Dark Side of The Moon
Saturday, April 19, 2025 8:00–9:00 PM
Description
Pink Floyd's legendary album returns, using all the capacities of the Museum's high-definition, full-dome video system. Fantastic sound and incredible images create an unforgettable experience. It's not just a laser show. I's a totally new digital revolution in sight and sound surrounding you, immersing you and losing you in the Dark Side of the Moon.This unique video experience is provided by Starlight Productions.
More from Academics
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Dive into the world of immersive video with this introduction to 180° and 360° filming. Learn how to use specialized lenses and cameras to create dynamic virtual reality content, and explore techniques for editing and sharing immersive media. Perfect for beginners looking to push their creative boundaries. - Apr 214:30 PMDigital War Speaker Series: Symbiotic Extremisms and Reactive RadicalizationAcademics | Alumni Hall, 111
Symbiotic Extremisms and Reactive Radicalization: The Algorithmic Combat Theater of Citizenship’s Transnational Crisis Scarcely three decades into the twenty-first century, techno-utopian discourses of “social media democratization” that accompanied 2011’s so-called “Arab Spring” now appear fundamentally bankrupt, replaced by anxieties about the proliferation of conspiracy theory, nation-state influence campaigns, and the spread of online “disinformation” that have accompanied the global rise of far-right populism, authoritarian ethno-nationalist movements, and the pervasive threat of transnational terrorism.From Narendra Modi’s BJP and China’s anti-Uigher crackdown, to the Western recruits of ISIS and internationalist Neo-Nazi fighters in Ukraine, nation-state actors and non-state armed groups alike exhibit an increasingly pervasive concern for communitarian-based (re)definitions of the citizen that challenge pluralistic conceptions of belonging. This contemporary geopolitical zeitgeist is often identified as “political polarization,” but how do such trends operate, mobilize, and spread?Taking as primary case study the paradoxically parallel objectives of so-called Islamic State and transnational Neo-Nazi accelerationists (each seeking “purified” territories of unitary identitarian affiliation), this talk examines the ways in which new media’s fear-based political economy enables symbiotic extremisms and reactive radicalization, embodying the contemporary geopolitical zeitgeist: transnational citizenship(s) in crisis.Dr. Amanda E. Rogers is a Fellow at the Century Foundation, where her research focuses on transnational political violence and non-state armed groups, and serves as a consultant to the U.S. Department of State and United Nations on the media and propaganda strategies of extremist groups, ranging from Neo-Nazi accelerationism to the so-called Islamic State. Her photojournalism, cultural commentary, and political analysis routinely appears in such forums as the Brookings Institution, Al-Jazeera, the New York Times, the Atlantic Council, The Intercept, CNN, and the BBC.This public lecture is part of the Peace and Conflict Studies program's 24-25 Digital War speaker series. - Apr 215:00 PMSchool-Wide Narcan TrainingAcademics | Ho Science Center, 101
Please join us for a school-wide Narcan training event led by EMTs from Madison County EMS, and Madison EMS. All students, faculty and staff are welcome to attend.For more information or details, contact: jmekhail@colgate.edu or psignorelli@colgate.edu.Scan the QR code to register. - Apr 22–23Crafting Futures: Feminist Embodiments of Care, Resistance, and Relation (Part 1)Academics | Center for Women's Studies, The Lounge at East Hall
Join our WGSS Seniors in presenting their capstone projects during part one of this two-week Brown Bag series.Today, we will hear from Rediet Shiferahu, Verenice Perez, Aryanna Rebolloso, and Isabella Gregory.We gather not just to witness research — but to think, feel, and imagine together. From explorations of Black love in education, queer silence, and single motherhood by choice to inquiries into language justice, feminist foodways, border crossings, and artistic resistance—these bold projects bring theory to life through embodied, justice-rooted inquiry.Come to listen, break bread, question, and dream alongside us! - Apr 22All dayUniversity Libraries: National Poetry MonthAcademics | Case-Geyer Library
National Poetry Month, launched by the Academy of American Poets in 1996, is an annual celebration in April that aims to highlight the importance of poetry and poets in American culture, encouraging people to read, write, and share poetry.The University Libraries, in collaboration with The Upstate Institute and the Adirondack Center for Writing, will be circulating a poetry machine throughout the Village of Hamilton in April.Pay attention the next time you’re at Case-Geyer, Flour & Salt, MOMs, or the Hamilton Public Library. You might encounter the ACW’s Poetry Machine.The Poetry Machine is an old capsule machine, the kind you might spend two quarters to get a bouncy ball, sticky hand, or small plastic alien from in the vestibule of a convenience store. With our machine, you can get your very own poem (for free—no quarters necessary).Inside the Poetry Machine are 10 different poems. Each one features a unique style of poetry, including haiku, cento, epistolary, list, ode, ekphrasis, prose poem, how-to, erasure, and cut-up.If you want to "check out" more poetry, visit the poetry display on the third floor of Case-Geyer.