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UID:i6tlj54hkh527umkdlh0e2avqg@google.com
DTSTART:20121201T000000Z
DTEND:20121201T000000Z
DESCRIPTION:My introduction to the psyche of the soldier\, in a sense\, go
 es back to my father and my childhood. My dad was a WW II vet who never ta
 lked about "his" war\, though he carried his dogtags on his keychain for 6
 5 years. The war never left him\; he took it to the grave\; and he always 
 felt that his burden was private. I suspect I always felt that the burden 
 ought to be shared\, or at least\, that I ought to understand it better.\n
 \nThe chance came when I was appointed the first Distinguished Chair in Et
 hics at the U.S. Naval Academy in the mid-nineties. I had been an academic
  in ethics for most of my career\, focused on ethics and the emotions\, in
  ancient and modern philosophy. I also had a background and research train
 ing in psychoanalysis. For the first time in my life I became a civilian i
 n a military world\, and I began to understand better the secret world of 
 my dad. I started teaching and writing about the moral challenges of going
  to war and returning home\, and have been immersed in that research ever 
 since. The issues couldn't be more urgent for a nation now fighting wars o
 n two fronts for almost a decade.\n\nThe Untold War is my best effort at a
 llowing soldiers to open up their hearts and tell their stories. I have li
 stened to those stories with the ear of a philosopher and psychoanalyst\, 
 but also with the ear of a daughter\, who always felt that she needed to u
 nderstand more about what her father went through. And I have analyzed tho
 se stories in language that steps outside the academy-in terms my dad woul
 d have understood. I talk about the visible and invisible wounds of war\; 
 posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and resilience\; military suicide and
  its prevention\; military honor\, guilt\, and shame. Military families ne
 ed to know that we who do not have loved ones serving are doing our best t
 o understand and help those who do.
SUMMARY:The Sidore Lecture Series Presents: Nancy Sherman "The Untold War:
  The Moral Toll of War"
URL:http://www.keene.edu/news/events/detail/610/
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UID:event.1359573669144@keene.edu
DTSTART:20130204T230000Z
DTEND:20130205T010000Z
DESCRIPTION:Cherrie Moraga\nPlaywright\, Poet\, Scholar and Essayist\n\nCh
 erríe L. Moraga is a playwright\, poet\, and essayist whose plays and pub
 lications have received national recognition\, including most recently Yal
 e University’s James Brudner Prize for 2013. Other awards include: Natio
 nal Endowment for the Arts Playwrights’ Fellowship\, two Fund for New Am
 erican Plays Awards\, the Pen West Award for Drama\, the American Studies 
 Association Lifetime Achievement Award\, the National Association of Chica
 na and Chicano Studie...s Scholar Award\, the National Association of Lati
 no/ Arts and Culture Master Artist Award and more. In 2007\, she won the U
 nited States Artist Rockefeller Fellowship for Literature.\n\nFor more tha
 n fifteen years\, Moraga has served as Artist in Residence at Stanford in 
 the Department of Theater and Performance Studies\, sharing an appointment
  with the Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity & The Institute for Di
 versity in the Arts Programs. She is a founding & an active member of La R
 ed Xicana Indígena\, an advocacy network of Xicanas working in education\
 , the arts\, and international organizing. A queer mother and “abuelita\
 ,” she calls Oakland\, California\, home.\n\nSponsored by the Dr. Lila B
 . Murphy ’52 - Women and Leadership Lecture Series\, KSC Gender and Wome
 n's Studies Department and the Office of Diversity and Multiculturalism\n\
 n
SUMMARY:Cherrie Moraga at Keene State College
URL:http://www.keene.edu/news/events/detail/828/
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