The largest and oldest college at Binghamton University, Harpur College offers an array of innovative, dynamic and forward-thinking educational and research programs that span the visual and performing arts, humanities, natural and social sciences.
Harpur College at Binghamton University
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The paper explores why the Situationist International has been excluded from undergraduate pedagogy and argues for its inclusion in art history curricula.
STANDING OVATION 👏 The revival of Death of a Salesman featuring junior Jake Termine won BIG at the Tony Awards, receiving six awards, including Best Revival of a Play!
Visiting Associate Professor of Mathematics Ryan McCulloch had his article “Covering by centralizers” published by the journal Monatshefte für Mathematik. Great work!
Congratulations to art history doctoral student Emily Owens, who presented her paper "These Silly Antics: Radical Pedagogy and the Situationist International" on Feb. 21. Her presentation was part of the panel "CTRL + ALT + RESIST."
Congratulations to art history doctoral student Eunha Chang, who published the essay "To Inscribe in the Ruins: Mimicry and Malware in the Work of TJ Shin and Shu Lea Cheang" in Contemporary Lynx. The essay appears in "Mindscapes #4: Ruins," a special issue of the journal.
Kudos! Art & Design lecturer Alex McQuilkin had an exhibition "What a Wonderful World: An Audiovisual Poem,” curated by Udo Kittelmann at Julia Stoschek Foundation’s Variety Arts Theater in Los Angeles from Feb. 6 through March 20.
Associate Professor of Art History Jeffrey Kirkwood spoke at The Meaning of AI symposium at the University of Chicago on Feb. 27. The workshop brought together leading thinkers and writers from philosophy, media studies, and literature to answer the question: what does AI mean? tinyurl.com/mrj5v2c9
Did you miss this story? The achievements of Binghamton’s doctoral candidates were highlighted during the University’s 2026 Graduate Student Excellence Awards ceremony and reception, held March 26 in the University Union. Learn more about our amazing doctoral students: tinyurl.com/6knkryy3
Binghamton University Distinguished Professor of Education and History Adam Laats places children at the center of his ‘new’ history of American public schools. Learn more: bit.ly/4sBNJC3
Basic income’s appeal today has roots in 18th-century England, and is a way to compensate people for a common good taken for private gain, Research Assistant Professor of the Humanities Will Glovinsky explains in The Conversation US. Read here: tinyurl.com/4bwdat39