Weekly movement classes for all Queen's philosophers

Date

Wednesday April 28, 2021
9:00 am - 10:00 am

Location

Queen's University, Zoom

The Philosophy Department is sponsoring free, Weekly Movement Classes, every Wednesday at 1pm until the end of May, 2021. This class will be live on Zoom. Keep your camera off, or turn it on for an interactive experience. The Zoom link will be shared via email.

This will be a a mid-week dance-based body refresh 鈥 no dance or movement experience required. Together (with a sense of humour about it all) we鈥檒l move through easy-to-follow sequences set to energetic music. Throughout this session you鈥檒l increase your range of motion, challenge your stamina, build strength and learn a couple humility-affirming dance moves along the way. You鈥檒l be encouraged to customize your workout with modifications offered to amp up or tone down any exercise to suit your personal needs. Make this class a routine and you鈥檒l feel energized, toned, bright and connected to your body! 

Our instructor, Alyssa Martin, is an award winning choreographer, director and educator. She is the Artistic Director of surrealist dance theatre company, , a creative home she founded in 2012. Her creations blur the lines of theatre, dance and comedy in mischievous conversation with her modern dance antecedents. She has toured her work internationally, working in residence at art centres including The Banff Centre, Stratford Festival Lab, The National Ballet of Canada and Canadian Stage. She most recently premiered a feature length experimental film, Bin Chicken, a commission for Toronto Dance Theatre. In addition to choreography, Alyssa works as a movement educator with people of all ages and experiences. She teaches Pilates and Dance Synergy at , Dance and Musical Theatre in the Performance Department at Ryerson University, Creative Composition at George Brown College鈥檚 Dance Program and has guest taught within Laurier University鈥檚 Opera Department. She also leads 鈥淣ONDance鈥 workshops for the Rock Bottom community. She holds her Pilates Mat and Reformer Certification (earned under the mentorship of Leslie Parker) as well as her BFA in Performance Dance from Ryerson University. She has supplemented her training with workshops in dance, movement and creative process in Montreal, New York, Berlin and Vienna. She approaches all that she does with a sense of play and places priority on the wellbeing of the individuals she is moving alongside!  Alyssa鈥檚 very excited to be leading these classes for 黑料吃瓜资源 philosophers!

Mid Week Move Poster (JPEG 400KB)   黑料吃瓜资源 Alyssa (JPEG 411KB)

Weekly movement classes for all Queen's philosophers

Date

Wednesday April 21, 2021
9:00 am - 10:00 am

Location

Queen's University, Zoom

The Philosophy Department is sponsoring free, Weekly Movement Classes, every Wednesday at 1pm until the end of May, 2021. This class will be live on Zoom. Keep your camera off, or turn it on for an interactive experience. The Zoom link will be shared via email.

This will be a a mid-week dance-based body refresh 鈥 no dance or movement experience required. Together (with a sense of humour about it all) we鈥檒l move through easy-to-follow sequences set to energetic music. Throughout this session you鈥檒l increase your range of motion, challenge your stamina, build strength and learn a couple humility-affirming dance moves along the way. You鈥檒l be encouraged to customize your workout with modifications offered to amp up or tone down any exercise to suit your personal needs. Make this class a routine and you鈥檒l feel energized, toned, bright and connected to your body! 

Our instructor, Alyssa Martin, is an award winning choreographer, director and educator. She is the Artistic Director of surrealist dance theatre company, , a creative home she founded in 2012. Her creations blur the lines of theatre, dance and comedy in mischievous conversation with her modern dance antecedents. She has toured her work internationally, working in residence at art centres including The Banff Centre, Stratford Festival Lab, The National Ballet of Canada and Canadian Stage. She most recently premiered a feature length experimental film, Bin Chicken, a commission for Toronto Dance Theatre. In addition to choreography, Alyssa works as a movement educator with people of all ages and experiences. She teaches Pilates and Dance Synergy at , Dance and Musical Theatre in the Performance Department at Ryerson University, Creative Composition at George Brown College鈥檚 Dance Program and has guest taught within Laurier University鈥檚 Opera Department. She also leads 鈥淣ONDance鈥 workshops for the Rock Bottom community. She holds her Pilates Mat and Reformer Certification (earned under the mentorship of Leslie Parker) as well as her BFA in Performance Dance from Ryerson University. She has supplemented her training with workshops in dance, movement and creative process in Montreal, New York, Berlin and Vienna. She approaches all that she does with a sense of play and places priority on the wellbeing of the individuals she is moving alongside!  Alyssa鈥檚 very excited to be leading these classes for 黑料吃瓜资源 philosophers!

Mid Week Move Poster (JPEG 400KB)   黑料吃瓜资源 Alyssa (JPEG 411KB)

Weekly movement classes for all Queen's philosophers

Date

Wednesday April 14, 2021
9:00 am - 10:00 am

Location

Queen's University, Zoom

The Philosophy Department is sponsoring free, Weekly Movement Classes, every Wednesday at 1pm until the end of May, 2021. This class will be live on Zoom. Keep your camera off, or turn it on for an interactive experience. The Zoom link will be shared via email.

This will be a a mid-week dance-based body refresh 鈥 no dance or movement experience required. Together (with a sense of humour about it all) we鈥檒l move through easy-to-follow sequences set to energetic music. Throughout this session you鈥檒l increase your range of motion, challenge your stamina, build strength and learn a couple humility-affirming dance moves along the way. You鈥檒l be encouraged to customize your workout with modifications offered to amp up or tone down any exercise to suit your personal needs. Make this class a routine and you鈥檒l feel energized, toned, bright and connected to your body! 

