• Judaic and Near Eastern Studies Lecture Series

    Tyrrell Hall 2930 East 6th Street, Tulsa, OK, United States

    Talk by distinguished Visiting Professor Dr. Danielle Gurevitch titled: Women without Guilt, Men without Shame: Defining Cultural Marital Distrust in the Jewish Tale ‘the Rabbi’s whose Wife turned him into […]

    Free
  • HCAR Works-in-Progress Seminar: Zachary Qualls & Nkem Ike

    Helmerich Center for American Research 1400 N Gilcrease Museum Rd, Tulsa, OK, United States

    Project: "Transformative Cultural Materiality: Archaeologies of Displacement, Persistent Lifeways, & Identity" Presenters: Dr. Zachary Qualls (Gilcrease Museum) & Dr. Nkem Ike (University of Toronto) Join us for a roundtable conversation […]

  • History of Antisemitism

    Tyrrell Hall 2930 East 6th Street, Tulsa, OK, United States

    Lecture in the Judiac and Near Eastern Studies Series by Phil Goldfarb

    Free
  • Faces of the Mother Road

    101 Archer 101 E. Archer St., Tulsa, OK, United States

    In partnership with the Route 66 Alliance, and renowned author/historian Michael Wallis, "Faces of the Mother Road: The Portraits of S.J. Tyler," features dozens of photographs taken between 1913 and […]

    Free
  • A Cultural History of Phobia: Don James McLaughlin and Rachel Walker Discuss Popular Science in Early America

    101 Archer 101 E. Archer St., Tulsa, OK, United States

    Professor McLaughlin and Professor Walker wrote the dissertations that would later become books on the topic of popular science in early America as office neighbors in Philadelphia in 2015. They quickly became close friends and incisive readers of each other’s work. Professor Walker’s book, "Beauty and the Brain: The Science of Human Nature in Early […]

    Free
  • Crusader Myths and Archaeology in the Middle East

    101 Archer 101 E. Archer St., Tulsa, OK, United States

    World War I opened the door for a French occupation the Middle East, including territory once ruled by medieval Frankish Crusaders, and for the modern-day occupiers, Crusader myths became a propaganda tool. French archaeologists, architects, prime ministers and tourism magnates flocked to the Middle East from 1918 to restore Crusader castles left over from the […]

    Free