Michigan II: Paris and Edinburgh in the Enlightenment: Moral Challenge and the Ethics of Living, Learning, and Beingįaculty: James Livesey, University of Dundee and Joanna Stephens, University of St. Michigan I: Science Fiction, Technology, and the Human Horizonįaculty: Sean Connolly, Bluefield State College and Seth Jacobowitz, Yale University Michigan II: BLACK LIVES MATTER: Race, Gender, and Resistance in Pan African Cinema from Algiers to Fergusonįaculty: Natasha Vaubel, Independent Scholar, and Audrey McCluskey, Indiana UniversityĬornell I: Thinking About Cities: In Particular, Jerusalemįaculty: Neil Hertz, Johns Hopkins University and Omar Yousef, Al-Quds UniversityĬornell II: Mapping Fictions of American Identity: 1840 – 1940įaculty: Shirley Samuels, Cornell University and Candace Waid, University of California, Santa Barbara Michigan I: Archetype and Contemporary Artįaculty: Justin Kim, Deep Springs College, and Charles Grimes, University of North Carolina, Wilmington Michigan II: Technology and Social Changeįaculty: Chiara Ricciardone, University of California, Berkeley, and Micah White, Independent ScholarĬornell I: Public Poetry in a Digital Worldįaculty: Emily Oliver and Liza Flum, Cornell UniversityĬornell II: Literatures of the Security State: Privacy, Surveillance, and Modern Cultureįaculty: Christopher Holmes, Ithaca College, and Corey McEleney, Fordham University Michigan I: Thinking About Cities: In Particular, Detroitįaculty: Deborah Dash Moore, University of Michigan, and Jason Schulman, New York University Maryland: Protest Poetics: Art and Performance in Freedom Movementsįaculty: Jakeya Caruthers, Stanford University, and Isaiah Wooden, American Universityįaculty: Ali Shapiro and Gina Brandolino, University of MichiganĬornell I: Gods and Heroes of the Celts and Vikingsįaculty: Thomas Hill, Cornell University, and Charles Wright, University of Illinois, Urbana-ChampaignĬornell II: Say It, Say It Anyway You Canįaculty: Aurora Masum-Javed, Cornell University, and Henry Mills, Writing Corps, Fresh Education, and Teachers and Writers Collaborative Mason, University of Maryland, and Lindsay Amthor Yotsukura, University of Marylandįaculty: Robert Bruno, University of Michigan, and Suzi Garcia, Independent ScholarĬornell I: Pleasure and Danger: Bodies in History, Science, Literature, and Philosophyįaculty: Masha Raskolnikov, Cornell University, and Kim Evans, State University of New York at Cortlandįaculty: Blakey Vermeule, Stanford University, and William Flesch, Brandeis University Maryland: Constructing Gender in Japanese Popular Cultureįaculty: Michele M. Grimes, University of North Carolina Wilmingtonįaculty: La TaSha Levy, University of Washington, and Nicole Burrowes, University of Texas at Austin Michigan: Feminist Philosophies of Space, Time, and Evolution: Untimely Politicsįaculty: MD Murtagh and Annu Dahiya, Duke UniversityĬornell I: Negative Capability in Art and Culture: Romanticism to the Presentįaculty: Justin Kim, Smith College and Deep Springs College, and Charles V. Scribner, University of Maryland, and Ethan Hutt, University of North Carolin a Here is a list of the seminar titles and faculty, from the very beginning to our online program in 2020.Ģ020 summer programs were held online due to the COVID pandemic.Ĭornell I: Storytelling Across Genre: Writing for Personal and Political Changeįaculty: Christine Vines and Kirsten Saracini, Cornell UniversityĬornell II: Humor, Comedy, and the Politics of Identityįaculty: Alpen Razi and Denise Isom, California Polytechnic State Universityįaculty: Campbell F. TASPs were taught at 15 different sites by several hundred different faculty, many of whom cite the experience as a teaching career highlight. Over the course of nearly 70 years, TASP transformed the lives of over 3,600 participants from around the world. After a year’s hiatus due to COVID and for reorganization, they and our Sophomore Seminars were superseded by the new Telluride Association Summer Seminars, to be premiered in 2022. Telluride Association Summer Programs (TASPs), Telluride’s pioneering summer program scholarship programs for high school juniors, ran from 1954 until 2020.
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