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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260428T180000
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SUMMARY:"Bramble"
DESCRIPTION:Acclaimed poet Susan Stewart discusses her new poetry collection with Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and poet Eliza Griswold.  Bramble is a meditation on difficulty and the powers of nature. \nIn the Biblical book of Judges\, the bramble is a figure of destructive leadership\, thwarting the lives of trees. In ballads and fairy tales\, roses grow “‘round the briar” in tragic contrast to heroines who are enveloped by the thorns. One of the oldest English words and an even older symbol\, “bramble” reminds us of the entangled and unending struggle that comes with living in time and searching beyond appearances. The rough thicket presents impediments\, yet it also bears fruit and delicate flowers. With Bramble\, Susan Stewart has composed a book of many forms\, including satires\, elegies\, meditations\, and songs. Bramble is also an exploration of the act of making such forms. The book’s three sections— \n“Mirror\,” “Briar\,” and “Channel”—link lyric time to our lives as they are situated in history and nature. Reflecting upon illness\, grief\, and change\, the poems follow the progress of day and night\, the movement of the seasons\, and the path of water from springs to the sea. \nSusan Stewart is a poet\, critic\, and translator. Her previous books of poetry include Columbarium\, winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award\, and Cinder: New and Selected Poems. A MacArthur Fellow and a former Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets\, she is also a member of the American Philosophical Society and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Her most recent prose books are Poetry’s Nature and The Ruins Lesson. \nEliza Griswold\, a poet\, a translator\, and a contributing writer covering religion\, politics\, and the environment\, has been writing for The New Yorker since 2003. Her books include Circle of Hope: A Reckoning with Love\, Power\, and Justice in an American Church and Amity and Prosperity: One Family and the Fracturing of America\, which won the 2019 Pulitzer Prize in general nonfiction. She is a Ferris Professor at Princeton University\, where she directs the Program in Journalism. \nThis event is co-sponsored by Chicago University Press\, Princeton University’s Department of English\, the Humanities Council\, the Program in Journalism\, the Lewis Center for the Arts\, and Labyrinth Books.  
URL:https://journalism.princeton.edu/event/bramble/
LOCATION:Labyrinth Books\, 122 Nassau Street\, Princeton\, NJ\, 08542\, United States
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260506T180000
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CREATED:20260425T002407Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260425T002609Z
UID:10000432-1778090400-1778097600@journalism.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:JRN 314 Film Screening: The Legacy of Lead / El Legado del Plomo
DESCRIPTION:The Trenton Project presents “The Legacy of Lead / El Legado del Plomo” on Wednesday\, May 6 in C112 Briger Hall. \nThis public film screening will feature four documentary shorts by the students in  JRN 314 The Art and Practice of Documentary: Environmental Justice Filmmaking in Trenton\, taught by Purcell Carson (Journalism). There will be a short reception starting at 6:00 PM\, followed by the screening. \nFilms by: \n\nSynai Ferrell ’26\nRaphaela Gold ’26\nHahyeon Kim ’29\nElla Kowal ’29\nPayge Neals ’26\nLoreta Quarmine ’27\nClara Schneider ’28\nStella Szostak ’26\n\nMany thanks to our university co-sponsors: The Program in Journalism\, the Princeton Humanities Initiative\, the Program in Community Engaged Scholarship (ProCES)\, the Princeton-Mellon Initiative in Architecture\, Urbanism and the Humanities\, the Department of Geosciences\, the Program in Environmental Studies\, the High Meadows Environmental Institute\, the Digital Learning Lab\, Urban Studies\, African American Studies and the Program in American Studies.
URL:https://journalism.princeton.edu/event/jrn-314-film-screening-the-legacy-of-lead-el-legado-del-plomo/
LOCATION:C112 Briger Hall
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260513T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260513T170000
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CREATED:20260421T192641Z
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UID:10000431-1778673600-1778691600@journalism.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Audio & Ideas: Exploring the Possibilities for Scholarly Podcasting
DESCRIPTION:Podcasting is already a medium for scholarship\, and there are dozens of so-called “academic podcasts” in existence. Indeed\, the New Books Network aggregates an enormous number of podcasts on everything from political science to literary theory. However\, the majority of these podcasts consist of “author interviews\,” which use only a fraction of audio’s potential to reach the listener the way that highly produced\, scripted\, expertly sound-designed and edited podcasts are doing in other parts of the culture. There is an opportunity for scholars to take charge of their own productions\, and serve a growing intelligent public that is increasingly turning to podcasts to both continue its education and learn about the pressing issues and topics of our time.  It is a public intellectual problem\, for which audio journalism has an answer. \nThe panels will address the way intellectuals of all kinds are using audio to generate new scholarship. While the commercial podcast universe has expanded and contracted in the past decade\, the world of academic podcasting has grown at a steady\, if modest\, pace. This may present the university with an opportunity.  At a time when the market has turned its back on highly produced podcasts\, perhaps this is a good time for intellectuals of all stripes to explore the possibilities of idea-driven\, narrative audio work within the context of the academy. \nFULL SCHEDULE HERE. 
URL:https://journalism.princeton.edu/event/audio-ideas-exploring-the-possibilities-for-scholarly-podcasting/
LOCATION:301 Wooten Hall
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