Skip to main content.
  • Faculty + Staff
  • Alumni/ae
  • Families
  • Students
Bard
  • Bard
  • Academics sub-menuAcademics
    • Academics
      • Programs and Divisions
      • Structure of the Curriculum
      • Courses
      • Requirements
      • Academic Calendar
      • Faculty
      • College Catalogue
      • Bard Abroad
      • Libraries
      • Dual-Degree Programs
      • Bard Conservatory of Music
      • Other Study Opportunities
      • Graduate Programs
      • Early Colleges
  • Admission sub-menuAdmission
    • Applying
      • Apply Now
      • Financial Aid
      • Tuition + Payment
      • Campus Tours
      • Meet Our Students + Alumni/ae
      • For Families / Para Familias
      • Join Our Mailing List
      • Contact Us
      • Link to Instagram @bardadmission
  • Campus Life sub-menuCampus Life
    • Living on Campus
      • Housing + Dining
      • Campus Resources
      • Get Involved on Campus
      • Visiting + Transportation
      • Athletics + Recreation
      • Montgomery Place Campus
      • Current Students
      • New Students
  • Civic Engagement sub-menuCivic Engagement
    • Bard CCE The Center for Civic Engagement (CCE) at Bard College embodies the fundamental belief that education and civil society are inextricably linked.

      Take action.
      Make an impact.

      • Get Involved
      • Engaged Learning
      • Student Leadership
      • Grow Your Network
      • About CCE
      • Our Partners
  • Newsroom sub-menuNews + Events
    • News + Events
      • Newsroom
      • Events Calendar
      • Press Releases
      • Office of Communications
    • Special Events
      • Commencement + Reunion
      • Fisher Center + SummerScape
      • Family and Alumni/ae Weekend
      • Athletic Events
    • Join the Conversation
      • Link to Facebook @bardcollegeny  Link to Twitter/X @bardcollege   Link to Instagram @bardcollege  Link to Threads @bardcollege  Link to YouTube @bardcollege

  • About Bard sub-menuAbout Bard
    • About Bard College
      • Bard History
      • Campus Tours
      • Employment
      • Visiting Bard
      • Support Bard
      • Inclusive Excellence
      • Sustainability
      • Title IX and Nondiscrimination
      • Board of Trustees
      • Bard Abroad
      • Open Society University Network
      • The Bard Network
  • Give
  • Search
Literature Menu
  • Curriculum + Course of Study
  • Community + Resources
    • Faculty
    • Staff
    • Students
  • Mission + Aims
  • News + Events
  • Home

Upcoming Events

There are no events to display.

Archive of Past Events

2025
  
2024
  
2023
  
2022
  
2021
  
2020
  
2019
  
2018
  
2017
  
2016
  
2015
  
2014
  
2013
  
2012
  
2009
  
2008


2022

Tuesday, December 6, 2022
Rome’s Migration Machine: Ships, Roads and Ancient Novels (and Religions)
Tim Whitmarsh, University of Cambridge
Reem-Kayden Center Laszlo Z. Bito '60 Auditorium  5:30 pm – 7:00 pm EST/GMT-5
Narratives take place in space and time. This talk considers how the revolutions in road networking in the time of the Emperor Augustus had decisive effects on the development of two new literary forms: one is the novel, and the other will be revealed on the day.


  Monday, December 5, 2022
Latin Table
Joins us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
Kline, College Room  1:00 pm – 2:00 pm EST/GMT-5
Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.


Wednesday, November 30, 2022
Talking Herodotus: Celebration of Carolyn Dewald's Herodotus Book 1
Carolyn Dewald (Bard) with James Romm (Bard) and Rachel Friedman (Vassar)
Hegeman 204A  6:00 pm – 7:30 pm EST/GMT-5
There are few authors more central to Greek history than Herodotus, whose nine books of Histories (literally, Investigations) set out not only to describe the conflict between Greece and the Persian empire but also to discover its origins. And there are few scholars whose work has been more central to our understanding of Herodotus than Carolyn Dewald, whose commentary on Book 1 of the Histories (co-authored with Rosaria Munson) has just been published. Professor Dewald has been working on this commentary since she arrived at Bard (2003-4) and is delighted to have finally finished it. She still finds him (aka the "Father of History") amazing and will be equally delighted to discuss how remarkable Herodotus is with all of you who have time to come and take part in the conversation. Professor Dewald will be joined by James Romm of Bard’s Classical Studies Program and Rachel Friedman of Vassar.


  Monday, November 28, 2022
Latin Table
Joins us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
Kline, College Room  1:00 pm – 2:00 pm EST/GMT-5
Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.


  Monday, November 21, 2022
Latin Table
Joins us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
Kline, College Room  1:00 pm – 2:00 pm EST/GMT-5
Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.


  Monday, November 14, 2022
Latin Table
Joins us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
Kline, College Room  1:00 pm – 2:00 pm EST/GMT-5
Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.


  Monday, November 7, 2022
Latin Table
Joins us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
Kline, College Room  1:00 pm – 2:00 pm EST/GMT-5
Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.


  Monday, October 31, 2022
Latin Table
Joins us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
Kline, College Room  1:00 pm – 2:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.


