communication Archives - Clement and Linda McGillicuddy Humanities Center /mhc/tag/communication/ University of Maine Thu, 07 Oct 2021 17:12:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.5 Speaking to Citizens, Connecting with Audiences /mhc/event/speaking-to-citizens/ /mhc/event/speaking-to-citizens/#respond Tue, 09 Nov 2021 21:00:00 +0000 /mhc/?post_type=tribe_events&p=7042 How might politicians, pundits, journalists, scholars, and other social and cultural leaders best connect with the audiences they need to address?Ìý As part of its 2021-2022 Annual Symposium, the McGillicuddy […]

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How might politicians, pundits, journalists, scholars, and other social and cultural leaders best connect with the audiences they need to address?Ìý As part of its 2021-2022 Annual Symposium, the McGillicuddy Humanities Center is pleased to sponsor a panel exploring this question and the issues it raises.Ìý Bringing together a professional political communicator, a Maine-based journalist, and a professor of political philosophy, the panel will describe how skills learned from the humanities – such as how to conduct interviews and answer questions, how to speak and write clearly, and how to engage audiences in democratic processes – play a vital role in their work.

²Ñ´Ç»å±ð°ù²¹³Ù´Ç°ù:ÌýRobert A. Ballingall, ÌýAssistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Maine.ÌýProfessor Ballingall’s research interests lieÌýin classical political philosophy and its fraught relationship to modern – especially liberal democratic – political thought.Ìý Before coming to 91¸£Àû, Professor Ballingall was Postdoctoral Fellow in the Program on Constitutional Government at Harvard and Allan Bloom Memorial Postdoctoral Fellow for Research in Classical Political Thought at the University of Toronto, where he also took his PhD.Ìý Professor Ballingall’s new book,ÌýThe Reverent City: Plato’s Laws and the Politics of Ethical Authority, is under contract to the University of Pennsylvania Press.

±Ê²¹²Ô±ð±ô¾±²õ³Ù:ÌýVictoria Bonney, Director of Communications for Congresswoman Chellie Pingree (D-Maine).Ìý In 2017, Victoria Bonney was namedÌý.Ìý Before that, Bonney spent more than a decade of service as a senior spokeswoman and communications strategist for government agencies, advocacy organizations, and political campaigns. She served as Communications Manager for Planned Parenthood’s New Hampshire Action Fund, and previously oversaw the United States Department of Health and Human Services’ outreach and public education strategy throughout New England during implementation of the Affordable Care Act.

Panelist:is a New York Times bestselling historian, a Polk-Award winning journalist, and the author of six books.Ìý He is a contributing editor at Politico and the State and National Affairs Writer at theÌýPortland Press HeraldÌýandÌýMaine Sunday Telegram, where he received a 2012 George Polk Award and was a finalist for the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting. A longtime foreign correspondent ofÌýThe Christian Science Monitor, The San Francisco Chronicle, andÌýThe Chronicle of Higher Education, he has reported from more than fifty foreign countries and seven continents. Born in Waterville, he’s a graduate of Mt. Abram High School, Tufts University, and the University of Chicago, and a past Pew Fellow in International Journalism at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies.His books are interdisciplinary in nature, informed by his liberal arts education, and include:ÌýOcean’s EndÌý(on the environmental crisis in the world’s oceans),ÌýThe Republic of PiratesÌý(on Blackbeard’s notorious pirate gang);ÌýThe Lobster CoastÌý(a cultural history of coastal Maine); and three books on the nature of the United States and the deep background to the existential crises it faces:ÌýAmerican Nations, American Character, and, most recently,ÌýUnion: The Struggle to Forge the Story of United States Nationhood.

