- All Categories
- Featured Events
- Alumni
- Application Deadline
- Arts
- Campus Discourse
- Careers
- BU Central
- Center for the Humanities
- Charity & Volunteering
- Kilachand Center
- Commencement
- Conferences & Workshops
- Diversity & Inclusion
- Examinations
- Food & Beverage
- Global
- Health & Wellbeing
- Keyword Initiative
- Lectures
- LAW Community
- Meetings
- Orientation
- Other Events
- Religious Services & Activities
- Special Interest to Women
- Sports & Recreation
- Social Events
- Study Abroad
- Weeks of Welcome
Social Suffering, Virtue Ethics and Moral Tragedy: The Perils of a Superstrong Black Mother
This talk will explore the intimate relationship between suffering and aspirations for a good life. Drawing from ethnographic research with African American families raising children with serious illnesses and disabilities, it considers the following questions: How do responses to trauma and suffering reflect or generate aspirations for a good life, or at least a better one? How do people attempt to realize good lives even in the most barren circumstances? How do their conceptions and aspirations for a good life guide their projects of becoming, their cultivation of moral character? And, paradoxically, how may these attempts generate new possibilities and hopes but also, new and unanticipated forms of suffering, including moral tragedy?
When | 4:00 pm to 6:00 pm on Wednesday, March 22, 2017 |
---|---|
Building | 232 Bay State Rd. |
Room | Conference room 505 |
Contact Name | Arlene Brennan |
Phone | 3539050 |
Contact Email | arleneb@bu.edu |
Contact Organization | CURA |
Fees | Free |
Speakers | Cheryl Mattingly, Professor of Anthropology, Department of Anthropology and the Division of Occupational Science and Therapy, University of Southern California |