Friday, October 28, 2022
Plato: Maths, Music, and Cosmology
Andrew Gregory, University College London
Hegeman 204  12:00 pm – 1:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
Plato's use of number in his music theory, theory of matter, and cosmology raises some interesting questions in metaphysics and philosophy of science. What is the relation between mathematics, physics, and the world? Is there a beauty and simplicity to some mathematics and does that capture the nature of the world? What is the distinction (historical, philosophical) between mathematical physics and numerology? This paper looks at the nature and influence of Plato's views.


  Monday, October 24, 2022
Latin Table
Joins us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
Kline, College Room  1:00 pm – 2:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.


Wednesday, October 19, 2022
The Reluctant Saint and the Total Ass: On Apuleius, Augustine, and Translation with Sarah Ruden
Sarah Ruden, University of Pennsylvania
Olin Humanities, Room 102  5:15 pm – 6:45 pm EDT/GMT-4
Celebrated and award-winning translator of ancient literature, Sarah Ruden, discusses her work on two authors from Roman North Africa: the "novelist" Apuleius and the "autobiographer" St. Augustine. The talk explores how the art of translation illuminates surprising overlap between apparently disparate texts: one farcical and irreverent, the other pious and philosophical.


Tuesday, October 18, 2022
A Talk with Gwenda-lin Grewal
Campus Center, Weis Cinema  6:00 pm – 7:30 pm EDT/GMT-4
On Tuesday, October 18 at 6 pm in Weis Cinema, Gwenda-lin Grewal will give a talk on her book Fashion / Sense.

Fashion / Sense seeks to explode fashion, and with it, the stigma in philosophy against fashion’s superficiality. Using primarily ancient Greek texts, alongside allusions to fashion and pop culture, Grewal examines the rift between fashion and philosophy, and challenges the claim that fashion is modern. Fashion’s quarrel with philosophy may be as ancient as that infamous quarrel between philosophy and poetry. And the quest for fashion’s origins—for a neutrally-outfitted self, stripped of the self-awareness that comes with thinking—prompts deeper questions about human agency and time. In the silhouettes of clothes and words, fashion emerges as perhaps philosophy’s most underestimated doppelgänger.

Introduced by writer and Bard College faculty member Benjamin Hale, and followed by a Q&A.

Gwenda-lin Grewal is currently the Onassis Lecturer in Ancient Greek Thought and Language at the New School for Social Research. She is the author of Fashion | Sense: On Philosophy and Fashion (Bloomsbury, 2022), Thinking of Death in Plato’s Euthydemus: A Close Reading and New Translation (Oxford University Press, 2022), an edited volume of essays on “(Mis)quotations in Plato” (Center for Hellenic Studies, 2022), and English translations of Plato’s Phaedo (Center for Hellenic Studies, 2018) and Plato’s Cratylus (New Alexandria, forthcoming). Her awards include the Blegen Research Fellowship (Vassar College) and an Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship (Yale University).

Benjamin Hale is the author of the novel The Evolution of Bruno Littlemore (Twelve, 2011) and the collection The Fat Artist and Other Stories (Simon & Schuster, 2016).  He has received the Bard Fiction Prize, a Michener-Copernicus Award, and nominations for the Dylan Thomas Prize and the New York Public Library's Young Lions Fiction Award. His writing has appeared, among other places, in Conjunctions, Harper's Magazine, the Paris Review, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and has been anthologized in Best American Science and Nature Writing.


  Monday, October 17, 2022
Latin Table
Joins us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
Kline, College Room  1:00 pm – 2:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.


  Monday, October 10, 2022
Latin Table
Joins us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
Kline, College Room  1:00 pm – 2:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.


  Monday, October 3, 2022
Latin Table
Joins us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
Kline, College Room  1:00 pm – 2:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.


  Monday, September 26, 2022
Latin Table
Joins us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
Kline, College Room  1:00 pm – 2:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.


  Monday, September 19, 2022
Latin Table
Joins us weekly. Stay for as long as you like.
Kline, College Room  1:00 pm – 2:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
Language tables are held at Kline and entail about an hour of casual discussion during meal times, where students interested in a language get to know each other and practice colloquial conversations. They are held by the tutor of the language, and although sometimes professors join the table, it is a very low-stakes and fun setting to immerse yourself in a language, its culture and the foreign language community at Bard.


  Wednesday, April 20, 2022
Imprints of Ancient Dance
A Conversation
11:50 am – 1:10 pm EDT/GMT-4
Dance is one of the oldest known art forms but also one of the most evanescent. How do we study dance in premodern cultures like ancient Greece and Rome? What questions can we ask, what sources are available to us, and what methodologies do we employ? How can scholars and practitioners create a more fruitful and creative dialogue between past and present in Dance Studies?

Please join Lauren Curtis (Bard College) and Karin Schlapbach (University of Fribourg), two members of the international research project IDA (Imprints of Ancient Dance / Improntas de danza antigua) to discuss their work in a roundtable conversation hosted by the Dance Program and Classical Studies Program.



Bard College
30 Campus Road, PO Box 5000
Annandale-on-Hudson, New York 12504-5000
Phone: 845-758-6822
Admission Email: [email protected]
Information For
Prospective Students
Current Employees
Alumni/ae 
Families
©2025 Bard College
Quick Links
Employment
Travel to Bard
Site Search
Support Bard
Bard IT Policies + Security
Bard has a long history of creating inclusive environments for all races, creeds, ethnicities, and genders. We will continue to monitor and adhere to all Federal and New York State laws and guidance.
Like us on Facebook
Follow Us on Instagram
Threads
Bluesky
YouTube