Canadian Punjabis expect for sons to ensure care in old age; however, how do sons and daughters understand and experience elder parent/parent-in-law care? This webinar illustrates the involvement of daughters in elder care, but also how sons may play a role in parents coping with their marginalized status in Canada.
Guest Speaker: Ashna Jassi, PhD Candidate, Department of Psychology, University of Guelph
Thursday, March 11th, 2021 8:30 AM to Friday, March 12th, 2021 2:00 PM
The two-day interdisciplinary virtual conference focuses on the role of cinema, media and digital technologies in fostering women’s empowerment. The aim of the conference is to understand how new voices of different genders are interrogating traditional roles and stereotypes, attitudes, and beliefs. The event will be particularly interested in women working behind the camera and grappling with the aesthetics and the commerce of filmmaking. The conference will take place on 11 & 12 March 2021, 7:00p.m.-12:30a.m. IST/ 8:30a.m.-2:00p.m. EST.
A growing number of filmmakers who attempt ‘bold’ or unconventional themes, are looking at international film festivals as suitable avenues to reach a larger audience. This webinar explores the socio-cultural reasons for this phenomenon.
Guest Speaker: Aysha Iqbal, Professor, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, IIT Madras
The State of the Cities Report: India, "to be released in March 2021" will bring together empirical findings on the complex and historic nature of the country's urban transition. The report focuses on the demographic, economic and infrastructural characteristics of India's urbanization and aggregates data at the state level, with a view to addressing a key question: how urban is contemporary India?
The event bring together several researchers from India, North America and Europe to discuss the Report's findings.
The talk will explore the ways in which interactive fiction and gaming can be utilized to explore colonial legacies, break down barriers, and delve into individual identity, moving towards reconciliation. There will be a particular focus on how interactive fiction can study colonial power structures, as a way of contemporary political protest.
SPEAKER: Dhruv Jani, Studio Oleomingus