CNY TalkAbout: Visit the New Museum– and Discuss! (7 May, 7pm)

A CNY TalkAbout: The New Museum’s Triennial exhibit called…

“Surround Audience”

Thursday, 7 May, 2015 at 7 pm

The New Museum
235 Bowery, NY NY

(Note: Thursdays at New Museum admission price is “suggested donation”)

Sign up here:
http://www.meetup.com/Conversations-New-York/events/221783609/

A signature initiative of the New Museum, the Triennial is the only recurring international exhibition in New York City devoted to early-career artists from around the world.

The Triennial’s predictive, rather than retrospective, model embodies the institution’s thirty-seven-year commitment to exploring the future of culture through the art of today. This third iteration of the Triennial is titled “Surround Audience” and is co-curated by New Museum Curator Lauren Cornell and artist Ryan Trecartin.

“Surround Audience” explores the effects of an increasingly connected world both on our sense of self and identity as well as on art’s form and larger social role. The exhibition looks at our immediate present, a time when culture has become more porous and encompassing and new considerations about art’s role and potential are surfacing. Artists are responding to these evolving conditions in a number of ways, from calculated appropriations to critical interrogations to surreal or poetic statements.

Featuring fifty-one artists from over twenty-five countries, “Surround Audience” pursues numerous lines of inquiry, including: What are the new visual metaphors for the self and subjecthood when our ability to see and be seen is expanding, as is our desire to manage our self-image and privacy? Is it possible to opt out of, bypass, or retool commercial interests that potentially collude with national and international policy? How are artists striving to embed their works in the world around them through incursions into media and activism? A number of artists in the exhibition are poets, and many more use words in ways that connect the current mobility in language with a mutability in form. The exhibition also gives weight to artists whose practices operate outside of the gallery—such as performance and dance—and to those who test the forums of marketing, comedy, and social media as platforms for art. The building-wide exhibition encompasses a variety of artistic practices, including sound, dance, comedy, poetry, installation, sculpture, painting, video, one online talk show, and an ad campaign.

After viewing the exhibit, we will re-convene at a local cafe and discuss our impressions of the work….

CNY Moderator: Laurence Mailaender

CNY TalkAbout: “Classroom Wars”– Tomorrow! 20 April

CNY Talk About: “Classroom Wars” (20 April 2015)

“Classroom Wars: Language, Sex, and the Making of Modern Political Culture”

This event takes place at:
New School, Johnson/Kaplan Hall
66 W. 12th St.
Room A712
6pm

Sign up here:

http://www.meetup.com/Conversations-New-York/events/221783164/

“In this carefully researched, empirically grounded, and elegantly written book, Natalia Mehlman Petrzela explores debates and politics of bilingual education and sex education in California at the origins of the ‘culture wars.’ She tells an engaging, accessible, and compelling history of these conflicts that has important implications for how we understand postwar American political culture and education, past and present. Scholars and students of education history, education policy, and postwar American politics and culture will want to read this book.”-Tracy L. Steffes, School, author of School, Society, and State: A New Education to Govern Modern America, 1890-1940

“What’s the matter with Kansas–or with America–and its endless culture wars? According to a common liberal refrain, contemporary conservatives have invoked hot-button cultural issues to persuade Americans to vote against their own economic interests. But that claim is itself a liberal conceit, ignoring the many ways that the American Right wove cultural and economic grievances into a cohesive and enduring ideology. No matter which way your own politics lean, you won’t be able to understand modern American conservatism without reading Natalia Mehlman Petrzela’s brave and original book.”-Jonathan Zimmerman, author of Too Hot to Handle: A Global History of Sex Education

After the lecture, the CNY group will convene at a local cafe and discuss the ideas presented in the lecture.

CNY Moderator: Laurence Mailaender

CNY TalkAbout: “Classroom Wars” (20 April 2015, 6pm)– with link!

CNY Talk About: “Classroom Wars” (20 April 2015)

“Classroom Wars: Language, Sex, and the Making of Modern Political Culture”

This event takes place at:
New School, Johnson/Kaplan Hall
66 W. 12th St.
Room A712
6pm

http://www.meetup.com/Conversations-New-York/events/221783164/

“In this carefu

lly researched, empirically grounded, and elegantly written book, Natalia Mehlman Petrzela explores debates and politics of bilingual education and sex education in California at the origins of the ‘culture wars.’ She tells an engaging, accessible, and compelling history of these conflicts that has important implications for how we understand postwar American political culture and education, past and present. Scholars and students of education history, education policy, and postwar American politics and culture will want to read this book.”-Tracy L. Steffes, School, author of School, Society, and State: A New Education to Govern Modern America, 1890-1940

“What’s the matter with Kansas–or with America–and its endless culture wars? According to a common liberal refrain, contemporary conservatives have invoked hot-button cultural issues to persuade Americans to vote against their own economic interests. But that claim is itself a liberal conceit, ignoring the many ways that the American Right wove cultural and economic grievances into a cohesive and enduring ideology. No matter which way your own politics lean, you won’t be able to understand modern American conservatism without reading Natalia Mehlman Petrzela’s brave and original book.”-Jonathan Zimmerman, author of Too Hot to Handle: A Global History of Sex Education

After the lecture, the CNY group will convene at a local cafe and discuss the ideas presented in the lecture.

