Upcoming Events
![Graduate Student Session with Mark Simpson-Vos, Obermann Editor-in-Residence promotional image](/sites/obermann.uiowa.edu/files/styles/square__1024_x_1024/public/externals/1/5/152806079cc4e67105762550d6d6f818.jpg?itok=Wm69Shf8)
Graduate Student Session with Mark Simpson-Vos, Obermann Editor-in-Residence
Thursday, April 17, 2025 10:00am to 11:00am
This interactive talk for PhD and MFA students in the writing disciplines will outline the publishing process for first books. The session will guide graduate students through the steps of the academic publishing process, with a focus on demystifying the journey from dissertation/thesis to manuscript to published book. Key topics will include identifying the right academic publisher, understanding peer review, negotiating contracts, and building a strong proposal. Led by Mark Simpson-Vos, Senior...
!["Beyond Crisis: Restoring the Creative Partnership between Authors and Publishers" - Lecture by Mark Simpson-Vos promotional image](/sites/obermann.uiowa.edu/files/styles/square__1024_x_1024/public/externals/1/5/152806079cc4e67105762550d6d6f818.jpg?itok=Wm69Shf8)
"Beyond Crisis: Restoring the Creative Partnership between Authors and Publishers" - Lecture by Mark Simpson-Vos
Thursday, April 17, 2025 3:30pm to 4:30pm
At this public lecture, Mark Simpson-Vos — Senior Executive Editor at University of North Carolina Press — will discuss the way commentators have since the 1970s routinely trotted out the idea that scholarly publishing is in crisis, and how the stance of publishers in particular has been to shrug off such ideas. In this moment, however, it is impossible to ignore the deep strains within the scholarly publishing ecosystem, amidst increasingly turbulent times for American higher education. Lament...
![Faculty Book Proposal Workshop with Mark Simpson-Vos promotional image](/sites/obermann.uiowa.edu/files/styles/square__1024_x_1024/public/externals/1/5/152806079cc4e67105762550d6d6f818.jpg?itok=Wm69Shf8)
Faculty Book Proposal Workshop with Mark Simpson-Vos
Friday, April 18, 2025 9:00am to 12:00pm
For this workshop, 4–5 UI faculty members will submit book proposal drafts for a collaborative feedback session led by Mark Simpson-Vos, Senior Executive Editor at University of North Carolina Press.
The session is designed to help authors write a compelling book proposal, with a focus on crafting a strong pitch, identifying target audiences, and outlining the project’s structure. The workshop’s goal is for participants to walk away with a strong and cohesive book proposal, increasing their...
![Wide Lens: LISTENING promotional image](/sites/obermann.uiowa.edu/files/styles/square__1024_x_1024/public/externals/1/a/1abd3e2f162f8b845845aa49163e961e.png?itok=d8yUQ3cy)
Wide Lens: LISTENING
Thursday, May 8, 2025 5:30pm
In a world full of noise, we often try listening to something: conversations with colleagues and family, music in our headphones, videos blasting from our smartphones. We hear all these things daily, but what does it mean to truly listen? In what sense do devices also listen to us? What is the role of silence in listening? How has listening changed over time? Can political tensions be solved through “listening”? How is listening both an art and a science? This Wide Lens event brings together...
Pagination
Spacer
Upcoming Application Deadlines
Upcoming Application Deadlines
News
![](/sites/obermann.uiowa.edu/files/styles/square__1024_x_1024/public/2021-06/Cahokia_monks_mound_McAdams_1887.jpg?h=b9a109bb&itok=kPYbwWVp)
Barbara Eckstein
Barbara Eckstein is a Fall 2012 Obermann Fellow-in-Residence and a University of Iowa professor of English. She is also on the faculty of the UI Center for Global and Regional Environmental Research (CGRER)
and is affiliated with International Programs. She’s previously served as Associate Provost for Academic Administration. Currently, she is in the early phases of an extensive study of the...
![](/sites/obermann.uiowa.edu/files/styles/square__1024_x_1024/public/2021-06/old-world-map.jpg?h=e264a81a&itok=aiOOleUE)
"Circulating Culture" Working Group Hosts UMass-Amherst Scholar Laura Doyle
The Obermann Center “Circulating Cultures” Working Group will host the upcoming visit by Laura Doyle, Professor of English at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. Doyle, who specializes in questions of transnationalism, modernity, and empire in literary studies, will give a public lecture, “Reading Otherwise: Interdisciplinarity, History, and the Dialectics of Culture,” on Thursday, October...
![](/sites/obermann.uiowa.edu/files/styles/square__1024_x_1024/public/2021-06/frankenstein-twotone1.jpg?h=a87dda0d&itok=rL122ttz)
Genetics - From Frankenstein to the Future
"The era of personalized genomic medicine is fast approaching,” says Richard Smith, Professor of Otolaryngology, Pediatrics, Molecular Physiology, and Biophysics. “Clinicians will provide health care tailored to each person’s genome to inform choices about medications, disease and disease prevention, and surgical risks.” Smith, who is the Co-Director of the University of Iowa Institute of Human...
![](/sites/obermann.uiowa.edu/files/styles/square__1024_x_1024/public/2021-06/LatinoGothic%255B1%255D.png?h=f1a5175d&itok=6tEGpoUK)
The Latino Midwest
Latino culture has been helping shape the United States for hundreds of years, even before the U.S. was a country. Though the Latino population in the Midwest is small compared to other areas of the country, it continues to grow, infusing Latino art, literature, and music into the culture of the heartland.The Latino Midwest, the 2012-13 University of Iowa Obermann-International Programs Humanities...
![](/sites/obermann.uiowa.edu/files/styles/square__1024_x_1024/public/2021-06/migrationLetters6.jpg?h=c8fd830d&itok=Qd4JO0-u)
Migration Letters
Alejandro García-Lemos first came to the U.S. from his home in Colombia in order to attend graduate school in 1997. The painter, who now works as an interpreter for immigrants in hospitals and at the courthouse in Columbia, South Carolina, had visited the U.S. many times before finally decided to stay. "You meet someone, life changes," he says with a small laugh. The process of staying has hardly...
![](/sites/obermann.uiowa.edu/files/styles/square__1024_x_1024/public/2021-06/Hands_gesture.jpg?h=17850c86&itok=jpM8kRPM)
Overlap of Gesture and Memory
When Susan Wagner Cook, an assistant professor in Psychology (CLAS) submitted a paper on hand gestures a few years ago, she received feedback from reviewers that her understanding of memory was about twenty years behind. Disappointed, but also knowing that she was unlikely to assimilate two decades of research into her thinking without serious commitment, she tabled the paper. She gave it second...
Pagination