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Global Governance Symposium

Please join us for this public event! The symposium features:         Madeline Baer, SDSU: "Water Politics, Rights, and Governance"         Jennifer Ramos, Loyola Marymount: "Global Security Issues in International Institutions"         Paula Tavrow, UCLA: “Global Health Governance and Local Results in East Africa” with comments by UCSB faculty: […]

Women, Gender, Sex: Social and Cultural Histories of the Long Nineteenth Century

AboutIn this conference, former students and colleagues of Patricia Cline Cohen explore the legacy of Cohen’s pioneering work in the cultural history of gender and sexuality. A founder of Women’s Studies (now Feminist Studies) at UCSB and a valued member of the History Department, Cohen worked tirelessly to advance the status of women and deepen […]

American Population Politics in Global Perspective

This lecture series on the biopolitics of reproduction in the US and globally is hosted by the Black Studies Colloquium, with the co-sponsorship of the department of Feminist Studies, Chicana and Chicano Studies, the History of Science Program, and the New Health, Medicine, and Care Working Group. Speakers will explore how cultural and political commitments […]

J-Rap, AKB48, and Miku: Japan’s Musical Creativity in an Age of Free

Now that recorded music is always available for free, what are the possible futures for musicians and fans? This talk will explore recent developments in Japan, including the resurgence of Japanese hip-hop, idol groups like AKB48, and a virtual idol, or "vocaloid," by the name of Hatsune Miku. Each case highlights different dynamics in the […]

War and Remembrance: Cultural Imprints of Japan’s Samurai Age

An interdisciplinary group of scholars of medieval and early modern Japanese literature, history, religion, and performing arts examine topics related to “War and Remembrance” during Japan’s years of military rule (late 12th to late 19th centuries). Exploring a range of representations and responses to war, participants examine the impacts of war on cultural memory and […]

Science, Secrecy, and the Soviet State

Secrecy was endemic in Soviet society and culture. Information that we might consider benign in the Western context was off-limits to most of the general populace throughout the existence of the Soviet Union. Controls over the circulation of information were particularly strict relating to matters of national security, which usually subsumed most scientific and engineering […]

When Worlds Collide: Fracking and Community in Rio Arriba County, New Mexico

In July 2012, the Bureau of Land Management announced atwo-week public scoping period for its decision to fulfill its mandate under the Mineral Leasing Act of 1920 to “explore for and develop oil and gas resources on public lands through a competitive leasing process” on 343,439 acres in Rio Arriba County, New Mexico. Included in […]

The Predicament of Aftermath: Memorializing Landscapes of Violence

Prof. Linenthal is the author of: he Landscapes of 9/11: A Photographer's Journey. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2013. (with Jonathan Hyman and Christiane Gruber) The Unfinished Bombing: Oklahoma City in American Memory. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001. History Wars: The Enola Gay and Other Battles for the American Past. New York: Metropolitan Books, […]

Senior Honors Seminar Presentations

Everyone is invited to this event, at which some of our best students present the fruits of two quarters of intensive research. Please attend as many presentations or panels as you would like. Refreshments will be available. The event will be run in a conference panel-type format, with the following schedule: Panel I: Contemporary Issues […]