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X-WR-CALNAME:Department of History, UC Santa Barbara
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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Department of History, UC Santa Barbara
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210314T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210314T160000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193704
CREATED:20210226T061631Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230203T154814Z
UID:10002861-1615737600-1615737600@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:8th Annual Van Gelderen Lecture: Sasha Coles\, “The Great Silk Experiment: Silkworms\, Mulberry Trees\, and Women Workers in Mormon Country\, 1850s-1910s”
DESCRIPTION:UCSB History Associates presents the eighth annual Van Gelderen Graduate Student Lecture\, this year given by Dr. Sasha Coles. \nFrom the 1850s to the early 1900s\, Latter-Day Saint (or Mormon) women in both rural and urban Great Basin settlements planted mulberry trees\, raised silkworms\, and attempted to produce silk cocoons\, thread\, and cloth of a high-enough quality to use and sell. By most measurements\, they failed. Homegrown silk was time-consuming\, onerous\, and practically impossible to profit from\, primarily due to superior imported goods from Europe and Asia. Even so\, this talk will show how the homegrown silk industry provided Mormon women with a venue to make their own money\, shape transnational labor and commodity markets\, and understand ever-changing environmental conditions. In these and other ways\, Mormon women used silk production and consumption to resolve tensions between economic cooperation and competition\, market isolation and integration\, and religious exceptionalism and American citizenship. \nOur speaker\, Sasha Coles\, defended her UCSB Ph.D. dissertation successfully in February 2021. She received her M.A. from UCSB in 2015 and her B.A. from Arizona State University in 2013. Her publications include two articles in historical journals\, and she has developed a website on the Walt Disney theme parks. \nThe Zoom link for this year’s Van Gelderen Lecture is https://ucsb.zoom.us/j/6855143149.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/8th-annual-van-gelderen-lecture-sasha-coles-the-great-silk-experiment-silkworms-mulberry-trees-and-women-workers-in-mormon-country-1850s-1910s/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:History Associates
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Van-Gelderen-Coles.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210312T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210312T130000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193704
CREATED:20210305T062717Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230402T204018Z
UID:10002863-1615554000-1615554000@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:FOCAL POINT Dialogues in History Webinar II: Empire and Liberation
DESCRIPTION:Building on the collective knowledge shared in our first webinar\, the History Department’s Colloquium Committee warmly invites you to attend the second session of our FOCAL POINT Dialogues in History series.  Inspired by the History Department’s Statement on the George Floyd Uprising and its invocation to understand and interrogate our racialized past and the investments of disciplinary history within it\, the series brings together UCSB History faculty and graduate students who have volunteered to lead a dialogue on Black life\, race\, and antiblackness in history. The conversations will engage Herman Bennett’s African Kings and Black Slaves\, as a focal point to discuss themes like sovereignty\, empire\, and racial capitalism from different historical angles of vision. \nOur second webinar will engage Prof. Herman Bennett’s emphasis on empire and colonialism in understanding Atlantic history and the politics of liberation from a wide diversity of scholarly standpoints. Registration for the webinar is required. Please click on the link below to register. \nDate: Mar 12\, 2021 \nTime: 1:00 PM Pacific Time (US and Canada) \nWebinar II: Empire and Liberation \nZoom registration: Please register in advance for this webinar using the link below. \nhttps://ucsb.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_kI2R6miRRO2blZUh_62shQ \nFeaturing presentations by Anthony Greco\, Katie Moore\, Stephan Miescher\, and Ya Zuo \nComment by Evelyne Laurent-Perrault \n\nAnthony Greco is a historian of engineering and technology\, colonialism\, and science in the modern Middle East. His dissertation research examines Egypt’s long tradition of scientific knowledge and pedagogy. Before this\, he worked as a diesel mechanic\, plumber\, and carpenter which inspired his interest in builders and maintainers of public works. \nKatie Moore is a historian of early American political economy\, money\, debt\, and the Atlantic World\, and the author of the forthcoming A Revolutionary Currency. \nStephan Miescher is a historian of nineteenth and twentieth century Ghana\, masculinities\, and environmental history\, and the author of Making Men in Ghana (2005) and coeditor of Gender\, Imperialism\, and Global Exchanges (2015). \nYa Zuo is a historian of middle and late imperial China\, epistemology\, political philosophy\, ethics\, and emotions\, and the author of Shen Gua’s Empiricism (2018). \nEvelyne Laurent-Perrault is a historian of the African diaspora in colonial Latin America and the Caribbean\, the political imagination of enslaved women\, and the author of the forthcoming Claims of Dignity. 
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/focal-point-dialogues-in-history-webinar-ii-empire-and-liberation/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Colloquium Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Webinar-II_Empire-and-Liberation.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210309T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210309T180000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193704
CREATED:20210305T060250Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230203T154838Z
UID:10002862-1615305600-1615312800@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:IHC Talk: Utathya Chattopadhyaya\, "Cannabis and South Asia"
DESCRIPTION:The IHC‘s Asian/American Studies Collective welcomes UCSB History professor Utathya Chattopadhyaya for a talk on the role of cannabis in South Asian experiences of empire. \nHistorical scholarship now conceives empire as a webbed uneven field of power relations and a multispecies enterprise. In other words\, the anxious and breathless struggle of European imperialism to sustain itself subjected human\, plant\, animal\, and insect bodies to its ambition to govern through logics of colonial difference. This paper argues that the cannabis plant in South Asia\, in the nineteenth century\, while being a subject of British revenue systems transformed into a race-d and gendered mode of explaining anticolonial insurgency by South Asian rebels. The intoxicating substance of the plant\, in the discursive logic of empire\, was seen to vitiate Asian bodies against European power. Cannabis also animated other imperial operations like the delegitimization of Indian sovereignty. Using the expansive reach of imperial periodical culture in the nineteenth century\, this paper highlights the Asian and global contexts within which cannabis became an alibi for rebellion or violence against empire. \nUtathya Chattopadhyaya is Assistant Professor of History at the UC Santa Barbara. He holds a Ph.D. from the University of Illinois and studies the history of modern South Asia\, British imperialism\, and agrarian commodities. His work has appeared in the South African Historical Journal\, Historical Reflections\, and Animalia: An Anti-Imperial Bestiary for our Times. He is currently writing a monograph on cannabis and empire in British India. \nThis event will be held on Zoom at https://ucsb.zoom.us/j/81976204749?pwd=ekZ2UUtFd0U0Znh6bFpIcXFXWUs5QT09.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/ihc-talk-utathya-chattopadhyaya-cannabis-and-south-asia/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Public Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Chattopadhyaya_flyer_03-page-001.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210309T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210309T180000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193704
