Our second newsletter discusses upcoming Indigenous People’s Day events, October 9, and IPEC co-sponsored events such as the Guerrilla Opera’s Thrilling Adventures of Lovelace and Babbage, October 12-15.
In October’s episode of IPEC Presents, our guest and IPEC executive committee member Libby Meyer discusses her work as a composer, her guilty pleasure musical choices, and what it means to co-create with the world around us. Libby is a dynamic, insightful and well-rounded artist whose perspective on the world inspires us to deepen our relationships–and to liberate our idea of stealing to create.
Now streaming on Spotify and Apple Podcasts, listen now.
All are welcome to a gathering honoring Indigenous Peoples’ Day on Monday, Oct. 9, 11:30-1:00 p.m. This annual holiday celebrates the histories and cultures of Indigenous peoples across the Americas. We will welcome James Rattling Leaf and Michael Waasegiizhig Price to the Michigan Tech campus in honor of the event.
Rattling Leaf will speak about leading with Indigenous cultural intelligence to advance equity in a changing climate; Waasegiizhig Price will share Anishinaabe insights on adapting to a changing climate. Please see their bios below.
This event will be held in the Alumni Lounge in the Memorial Union Building. The session will open with an opportunity to meet and visit with our honored guests while sharing light refreshments; presentations will commence around noon. For those interested in meeting with our guests before this event, please contact Erika Vye at ecvye@mtu.edu.
For more information and Google Calendar invite click here.
Members and non-members both are invited to the Rozsa mezzanine from 6:00-7:30 p.m. on Thursday, October 12 for heavy appetizers and drinks. Then join us afterwards for The Thrilling Adventures of Lovelace and Babbage, a one-hour opera in the McArdle Theatre. Free opera tickets are available by contacting IPEC Director Stefka Hristova, shristov@mtu.edu.
Add to Google calendar.
Aritra Chakrabarty (SS) received a $1000 grant through the IPEC small grant program to attend the International Public Policy Association Conference as an executive committee member of the newly formed Global South -Policy Process Research Network (GS-PPRN). Chakrabarty and the GS-PPRN executive team worked for over a year to provide a platform for Global South scholars working in the realm of public policy in different sectors. The conference was held in Toronto, Canada, June 26-27, 2023.
As you’re settling into the second week of the semester, IPEC has news, events, and media to share with you to get excited about.
Read our monthly member newsletter, published on the first Thursday of each month here. We’re announcing IPEC’s five signature research clusters, upcoming funding opportunities, member awards and publications, and more.
Our brand new podcast, IPEC Presents, is now available on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Please follow, share, and listen to our first episode with guest Dr. Richard Canevez (HU), lead of our Social Media and Society research cluster.
If you’d like to include a member-affiliated event, new publication or funding award, please reach out to Kendall Belopavlovich via email (kybelopa@mtu.edu) to have your announcement listed in the October newsletter.
Please join the Rozsa Art Galleries and The Institute for Policy, Ethics, and Culture on Thursday September 14 (3-Spm) for a presentation and discussion on the theme of art and its role in activism. The event will feature an engaging artist talk from Rozsa visiting artist Erin Hoffman. There will also be a conversation on the topic lead by Rich Canevez (Humanities), Stefka Hristova (Humanities), Soonkwan Hong (College of Business) and Terri Jo Frew (Visual & Performing Arts).
Click here for more information.
Join us for an open lecture with author, entrepreneur, and public speaker George Paasewe on his book “How Black College Students Learn Code Switching”. George will help to imagine a campus community where all members are culturally aware, sensitive, and can effectively communicate with one another. Find solutions to overcoming racial tensions and education on becoming a social change agent through learning and mastering the tool of code-switching.
The Institute for Policy, Ethics, and Culture (IPEC) is pleased to announce IPEC Presents. Each episode of IPEC Presents is dedicated to discussing the research our institute conducts in service of policy engagement, and teaching that address the ethical and cultural challenges, implications, and strategies unique to the emerging techno cultural environment. In our first episode, guest Dr. Richard Canevez (HU) and host Kendall Belopavlovich (HU) discuss his rising academic career and research as an IPEC executive committee member and research area lead. Rich is a multi-talented professional whose expertise draws on multiple disciplinary backgrounds, including philosophy, information sciences and technology, artificial intelligence, and communication.
IPEC Presents can be found on Apple Podcasts and Spotify by searching for “IPEC Presents”. Our website also hosts the podcast, located here.
Website: https://www.mtu.edu/ipec/research/podcast/podcasting/
Streaming: Spotify, Apple Podcasts
“Thrilling Adventures as much a triumph as it is a bit of wacky fun.” Aaron Keebaugh, Artfuse 2023
The Thrilling Adventures of Lovelace and Babbage is a new one-act opera by composer Elena Ruehr and librettist Royce Vavrek, adapted from the steampunk graphic novel written and drawn by Sydney Padua, commissioned, produced, and performed by Guerilla Opera. This comedic new opera features Ada Lovelace and Charles Babbage, the true-life unsung inventors of the first computer, in an alternative universe where they use their new invention to “fight crime.”
Ada Lovelace was a mathematician, gambler, and proto-programmer, whose writings contained the first ever appearance of general computing theory. Charles Babbage was the eccentric inventor of the “Difference Engine”, an enormous clockwork calculating machine that would have been the first computer, if he had ever finished it.
Ada Lovelace was the first great genius to develop a programming language, and who is still not generally known. By bringing this historical figure to light, this opera demonstrates that there is a history of great scientists that are women.
The project is a collaboration with the Department of Computer Science; the College of Computing; the College of Sciences and Arts; and the Institute for Policy, Ethics, and Culture. It is part of the celebration of 50 years of computer science at Michigan Tech.
Tickets available at the Rozsa website.