CNY Moderator: Laurence Mailaender

CNY TalkAbout: “Classroom Wars” (20 April 2015, 6pm)

CNY Talk About: “Classroom Wars” (20 April 2015)

“Classroom Wars: Language, Sex, and the Making of Modern Political Culture”

This event takes place at:
New School, Johnson/Kaplan Hall
66 W. 12th St.
Room A712
1-212-229-5600
All programs are subject to change. Please confirm with the venue at 1-212-229-5600.
6pm

“In this carefully researched, empirically grounded, and elegantly written book, Natalia Mehlman Petrzela explores debates and politics of bilingual education and sex education in California at the origins of the ‘culture wars.’ She tells an engaging, accessible, and compelling history of these conflicts that has important implications for how we understand postwar American political culture and education, past and present. Scholars and students of education history, education policy, and postwar American politics and culture will want to read this book.”-Tracy L. Steffes, School, author of School, Society, and State: A New Education to Govern Modern America, 1890-1940

“What’s the matter with Kansas–or with America–and its endless culture wars? According to a common liberal refrain, contemporary conservatives have invoked hot-button cultural issues to persuade Americans to vote against their own economic interests. But that claim is itself a liberal conceit, ignoring the many ways that the American Right wove cultural and economic grievances into a cohesive and enduring ideology. No matter which way your own politics lean, you won’t be able to understand modern American conservatism without reading Natalia Mehlman Petrzela’s brave and original book.”-Jonathan Zimmerman, author of Too Hot to Handle: A Global History of Sex Education
After the lecture, the CNY group will convene at a local cafe and discuss the ideas presented in the lecture.
CNY Moderator: Laurence Mailaender

On Saturday, April 11, 2015 10:03 PM, Laurence Mailaender <lem986@verizon.net> wrote:

CNY Talk About: “Classroom Wars” (20 April 2015)

“Classroom Wars: Language, Sex, and the Making of Modern Political Culture”

This event takes place at:
New School, Johnson/Kaplan Hall
66 W. 12th St.
Room A712
1-212-229-5600
All programs are subject to change. Please confirm with the venue at 1-212-229-5600.
6pm

“In this carefully researched, empirically grounded, and elegantly written book, Natalia Mehlman Petrzela explores debates and politics of bilingual education and sex education in California at the origins of the ‘culture wars.’ She tells an engaging, accessible, and compelling history of these conflicts that has important implications for how we understand postwar American political culture and education, past and present. Scholars and students of education history, education policy, and postwar American politics and culture will want to read this book.”-Tracy L. Steffes, School, author of School, Society, and State: A New Education to Govern Modern America, 1890-1940

“What’s the matter with Kansas–or with America–and its endless culture wars? According to a common liberal refrain, contemporary conservatives have invoked hot-button cultural issues to persuade Americans to vote against their own economic interests. But that claim is itself a liberal conceit, ignoring the many ways that the American Right wove cultural and economic grievances into a cohesive and enduring ideology. No matter which way your own politics lean, you won’t be able to understand modern American conservatism without reading Natalia Mehlman Petrzela’s brave and original book.”-Jonathan Zimmerman, author of Too Hot to Handle: A Global History of Sex Education
After the lecture, the CNY group will convene at a local cafe and discuss the ideas presented in the lecture.
CNY Moderator: Laurence Mailaender

CNY TalkAbout: New Museum Triennial (7 May 2015, 7 pm)

A CNY TalkAbout: The New Museum’s Triennial exhibit called…

“Surround Audience”

Thursday, 7 May, 2015 at 7 pm
The New Museum
235 Bowery, NY NY

(Note: Thursdays at New Museum admission price is “suggested donation”)

http://www.meetup.com/Conversations-New-York/events/221783609/

A signature initiative of the New Museum, the Triennial is the only recurring international exhibition in New York City devoted to early-career artists from around the world.

The Triennial’s predictive, rather than retrospective, model embodies the institution’s thirty-seven-year commitment to exploring the future of culture through the art of today. This third iteration of the Triennial is titled “Surround Audience” and is co-curated by New Museum Curator Lauren Cornell and artist Ryan Trecartin.