Our instructor, Alyssa Martin, is an award winning choreographer, director and educator. She is the Artistic Director of surrealist dance theatre company, , a creative home she founded in 2012. Her creations blur the lines of theatre, dance and comedy in mischievous conversation with her modern dance antecedents. She has toured her work internationally, working in residence at art centres including The Banff Centre, Stratford Festival Lab, The National Ballet of Canada and Canadian Stage. She most recently premiered a feature length experimental film, Bin Chicken, a commission for Toronto Dance Theatre. In addition to choreography, Alyssa works as a movement educator with people of all ages and experiences. She teaches Pilates and Dance Synergy at , Dance and Musical Theatre in the Performance Department at Ryerson University, Creative Composition at George Brown College鈥檚 Dance Program and has guest taught within Laurier University鈥檚 Opera Department. She also leads 鈥淣ONDance鈥 workshops for the Rock Bottom community. She holds her Pilates Mat and Reformer Certification (earned under the mentorship of Leslie Parker) as well as her BFA in Performance Dance from Ryerson University. She has supplemented her training with workshops in dance, movement and creative process in Montreal, New York, Berlin and Vienna. She approaches all that she does with a sense of play and places priority on the wellbeing of the individuals she is moving alongside!  Alyssa鈥檚 very excited to be leading these classes for 黑料吃瓜资源 philosophers!

Mid Week Move Poster (JPEG 400KB)   黑料吃瓜资源 Alyssa (JPEG 411KB)

Political Philosophy Reading Group: Patti Lenard (University of Ottawa)

Date

Monday April 19, 2021
2:30 pm - 4:00 pm

Location

Queen's University, Zoom

Faculty and graduate students are welcome to join, over Zoom, the upcoming meeting of the Political Philosophy Reading Group, to discuss a paper by Patti Lenard (University of Ottawa): "When accessing citizenship requires a handshake: On the permissibility of denying religious/cultural accommodations to citizenship oath-takers". Further details, as well as Patti's paper, have been circulated via email. For more information, contact Christine Sypnowich (christine.sypnowich@queensu.ca).

APPLE Speaker Series: Yamini Narayanan (Deakin University)

Date

Thursday April 15, 2021
4:00 pm - 5:30 pm

Location

Queen's University, Zoom

The group at Queen's welcomes you to the fourth talk in our winter speaker series on Thursday, April 15th, with Yamini Narayanan from Deakin University. 

The zoom link will be shared over email. For more information, click the button below, or contact contact Jishnu Guha-Majumdar (jgm12@queensu.ca).

Weil and Arendt Conference: "The Self and the Selfless"

Start Date

Thursday April 15, 2021

End Date

Saturday April 17, 2021

Time

8:00 pm - 8:00 pm

Location

Queen's University, Zoom

This virtual conference, "The Self and the Selfless" brings together academics from across the globe, posing questions around the philosophical thought of Hannah Arendt and Simone Weil. Featuring international leading Weil and Arendt scholars, the conference focuses on how these thinkers can assist us in navigating our own "Dark Times." .

The talks are all posted on the website and the conference itself will involve panel discussions around the talks, so it is recommended but not required that all registered participants pre-view the talks. Registration ends Friday April 9, 2021. Pease visit the website and .

This conference is organized by Kathryn Lawson (Queen's University) and Joshua Livingstone (Queen's University). 

The conference will hear plenary addresses from:

  • Lissa McCullough (California State University Dominguez Hills) on Weil
  • Elvira Roncalli (Carroll College) on Arendt
  • Marie Cabaud Meaney (International Theological Institute in Trumau, Austria) on Weil and Arendt

It will feature:

  • Antonio Calcagno (King鈥檚 University College at Western University)
  • Benjamin Davis (University of Toronto)
  • Diane Enns (Ryerson University)
  • Alzbeta Hajkova (Purdue University)
  • Marina Lademacher (University of Sussex)
  • Paolo Monti (Universit脿 degli Studi di Milano Bicocca)
  • Rose Owen (University of Chicago)
  • Silvia Panizza (University College Dublin)
  • Ian Rhoad (American University)
  • Scott Ritner (Temple University)
  • Maria Robaszkiewicz (Paderborn University)
  • Ilya Shodjaee-Zrudlo (McGill University)
  • Tom Sojer (University of Erfurt)
  • Sam Sokolsky-Tifft (Purdue University)
  • Christopher Thomas (Manchester Metropolitan University)
  • Philip Wilson (University of East Anglia)

APPLE Symposium on Recent PhD Kyle Johannsen鈥檚 Wild Animal Ethics

Date

Friday April 9, 2021
11:00 am - 2:00 pm

Location

Queen's University, Zoom

is happy to sponsor a virtual symposium on recent PhD Kyle Johannsen鈥檚 recent book, Wild Animal Ethics: The Moral and Political Problem of Wild Animal Suffering. The symposium will be held over Zoom. It will feature commentaries by Nicolas Delon (New College of Florida), Bob Fischer (Texas State), Gary O鈥橞rien (Oxford), and Clare Palmer (Texas A&M).

For information about the book, please see the description below.

You may also be interested in , that recently aired on the New Books Network.

鈥淭hough many ethicists have the intuition that we should leave nature alone, Kyle Johannsen argues that we have a duty to research safe ways of providing large-scale assistance to wild animals. Using concepts from moral and political philosophy to analyze the issue of wild animal suffering (WAS), Johannsen explores how a collective, institutional obligation to assist wild animals should be understood. He claims that with enough research, genetic editing may one day give us the power to safely intervene without perpetually interfering with wild animals鈥 liberties.鈥

Questions addressed include:

  • In what way is nature valuable and is intervention compatible with that value?
  • Is intervention a requirement of justice?
  • What are the implications of WAS for animal rights advocacy? 
  • What types of intervention are promising?