CREATED:20210107T065221Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230203T154843Z
UID:10002327-1615305600-1615312800@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:ISRRAR Event–Dr. Samiha Rahman\, "Redefining Black Excellence: Ihsan\, Islamic Education\, and the Tijani Sufi Order"
DESCRIPTION:Since the 1980s\, hundreds of predominantly working-class African American Muslim youth have migrated to the West African Tijani Sufi town of Medina Baye\, Senegal. They hope to circumvent the antiblackness\, Islamophobia\, and economic inequality they face in the U.S. in search of a transformative educational encounter in a society where Blackness and Islam constitute the dominant norms. This talk chronicles these young people’s everyday experiences pursuing Islamic education in Medina Baye. Complicating popular notions that link Black excellence to individualistic material gain and Black capitalism\, Dr. Samiha Rahman (CSU Long Beach) argues that Black Muslim excellence (ihsan) provides an alternative paradigm rooted in the pursuit of human excellence through spiritual and social practice. Grounded in a transatlantic Black Muslim tradition\, Black Muslim ihsan offers African American Muslims pathways to individual and collective liberation. \nJoin this Zoom event here: bit.ly/3hVdvP4  \n\nThis event is part of the ISRRAR Winter Quarter series. \nProfessor Butch Ware and the ISRRAR announce the Winter Quarter schedule for HIST 210RA: Race\, Faith\, Revolution. Graduate students are invited to register for this 2-unit seminar and to sign up for the listserv at http://tinyurl.com/ISRRARListServ. \nHow have Black metaphysics articulated with racial politics in order to advance efforts of justice\, liberation\, and self-actualization? In this very special year of 2021\, our seminar will take on manifestations of anti-black racism and imperialism\, as well as African and African Diasporic efforts to mediate between the seen and unseen worlds in struggles for justice. \nThis graduate seminar is part of a broader collaborative process meant to engage graduate students and faculty alike. The Initiative for the Study of Race\, Religion\, and Revolution (ISRRAR) seeks to foster a conversation on intersections of spirituality and social change wherein works on (and by) formerly colonized peoples are central\, rather than peripheral. \nThis approach is driven by an axial critique of the ways in which modernity’s core contradictions shape our shared pasts and presents. An era of revolutionary enlightenment\, we are told\, brought humanity out of the ‘dark ages.’ Freedom dawned. But this ‘age of lights’ brought the darkest of racial taxonomies\, and scales of slavery and human suffering unknown to ancient and medieval worlds. Reason proclaimed its mission: liberate humanity from the bondage of irrational religion. Yet rational political economies brought global empires\, world wars\, and ethnic genocides. Moreover\, new nationalisms have drawn on older religious repertories to define citizens and subject them to moral authority. Self-congratulatory Western tropes\, however\, tend to overlook the ubiquity of race and the persistence of faith\, portraying them as incidental rather than fundamental. \nColonized peoples in Africa and the Americas\, tell different tales. A generation of emergent scholarship has brought these forward. Scholars (many trained in interdisciplinary fields) have recovered ‘native’ narratives and ontologies of the oppressed\, often dislodging dominant meta-narratives in the study of the global West. In History 210 we engage live presentations of the works of scholars\, activists\, and artists whose conceptualization and execution of their research breaks new ground in these domains.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/the-initiative-for-the-study-of-race-religion-and-revolutions-winter-2021-schedule-2021-03-09/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Colloquium Event,Graduate Program
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/ISRRAR-Rahman.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210306T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210306T160000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193704
CREATED:20210306T200534Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230203T154851Z
UID:10002864-1615046400-1615046400@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:History Associates: Luke Roberts\, "A Samurai Wife Divorces her Lout of a Husband"
DESCRIPTION:Join the History Associates for an engaging presentation from UCSB History Professor Luke Roberts on a specific case that influenced gender roles in 19th-century Japan. \nZoom link: ucsb.zoom.us/j/6855143149 \nMori Nao\, a young samurai wife in Japan\, desired a divorce from her abusive husband in 1824. Legally a man could divorce his wife but a wife could not divorce her husband. Nevertheless\, she persisted in the face of his adamant refusal to divorce her. Soon her relatives mobilized their social networks to convince his relatives to pressure him to give her a divorce\, but he still refused. Eventually most samurai in her lord’s domain in southwestern Japan were working to get her a divorce and even the lord became involved in supporting what she had no legal right to demand\, and threatened the well-being of the husband’s kin group. \nFinally\, the husband divorced her. His angry kin put him in a cage in his backyard where he was forced to live for some months. No formal record survives\, but a detailed diary of the process made by one relative of his house who played an important role in the negotiations reveals much about gender roles\, family networks and common disjunctures between law-as-written and law-as-it-operated.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/history-associates-luke-roberts-a-samurai-wife-divorces-her-lout-of-a-husband/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:History Associates
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Roberts-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210305T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210305T133000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193704
CREATED:20210111T045959Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230402T204007Z
UID:10002848-1614945600-1614951000@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Public History Colloquium Event–”Abina and the Important Men: Graphic History as Public History”
