Arts and Entertainment

  • 10/12 Salon at the Benton: Dangerous Art & Censorship

    Salon at the Benton: Dangerous Art & Censorship

    Friday, October 12, 2018
    5:00pm – 7:00pm
    5-5:30 pm Cash Bar; light hors d'oeuvres
    5:30 pm Discussion commences
    Free event, donations very welcome
    RSVP appreciated to x4520 or benton@uconn.edu

    Panelists:
    Dwayne Booth (aka Mr. Fish) is a cartoonist and freelance writer whose work can regularly be seen on http://Harpers.org and Truthdig.com; his work has also been published internationally. He has been a cartoonist and freelance writer for 20 years, publishing under both his own name and the penname of Mr. Fish. He is the subject of a 2017 feature documentary, “Mr. Fish: Cartooning from the Deep End.” He is curator of the exhibition "What's the Alternative?" currently on view at the museum.

    Molly Land is Professor of Law and Human Rights and the Associate Director of the Human Rights Institute at UConn. Professor Land’s scholarship focuses on the intersection of human rights, science, and technology. Her current work explores the extent to which human rights law can provide a foundation for claims of access to the Internet as well as the opportunities and challenges for using new technologies to achieve human rights objectives.

    Christopher Vials is Associate Professor of English and Director of American Studies at UConn. His specialties are 20th-Century American literature, popular culture, working class literature, political economy, U.S. empire, and social class and racial formation. His current work deals with narratives of economic development, imperialism in contemporary U.S. culture, antifascism and the cultural work of social movements on the political left and right.

    Moderator: Brendan Kane is Associate Professor of History and Assistant Director of Public Humanities at UConn. His area of specialty is early modern British and Irish history. He has authored several books on this subject and has co-curated the exhibition Nobility and Newcomers in Renaissance Ireland at the Folger Shakespeare Library (2013). His interests include comparative colonialism and the history of human rights; and gender and history.

    If you require an accommodation (at this event), please contact the Museum’s Visitor Services Desk at 860-486-4520 or benton@uconn.edu

    THE WILLIAM BENTON MUSEUM OF ART
    University of Connecticut
    School of Fine Arts
    245 Glenbrook Road
    Storrs, CT

    www.benton.uconn.edu

    Like us at:  www.facebook.com/benton.museum

    For more information, contact: The Benton Museum at 860-486-4520