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Salim Yaqub, History, “Imperfect strangers: Americans, Arabs, and U.S.-Middle East Relations in the 1970s”

McCune Conference Room (HSSB 6020) Humanities and Social Sciences Bldg, Santa Barbara, CA, United States

Salim Yaqub will be giving a talk on his new book, Imperfect Strangers: Americans, Arabs, and U.S.-Middle East Relations in the 1970s, which was published by Cornell University Press in September 2016. In this book Yaqub argues that the 1970s were a pivotal decade in U.S.-Arab relations—a time when Americans and Arabs became an inescapable presence […]

Jeff Sklansky, History, University of Illinois at Chicago, “The Fund of Trust: Monetary Reform and the Ethic of Investment in the Gilded Age”

Sklansky is the author of The Soul's Economy: Market Society and Selfhood in American Thought, 1820-1920 (2002) and the forthcoming Sovereign of the Market: The Money Question in Early America. A copy of his paper, “"The Fund of Trust: Monetary Reform and the Ethic of Investment in the Gilded Age" can be found here: Sklansky

Panel Discussion: Historical Perspectives on President Trump’s Jan. 27 Executive Order on Immigration

HSSB 6020 (McCune Room) University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, United States

Three faculty of the UCSB History Department will provide historical perspectives on immigration in the U.S.: Giuliana Perrone, "The History of Exclusion in American Law" Nelson Lichtenstein, "Immigrants Built the American Left and They Will Do It Again" Paul Spickard, "Immigration in a Time of Hate" Feb. 8 Poster

Free

Ann Little (Colorado State University) – Blogging, Tweeting, and Instagramming the Borderlands of Public and Academic History: Social Media as a Tool for Public Engagement

HSSB 3208 University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, United States

College and university History departments (once again?) say they're in crisis: nationwide, our numbers of majors have shrunk dramatically over the past decade, not to mention the "job crisis" of the past 45 years that has outlived the expansion of the profession from 1945-1970 nearly twice over. What's an academic historian to do about this? […]

Professor Ann Little (Colorado State University) – The Many Captivities of Esther Wheelwright: Communities of Women in the Northeast Borderlands.

HSSB 4080 4080 Humanities and Social Sciences Building, UC Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, United States

Join us for a talk by Prof. Ann Little who will be speaking about her new book, The Many Captivities of Esther Wheelwright: Communities of Women in the Northeast Borderlands. Esther Wheelwright (1696-1780) embodies the imperial conquest of North America like no other eighteenth-century figure, yet she has been largely written out of the story […]

Nicole De Silva, History UCSB, “Fashioning Chinese America Cultural Citizenship and the Transpacific Boycott of Japanese Silk Stockings, 1937-1940”

HSSB 3001E 3001E Humanities and Social Sciences Building, UC Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, United States

The Commerce, Commodities and Material Culture Research Cluster will be hosting its first paper workshop this year to discuss Nicole De Silva's paper "Fashioning Chinese America Cultural Citizenship and the Transpacific Boycott of Japanese Silk Stockings, 1937-1940." The paper positions the Japanese silk stocking boycott of 1937-1941 as a staging ground that fostered the development […]

Hail the Maintainers! or – How to Give Up the Innovation Fetish (Prof. Lee Vinsel)

HSSB 4080 4080 Humanities and Social Sciences Building, UC Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, United States

Hail the Maintainers! or - How to Give Up the Innovation Fetish Join us for a talk by Prof. Lee Vinsel, Stevens Institute of Technology - 16 February 2017 in HSSB 4080 at 4PM Our culture is obsessed with innovation. Innovation is thought to be the goal of business, policy-making, philanthropy, education, even play. Yet, […]

David Moss, Harvard Business School, “E Pluribus Unum: Thoughts on the Perils (and Promise) of an Aging Democracy”

David Moss is the Paul Whiton Cherington Professor at Harvard Business School, where he teaches in the Business, Government, and the International Economy (BGIE) unit. He earned his B.A. from Cornell University and his Ph.D. from Yale.  A founder of the Tobin Project, Professor Moss is the author of Socializing Security: Progressive-Era Economists and the […]

Cheryl Jimenez Frei, UCSB, “Shaping and Contesting the Past: Monuments, Memory and Identity in Buenos Aires”

Alumni Hall, Mosher Alumni Center UCSB, Santa Barbara , CA, United States

UCSB History Associates invites you to attend the Fourth Annual Van Gelderen Graduate Student Lecture  Cheryl Jimemez Frei, a PhD Student in Latin American History, will be giving a lecture related to her work on memory and the built environment in Argentina.  A luncheon will follow.  To attend the luncheon, please fill out the form […]