Civil War and Revolt in the Achaemenid Persian Empire
Sponsored by the History Department's Pre-Modern Cultures and Communities research cluster. rev. hm 1/11/15
Sponsored by the History Department's Pre-Modern Cultures and Communities research cluster. rev. hm 1/11/15
This is the Second Annual JoBeth Van Gelderen Graduate Student Lecture. To most Americans, the word “slavery” conjures up images of plantations in the Old South. But in the Texas Borderlands from 1700 to 1850, slavery was much more diverse. In his lecture, Paul Barba will explain how Spaniards, Comanches, Anglo Americans, and Choctaws enslaved […]
Anne Knowles and Alberto Giordano will present Geographies of the Holocaust. This book is the result of a multi-year collective project that has explored the geographies of the Holocaust at every scale of human experience, from the European continent to the experiences of individual human bodies. Built on six innovative case studies utilizing Geographical Information […]
As we mark the centenary of the First World War, this epochal event is usually remembered as a bloody conflict between rival alliances of nations. But from 1914 to 1918 there was another struggle: between those who regarded the war as a noble and necessary crusade and a brave minority who felt it was tragic […]
From the Bronze Age to the era of petroleum, the Middle East has experienced asuccession of energy profi les that helps to explain its political and cultural effl orescences and stagnations. This presentation will discuss the ways in which chariots, camels, and crude oil have shaped the region and distinguished it from the surrounding lands […]
Sunday, 22 June 1941, was arguably the most significant day of the 20th century. For on that day Adolf Hitler’s armies stormed into the Soviet Union, launching a surprise attack which, despite ending in Germany’s defeat and the eradication of the Hitler’s Third Reich, changed our world forever. By virtue of any yardstick, the war […]
Professor Steven Salaita is at the center of an international protest against academic censorship and the silencing of dissent. During the summer of 2014, he tweeted about Israel's assault on Gaza. As a result, he was “de-hired” from his position as tenured professor in American Indian Studies at the University of Illinois on the basis […]
"Sub Conscious" is a rather sardonic recounting of filmmaker Mel Halbach's experiences aboard a nuclear missile submarine in the 1970s. Halbach himself will be present, and he will engage in a brief colloquy with the audience after the film screening. Drawing on personal experience, Halbach takes us on a journey through a Cold War underworld--aboard […]
On September 26 and 27, 2014, municipal police agents opened fire on students of the teacher training school Isidro Burgos of Ayotzinapa. The students were traveling in buses they commandeered in the city of Iguala, in the southern Mexican sate of Guerrero. The police assassinated six people, three of them students. One student remained in […]
In 1839, a twice-divorced temple daughter from a small village in Echigo ran away to Edo. In a letter home, she wrote that she wanted to enter a daimyo's service and learn "the conduct and manners of the upper class." Her brothers, scandalized, demanded that she return immediately. Instead, she made a life for herself […]