Harriet Elliott Keynote Event | The Power of Prose: Storytelling as the Ultimate Foundation
Part keynote lecture, part hip hop show: Jacoby Cochran and In the Beat of the Night help us tell better stories by sharing their own.
Part keynote lecture, part hip hop show: Jacoby Cochran and In the Beat of the Night help us tell better stories by sharing their own.
Please join us to learn more about our brand-new concentration, Videogaming and Esports Studies!
During our information sessions, we will talk about the major, how to add it, how to complete a double major, and more. We will be able to walk you through signing up and do initial advising so you can plan your course of study.
Please join us to learn more about our brand-new concentration, Videogaming and Esports Studies!
During our information sessions, we will talk about the major, how to add it, how to complete a double major, and more. We will be able to walk you through signing up and do initial advising so you can plan your course of study.
Jameela F. Dallis, a multidisciplinary writer, curator, art collector, and scholar based in Durham, NC, will give a reading from her first full-length poetry collection, “Encounters for the Living and the Dead” (River River Books, 2025). The event is free and open to the public and will be followed by a book signing.
The primary objective of this virtual conference series is to provide a forum for researchers from academia, industry, and laboratories world-wide to share results on all aspects of recent advances in partial differential equations. The overall goal of this conference series is to promote research in mathematical and computational analysis of differential equations. As a new feature in this conference series, we welcome undergraduate students doing research in differential equations to present their work.
The conference is dedicated to Professor Alfonso Castro in celebration of his 75th birthday and his outstanding contributions to Differential Equations.
Open to the public.
UNCG alums Jen Julian and Mackenzie Kozak will return to campus to give a special reading of fiction and poetry. Join us to celebrate homecoming and these alumni publications: Julian’s debut novel, Red Rabbit Ghost, and Kozak’s new collection of poems, no swaddle (winner of the Iowa Poetry Prize). A part of the Department of English’s 2025 Homecoming Celebration, the event will be preceded by a reception. It is free and open to the public.
“The Great Conversation Series” features some of humanity’s most challenging questions as topics. It is hosted by the UNCG Philosophy Department and is free and open to the public.
Join The Greensboro Review and local independent presses at a reading to celebrate the release of new collections by James Daniels (MFA at UNCG alum) and Hillsborough, NC poet Matt Poindexter. The reading is free and open to the public.
Join UNCG for this all-day event on the theme, “Better Food Futures,” featuring panels on the intersection of food and the humanities, food security, environmental justice, land stewardship and farming communities from the perspectives of local farmers, practitioners, film makers and faculty.
The College of Arts & Sciences’ Ashby Dialogues presents this lecture by Professor Zach Wrublewski of UNCG’s Philosophy Department. The 2025-26 Ashby Dialogues explores the theme, “Rethinking the Algorithm: AI and the Human Experience.”
Join the Greensboro literary community for an evening with Barbara Presnell, a lifelong Southerner who studied creative writing at UNCG and is now Senior Lecturer Emerita at UNC Charlotte. Presnell will read from her new memoir, Otherwise, I’m Fine, a daughter’s story of unresolved grief and a family’s hard-won healing. This event is free and open to the public; it will be followed by a book signing.
Dr. Hronek examines the nature of cyborg in fictional literature and media and ponders the questions of whether technology is portrayed as a liberator or another means of oppresion.