The 2026 Provost’s Global Forum, Cinematic Connections in a Polarized World: How movies bring us together, will bring together experts from across the University of Iowa campus, the greater Iowa City area, and around the world for film screenings, keynote talks, and lively conversations about how movies foster connection across cultural, religious and generational divides.
Experts will convene in Iowa City in late April 2026, for a three-day symposium.
Date: Tuesday, April 21, 2026 – Thursday, April 23, 2026
Location: Senate Chambers of the Old Capitol Museum - 21 N. Clinton Street, Iowa City, Iowa, 52242
RSVP to let organizers know which sessions you’ll attend and to help determine the amount of refreshments needed for various breaks and meals.
“Through a series of films and conversations with scholars, this forum explores how cinema and television have portrayed connections across cultures, from Jewish screenwriters responding to Hollywood’s representation of Blackness after World War II to contemporary series about Black-Jewish relationships, the evolution of Latin American Jewish cinema, Israeli-Palestinian love stories, and the influence of India’s centuries-old Jewish community on Bollywood,” shared Elke Heckner, associate professor of instruction, German, in the UI College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and one of the co-organizers of this year’s Provost’s Global Forum. Joining Heckner as co-organizer is Denise Filios, associate professor of Spanish and Portuguese in the UI College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Audiences can expect engaging panels on topics ranging from food and music to friendship, romance, and sports—paired with Q&As featuring international speakers. This event invites anyone interested in global Jewish cinemas, storytelling, or cross-cultural dialogue to explore how films help us laugh together, learn together, and imagine more connected futures.
“Film has a unique ability to bring people into conversation with perspectives and experiences beyond their own,” said Russell Ganim, associate provost and dean of UI International Programs. “The Provost’s Global Forum creates space for our campus and community to engage with global stories, reflect on complex histories, and explore how cultural expression, in this case cinema, can help us understand one another.”
On the final day of the forum, Lawrence Baron will give the 2026 Joel Barkan Memorial Lecture.
Joel Barkan retired from the University of Iowa in 2005, after a career as a political science professor and the founding director of the Center for International and Comparative Studies (CICS), the predecessor to UI International Programs. Following his retirement, Barkan went on to have a second career in Washington, D.C., as a consultant with the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), the World Bank, and the U.S. Agency for International Development. Many of the university’s faculty, staff, and administrators knew him also as a creative program-builder who made lasting contributions to international studies at the university and to the regular discussion in Iowa City of changing political, economic, and social circumstances in the world. UI faculty members who were his colleagues and who teach international studies proposed that Joel Barkan be recognized in a named annual campus lecture. The first annual Joel Barkan Memorial Lecture was given in 2015.
This year’s Provost’s Global Forum is made possible through the generous support and financial contributions from the Stanley-University of Iowa Foundation Support Organization, UI International Programs, the Obermann Center, and the Department of Cinematic Arts. Activities for the forum are hosted in collaboration with the Departments of Languages, Linguistics, Literatures, and Cultures; English; Religious Studies; and Spanish and Portuguese, the UI Old Capitol Museum and the Global Memory Studies Humanities Lab.
Individuals with disabilities are encouraged to attend all University of Iowa–sponsored events. If you are a person with a disability who requires a reasonable accommodation in order to participate in this program, please contact Daniel Vorwerk in advance at 319-467-1619 or daniel-vorwerk@uiowa.edu.
International Programs (IP) at the University of Iowa (UI) is committed to enriching the global experience of UI students, faculty, staff, and the general public by leading efforts to promote internationally oriented teaching, research, creative work, and community engagement. IP provides support for international students and scholars, administers scholarships and assistance for students who study, intern, or do research abroad, and provides funding opportunities and grant-writing assistance for faculty engaged in international research. IP shares their stories through various media, and by hosting multiple public engagement activities each year.