“Surround Audience” explores the effects of an increasingly connected world both on our sense of self and identity as well as on art’s form and larger social role. The exhibition looks at our immediate present, a time when culture has become more porous and encompassing and new considerations about art’s role and potential are surfacing. Artists are responding to these evolving conditions in a number of ways, from calculated appropriations to critical interrogations to surreal or poetic statements.

CNY Moderator: Laurence Mailaender

CNY TalkAbout: “Classroom Wars” (20 April 2015, 6pm)

CNY Talk About: “Classroom Wars” (20 April 2015)

“Classroom Wars: Language, Sex, and the Making of Modern Political Culture”

This event takes place at:
New School, Johnson/Kaplan Hall
66 W. 12th St.
Room A712
1-212-229-5600
All programs are subject to change. Please confirm with the venue at 1-212-229-5600.

6pm

“In this carefully researched, empirically grounded, and elegantly written book, Natalia Mehlman Petrzela explores debates and politics of bilingual education and sex education in California at the origins of the ‘culture wars.’ She tells an engaging, accessible, and compelling history of these conflicts that has important implications for how we understand postwar American political culture and education, past and present. Scholars and students of education history, education policy, and postwar American politics and culture will want to read this book.”-Tracy L. Steffes, School, author of School, Society, and State: A New Education to Govern Modern America, 1890-1940

“What’s the matter with Kansas–or with America–and its endless culture wars? According to a common liberal refrain, contemporary conservatives have invoked hot-button cultural issues to persuade Americans to vote against their own economic interests. But that claim is itself a liberal conceit, ignoring the many ways that the American Right wove cultural and economic grievances into a cohesive and enduring ideology. No matter which way your own politics lean, you won’t be able to understand modern American conservatism without reading Natalia Mehlman Petrzela’s brave and original book.”-Jonathan Zimmerman, author of Too Hot to Handle: A Global History of Sex Education

After the lecture, the CNY group will convene at a local cafe and discuss the ideas presented in the lecture.

CNY Moderator: Laurence Mailaender

CNY Talk About: “Classroom Wars” (20 April 2015)

On 20 April, 6 pm, we will attend a Book Launch conversation on….

“Classroom Wars: Language, Sex, and the Making of Modern Political Culture”

This event takes place at:
New School, Johnson/Kaplan Hall
66 W. 12th St.
Room A712
1-212-229-5600
All programs are subject to change. Please confirm with the venue at 1-212-229-5600.

Book Discussions, April 20, 2015, 04/20/2015, Book Launch: Classroom Wars: Language, Sex, and the Making of Modern Political Culture

“In this carefully researched, empirically grounded, and elegantly written book, Natalia Mehlman Petrzela explores debates and politics of bilingual education and sex education in California at the origins of the ‘culture wars.’ She tells an engaging, accessible, and compelling history of these conflicts that has important implications for how we understand postwar American political culture and education, past and present. Scholars and students of education history, education policy, and postwar American politics and culture will want to read this book.”-Tracy L. Steffes, School, author of School, Society, and State: A New Education to Govern Modern America, 1890-1940

“What’s the matter with Kansas–or with America–and its endless culture wars? According to a common liberal refrain, contemporary conservatives have invoked hot-button cultural issues to persuade Americans to vote against their own economic interests. But that claim is itself a liberal conceit, ignoring the many ways that the American Right wove cultural and economic grievances into a cohesive and enduring ideology. No matter which way your own politics lean, you won’t be able to understand modern American conservatism without reading Natalia Mehlman Petrzela’s brave and original book.”-Jonathan Zimmerman, author of Too Hot to Handle: A Global History of Sex Education

After the lecture, the CNY group will convene at a local cafe and discuss the ideas presented in the lecture.

CNY Moderator: Laurence Mailaender

 

 

SHARING OUR SPIRITUALITY: Conversations Throughout NYC in April

SHARING OUR SPIRITUALITY:

Conversations Throughout NYC in April

 

SPIRITUALITY will be the subject of conversations throughout New York City

during the month of April, as many of us observe Easter and Passover, in a

project sponsored by Conversations New York (CNY) and listed on its calendar at

http://www.conversationsnewyork.com and Meetup.com http://www.meetup.com/Conversations-New-York/ .

 

“Lively-minded New Yorkers will gather to share their ideas, experiences, and feelings

about this compellinig subject,” says Ron Gross, founder of CNY, who conducts Socratic

Conversations at Columbia University. “Spirituality is one of the most powerful forces in

our lives. Some people contend that it’s too hot a topic for conversation. But we believe

that thinking about it together, in a spirit of mutual respect, can help us understand

ourselves and each other more deeply.”

 

Throughout the month, individuals, organizations and institutions will explore the subject

from diverse perspectives, ranging from the personal to the political, from the literary to the

scientific.

