Why This Show

Meet The People

Connect

Why This Show

Meet The People

Connect

Why This Show

Meet The People

Connect

Symposium Events

All events take place 10 minutes following the production, approximately at 8:30 p.m. and will run until 9:30 p.m.

Wednesday, March 25 – Opening Night

Silversides Theatre Artist Talk

Interview with The Nether playwright Jennifer Haley

Facilitator: Zachary McKendrick

Thursday, March 26

Digital Governance: Power, Ethics, and Cultural Responsibility

Moderated panel discussion

Facilitator: Paula Nunez de Villavicencio

Panelists: Lai-Tze Fan & Shana MacDonald

Friday, March 27

Digital Scholarship: Foundations, Futures, and Frictions

Roundtable discussion with scholars and researchers

Facilitator: Zachary McKendrick

Panelists: Jin-Sol Kim, Eugene Kukshinov, Paula Nunez de Villavicencio, Kierra Obbard, & Geneva Smith

Saturday, March 28 – Closing Night

Digital Creativity: Process, Practice, and Performance

Audience talkback with the creative team

Facilitators: Brooke Barnes & Dramaturgy team

Symposium Archive

Why This Show

Meet The People

Connect

We acknowledge that this theatre and the university that holds it stand on the traditional territories of the Attawandaron (also known as the Neutral), Anishinaabeg, and Haudenosaunee peoples. Our main campus is in Block 2 of the Haldimand Tract, land promised in 1784 by the British Crown to the Haudenosaunee of the Grand River in recognition of their alliance during the American Revolution.

 

This territory, which includes six miles on either side of the Grand River, is governed by the Dish with One Spoon Wampum, an agreement that teaches that the land is a shared dish from which we all eat, and that we carry collective responsibilities: to take only what we need, to ensure there is enough for others, and to keep the dish clean for those who come after us. It is an agreement rooted in care, reciprocity, and stewardship.


Gathering here in this theatre, on this land, within this agreement, means recognizing that welcome comes with responsibility. It asks us to consider how we move through shared spaces, how we care for one another, and how the systems we build shape access, safety, and belonging as equal partners.

We acknowledge that this theatre and the university that holds it stand on the traditional territories of the Attawandaron (also known as the Neutral), Anishinaabeg, and Haudenosaunee peoples. Our main campus is in Block 2 of the Haldimand Tract, land promised in 1784 by the British Crown to the Haudenosaunee of the Grand River in recognition of their alliance during the American Revolution.

 

This territory, which includes six miles on either side of the Grand River, is governed by the Dish with One Spoon Wampum, an agreement that teaches that the land is a shared dish from which we all eat, and that we carry collective responsibilities: to take only what we need, to ensure there is enough for others, and to keep the dish clean for those who come after us. It is an agreement rooted in care, reciprocity, and stewardship.


Gathering here in this theatre, on this land, within this agreement, means recognizing that welcome comes with responsibility. It asks us to consider how we move through shared spaces, how we care for one another, and how the systems we build shape access, safety, and belonging as equal partners.