DESCRIPTION:Join the History Department’s Colloquium in Public History on Friday\, March 5 at noon for a Zoom talk by Trevor R. Getz (San Francisco State University). \nAbina and the Important Men began as an attempt to address a classroom problem: how to teach students about the dual responsibilities of the historian to historical subjects and contemporary audiences.  These goals both drove its development as a graphic history.  Fortuitously\, its publication caught the leading edge of the rehabilitation of that medium as a serious scholarly mode of communication. This great graphic shift is part of a wider realignment of both the history discipline and popular culture\, and it provides both opportunities and pitfalls for the scholar who wishes to share their work with a broader public while retaining its authenticity and maintaining its accuracy.  This is a discussion by the author of Abina and the Important Men about what he has learned since its publication in first edition in 2012\, with some arguments about the future of the graphic history genre. The graphic novel can be obtained through the Oxford University Press website\, or the community-built 2-D animated video version can be watched here (Password: Independence). \nRegister for this Zoom event at http://bit.ly/abina-webinar. \nRecommended video/reading/short links: \n• “How to Design a Comix Page” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1dQEfL2BfUM \n• Julia Alekseyeva\, “Form\, Function\, and Style in the Graphic Essay\,” Sequentials Journal\, 1.4 (May 2020).\nhttps://www.sequentialsjournal.net/issues/issue1.4/alekseyeva.html?fbclid=IwAR0_bxgktwVoNr6TEcWjSeVogcZjM_U36FhvB6GpHXs8mhSfMKSc9PgTz0k  \nRocky Cotard and Laurent Dubois\, “The Slave Revolution That Gave Birth to Haiti\,” The Nib (Feb. 5\, 2018).\nhttps://thenib.com/haitian-revolution/ \n• Nick Sousanis\, “No Sides\,” Spin\, Weave & Cut (blog)\, http://spinweaveandcut.com/no-sides/ \n• Charis Loke & Max Loh\, “The Word for World is Image\,” Singpowrimo\, 20.2:\nhttps://www.singpowrimo.com/features/wordimage?fbclid=IwAR2WSiuLQKWT3EkbJvtBPdC7UmLWquXuduKUGLibIi9sA5jby-sCf1cLqLg \nOther recommended readings:\n• Trevor R. Getz\, “Getting Serious about Comic Histories”\, American Historical Review\, 2018\, 123\, 1596-1597. \n• Barbara Tversky\, “Visualizing Thought”\, Topics in Cognitive Science\, 3 (2011)\, 499-535. \n• Neil Cohn\, “In defense of a ‘grammar’ in the visual language of comics”\, Journal of Pragmatics\, 127 (2018)\, 1-19.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/public-history-colloquium-event-abina-and-the-important-men-graphic-history-as-public-history/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Colloquium Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/ph-abina-webinar.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210304T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210304T160000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193704
CREATED:20210223T181956Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230203T154901Z
UID:10002859-1614873600-1614873600@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Humanities Decanted--W. Patrick McCray\, "Making Art Work: How Cold War Engineers and Artists Forged a New Creative Culture"
DESCRIPTION:The IHC‘s Humanities Decanted series invites all to a dialogue between Patrick McCray (History) and Alan Liu (English) about McCray’s new book\, Making Art Work: How Cold War Engineers and Artists Forged a New Creative Culture (MIT Press\, 2020). Audience Q&A will follow. \nDespite C. P. Snow’s warning\, in 1959\, of an unbridgeable chasm between the humanities and the sciences\, engineers and scientists of that era enthusiastically collaborated with artists to create visually and sonically interesting multimedia works. This new artwork emerged from corporate laboratories\, artists’ studios\, publishing houses\, art galleries\, and university campuses and it involved some of the biggest stars of the art world. Less famous and often overlooked were the engineers and scientists who contributed time\, technical expertise\, and aesthetic input to these projects. These figures included the rocket engineer-turned-artist Frank J. Malina\, MIT’s Gyorgy Kepes\, and Billy Klüver\, a Swedish-born engineer at Bell Labs who helped establish the New York–based group Experiments in Art and Technology. This book restores the role of technologists to the foreground\, explores the era’s hybrid creative culture\, and recounts the many ways that artists\, engineers\, and curators have collaborated over the past fifty years. Making Art Work shows that the borders of art and technology over the past half century are anything but fixed. Just as striking is that the original ideals and ambitions that animated the 1960s-era art-and-technology movement have not faded. Today\, creativity\, collaborations\, and interdisciplinary research are promoted by academic and corporate leaders alike. What emerges is a long history of artists and technologists who have repeatedly built new creative communities in which they can exercise imagination\, invention\, and expertise. \nW. Patrick McCray is a professor in the Department of History at UC Santa Barbara where his research\, writing\, and teaching focus on the histories of technology and science. Originally trained as a scientist\, he is the author or editor of six books. McCray’s 2013 book\, The Visioneers: How an Elite Group of Scientists Pursued Space Colonies\, Nanotechnologies\, and a Limitless Future\, won the Watson Davis Prize in 2014 from the History of Science Society as the “best book written for a general audience.” \nRegistration is required in advance. Register at https://ucsb.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_YAKxHjklSWqDzHO5Vs8Ngg. \nSponsored by the IHC’s Harry Girvetz Memorial Endowment
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/humanities-decanted-w-patrick-mccray-making-art-work-how-cold-war-engineers-and-artists-forged-a-new-creative-culture/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Book Talk,Public Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/McCray_eventPage.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="IHC":MAILTO:events@ihc.ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210302T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210302T160000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193704
CREATED:20210224T024137Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230203T154907Z
UID:10002860-1614700800-1614700800@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Launch Party for the UCSB Undergraduate Journal of History
DESCRIPTION:The UCSB Undergraduate Journal of History is about to release its first issue\, and its editors and contributors cordially invite the public to its Zoom launch party on March 2. The event will feature a short Q&A featuring four of the ten undergraduate authors and moderated by members of the editorial team. \n \nTo celebrate the Journal‘s launch\, use this Zoom link: https://ucsb.zoom.us/j/86005899456
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/launch-party-for-the-ucsb-undergraduate-journal-of-history/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Undergraduate Program
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Undergrad-Journal-Cover-1.1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210227T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210227T160000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193704
CREATED:20210222T231101Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230203T154912Z
UID:10002858-1614434400-1614441600@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:CWWG Workshop--Addison Jensen\, "WITCHIEs\, Chickies\, and Donut Dollies: The Women’s Rights Movement and American GIs"
DESCRIPTION:On Saturday\, February 27\, from 2 to 4 pm\, the Center for Cold War Studies and International History (CCWS) will host a workshop. They will read and discuss a dissertation chapter\, “WITCHIEs\, Chickies\, and Donut Dollies: The Women’s Rights Movement and American GIs\,” by Addie Jensen\, a doctoral candidate in the UCSB history department. \nThis workshop is part of a new CCWS initiative\, the Cold War Working Group (CWWG)\, a collaborative\, graduate student-led group designed to provide a supportive\, welcoming environment for graduate students working on or around the Cold War and international history. The workshops provide an occasion for graduate students\, faculty\, and others to join together as peers to read\, and provide feedback on\, scholarly work in progress (dissertation chapters\, journal articles\, etc.) by members of our community. We strongly encourage other UCSB graduate students and faculty members to consider submitting their own work for discussion in future workshops. \nIf you wish to participate in the February 27 workshop\, please email Addie (who is also serving this year as the CCWS Graduate Fellow) at addisonmjensen@ucsb.edu\, and she will provide you with the password to access her dissertation chapter\, along with a Zoom address. \nPlease join us for this exciting event!
