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Other Opportunities for Students

From DePauw University, Greencastle, Indiana

CALL FOR ESSAYS AND CREATIVE WRITING PROJECTS
Undergraduate Ethics Symposium
DePauw University, Greencastle, Indiana
April 3-5, 2008

PURPOSE
During the 2007-2008 academic year, DePauw University inaugurates The Prindle Institute of Ethics, which fosters interdisciplinary reflection on moral issues, including questions of justice and public policy, character, duty, and responsibility. The Undergraduate Ethics Symposium is designed to encourage undergraduate scholarship and artistic work. This symposium is an outstanding opportunity for student scholars and artists to discuss their ethics-related work with leading scholar/artists in their fields and to participate in a significant discussion of ethical concerns. It is anticipated that the Institute will publish a Symposium volume, which, in addition to the presentations by the visiting scholars, will include student papers selected from works by the participants.

INVITATION
The Institute invites students to submit papers on topics that include, but are not limited to, issues about human rights, environmental ethics, media ethics, ethics of international relations, science research ethics, personal ethics, and ethics and religion. Students may write an argumentative essay or an analysis focused on an ethical question or subject; or they may wish to explore ethical themes that are addressed in plays, poetry, film, or fiction. In addition, students may wish to explore these themes through fiction, creative non-fiction, poetry or dramatic writings. The Institute welcomes works centered on ethics from all disciplines, including the humanities and social sciences, but also the natural sciences and arts.

SELECTION PROCESS AND CONFERENCE SCHEDULE
Consisting of DePauw University faculty members, the selection committee for the Undergraduate Ethics Symposium will identify up to twenty papers, whose authors will then be invited to the Institute for the three-day symposium, April 3-5, 2008. During the Symposium, these students will meet in seminars led by one of the distinguished visiting scholars or artists, who will not only present their work at the Symposium but also read the students' works and facilitate discussion about them. The students' travel (based upon $0.38 per mile for those traveling by car and up to $500 for airfare), lodging, and meals while on campus will be covered by the Institute.

KEYNOTE SPEAKER
John K. Roth, Frederick Distinguished Visiting Professor of Ethics, DePauw University, author of Ethics During and After the Holocaust: In the Shadow of Birkenau

VISITING SCHOLARS AND ARTIST

  1. Noah Lemos, College of William and Mary -- scholar
  2. Thomas Kasulis, The Ohio State University -- scholar
  3. Janet Neipris, New York University Tisch School of the Arts --creative writer

SUBMISSIONS
Submit works by February 1, 2008 to Martha Rainbolt, rainbolt@depauw.edu. (N.B. Place your name and affiliation on a separate page, so that the works may be read anonymously.) Please note that all works must be submitted electronically, so that they may be transmitted easily to the faculty readers and other students. Student essayists (both scholarly and creative non-fiction) and student fiction writers should submit work which does not exceed 3,500 words. Student poets should submit 5-10 poems; student playwrights should submit a ten-minute play; screenwriters should submit a ten-page screenplay. Students whose works are accepted for the Symposium will be notified by March 1, 2008. For further information, please contact Martha Rainbolt, Coordinator; Janet Prindle Institute for Ethics, 2961 W 225 S Co. Rd., DePauw University; Greencastle, IN 46135. You may also visit the Prindle Institute website for a conference schedule and other information.


Tentative Schedule for Undergraduate Ethics Symposium
April 3-5, 2008
DePauw University, Greencastle, Indiana

Students will submit works by February 1, 2008, and will be notified by March 1 whether or not they are invited to participate in the Symposium. Students will be sent the works of the other students in their seminar sometime in early March, shortly after selections are made.

Thursday afternoon Registration of students
Thursday evening Plenary #1: Keynote lecture by John Roth, Frederick, Distinguished Visiting Professor of Ethics, DePauw University, author of Ethics During and After the Holocaust: In the Shadow of Birkenau.

Friday morning Divide into three seminar sections; two facilitated by scholars, one by a creative writer.
First Seminar Session: Discussion of half of the works; students will not present their own work, but it will be commented upon first by one of the other students in the group, then the student writer will respond. All students will have comments for each work in their seminar (approximately 7 students per seminar).
Friday lunch Plenary #2: lecture by visiting scholar
Friday afternoon Second Seminar Session: Discussion of remaining works
Friday dinner Plenary #3: reading or presentation by visiting creative writer

Saturday morning Plenary #4: Discussion of themes, questions, and concerns raised by the students' works at the Friday sessions, led by seminar leaders.
Saturday lunch Plenary #5: lecture by visiting scholar



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Last updated: 11 October 2007
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