Upcoming Events
iWitness Lunch Break: Being Human Festival I Am Little Haiti
A conversation between Jacqueline Charles, Miami Herald Senior Reporter and Carl Juste, Miami Herald Senior PhotoJournalist. Inez Barlatier will perform.
Haiti Through 2ii
This inaugural iWitness: Global Borderless Caribbean Initiative exhibition in the SIPA I Gallery celebrates and explores the complexity and beauty of Haitian creativity. Curated by Carl-Philippe Juste, iWitness Director of Visual Journalism and award-winning photojournalist, this show of large-scale photographs and mixed-media pieces opened room for dialog about Haiti’s powerful past and complex present with the goal of collective understanding.
Learn more about this event on the WPHL website.
Documenting Goombay and Little Bahamas of Coconut Grove Exhibition
Learn more about this event on the WPHL website.
Documenting Goombay and Little Bahamas Exhibition at Goombay Festival
Learn more about this event on the WPHL website.
2025 Summer H.E.ART Program
Recent Events
Lunch And Learn: Reimagining Learning Through Undergraduate Research (Humanities Edge, MDC)
This session offered an opportunity for our faculty to come together and share valuable insights on reimagining learning through undergraduate research. Lunch was provided by the Humanities Edge. This program was presented in coordination with the Excellence Across the Curriculum Student Symposium & Showcase.
Humanities Edge Undergraduate Research Virtual Symposium (Humanities Edge, MDC)
The ninth Humanities Edge Undergraduate Research Virtual Symposium took place on Thursday, April 10th. Here we explored our students’ research projects, watched the live research presentations, and engaged directly with our presenters.
Excellence Across The Curriculum – Student Symposium & Showcase (Humanities Edge, MDC)
EAC provided a forum for students across the disciplines to present their undergraduate research projects. Students presented a scholarly flash presentation session, an art exhibit, spoken word presentation, and/or collaborative student project.
URFIU
The Humanities Edge team tabled during the URFIU conference to share information about its programs. URFIU was a fantastic opportunity for undergraduate students—and even recent graduates—to showcase their research in a poster session or a panel presentation.
Humanities Edge Spring 2025 D.C. Fly-In: Humanities for All
The Humanities Edge accompanied eight undergraduate humanities students to DC for a four-day "Fly-In" centered on opportunities for internships and careers for humanities majors. Meetings were held with FIU in DC staff, FIU interns in DC, and professionals working in government agencies and other organizations to learn about internship and career opportunities in Washington, DC. Students visited a wide range of museums and federal agencies that corresponded with their interests.
iWitness Lunch Break: March Forward
Isabella Persad, Sasha Wells, and Beverly Muzii in conversation with Rebecca Friedman, Oana Martisca presented her trailer for News Without a Newsroom and conversed with Carl Juste, poet Janet Arelis Quezada performed.
Humanities Circle Celebration
The Humanities Edge hosted its second Humanities Circle Celebration, bringing together students, faculty, and staff for a vibrant and engaging few hours. The event offered an excellent opportunity for participants to learn more about the various academic and extracurricular opportunities available to humanities students at FIU. Among the highlights of the celebration were the informative tables hosted by several prominent organizations, including the Center for Excellence in Writing, the FIU Undergraduate Research Journal, and the Art History Student Association. These organizations provided valuable resources and information, encouraging attendees to explore the many pathways available within humanities.
2025 FIU-MDC Day: Strengthening Pathways & Empowering Futures
iWitness Lunch Break: I Am A Man: A Declaration on Baldwin
Shawn Christian and Rebecca Friedman in Conversation, jazz pianist Danny Mixon, Betsy Writers Room Artist-in-Residence performed.
2025 Humanities Edge Undergraduate Humanities Research Conference
The Humanities Edge hosted its annual Undergraduate Humanities Research Conference at FIU's Dotson Pavilion. Twelve FIU students and four MDC students presented their current research projects. Organized into thematic panels, each had a faculty respondent who questioned the presenters and invited participation.
iWitness Lunch Break: The Soul of Freedom
iWitness presented two luminaries in conversation on the Freedom of the Press: David Lawrence Jr., former publisher of the Miami Herald and founder of The Children’s Movement of Florida, and FIU’s Dr. Mike Heithaus, Executive Dean of the College of Arts, Science and Education, Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences, and Vice Provost for BBC and Environmental Sustainability.
2024 Summer H.E.ART Program
2024 Humanities Edge Undergraduate Humanities Research Conference
MDC-FIU Day
Preparatory Workshop for the 2024 Humanities Edge Undergraduate Humanities Research Conference
Deadline to submit applications for The Humanities Edge 2024 Paid Summer Internship Program
Deadline to submit applications for the 2024 Humanities Edge Undergraduate Humanities Research Conference
Silhouettes: Image and Word in the Harlem Renaissance
The Harlem Renaissance, Illustrated
The flourishing of literary, visual, and musical arts between the 1920s and '40s known as the Harlem Renaissance projected a new picture of Black life to the world. Silhouettes: Image and Word in the Harlem Renaissance considers the role of art in this movement, paying special attention to collaboration between artists and writers on illustrated books—works that reached a broad audience with stories and images that challenged demeaning stereotypes and asserted African Americans' capacity for self-determination.