 

Why not host such a conversation yourself – with whomever you like, wherever and

whenever you like — to explore SPIRITUALITY from your perspective. It’s a great way to

nurture rapport and understanding!

Among the topics to be discussed at these conversations will be:

What does spirituality mean, to you?

How do you appraise the impact of Spirituality on our society and culture?

Do you feel that religious convictions bring us together or pull us apart?

How have your spiritual principles and practices changed in the course of your life?

Could religious and spiritual leaders and institutions do more to build a better world?

 

Offerings will be listed on the CNY calendar at http://www.conversationsnewyork.com. They

will take place in a myriad of public venues, ranging from the Jung Society, the New York

Society for Ethical Culture, and Columbia University, as well as at warmly welcoming cafes

and restaurants, to the atriums of business buildings like CitiGroup, IBM, and SONY.

 

Suggested Basic Reading: An excellent article on Spirituality on Wikipedia includes

definitions, historical development, major traditions, contemporary schools, scientific

responses, and further readings.

 

Conversations New York (www.conversationsnewyork.com) is a community of

volunteers devoted to enhancing the quality of life in NYC by promoting more and better

conversations. CNY’s projects have included the first national conference on THE

POWER OF CONVERSATION at Columbia University, the first CONVERSATION DAY

in Bryant Park, and promoting 1,000 conversation per year on its on-line calendar.

LOVE! Conversations Throughout NYC in February

LOVE! Conversations Throughout NYC in February

LOVE is the subject of conversations throughout NYC during the month of February, leading up to Valentine’s Day on Saturday the 14th and continuing throughout February, in a project sponsored by Conversations New York (CNY) and listed on its calendar at www.conversationsnewyork.com.

Lively-minded New Yorkers are gathering to share their ideas, experiences, and feelings,” says Ron Gross, founder of CNY, who conducts Socratic Conversations at Columbia University. “They are going deeper than the Hallmark hoopla and heart-shaped boxes of candy!”

Throughout the month, individuals, organizations and institutions are exploring the subject from diverse perspectives, ranging from the personal to the political, from the literary to the scientific.

Why not host one yourself – with whomever you like, wherever and whenever you like — to explore LOVE from your perspective. It’s a great way to nurture rapport and understanding!

Many of the Conversations are listed on the CNY calendar– including ones at the C.G. Jung Center on 2/3, at the NY Society for Ethical Culture on 2/4, at the Royalton Hotel on 2/7, at Panera Bread in Queens on 2/2, 2/9, and 2/11, at Senior Planet on 2/11, at Café Philo on 2/19, etc. On Valentine’s Day itself, Love will be discussed in the Times Square area amidst the hundreds of couples who will be there popping the question, getting married, or renewing their vows. Discussions of the CUNY TV series Love is being conducted at Whole Foods on Greenwich Street. Concluding the month’s events will be conversations on February 28th at the LGBT Expo at the Jacob Javitz Convention Center.

Conversations are taking place in a myriad of public venues, ranging from welcoming cafes and restaurants, to the atriums of business buildings like CitiGroup, IBM, and SONY.

Among the topics being discussed at these conversations are:

What does love mean, to you?

Is love different for men and for women, for gay and straight folks, and for others?

Does the meaning of love change as we get older?

What have you learned about loving wisely and well?

What the relationship between love and sexuality?

Is love “natural” – or is it “socially-constructed”?

How is love effected by its political, social, and economic environment?

Conversations New York (www.conversationsnewyork.com) is a community of volunteers which has promoted more and better conversations among New Yorkers by such activities as Conversation Day in Bryant Park last summer, and a national symposium on The Power of Conversation at Columbia University.

CNY joins Meetup in lauching #MeetupMonday: CONVERSATIONS TO BUILD COMMUNITY TOGETHER

You are warmly invited to participate in the #MeetupMonday program to be launched on Monday, January 19th, by Meetup and partners like us.   For full information:  http://blog.meetup.com/meetupmondayguide/
For a full listing of meetups:  https://secure.meetup.com/monday/
For CNY’s #MeetupMonday meetup: http://www.meetup.com/NewYork-NY-MeetupMonday/events/219887516/
On Meetup.com’s #MeetupMonday cover photo, note our Conversations New York (CNY) regulars Bill C. Stephen S., and Tim C. at John L.’s “How do we know what we know?” conversation. http://www.meetup.com/Conversations-New-York/events/219414124/
Next CNY meeting: Thursday, January 29th, 5:30 pm, Columbia University. For details, please visit “Conversations New York” at http://www.meetup.com/Conversations-New-York/events/219657328/
Ron Gross — For the CNY Team
ConversationsNewYork@gmail.com