This panel is part of the McGillicuddy Humanities Center’s 2021-2022 Annual Symposium: “Humanities: Impact in Real Life”

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/mhc/event/speaking-to-citizens/feed/ 0 November 9, 2021 @ 4:00 pm November 9, 2021 @ 5:00 pm Arthur St. John Hill Auditorium
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DH Pop In: Using Canva to Market Your Event or Research /mhc/event/dh-pop-in-canva/ /mhc/event/dh-pop-in-canva/#respond Fri, 22 Jan 2021 16:00:00 +0000 /mhc/?post_type=tribe_events&p=6676

The McGillicuddy Humanities Center’s next DH Pop In event will be Friday, January 22, at 11AM. The MHC’s Humanities Specialist Karen Sieber will show participants how to use a free, […]

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The McGillicuddy Humanities Center’s next DH Pop In event will be Friday, January 22, at 11AM. The MHC’s Humanities Specialist Karen Sieber will show participants how to use a free, easy-to-use program called Canva to design event flyers, social media posts, brochures, powerpoints, resumes and more. Email mhc@maine.edu for the link to join.Ìý No digital skills or design aesthetic needed.

While not a digital humanities tool per se, as humanities events, outreach, and employment move to a virtual format, learning design skills using programs like Canva will allow participants to better promote their events and research and engage with the public.

This event is part of an ongoing “DH PopIn” series which introduces students and faculty to easy-to-use tools and methods in the digital realm that help explore and share the humanities in new and exciting ways. The series will also feature virtual chats with noted digital humanities practitioners from across the country to discuss the process building a variety of different projects, from GIS mapping to textual analysis.

 

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/mhc/event/dh-pop-in-canva/feed/ 0 January 22, 2021 @ 11:00 am January 22, 2021 @ 11:30 am
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Telling the Story of Climate Change /mhc/event/telling-the-story-of-climate-change/ /mhc/event/telling-the-story-of-climate-change/#respond Wed, 18 Nov 2020 00:30:00 +0000 /mhc/?post_type=tribe_events&p=6569

This event, part of the MHC’s 2020-2021 Symposium on “The Story of Climate Change”ÌýbringsÌýtogetherÌýpeopleÌýfromÌýdifferentÌýprofessionalÌýfieldsÌýtaskedÌýwith communicatingÌýthe impact of climate change to the public. The panel (which will be remote, via Zoom) […]

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This event, part of the MHC’s 2020-2021 Symposium on “The Story of Climate Change”ÌýbringsÌýtogetherÌýpeopleÌýfromÌýdifferentÌýprofessionalÌýfieldsÌýtaskedÌýwith communicatingÌýthe impact of climate change to the public. The panel (which will be remote, ) features a veteran reporter, scientists working with Maine’s Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife (DIFW), and is moderated by Dr. Katherine Glover from the University of Maine’s Climate Change Institute.Ìý Panelists will discuss best practices for telling the story of climate change, and for helping theÌýpublicÌýunderstand environmental transformation on both a local and global scale.

Panelists:

is a veteran Bangor Daily News reporter who writes about how the Atlantic Ocean and the state’s iconic coastline help to shape the lives of coastal Maine residents and visitors.ÌýÌýBased , he writes about fisheries, marine-related topics, and covers eastern coastal Maine communities.

Dr. Amanda Cross is a wildlife biologist with the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife and a member of .ÌýÌýShe studies, teaches, and conducts public outreach about vernal pool ecology across Maine.

is aÌýMoose Biologist for the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife.ÌýÌýIn 2019, Kantar was awardedÌýat the 53rd North American Moose Conference held in Carrabassett Valley, Maine.

Moderator

is a Research Associate at the University of Maine’s Climate Change Institute. Specializing in how interactions between hydroclimate, vegetation, and wildfire produce landscape change, and the sustainableÌýÌýmanagement of public lands, Dr. Glover will be teaching WGS 301/501: Women and Climate Change, in the spring, 2021 semester.

The panel will run 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., and it will be recorded.
Join via Zoom at:Ìý

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/mhc/event/telling-the-story-of-climate-change/feed/ 0 November 17, 2020 @ 7:30 pm November 17, 2020 @ 8:30 pm
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