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/cwwg-workshop-addison-jensen-witchies-chickies-and-donut-dollies-the-womens-rights-movement-and-american-gis/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:workshop/brown bag/practicum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/VietnamCWWG.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210226T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210226T160000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193704
CREATED:20210219T225951Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230203T154918Z
UID:10002856-1614355200-1614355200@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Mónica Michelena: "We Are Charrúa Women: From Negation to Re-Existence in Our Body-Territory"
DESCRIPTION:UCSB and UCSD have joined together to welcome Mónica Michelena\, Secretary of the Charrúa Nation’s Council and former Advisor on Indigenous Affairs for Uruguay’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (2014-18). \nCharrúa women have gone through dispossession\, exclusion\, and negation that left marks on their collective memory and body-territory. This genocidal process did not end in 19th-century Uruguay\, but continues today and manifests itself every time that institutions or civil society denies their existence as an indigenous people. For fifteen years\, together with Charrúa sisters from Argentina\, Charrúa women from Uruguay have been working to demolish hegemonic narratives of the market and state. As subjects of legal right\, they are reconfiguring their existence and re-existence in their great ancestral-territory-body. This collective search has led Michelena to academic spaces. \nIn 2011\, Michelena began an investigation with rural Charrúa women in Uruguay’s interior to question the nation-state’s devices of invisibility and to expose counter-memories as part of an attempt to disarm the social and symbolic representation of their extinction. Through a methodological approach based on collaborative ethnography\, Michelena’s research aims to rearm the great quillapí of memory. The metaphor of quillapí – a leather cape made from patchwork – implies that each woman is the bearer of a small piece of memory and\, among all\, they are sewing together its scraps. Down this path\, Charrúa women began to slowly gain recognition from the Uruguayan feminist movement\, in a slow process of internal decolonization. \nZoom link: https://ucsd.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJcscu2urjkpEtMCu4cVNRoiyQe_J-RtAr1Y \nPassword: uruguay \n\nThis event is part of the Feminismos desde abajo\, y hacia el sur/ Feminisms from Below\, and Toward the South series. This speaker series welcomes feminist militants from Latin America to share their perspectives and experiences on building popular power towards a mass feminist movement. Over the past decade\, Latin American feminists have identified manifestations of gender-based oppression under capitalism in everyday women’s conditions in order to successfully mobilize them as part of a political movement. Feminists produce analyses and subsequent strategies around reproductive rights\, resource extractivism\, housing\, debt\, and more. This mass feminism has grown to be arguably the most insurgent political force across the continent.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/monica-michelena-we-are-charrua-women-from-negation-to-re-existence-in-our-body-territory/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Public Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/URUGUAY-Feminismos-desde-abajo-fliers.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210225T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210225T140000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193704
CREATED:20210213T213240Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230203T154928Z
UID:10002855-1614256200-1614261600@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Adrienne Edgar\, "Mixed Children in Soviet Central Asia: Dilemmas of Identity and Belonging"
DESCRIPTION:The UCSB Department of Political Science‘s Identity Politics Group invites you to join them at a Workshop in which Professor Adrienne Edgar (History\, UCSB) will present a chapter from her forthcoming book\, Intimate Internationalism: Mixed Marriage in Soviet Central Asia. The chapter to be discussed is “Mixed Children in Soviet Central Asia: Dilemmas of Identity and Belonging.” \nProfessor Paul Spickard (History\, UCSB) will serve as the discussant. \nTo obtain a copy of Professor Edgar’s chapter in advance\, email Kristen Thomas-McGill at kthomasmcgill@ucsb.edu.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/adrienne-edgar-mixed-children-in-soviet-central-asia-dilemmas-of-identity-and-belonging/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:workshop/brown bag/practicum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Adrienne-Edgar-Flyer-1-page-001.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210225T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210225T123000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193704
CREATED:20210219T233031Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230203T154932Z
UID:10002857-1614256200-1614256200@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:AfroLatinx Voices Series: Re-Writing Black Religions in the Atlantic World--A Conversation with Andrea Mosquera-Guerrero
DESCRIPTION:How might we re-write the history and historiography of religion\, race\, and art in Latin America\, the Caribbean and the Atlantic world? Prof. Andrea Guerrero-Mosquera (Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Xochimilco) will discuss the role of historians in uncovering and debating ideas about the past of people of African descent during the colonial period. She invites us to consider the ways art\, material culture and performance can help us understand how people lived and experienced different forms of religiosity in the past\, and how these practices helped develop different forms of Catholicism and cultural changes across the Atlantic world. She will also share her experience with the Red Iberoamericana de Historiadoras (Ibero-American Network of Historians)\, a digital humanities initiative that seeks to promote dialogues and connect historians across the globe. \nDr. Andrea Mosquera-Guerrero is a researcher at the Sistema Nacional de Investigadores (National System of Researchers\, Mexico) and co-founder of the Iberoamerican Network of Female Historians. She specializes in Afro-Latin American cultures in the Atlantic world during the colonial period\, focusing on issues related to race and art. \nModerator: Andreína Soto is a Ph.D. candidate in History at UC Santa Barbara who specializes in African diaspora\, legal and religious history\, and digital humanities methods. \nZoom event: REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED. You will receive a confirmation email with the link and password to the event. This event will be in Spanish and English interpretation will be available through the Zoom interpretation feature. This event will be recorded. If you require an accommodation to fully participate in this event\, please contact Janet Waggaman at clas@berkeley.edu. \n\n¿Cómo podríamos re-escribir la historia y la historiografía sobre religión\, raza y arte en América Latina\, el Caribe y el mundo atlántico? Andrea Guerrero-Mosquera discutirá el papel de los historiadores en el descubrimiento y el debate sobre el pasado de las personas afrodescendientes durante el período colonial. Nos invita a considerar las formas en que el arte\, la cultura material y el performance pueden ayudarnos a comprender cómo las personas vivían y experimentaban diferentes formas de religiosidad en el pasado\, y cómo estas prácticas ayudaron a desarrollar diferentes formas de catolicismo y cambios culturales en el mundo atlántico. También compartirá su experiencia con la Red Iberoamericana de Historiadoras\, una iniciativa de humanidades digitales que busca promover el diálogo y conectar a historiadores alrededor del mundo. \nDra. Andrea Mosquera-Guerrero es investigadora del Sistema Nacional de Investigadores (México) y es co-fundadora de la Red Iberoamericana de Historiadoras. Se especializa en las culturas afro-latinoamericanas en el mundo atlántico durante el período colonial\, y se enfoque en las cuestions de arte y raza. \nModeradora: Andreína Soto es candidata de doctorado en historia en UC Santa Barbara. Andreína se especializa en estudios de la diáspora africana\, historia de las leyes y la religión\, así como métodos de humanidades digitales. \nEvento por Zoom: SE REQUIERE REGISTRO. Recibirá un correo electrónico de confirmación con el enlace y contraseña para el evento. Este evento será en español\, y habrá interpretación en inglés a través de la funcionalidad de interpretación de Zoom. Si necesita una adaptación para participar plenamente en este evento\, comuníquese con Janet Waggaman clas@berkeley.edu.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/afrolatinx-voices-series-re-writing-black-religions-in-the-atlantic-world-a-conversation-with-andrea-mosquera-guerrero/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Roundtable
