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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210507T120000
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DTSTAMP:20260423T094232
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UID:10002876-1620388800-1620394200@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Public History Colloquium Event–"The Queerness of Home: Public History and the Domestic Archive"
DESCRIPTION:Join the History Department’s Colloquium in Public History on Friday\, May 7 at noon for a Zoom talk by Stephen Vider (History\, Cornell University). \nHistories of queer and trans politics and culture have centered almost exclusively on public activism and spaces. Stephen Vider will discuss how his forthcoming book\, The Queerness of Home: Gender\, Sexuality\, and the Politics of Domesticity After World War II (University of Chicago Press\, October 2021) retells LGBT history from the inside out\, revealing how LGBT people mobilized home spaces as crucial sites of intimate connection\, care\, and cultural inclusion. He’ll focus particularly on the challenges and possibilities of uncovering queer domestic life both in The Queerness of Home and in his 2017 exhibition\, AIDS at Home: Art and Everyday Activism (Museum of the City of New York)—and how a focus on the domestic archive can reshape methods in public history. \nRegister for this event at http://bit.ly/queerness-home \nRecommended links: \nA Place in the City: Three Stories about AIDS at Home\, dir. Nate Lavey and Stephen Vider (2017)\, documentary film which originally appeared in AIDS at Home: Art and Everyday Activism https://vimeo.com/303736782 \nStephen Vider\, “”Oh Hell\, May\, Why Don’t You People Have a Cookbook?”: Camp Humor and Gay Domesticity\,” American Quarterly 65\, no. 4 (2013): 877-904. [Open-access through JSTOR Daily: https://www.jstor.org/stable/43822994?mag=in-the-gay-cookbook-domestic-bliss-was-queer]
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/public-history-colloquium-event-the-queerness-of-home-public-history-and-the-domestic-archive/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Colloquium Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Public-History-event-queerness.png
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210520T110000
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CREATED:20210513T033419Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230203T154634Z
UID:10002352-1621508400-1621512900@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Center for Cold War Studies Talk: Nancy Mitchell\, "Andrew Young: Challenging Anglo-Saxon Foreign Policy?"
DESCRIPTION:Andrew Young\, one of Martin Luther King’s top aides and a former member of Congress\, served as Jimmy Carter’s ambassador to the United Nations. Outspoken and controversial\, Young questioned prevailing Cold War assumptions. “Communism has never been a threat to me\,” he said. “Racism has always been a threat—and that has been the enemy of all of my life.” \nNancy Mitchell is Professor of History at North Carolina State University. She is the author of Jimmy Carter in Africa: Race and the Cold War (2016)\, which received the Douglas Dillon Award from the American Academy of Diplomacy and the Robert Ferrell Prize from the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations. Professor Mitchell’s first book was The Danger of Dreams: German and American Imperialism in Latin America\, 1895-1914 (1999). She contributed the chapter on “The Cold War and Jimmy Carter” to The Cambridge History of the Cold War (2010)\, and her articles have appeared in Cold War History\, International History Review\, Diplomatic History\, American Historical Review\, Journal of American History\, Prologue\, H-Diplo\, and H-Pol. \nClick here to join the Zoom for this event.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/center-for-cold-war-studies-talk-nancy-mitchell-andrew-young-challenging-anglo-saxon-foreign-policy/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Public Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Nancy-Mitchell-talk-page-001.jpg
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