Dean of Arts Office:
PAS building, room 2401
Tel 519 888-4567 ext. 48246
Arts Undergraduate Office:
PAS building, room 2439
Tel 519 888-4567 ext. 45870
Information for faculty and staff
Arts computing support for students, faculty, and staff
Visit our COVID-19 information website to learn how Warriors protect Warriors.
Inspired by the genre conventions of cinema, Brooklyn-based artist Jillian McDonald has been exhibiting her videos internationally for over a decade. Having explored the cinematic tropes of horror movies and zombie films in particular, her recent work has shifted in tone and substance.
Gallery One: Roula Partheniou | Inventory
Toronto-based Roula Partheniou makes remarkable sculptural replicas based on domestic items, construction materials and office supplies. Whether stacked, shelved or left leaning against the wall, the artist’s use of precise forms and a reductive colour palette elicits a double take
Barbara Ehrenreich, best-selling author of Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America, Bright-Sided: How Positive Thinking is Undermining America, Re-making Love: The Feminization of Sex, and most recently her memoir Living with a Wild God, is coming to Waterloo.
The Drama and Speech Communication Speakers Series presents invited lecturer Professor Rinaldo Walcott from the Department of Social Justice Education, and Director of the Women and Gender Studies Institute, both at the University of Toronto.
The University of Waterloo Cognitive Science program examines what concepts and theories are blocking progress in understanding mind, brain and intelligence?
As digital gaming has increased in popularity and become a global practice, computer-assisted language learning (CALL) researchers and second and foreign language (L2) educators have begun reconsidering games as potential L2 teaching and learning (L2TL) resources.
Why is our region, our city, a university, a public library and more named after a tiny farming village in Belgium? Why does the name Wellington appear in towns and on street signs all over Ontario? How did a bloody battle 200 years ago capture the popular imagination?
Join us at the Waterloo Aboriginal Education Centre for soup and bannock (frybread) for most Thursdays of the school year. Everyone's welcome!
Marking Canada’s National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women, December 6, there will be a special screening of Polytechnique at the Original Princess Cinema in Uptown Waterloo. Opening remarks by, Prof. Carolyn Hanson (UWaterloo Mechanical and Mechatronics Engineering).
Join us for the our annual Celebration of Arts and the presentation of the 2015 Arts Awards for teaching, service and research.
Join us at the Waterloo Aboriginal Education Centre for soup and bannock (frybread) for most Thursdays of the school year. Everyone's welcome!
The Arts Peer Mentors and the SSO team up to offer this great workshop just in time for exam prep! Come learn some great tricks to survive exam-season.
A student with great time management is able to get their work done early, ensuring it's top quality while reducing their stress levels. So, do you want to stay on top of it all? Come out to this time management session to learn how.
In the fall of 1918, as soldiers return to Canada from distant battlefields, a world devastated by four years of war is suddenly hit by a mysterious and deadly plague – the “Spanish flu”. The illness strikes anybody, even people in the prime of life. The rapid progression toward mortality brings home the terror, the panic, and the sense of helplessness of World War I
In the fall of 1918, as soldiers return to Canada from distant battlefields, a world devastated by four years of war is suddenly hit by a mysterious and deadly plague – the “Spanish flu”. The illness strikes anybody, even people in the prime of life. The rapid progression toward mortality brings home the terror, the panic, and the sense of helplessness of World War I
In the fall of 1918, as soldiers return to Canada from distant battlefields, a world devastated by four years of war is suddenly hit by a mysterious and deadly plague – the “Spanish flu”. The illness strikes anybody, even people in the prime of life. The rapid progression toward mortality brings home the terror, the panic, and the sense of helplessness of World War I
Join us at the Waterloo Aboriginal Education Centre for soup and bannock (frybread) for most Thursdays of the school year. Everyone's welcome!
In the fall of 1918, as soldiers return to Canada from distant battlefields, a world devastated by four years of war is suddenly hit by a mysterious and deadly plague – the “Spanish flu”. The illness strikes anybody, even people in the prime of life. The rapid progression toward mortality brings home the terror, the panic, and the sense of helplessness of World War I
Award-winning novelist, screenwriter, essayist, and performer Thomas King will be presenting this year's Hagey Lecture entitled "Love in the Time of Cholera: Canadian Edition."
Interested in an Arts major? Thinking of an Arts minor? Want to take Arts electives? All current students are invited to attend this Arts Major Showcase to learn more about the Arts majors and minors!
Religious freedom has been increasingly under attack in France in the last 10 years. In 2004, religious symbols were banned in public high schools, and in 2011, covering the face in public spaces was prohibited.
The Department of Spanish and Latin American Studies invite all to join Prof María del Carmen Sillato and the SPAN 350 The Poetry of the Tango students for a presentation entitled “El tango: expresión de la identidad cultural argentina” by Carlos Siri.
Join us at the Waterloo Aboriginal Education Centre for soup and bannock (frybread) for most Thursdays of the school year. Everyone's welcome!
St Paul's University College welcomes Kim Pate, C.M., the 2015 Carold Institute Visiting Fellow, who will present a public lecture on the treatment of women by the Canadian legal and penal systems.
Professor Jingjing Huo (Political Science) will be presenting the arguments from his new book How Nations Innovate which compares how affluent capitalist economies differ in their patterns of technological innovation.
Dean of Arts Office:
PAS building, room 2401
Tel 519 888-4567 ext. 48246
Arts Undergraduate Office:
PAS building, room 2439
Tel 519 888-4567 ext. 45870
Information for faculty and staff
Arts computing support for students, faculty, and staff
The University of Waterloo acknowledges that much of our work takes place on the traditional territory of the Neutral, Anishinaabeg and Haudenosaunee peoples. Our main campus is situated on the Haldimand Tract, the land promised to the Six Nations that includes six miles on each side of the Grand River. Our active work toward reconciliation takes place across our campuses through research, learning, teaching, and community building, and is centralized within our Indigenous Initiatives Office.