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Land and Sea in the Mediterranean World

The Mediterranean Seminar/UCMRP is happy to announce our Fall 2014 workshop and symposium, hosted and co-sponsored by the Medieval Studies Program at UC Santa Barbara.Space is limited, please register now by contacting Courtney Mahaney (cmahaney@ucsc.edu). Friday, 7 November - Symposium 12:30-6pm This one day interdisciplinary meeting sponsored by the Medieval Studies Program at UCSB will […]

Cashing the “California Banknote”: Anglo Settlers in Mexican California

In this talk, I consider American expansion in Mexican California,a region seen as an important gateway to the vast Pacific beyond its shores. The encroachment on Spanish and later Mexican territory also permitted the development of a trade in raw materials that, for instance, supplied the shoe factories that were springing up all over New […]

The War to End All Wars—What Have We Learned?

A Special Centennial EventCo-Sponsored by the UCSB Affiliates, the UCSB Department of History & Center for Cold War Studies On Armistice Day, a panel of UCSB faculty will commemorate the 100th anniversary of the start of WW I with a discussion of the impact of this war that, far from ending all wars, left millions […]

Beyond UCSB in History

Hello Fellow Historians (and those simply interested in History), Please join the UCSB History Club and Honor Society (Phi AlphaTheta) this upcoming Wednesday (November 12) for our third general meeting of the quarter at 6:00pm at HSSB 4080. Prof. McGee and Prof. Ann Plane will host a "Beyond UCSB in History" workshop for everyone interested […]

Labor and Empire

This talk inaugurates a conference on “Labor and Empire” that continues through November 15. Chibber is the author of Postcolonial Theory and the Specter of Capital (2013). Conference participants include Sven Beckert, Avi Chomsky, Dana Frank, Julie Green, Paul Kramer, Jana Lipman, Elizabeth McKillen, and Steve Striffler. Sponsored by LABOR: Studies in Working-Class History of […]

David: The Divided Heart

Of all the figures in the Bible, David arguably stands out as the most perplexing and enigmatic. He was many things: a warrior who subdued Goliath and the Philistines; a king who united a nation; a poet who created beautiful, sensitive verse; a loyal servant of God who proposed the great Temple and founded the […]

Greeting the Dead: Managing Solitary Existence in Japan

At a moment when the population is declining, marriage and birth rates are down, one-third of people live alone while one-fourth are 65 or older, and reports of “lonely death” (of solitary people whose bodies are discovered days, or weeks, after death) are commonplace, the social ecology of existence is undergoing radical change in 21st […]

Phi Alpha Theta/History Club Meeting

Please join the UCSB History Club and Phi Alpha Theta this Wednesday (November 19) at 6:00pm in HSSB 4080 for our fourth general meeting (and second to last one) of the quarter! We will be celebrating the holidays with a Thanksgiving-style potluck complete with turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes, and the works. We also will be […]

Climbing a stairway to heaven: Rereading dream texts as lived religion and embedded emotion in seventeenth-century New England

You are invited to the Pre-Modern Cluster's second brown bag lunch of this year. It is based on Prof. Plane's newly published book: Dreams and the Invisible World in Colonial New England: Indians, Colonists, and the Seventeenth Century From angels to demonic specters, astonishing visions to devilish terrors, dreams inspired, challenged, and soothed the men […]