
Symposium on the Tanner Lecture on Human Values by David Wengrow
10 a.m.
This event follows David Wengrow’s Tanner Lecture on Human Values from the previous day.
Lunch provided for registered attendees.
10–11:30 a.m. — Panel 1
- “Seeing Freedom Archaeologically”
Rosemary Joyce — Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley - “Community: An Andean History”
Rohan Chatterjee — Assistant Professor of History, University of Utah - “Personhood, Self-Realization, and Imaginaries of Freedom in the Oyo Empire”
Akinwumi Ogundiran — Professor of History, Cardiss Collins Professor of Arts and Sciences, Northwestern University
12–1:30 p.m. — Keynote
“The Elementary Forms of Human Freedom, Part II: A Nightmare on the Brain of the Living”
David Wengrow — Professor of Comparative Archeology, University College London
2–3:30 p.m. — Panel 2
- “More Than Freedom: What Freedom Meant to Enslaved Black Americans in Nineteenth Century America”
Eric Herschthal — Associate Professor of History, University of Utah - “Freedom, Liberation or Emancipation? A Reflective Query”
Anthony Bogues — Asa Messer Professor of Humanities and Critical Theory, Professor of Africana Studies and History of Art and Architecture, Director of the Ruth J. Simmons Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice, Brown University - “Practicing Feminist Freedom: Jane’s Anarchic Direct Action and Taking the Right to Abortion”
Ella Myers — Professor of Political Science and Gender Studies, University of Utah
About the Tanner Lectures on Human Values
Founded by Grace and Obert Tanner in the mid-1970s, the Tanner Lectures are dedicated to enriching the intellectual and moral life of humankind. Annual Tanner Lectures are delivered at nine universities: Stanford, Berkeley, Utah, Michigan, Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Oxford, and Cambridge. More information at tannerlectures.org.
For class visits or large group bookings, please contact us at tanner-humanities@utah.edu for special ticketing.
Views expressed at Tanner Humanities Center events do not reflect the official views of the Center or the University of Utah.