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25 January, Thursday, 4:00 p.m.
Anja Schwalen (Comparative Literature), "Mysticism, Reformation Thought and Female Subjectivity in Marguerite de Navarre and Aemilia Lanyer," Room 311 of the Glasscock Building.
15 February, Thursday, 4:00 p.m.
Christopher Garrett (English), "Divine Breathings: Meditational Prose in Seventeenth-Century England," Room 311 of the Glasscock Building.
8 March, Thursday, 4:00 p.m.
Tracey Hayes (History),"Strangers Amongst Us: German, Jewish and Polish Relations During German Occupation, 1915-1918," Room 311 of the Glasscock Building.
12 April, Thursday, 4:00 p.m.
Christopher Sparks (Anthropology), "Wrestling with Ssireum: Korean Traditional Sport Versus Globalization," Room 311 of the Glasscock Building.


13 September, Wednesday, 4:00 p.m.
Emily Hoeflinger (English), "Holy Space: Salvationist Female Open-Air Preachers as Feminist Prototype," Room 311 of the Glasscock Building.
6 October, Friday, 4:00 p.m.
Naho Maruyama (Recreation, Park, and Tourism Sciences), "Chinese American in China: Ethnicity and Belonging," Room 311 of the Glasscock Building.
27 October, Friday, 4:00 p.m.
Diane Rolnick (Hispanic Studies),"The Mode of Self-Expression in Dreaming in Cuban and Almost a Woman," Room 311 of the Glasscock Building.
9 November, Thursday, 4:00 p.m.
Masha Shukovic (Communication), "Hysterectomies and Gender Identity Among Serbian Women," Room 311 of the Glasscock Building.


9 February,
Miranda Green-Barteet (Department of English), "The Women, the Orangutan, and Dupin: Gender, Race and Reason in Poe's The Murders in the Rue Morgue."
23 March, David Wiens (Department of Philosophy), "Liberty and Capability."
13 April, Roger Reeves (Department of English), "Dual Citizenship: African-American Subjectivity in Julie Dash's Daughters of the Dust."


15 September,
J. Michael Jones (Department of Philosophy), "Science and Religion: An Historical Field Guide."
13 October,
Carol Simmons (Department of History), "School Desegregation in Bryan, Texas."
17 November, Chris Sparks (Department of Anthropology), "Inside, Outisde, Upside-Down: Understanding Social Networks in Context."
1 December, Sarah Peters (Department of English), "'Submitting to Another Way to Talk': Fantastical and Metaphorical Rape in Eudora Welty's The Golden Apples."


2 February,
Sonya Sawyer (Department of English), "Not Any Man but a Gentleman: Maria Edgeworth's Constructions of English/Irish Masculinity and Cultural Identity in Ennui."
3 March, Pearce Creasman (Department of Anthropology), "Forest Management Practices in Early America: 1500-1820."
21 March,
Jungsik Park (Department of English), "The Formation and Re-Emergence of the 'Conversation' Format in the Novels of Daniel Defoe and the later 'New Journalists.'"
21 April,
Helga Kocurek (Department of Philosophy), "The World is Messy."


15 September, Kevin C. Motl (Department of History), "The Politics of John Barleycorn: Businessmen and Brewers in Progressive-Era Texas."
21 October,
Ilan Mitchell-Smith (Department of English), "Between Mars and Venus: Gender as Balance in Later Medieval English Romances."
5 November,
Upali Nanda (Department of Architecture), "Sensthetics: From Disconnect to Dialogue in Design."
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