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“Why Should I Join Learned Societies;” “Marriage and Citizenship”

"Why Should I Join Learned Societies -- AHA, OAH, LASA, MESA, NCPH -- Even Though I Now Can Get Their Journals Free?" This brown-bag talk will be held Wednesday, May 18 at noon in HSSB 4041. Kerber is part president of the American Historical Association, the Organization of American Historians, and the American Studies Association, […]

“MARCHING FOR THE EMPIRE: CHILDREN ON THE SECOND ANZA EXPEDITION”

Presidio Chapel at El Presidio de Santa Bárbara SHP123 East Canon Perdido Street, Santa Barbara, CA Vanessa Crispin-Peralta, adjunct professor of history at Westmont College, will draw upon her doctoral dissertation “Children at the Edge of the Empire: A History of Childhood in Coastal California’s Pueblos and Missions, 1750 – 1850,” to explore the integral […]

Senior Honors Seminar Colloquium

In the following schedule, the name of the student’s mentor appears in parenthesis and that of the commentator in brackets. 2:30-3 pm: Andrew Seguin, “Forays into the ‘Urban Frontier’: The Beginnings of Gentrification in New York City” (Randy Bergstrom) 3-3:30 pm: Emmett Bloom, “Who’s In Charge? Political Fragmentation in Post-Taliban Afghanistan” (Steve Humphreys) 3:40-4:10 pm: […]

Borderland Processes Along the Han Northern Frontier, 130 BCE-2 CE

At the height of Han expansion, the northern frontier of the Han Empire stretched from northern Korea in the east to the Tengger Desert in the west and onward into Central Asia. In Chinese historical sources, the massive complex of walls built across this region appears as an absolute dividing line between the Chinese and […]

Senior Honors Seminar Colloquium

In the following schedule, the name of the student’s mentor appears in parenthesis and that of the commentator in brackets. 1-1:30 pm: Cheyanne Gustason, “Some Like It Haute: the Role of 1930s Hollywood Cinema in the Rise of the U.S. in the International Fashion Industry” (Chuck Wolfe) 1:30-2 pm: Eric Rogers, “A Study of Early […]

Implications of the Assassination of Bin Laden

Americans seem united in their elation over justice being brought to themastermind of the September 11th terrorist attacks, but no one seems to agree on what to expect now. Whether this will mark a major shift in national priorities, or is simply a symbolic and cathartic event, is yet to be determined. The situation is […]

Masculinity, Space, and late Seventeenth-Century Alchemical Practices

Building on contemporary research in alchemy and gender, I engage themedium of space, examining the connections between the identity of the philosopher-alchemist and the composition of a masculine domestic space. I show that the private, enclosed nature of alchemical experimentation enabled the free exploration of masculinity. The private and semi-private nature of alchemical practices in […]

Framing the Word: The Bible in European Culture and Society, ca. 1250-1611

In conjunction with a student-curated exhibit (May 15-July 15) of Medieval and Early Modern Bibles in the UCSB Davidson Library's Department of Special Collections, Prof. Sharon Farmer (UCSB History) has organized this conference. Each speaker will incorporate material from books in the exhibit into his or her talk. Friday, May 27 / 1:00-4:00 PM, McCune […]

Ancient India & Early Greece: A Historical-Comparative Approach to Political Thought and the Concept of Ruling

This talk will map out an analytic approach for political theory that combines the history of political ideas and cross-cultural, comparative political thought. Special attention will be given to the methodological and interpretive challenges confronting this approach, how and why it should be applied to ancient Greek and Indian political thought, and finally, its general […]