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/BLAC-event3-ENG.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210219T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210219T130000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193704
CREATED:20210209T045049Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230402T203958Z
UID:10002854-1613739600-1613739600@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:FOCAL POINT Dialogues in History Webinar I: Sovereignty and the Political
DESCRIPTION:The History Department’s Colloquium Committee warmly invites you to attend the inaugural session of our FOCAL POINT Dialogues in History series.  Inspired by the History Department’s Statement on the George Floyd Uprising and its invocation to understand and interrogate our racialized past and the investments of disciplinary history within it\, the series brings together UCSB History faculty and graduate students who have volunteered to lead a dialogue on Black life\, race\, and antiblackness in history. The conversations will engage Herman Bennett’s African Kings and Black Slaves as a focal point to discuss themes like sovereignty\, empire\, and racial capitalism from different historical angles of vision. \nOur inaugural webinar will engage Prof. Herman Bennett’s emphasis on sovereignty and the importance of the political in understanding the history of race in the world. Registration for the webinar is required. Please click on the link below to register. \nDate: 19th February 2021 \nTime: 1:00 PM \nWebinar I: Sovereignty and the Political \nZoom registration: Please register in advance for this webinar using the link below.\nhttps://ucsb.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_31FRU_q0QYiZ46ABcHCvkw \nFeaturing presentations by Juan Cobo Betancourt\, Elizabeth Digeser\, Adam Sabra and Sergey Saluschev.  \nComment by Hilary Bernstein. \n\n  \nJuan Cobo Betancourt is a historian of race\, language\, religion\, and law in colonial Latin America\, co-founder of Neogranadina\, and the author of Mestizos Heraldos de Dios (2012). \nElizabeth Digeser is a historian of religion\, philosophy\, Roman politics\, and conversion in Late Antiquity\, and the author of A Threat to Public Piety: Christians\, Platonists\, and the Great Persecution (2012). \nAdam Sabra is a historian of poverty\, charity\, aristocracy\, and Islam in medieval and early modern Egypt\, and the author of Poverty and Charity in Medieval Islam: Mamluk Egypt 1250-1517 (2000). \nSergey Salushchev is a historian of slavery and abolition in the nineteenth century Caucasus under Russian imperialism. His dissertation analyzes the region as a permanent borderland\, a site of cultural exchanges\, translational commercial networks\, contested memory\, and imperial rivalries. \nHilary Bernstein is a historian of urban culture and history in early modern France\, and the author of Historical Communities: Cities\, Erudition\, and National Identity in Early Modern France (2020).
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/focal-point-dialogues-in-history-webinar-i-sovereignty-and-the-political/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Colloquium Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Webinar-I_Sovereignty-and-the-Political.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210209T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210209T193000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193704
CREATED:20210201T183928Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230203T154954Z
UID:10002852-1612893600-1612899000@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Capps Center Event: Speech\, White Supremacy\, and Insurrection
DESCRIPTION:The January 6 insurrection at the United States Capitol brought to the fore the threat that white nationalist forces pose to our democracy. Join the Walter H. Capps Center for the Study of Ethics\, Religion\, and Public Life for a conversation about these forces\, their history\, and what can be done to resist them. Our guests will be UC Free Speech Fellows Ryan Coonerty (Santa Cruz County Supervisor) and Melissa Barthelemy (Public History doctoral candidate)\, and Dr. Katya Armistead (Assistant Vice Chancellor and Dean of Student Life). \nRegister via Zoom: https://ucsb.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_-xSYflSySEGpGbop0ZfULg.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/capps-center-event-speech-white-supremacy-and-insurrection/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Panel Discussion
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Capps-Center-Speech-WhiteSupremacy-Insurrection-012821.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210209T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210209T180000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20210107T065221Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230203T170744Z
UID:10002323-1612886400-1612893600@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:ISRRAR Event--Dr. Jason Young\, "Look for Me in the Whirlwind: Toward an Ecology of Afro-Futurism"
DESCRIPTION:Speaking before a rapt audience\, famed black nationalist leader\, Marcus Garvey\, vowed to support the cause of African liberation not only in life\, but also in death\, insisting that he would return as an “earthquake\, or a cyclone\, or plague\, or pestilence” to aid in the fight for freedom. He implored his followers: “Look for me in the whirlwind.” Using Garvey’s promise as a starting point\, Dr. Jason Young (University of Michigan) reconsiders the history of slavery with an eye trained on the transformative role that torrential rains\, gale force winds and raging fires played in both opening and closing paths to freedom and resistance. And in view of the current climate crisis\, COVID-19\, and yet another national reckoning on racial injustice\, Young imagines the role that rising sea levels\, receding coastlines\, and global fugitivity might play in the Afro-futures to come. \nJoin this Zoom event here: bit.ly/3hVdvP4  \n\nThis event is part of the ISRRAR Winter Quarter series. \nProfessor Butch Ware and the ISRRAR announce the Winter Quarter schedule for HIST 210RA: Race\, Faith\, Revolution. Graduate students are invited to register for this 2-unit seminar and to sign up for the listserv at http://tinyurl.com/ISRRARListServ. \nHow have Black metaphysics articulated with racial politics in order to advance efforts of justice\, liberation\, and self-actualization? In this very special year of 2021\, our seminar will take on manifestations of anti-black racism and imperialism\, as well as African and African Diasporic efforts to mediate between the seen and unseen worlds in struggles for justice. \nThis graduate seminar is part of a broader collaborative process meant to engage graduate students and faculty alike. The Initiative for the Study of Race\, Religion\, and Revolution (ISRRAR) seeks to foster a conversation on intersections of spirituality and social change wherein works on (and by) formerly colonized peoples are central\, rather than peripheral. \nThis approach is driven by an axial critique of the ways in which modernity’s core contradictions shape our shared pasts and presents. An era of revolutionary enlightenment\, we are told\, brought humanity out of the ‘dark ages.’ Freedom dawned. But this ‘age of lights’ brought the darkest of racial taxonomies\, and scales of slavery and human suffering unknown to ancient and medieval worlds. Reason proclaimed its mission: liberate humanity from the bondage of irrational religion. Yet rational political economies brought global empires\, world wars\, and ethnic genocides. Moreover\, new nationalisms have drawn on older religious repertories to define citizens and subject them to moral authority. Self-congratulatory Western tropes\, however\, tend to overlook the ubiquity of race and the persistence of faith\, portraying them as incidental rather than fundamental. \nColonized peoples in Africa and the Americas\, tell different tales. A generation of emergent scholarship has brought these forward. Scholars (many trained in interdisciplinary fields) have recovered ‘native’ narratives and ontologies of the oppressed\, often dislodging dominant meta-narratives in the study of the global West. In History 210 we engage live presentations of the works of scholars\, activists\, and artists whose conceptualization and execution of their research breaks new ground in these domains.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/the-initiative-for-the-study-of-race-religion-and-revolutions-winter-2021-schedule-2021-02-09/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Colloquium Event,Graduate Program
