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Anomalous Textualities: A showroom of models 

<p><em>Anomalous Textualities</em> re-imagines the Studio Theater as a traversable showroom. Inhabited by seven distinct works, the margins of language and meaning are re-mediated, embodied, and deconstructed through human-machine (mis)translations. In this performance-installation, spatial, temporal, and linguistic boundaries are blurred, giving way to slippages across models, bodies, and forms. Within this anomalous showroom, language models drive mechanical systems, glitching oracles, and choreographic prompts.

Virtual Session for Prospective Students

<p>Want to learn more about the dance major or minor? Do you love taking dance classes but don't know what majoring/minoring in dance would look like? Do you want to major in dance, but think double-majoring isn't possible? Do you want to figure out ways to go deeper into your study of dance, but aren't sure that majoring is right for you?</p><p>Come to the virtual info session on Thursday, April 9th, 11am -12pm with Dance Advisor Davianna Griffin over Zoom.

Coffee and Concepts: Women and Performance

<p dir="ltr"><strong>Coffee and Concepts: Women and Performance</strong></p><p><strong>Friday, January 9, 2026</strong><br><strong>3:30–5:00 PM</strong><br><strong>Hutchinson Hall, Room 154</strong><br>Free + Open to the Public</p><p> </p><p><span><strong>“Good conversation is just as stimulating as black coffee, and just as hard to sleep after,”</strong> says a not-too-ancient proverb.</span></p>

THEME Lecture Series: Nicholas Mathew (UC Berkeley)

<p>Nicholas Mathew, professor of music at the University of California, Berkeley, presents "The Post-humanization of Sound (between Paris and California," in the first presentation of the 2025-26 THEME lecture Series.</p><hr><h2>Abstract</h2><p>This talk begins in 1972, at the intermission of a concert in Berkeley, California, when the composer and astrologer Dane Rudhyar -- a veteran of twenties theosophical experimentation and sixties counterculture -- took to the stage and delivered a wide-ranging lecture entitled "The Transforming Power

THEME Lecture Series: Ana Alonso Minutti (University of New Mexico)

<p>Ana Alonso Minutti, associate professor of musicology and ethnomusicology at the University of New Mexico, is featured speaker in this installment of the 2025-26 THEME lecture Series.</p><hr><h2>Biography</h2><p>Ana Alonso-Minutti (she/hers) is an associate professor of music, research associate of the Southwest Hispanic Research Institute, and faculty affiliate of the Latin American and Iberian Institute and the Feminist Research Institute at the University of New Mexico.

THEME Lecture Series: William Dougherty (University of Washington)

<p>William Dougherty, assistant professor of composition at the University of Washington, is featured speaker in this installment of the 2025-26 THEME lecture Series.</p><hr><h2>Biography</h2><p><span class="C9DxTc ">William Dougherty is an American composer, sound artist, educator, and writer who joined the University of Washington faculty in January 2025.

THEME Lecture Series: Lauren Kapalka Richerme (Indiana University)

<p>Lauren Kapalka Richerme, professor of music education at Indiana University, is featured speaker in this installment of the 2025-26 THEME lecture Series.</p><hr><h2>Biography</h2><p>Lauren Kapalka Richerme is professor of music in music education at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music, where she teaches undergraduate and graduate courses on philosophy, sociology, and instrumental methods.

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