Celebrate You!
FIU Humanities Edge and the FIU Undergraduate Research Journal (FIU URJ) invite you to join us as we celebrate YOU: the undergraduates who write, research, and create original works, as well as the faculty and staff who support your efforts!
Writing Across the Curriculum Faculty Reading Group: Exploring AI's Impact
Join us for this enlightening reading group where we'll collectively ponder, question, and envision the future of teaching with writing in the age of AI. Whether you're well-versed in technology integration or just beginning to explore its potential, this group offers an inclusive space for all of us to learn, share insights, and strategize together.
National Conference on Peer Tutor Writing
The National Conference on Peer Tutoring in Writing (NCPTW) promotes the teaching of writing through collaborative learning.
DC Fly-In: Arts and Humanities: For the People
Join FIU in D.C., The Humanities Edge, and a small group of FIU students majoring in humanities for a unique learning experience in the nation’s capital.
History and AI Prompt Engineering Workshop
This workshop series will address how Large Language Models like ChatGPT work, how their existence impacts teaching and learning in History courses, how instructors can adjust instruction methods, and how to deal with academic integrity as it relates to AI tools. Participants will be provided with techniques and tools to help rethink and redesign their writing prompts in light of new AI technology.
Writing Across the Curriculum Luncheon + Workshop
This working lunch event will be focused on using AI to help student writers. The WAC team will showcase several specific strategies for using AI in your classroom as a tool for promoting student learning, engagement, and students’ growth as writers. Faculty will have time to discuss with colleagues over lunch. We will also recognize and celebrate the faculty who have earned the Teaching with Writing in the Disciplines badge.
Writing Across the Curriculum Faculty Reading Group: Exploring AI's Impact
Join us for this enlightening reading group where we'll collectively ponder, question, and envision the future of teaching with writing in the age of AI. Whether you're well-versed in technology integration or just beginning to explore its potential, this group offers an inclusive space for all of us to learn, share insights, and strategize together.
History Department's Macabre Fall Celebration
The Macabre Fall Celebration will be a social held by DOHGSA and co-sponsored by The Humanities Edge. This will be a celebration of the middle of the fall semester and will provide undergraduate and graduate students alike the opportunity to have a break from midterms and writing papers.
Wynwood Art Talk with Kern Myrtle
Join Senior Special Events Manager and Curator Colette Mello in conversation with Yarn artist and muralist Kern Myrtle. Kern creates large scale works made of crocheted acrylic yarn, spray paint – or both, and infuses their work with gender quandaries.
History and AI Prompt Engineering Workshop
This workshop series will address how Large Language Models like ChatGPT work, how their existence impacts teaching and learning in History courses, how instructors can adjust instruction methods, and how to deal with academic integrity as it relates to AI tools. Participants will be provided with techniques and tools to help rethink and redesign their writing prompts in light of new AI technology.
Howl-O-Ween at The Wolf—A Day of Dreadful Fun
Explore spine-chilling treasures from The Wolfsonian collection, step into the eerie world of Edgar Allan Poe at a haunting reading, and cap off your weekend with a performance by Young Musicians Unite's Miami Beach Rock Ensemble.
Writing Across the Curriculum Faculty Reading Group: Exploring AI's Impact
Join us for this enlightening reading group where we'll collectively ponder, question, and envision the future of teaching with writing in the age of AI. Whether you're well-versed in technology integration or just beginning to explore its potential, this group offers an inclusive space for all of us to learn, share insights, and strategize together.
Rooted Knowledge Redux: A Conversation with Michelle May-Curry
This conversation is a continuation of the Rooted Knowledge summit held in April 2023, in collaboration with the Wolfsonian Public Humanities Lab and FIU CARTA | Mana Wynwood. Michelle May-Curry is the curator of Washington, DC’s Commission on the Arts and Humanities, and core faculty for Georgetown University’s Engaged and Public Humanities master’s degree program.
History and AI Prompt Engineering Workshop
This workshop series will address how Large Language Models like ChatGPT work, how their existence impacts teaching and learning in History courses, how instructors can adjust instruction methods, and how to deal with academic integrity as it relates to AI tools. Participants will be provided with techniques and tools to help rethink and redesign their writing prompts in light of new AI technology.
Mellon Scholars Conference
Artist Talk: Visiting Artist Tony Chirinos (2023 Guggenheim Fellow)
In conjunction with the exhibition, The Archive: since 1975. FIU Student Photography