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/ISRRAR-Young.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210208T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210208T160000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20210203T174248Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210203T174248Z
UID:10002853-1612800000-1612800000@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Lucía Cavallero: "Gendered Violence and Financialization of Social Reproduction: A Feminist Perspective On Debt"
DESCRIPTION:UCSB and UCSD have joined together to welcome Lucía Cavallero\, a doctoral candidate in Social Sciences at the University of Buenos Aires. \nThe presentation will focus on the relationship between sexist violence and economic violence\, specifically the financialization of life and the increase in gender-based violence. It will highlight the Latin American feminist movement’s struggles against debt as articulated in the tactic of the March 8 International Women’s Day Strike and in Argentina’s Ni Una Menos (Not One Less) movement. \nSee Lucía’s articles “Debt and the Violence of Property” (Verso 2020) and “A feminist perspective on the battle over property” (Feminist Review 2020)\, both co-authored with Verónica Gago. \nZoom link: https://ucsb.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZElduGopjorEtfsRKUqNx8CcKzu8_VhM43a \nPassword: argentina \n\nThis event is part of the Feminismos desde abajo\, y hacia el sur/ Feminisms from Below\, and Toward the South series. This speaker series welcomes feminist militants from Latin America to share their perspectives and experiences on building popular power towards a mass feminist movement. Over the past decade\, Latin American feminists have identified manifestations of gender-based oppression under capitalism in everyday women’s conditions in order to successfully mobilize them as part of a political movement. Feminists produce analyses and subsequent strategies around reproductive rights\, resource extractivism\, housing\, debt\, and more. This mass feminism has grown to be arguably the most insurgent political force across the continent.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/lucia-cavallero-gendered-violence-and-financialization-of-social-reproduction-a-feminist-perspective-on-debt/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Public Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/ARGENTINA-Feminismos-desde-abajo-fliers.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210205T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210205T133000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20210111T044047Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230402T203947Z
UID:10002847-1612526400-1612531800@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Public History Colloquium Event–”Reinterpreting Slavery and the Emotional Labor of History”
DESCRIPTION:Join the History Department’s Colloquium in Public History on Friday\, February 5 at noon for a Zoom talk by Professor Hilary N. Green (University of Alabama). \nProfessor Green reflects on the powerful legacy of Jim Crow era efforts to erase the history of slavery from the landscape of her workplace\, the University of Alabama\, and shares a project she pursued to rewrite this historical narrative. She researched\, designed and implemented a campus tour to tell the actual history of slavery and enslaved workers in the University’s past. She collected oral tradition and pursued deep archival research\, to historicize “the experiences\, activism and collective memories of African American men\, women and children\,” and describes her efforts to get the campus community to rethink its understanding of the past\, even as an untenured member of the faculty. Her project exposed the racist structures undergirding the University Archives; it highlights the tenacity of older narratives and exposes some of the physical and psychological burdens of this sort of historical recuperation for the practitioner. All this unfolded in the larger social struggle over historical monuments and commemoration in recent months. As Green writes\, “when exploring the racial history of one’s employer\, the Jim Crow era archival project of white supremacy is no longer an abstract concept read about only in scholarship.” \nRegister for this Zoom event at https://ucsb.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_yzLVlQ62QNGv7sZz1DenDA. \nTo download the flyer for this event\, click here. \nRecommended reading: \n• Hilary Green\, “The Hallowed Ground Tour: Revising and Reimagining Landscapes of Slavery at the University of Alabama\,” in-progress seminar paper.  \n• Hilary Green\, “The Burden of the University of Alabama’s Hallowed Grounds\,” The Public Historian 42: 4 (November 2020): 28-40.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/public-history-colloquium-event-reinterpreting-slavery-and-the-emotional-labor-of-history/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Colloquium Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Green-Little-Round-House.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210202T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210202T133000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20210201T093055Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210201T093055Z
UID:10002851-1612267200-1612272600@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:LAIS Tertulia | "Race and Caste in Latin America\, India\, and the USA: A Global Conversation"
DESCRIPTION:Latin American and Iberian Studies invites you to a Tertulia in the Time of COVID\, 2020-2021! Two History Department faculty members will speak at this exciting event. \nIn her widely acclaimed book Caste: The Origins of our Discontents\, Isabel Wilkerson complicates the category of race\, as it is commonly understood in the US\, by bringing caste to the fore. She discusses the “caste” historical experience of the US in light of those in Nazi Germany and India. Insofar as the term “caste” was first introduced in India by the Portuguese at a time when the Spanish and Portuguese empires had a global colonial reach\, Wilkerson’s book provides a perfect pretext for the Program in Latin American and Iberian Studies (LAIS) to launch a global conversation. In this roundtable\, UCSB faculty from Black Studies\, History\, and LAIS specialized in the US\, India\, and Latin America discuss their take on caste\, race\, and Isabel Wilkerson. \nSpeakers (UC Santa Barbara)\nUtathya Chattopadhyaya is Assistant Professor of History at the University of California\, Santa Barbara. He specializes in the history of modern South Asia\, British imperialism\, and agrarian commodities in global markets. His essays have appeared in A Cultural History of Western Empires\, the South African Historical Journal\, Historical Reflections\, English Language Notes\, and the edited volume Animalia: An Anti-Imperial Bestiary for our Times. He is currently working on a monograph on cannabis and empire in British India. \nCecilia Méndez is a Peruvian historian specialized in the social and political history of the Andean region. She is the director of the Latin American and Iberian Studies Program at UC Santa Barbara and an Associated Professor in History. Her work calls the attention on the importance of late eighteenth-century\, and nineteenth-century political developments in shaping modern conceptions nationhood\, citizenship\, and “race.” \nTerrance Wooten is an Assistant Professor in Black Studies. He is currently working on his first book manuscript\, “Lurking in the Shadows of Home: Homelessness\, Carcerality\, and the Figure of the Sex Offender\,” which examines how those who have been designated “sex offenders” and are homeless in the Maryland/DC area are managed and regulated through social policies\, sex offender registries\, and urban and architectural design. His scholarly interests are located at the intersections of Black studies\, gender and sexuality studies\, studies of poverty and homelessness\, and carceral studies. \nJoin the Zoom meeting here: https://ucsb.zoom.us/j/84061612112. 
