News & Features — Division of Humanities and Fine Arts

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Juan Felipe Herrera on the Power of Poetry

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Juan Felipe Herrera on the Power of Poetry

Poet Laureate Juan Felipe Herrera visited UC Santa Barbara in in an interdisciplinary event in which he highlighted poetry's power to honor ancestors by sharing their stories with others. He shared poems on social issues such as police violence and immigration.

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The Double Groove: Unpredictability in Art

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The Double Groove: Unpredictability in Art

In a lecture as part of Art Department’s Visiting Artist Speaker Series at UCSB, artist Eamon Ore-Giron explores the fluid movement of cultural narratives across borders, blending ancient traditions with contemporary expression. His work insists that art, like history, is never singular—it's a conversation in motion. Currently on display at the AD&A Museum as half of the art duo Los Jaichackers, Ore-Giron walks the audience through his creative journey.

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From Ancient Texts to Modern Activism

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From Ancient Texts to Modern Activism

Olga Faccani believes Ancient Greek theater remains relevant today, shaping how we understand justice, democracy, and human connection. Through her Ph.D. work at UCSB, particularly with The Odyssey Project, she explored how classical texts resonate with marginalized voices, helping incarcerated youth navigate themes of isolation and trauma.

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An Inclusive and Student-Centered Approach to Writing

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An Inclusive and Student-Centered Approach to Writing

Writing Program professor Victoria Houser draws upon her teaching experiences to create an inclusive learning environment that engages students of diverse backgrounds. Houser prioritizes class discussions and encourages students to set clear goals for their writing. In a recent interview, she spoke about strategies to support multilingual students.

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The Authoritarian Playbook: Using Fear and Crisis to Gain Power in Italy and America

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The Authoritarian Playbook: Using Fear and Crisis to Gain Power in Italy and America

Authoritarian leaders use fear, crisis, and rebranding to push far-right agendas and erode democracy, NYU professor Ruth Ben-Ghiat told a UCSB audience at the inaugural Charles R. Ross Distinguished Lecture in the Department of Italian Studies. She highlighted how figures like Mussolini, Meloni, and Trump manipulate public perception to justify extreme policies.

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A Passion for Singing and the Environment

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A Passion for Singing and the Environment

Selene Kalra is an Environmental Studies exchange student from the University of Edinburgh in the United Kingdom who found her passion in the Jazz program in UCSB Music Department.

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The Fight for Repatriation at UCSB and Beyond

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The Fight for Repatriation at UCSB and Beyond

A panel held by the Religious Studies Department at UCSB called on the university to strengthen its efforts to return Native ancestors' remains and cultural objects, highlighting the spiritual and human rights importance of repatriation. Panelists stressed that education and understanding are key to addressing the long-standing harm caused by the desecration of Native burial sites.

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Layers: A Senior Music Recital Explores Sleep and Creativity

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Layers: A Senior Music Recital Explores Sleep and Creativity

UC Santa Barbara music student Donavan Walker’s senior recital, Layers, was an immersive performance blending original compositions, live music, and set design to explore the connection between dreams, nightmares, and creativity. Centered around a bed symbolizing his restless mind, the show built to a breathtaking ensemble finale, capturing the exhaustion and rewards of the creative process.

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Premodern Poetry and the Future of Digital Humanities

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Premodern Poetry and the Future of Digital Humanities

Christina Han, an associate professor of history at Wilfrid Laurier University in Ontario, Canada, visited UCSB to present on the 17th-century Korean Sihwa ch'ongnim 詩話叢林 Compendium of Poetry Talks and the importance of collaborative, transnational scholarship in digital humanities.

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Black History in America — Its Legacy and Fate

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Black History in America — Its Legacy and Fate

Harvard University professor and filmmaker Vincent Brown spoke at a UCSB Key Passages series talk titled “Black History’s Warning to the World” and gave insights on the past, present, and future of Black history in the United States and internationally.

