¾ÅÐãÖ±²¥

Salisbury University students on campus

Fulton School of Liberal Arts Public Humanities Program

The mission of the Fulton Public Humanities Program (FPHP) is to bring the arts and humanities to SU’s surrounding community and to foster dialogue. This includes local, regional, national, and global audiences.

We fund projects that promote an awareness of minority and marginalized groups including those represented by the Heritage Months (African American, Women’s, LGBTQ, Latinx, and Native American). FPHP supports global diversity efforts that highlight the peoples, populations, and cultures of SU’s continental Area Study regions (African, East Asian, European, Latin American, Middle Eastern, and South Asian).

In addition to diversity, FPHP encourages an expansive view of the humanities by funding interdisciplinary exchanges between the arts and sciences.

Events

Upcoming Events

September 26 Plain Paths & Dividing Lines: How Southeastern Travelers Challenged Colonial Authority in the Early Chesapeake

Location: Conway Hall 153, 7:00 pm

Event Details: Algonquian connections continued to define the watery Chesapeake landscape, even as Virginia and Maryland planters erected fences and forts, policed unfree laborers and Native neighbors, and dispatched land surveyors. Taylor (Virginia Tech University) discusses her 2023 book Plain Paths and Dividing Lines: Navigating Native Land and Water in the Seventeenth-Century Chesapeake.


 

October 8 Book Talk: The State’s Sexuality: Prostitution & Postcolonial Nation Building in South Korea

Location: Conway Hall 153, 6:00 pm

Event Details: Jeong-mi Park explores complex dynamics of women involved in prostitution in South Korea. Despite marginalization, these women have played a strategic role in postcolonial nation-building efforts. The South Korean state employed laws and regulations, excluding sex workers from citizenship while utilizing their labor for national security, development and the formation of a gender-specific citizenry.


 

November 6 Buddha on the Silver Screen

Location: Fulton Hall 111, 6:30 pm

Event Details: Buddhism has fascinated filmmakers and lay persons for a very long time. Sharon A. Suh (professor of theology and religious studies, Seattle University) discusses the various ways race, gender and Buddhism have been portrayed in Asia and the global West. Her presentation features clips from some of the most iconic films about Buddhism.


 

November 13 River Networks & Ancestral Pathways: The Cultural Heritage of Rivers in the Pocomoke Indian Nation’s Sphere of Influence

Location: Conway Hall 153, 7:00 pm

Event Details: Wicomico, Rockawalkin, Wighcocomoco, Pocomoke. Familiar local monikers have a complex history that members of the Pocomoke Indian Nation have been researching through colonial-era documents. This presentation takes you on a journey along the rivers, paths and bridges that composed the Pocomoke and other Algonquian groups’ ancestral landscapes, and still shape our familiar surroundings.


 

December 7 Latin American & Latinx Symposium

Location: Perdue Hall Atrium & Bennett Family Auditorium 9:00 am-2:00 pm

Event Details: The symposium features students’ research and creative projects on cultural expressions in different formats, including posters and pre-recorded and in-person presentations. The symposium fosters critical views on marginalization in the Spanish-speaking world in conversation with contemporary events

About the Program