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/lais-tertulia-race-and-caste-in-latin-america-india-and-the-usa-a-global-conversation/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Roundtable
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/LAIS-Tertulia-Feb-2021-Caste.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210201T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210201T160000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20210127T035850Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210127T035934Z
UID:10002850-1612195200-1612195200@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Mia Dragnic and Pierina Ferretti: "An Expansive Rebellion: Feminism and Social Revolt in Chile"
DESCRIPTION:UCSB and UCSD have joined together to welcome Pierina Ferretti and Mia Dragnic García\, sociologists and doctoral candidates in Latin American Studies at the University of Chile. \nIn October 2019\, Chile experienced its largest social revolt since the return to democracy in 1990. The mobilization\, which began as a spontaneous reaction to protest against a 0.30 USD rise in the Santiago transport fare\, soon after became a widespread outburst against the precarious and unjust conditions that affect the majority of the population after almost fifty years of life under a neoliberal regime. Throughout Chile\, high school and university students\, young precarious professionals\, residents of peripheral neighborhoods\, sectors of a fragile and unstable “middle class”\, soccer hooligans (a symbol of popular and stigmatized youth)\, qualified salaried workers and unqualified\, retirees and older adults\, office workers\, and app workers\, among others\, joined together in mass demonstrations. \nAs an immediate antecedent to this revolt in Chile\, there had been a recent emergence of a new wave of the feminist movement that has since caused a general awareness of sexist violence\, sexual abuse\, and the need for an abortion law\, issues that today they occupy the center of social debate. One can see the underground work that Chilean feminism has carried out for many years and that has gained symbolic capital – this is key to understanding how it has moved from private malaise to collective revolt today. Feminism has acted in Chile as an expansive rebellion\, starting with women and sexual dissidents and has advanced towards the politicization of broad social sectors\, preparing the conditions for mass revolt. \nZoom link: https://ucsb.zoom.us/j/89256077958?pwd=Mlp2MWFNVENGRTNmZXFIb2k0WE5rZz09 \nPassword: chile \n\nThis event is part of the Feminismos desde abajo\, y hacia el sur/ Feminisms from Below\, and Toward the South series. This speaker series welcomes feminist militants from Latin America to share their perspectives and experiences on building popular power towards a mass feminist movement. Over the past decade\, Latin American feminists have identified manifestations of gender-based oppression under capitalism in everyday women’s conditions in order to successfully mobilize them as part of a political movement. Feminists produce analyses and subsequent strategies around reproductive rights\, resource extractivism\, housing\, debt\, and more. This mass feminism has grown to be arguably the most insurgent political force across the continent.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/mia-dragnic-and-pierina-ferretti-an-expansive-rebellion-feminism-and-social-revolt-in-chile/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Public Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/CHILE-Feminismos-desde-abajo-fliers.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210115T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210115T133000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20210111T040040Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230402T203939Z
UID:10002846-1610712000-1610717400@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Public History Colloquium Event–"Public Lands\, Public History: Putting History to Work for the United States Forest Service"
DESCRIPTION:Join the History Department’s Colloquium in Public History on Friday\, January 15 at noon for a Zoom talk by Leisl Carr Childers and Michael Childers (Colorado State University). \nChilders and Carr Childers will discuss their current project\, a new history of the USDA Forest Service from 1960-2020\, and the historical methodologies that undergird their work. In particular\, they will address what it means to work in applied history\, how applied history works (or does not work) with regard to public lands management agencies\, and how public history\, applied history\, and working as a public intellectual speaks to history taking a public turn. \nRegister in advance for this event here. You can download the event flyer at this link. \nRecommended Readings: \nBundyville\, Season ONE—podcast (applied history work by Leisl Carr Childers)\nhttps://longreads.com/bundyville/season-one/ \nImperiled Promise: The State of History in our National Parks\nhttps://www.oah.org/site/assets/files/10189/imperiled_promise.pdf \nPatricia Limerick\, “Applied History\, Knocked for a Loop but Neither Down Nor Out\,” and “Where Bipartisanship Finds a Refuge: A Rendezvous with the Western Governors’ Association\,” both in her “Not my first Rodeo” blog: \nhttps://www.centerwest.org/archives/23851 \nhttps://www.centerwest.org/archives/23429 \nAbout the speakers:\n• https://libarts.source.colostate.edu/csu-faculty-writing-history-of-the-modern-u-s-forest-service/\n• https://leislcarrchilders.org \n• https://michaelwchilders.com/author/michaelwchilders/
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/public-history-colloquium-event-public-lands-public-history-putting-history-to-work-for-the-united-states-forest-service/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Colloquium Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/USFS-History-Project.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210113T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210113T113000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20210109T001811Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250127T170033Z
UID:10002331-1610537400-1610537400@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Job Talk: Taylor M. Moore's "Amulet Tales: Political and Spiritual Economies of Healing in Egypt"
DESCRIPTION:The History Department invites all to a job talk by Dr. Taylor M. Moore on January 13\, 2021. \nDr. Moore is a University of California President’s Postdoctoral Fellow in the History Department at UC Santa Barbara. Her research lies at the intersections of critical race studies\, decolonial/postcolonial histories of science\, and decolonial materiality studies with a geographical focus on Egypt and the late Ottoman world. Her manuscript-in-preparation\, Superstitious Women: Race\, Magic\, and Medicine in Egypt\, uses modern Egyptian amulets as an archive to reconstruct the magical and vernacular medical life-worlds of peasant women healers\, and their critical role developing medico-anthropological expertise in Egypt from 1875-1950. \nUpper Egyptian and Black African women healers\, and the amulets they wielded\, shaped robust spiritual and political economies of healing in Egypt’s long nineteenth century. Known as “old wives\,” these women stood at the center of a contest over power\, expertise and scientific authority. Despite repeated and overlapping imperial\, colonial\, and nationalist efforts by government officials and doctors to discredit their knowledge\, wise women controlled a widespread market in occult objects and services that were crucial to everyday life. By the 1920s\, the production of occult knowledge became intimately entangled with the internationalization of the social sciences. Egyptologists and anthropologists designated women healers and their magico-medical practice as\n“survivals” of ancient Egypt. As such\, these women were both objects of scientific inquiry and critical producers of medical and anthropological knowledge. \nDr. Moore’s job talk will take place on Zoom at this link. To download the flyer for this event\, click here.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/job-talk-taylor-m-moores-amulet-tales-political-and-spiritual-economies-of-healing-in-egypt/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Job Talk
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Moore-Job-Talk-Flyer-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210110T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210110T160000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20210107T070713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210107T070713Z
UID:10002329-1610294400-1610294400@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Miroslava Chávez-García\, "Migrant Longing"