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Music in Medicine, Academics, and Culture

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Music in Medicine, Academics, and Culture

Dian Zeng’s experience providing music therapy during the Covid-19 pandemic led her to explore the broader impact of music on well-being, from supporting overwhelmed doctors to working with cancer patients. Now a Ph.D. student in Ethnomusicology at UC Santa Barbara, she researches how elderly Tai Chi practitioners in Los Angeles use music to enhance both their physical and mental health . At the same time, she works as a teaching assistant in Music and Asian American Studies.

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Rediscovering Student Art in ‘Creative Currents’

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Rediscovering Student Art in ‘Creative Currents’

The newly opened exhibit Creative Currents: Student Expression in the Arts at UC Santa Barbara’s Sara Miller McCune Arts Library showcases decades of student creativity, spanning from 1960 to 2017. Curated by graduate student Carlyle Constantino, the exhibit highlights emotionally resonant works while exploring themes of identity, belonging, and the evolving role of curation in amplifying historically overlooked voices.

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From Campus Coverage to Broadcast Journalism

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From Campus Coverage to Broadcast Journalism

UCSB alumna Alexandra Goldberg turned her passion for journalism into a career in broadcast news. From reporting at UCSB to working at WHAS11, an ABC-affiliated TV station in Louisville, Kentucky, Goldberg believes her time at UCSB helped her develop key journalism skills. Now, she shares how her college experience shaped her path to the professional newsroom.

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From Actor to Director: Delving Deep into "Sweeney Todd"

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From Actor to Director: Delving Deep into "Sweeney Todd"

UCSB English student and actor-turned-director Curran Seth made his directorial debut with Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, collaborating with the UCSB Music Department and Shrunken Heads Production Company to bring the dark, character-driven story to life. Emphasizing emotional depth over technical precision, Seth guided his cast—many of whom were primarily singers—to tap into their characters' psychology, resulting in a raw and immersive production.

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HFA Speaks: Five Years after Lockdown, a Lingering Legacy in the Arts

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HFA Speaks: Five Years after Lockdown, a Lingering Legacy in the Arts

Five years after COVID-19’s initial outbreak across the U.S., Letty García, Nomi Morris and Nathan Roberts from the Division of Humanities and Fine Arts gathered to unpack its impacts on film, the performing arts, writing and academia for a UC Santa Barbara audience. While quarantine fostered artistic innovation and collective creativity, it also transformed university students in both positive and negative ways, according to the speakers.

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Student Spotlight: The Power of Memory in Art

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Student Spotlight: The Power of Memory in Art

Amanda Harris, a UCSB Art major, uses painting to explore memory and healing. From childhood sketches to public art projects like Santa Barbara’s Painted Pianos on State Street, her work reflects a deep connection to nostalgia. As she prepares for a career in art therapy, she hopes to use creativity as a tool for healing and self-expression.

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The Poetic Cinema of Shane Book

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The Poetic Cinema of Shane Book

Shane Book, a poet and filmmaker, spoke at An Evening of Film and Poetry with Shane Book last week. Co-sponsored by the College of Creative Studies, Film and Media Studies, and the Center for Black Studies Research, Book spoke about his poetry books, his two short films, and his time spent learning and living in a myriad of different cities.

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Breaking into the Entertainment World

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Breaking into the Entertainment World

Shoshana Medved, a graduating student, has already begun refining her creative expertise in the professional world, gaining hands-on experience with top entertainment brands such as Beats by Dre and Paramount’s Pluto TV. In an interview, she shares insights into her internships and the lessons she’s learned.

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Blurring the Lines Between Objectivity and Subjectivity

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Blurring the Lines Between Objectivity and Subjectivity

Sociologist Claudio E. Benzecry explores the blurred boundaries between humans and objects, revealing how people project themselves onto their surroundings and, in turn, become shaped by them. Through studies on opera lovers, shoe models, and museum guards, he uncovers the ways in which passion and perception transform inanimate things into active participants in human experience.

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