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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:The Donald W. Meinig Undergraduate Lecture honors the pivotal g
 eographical work of Maxwell Professor Emeritus Donald W. Meinig\, a member
  of the Syracuse University Department of Geography from 1959 until his re
 tirement in 2005.&amp\;#160\; As the featured speaker\, Dr. Sallie Marston
 \, Professor of Geography and Regional Development at&amp\;#160\;the Unive
 rsity of Arizona\, will discuss\, &amp\;quot\;Imagine the Impossible: Scie
 nce\, Art\, Transversality and the Creation of Creative Subjects.&amp\;quo
 t\;&amp\;#160\; Professor Marston&amp\;#39\;s work is located at the inter
 section of socio-spatial theory and politics.&amp\;#160\; She is particula
 rly interested in how space\, or sites\, are bound up in and shape the pro
 duction of bodies\, practices and discourses.
DTEND:20150407T223000Z
DTSTAMP:20260514T083711Z
DTSTART:20150407T211500Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Geography Department presents: Sallie Marston
UID:RFCALITEM639143302319044729
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p></p><p></p><p></p><p>The Donald W. Meinig U
 ndergraduate Lecture honors the pivotal geographical work of Maxwell Profe
 ssor Emeritus Donald W. Meinig\, a member of the Syracuse University Depar
 tment of Geography from 1959 until his retirement in 2005.&amp\;#160\; As 
 the featured speaker\, Dr. Sallie Marston\, Professor of Geography and Reg
 ional Development at&amp\;#160\;the University of Arizona\, will discuss\,
  &amp\;quot\;Imagine the Impossible: Science\, Art\, Transversality and th
 e Creation of Creative Subjects.&amp\;quot\;&amp\;#160\; Professor Marston
 &amp\;#39\;s work is located at the intersection of socio-spatial theory a
 nd politics.&amp\;#160\; She is particularly interested in how space\, or 
 sites\, are bound up in and shape the production of bodies\, practices and
  discourses.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p>
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