DESCRIPTION:UCSB History Associates has partnered with the Santa Barbara Trust for Historic Preservation to present a public lecture by UCSB Professor of History Miroslava Chávez-García.  \nDrawing upon a personal collection of more than 300 letters exchanged between her parents and other family members across the U.S.-Mexico border\, Professor Chávez-García recreates and gives meaning to the hope\, fear\, and longing migrants experienced in their everyday lives both “here” and “there” (aqui y alla). As private sources of communication hidden from public consumption and historical research\, the letters provide a rare glimpse into the deeply emotional\, personal\, and social lives of ordinary Mexican men and women as recorded in their immediate\, firsthand accounts. Chávez-García demonstrates not only how migrants struggled to maintain their sense of humanity in el norte but also how those remaining at home made sense of their changing identities in response to the loss of loved ones who sometimes left for weeks\, months\, or years at a time\, or simply never returned. \nPlease register for this Zoom event in advance at this link. To download the event flyer\, click here.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/miroslava-chavez-garcia-migrant-longing/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:History Associates
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/2021-Migrant-Longing-flyer.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201210T093000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201210T093000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20201124T222018Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201124T222018Z
UID:10002317-1607592600-1607592600@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Nyasha Mboti\, "Closing the Loophole: Apartheid Studies"
DESCRIPTION:Professor Mhoze Chikowero invites all to attend a special guest lecture by Dr. Nyashi Mboti as part of UCSB’s African Studies Series. Dr. Mboti will discuss the new field he founded: Apartheid Studies. He will introduce his forthcoming 4-volume treatise on the subject\, Apartheid Studies: A Manifesto\, which will change how we think about enslavement\, colonialism\, neocolonialism\, impoverishment\, and the exploitation and carnage of humans that has defined global history for at least half a millennium.\n \nDr. Mboti is an Associate Professor in the Department of Communication Science at the University of the Free State in South Africa. His keen interest in academia is to ask questions that people do not normally intend or think to ask. He has\, to date\, successfully supervised ten doctoral students\,\ndelivered seminal keynotes at international conferences\, and published over two dozen peer reviewed research articles.\n \nTo read an early copy of Volume 1 of Apartheid Studies: A Manifesto\, contact Professor Chikowero at chikowero@history.ucsb.edu or Claudia Ankrah at c_ankrah@ucsb.edu. To download the flyer for the lecture\, click here. To attend Dr. Mbughuni’s lecture on Zoom\, use this link.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/nyasha-mboti-closing-the-loophole-apartheid-studies/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Public Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Mboti-Final-page-001-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201204T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201204T133000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20201106T040442Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230402T203930Z
UID:10002844-1607083200-1607088600@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Public History Colloquium Event–"Pride of Place: LGBTQ Public History in the United Kingdom"
DESCRIPTION:Join the History Department’s Colloquium in Public History on Friday\, December 4 at noon for a Zoom talk by UCSB alumnus Dr. Justin Bengry (Goldsmiths\, University of London). \nDr. Bengry will present a major crowdsourced public history project he helped develop. Pride of Place maps sites of LGBTQ history in the United Kingdom. Dr. Bengry set the project in context of the state of LGBTQ public history in the UK. He is a historian of sexuality and capitalism who chairs the first MA in Queer History at Goldsmiths\, University of London. \nTo view the Pride of Place online exhibition at the Historic England webpage\, click here. To view the crowdsourced map\, click here. \nPlease register in advance for this event at this link.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/public-history-colloquium-event-pride-of-place-lgbtq-public-history-in-the-united-kingdom/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Colloquium Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Gay-Pride-Image.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201115T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201115T160000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20201112T193242Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201112T193242Z
UID:10002315-1605456000-1605456000@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Sheila Lodge\, "Santa Barbara: An UNcommonplace American Town"
DESCRIPTION:UCSB History Associates has partnered with the Santa Barbara Trust for Historic Preservation to present a public lecture by former mayor Sheila Lodge on the topic of Santa Barbara history.  \nLodge will discuss her book Santa Barbara: An UNcommonplace American Town about how Santa Barbara became the community that it is through planning. She will describe the many battles it sometimes took and the process that was developed to make the critical decisions. Because of her personal involvement in the struggles\, her book is partially a memoir. \nLodge was born at home on her parents’ dairy in Arcadia\, CA. She is a life-long Californian except for 2 1/2 years in Annapolis\, MD\, where she taught school and did social work. She returned to\nCalifornia in 1950 and came to Santa Barbara in 1952. She served on the Santa Barbara City Planning Commission from 1973-1975\, the City Council from 1975-1981\, and as Mayor from 1981-\n1993. An incurable public policy wonk\, since 2009 she’s been back on the Planning Commission where she started her civic life 45 years ago. \nPlease register in advance for this free event here. To download the event flyer\, click here.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/sheila-lodge-santa-barbara-an-uncommonplace-american-town/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:History Associates
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Lodge-UNcommonplace-Flyer-page-001.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201112T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201112T130000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20201110T231010Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201110T231010Z
UID:10002313-1605182400-1605186000@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Kendall Lovely\, "Dismembering Classicism: Contesting Colonial and Classical Legacies in the Southwest"
DESCRIPTION:Classicization in U.S. heritage narratives often involves the imposition of classical elements\, derived from Greek and Roman civilization\, onto narratives of colonial conquest in Southwestern borderlands and frontier spaces. Ongoing controversies surrounding statues of the conquistador\, Juan de Oñate\, reflect the ways in which the classical legacy remains prominent in public spheres of historical narrative. In providing a visual narrative of conquest linked to classical imagery\, the Spanish history of the settling of the Southwest becomes implicated in broader U.S. historical narratives that valorize conquest as a civilizing force in the settling of the American West. While much of this classical imagery first appeared in Spanish sources\, this paper traces specifically how these classicized narratives of Spanish conquest became appropriated and implicated in Anglo-American/U.S. historical narratives\, as well as counter-narratives of Indigenous resistance. \nKendall Lovely\, a member of the Navajo Nation\, is from Albuquerque\, NM. She holds a double-major B.A. from the University of New Mexico in Comparative Literature & Cultural Studies and Anthropology\, an M.A. in Comparative Humanities from Brandeis University\, and a second M.A. in Museum Studies from UNM. Her recent thesis in Museum Studies explored Classical influence within early anthropology and museum discourses. Her examinations revealed how these models helped to construct colonial representations of gender\, especially in Southwest ethnology. As a Ph.D. student in Public History at the University of California Santa Barbara\, she continues these research inquiries toward decolonizing museum practices and the public interpretation of history in museum settings. \nPlease register in advance for this free presentation at this link.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/kendall-lovely-dismembering-classicism-contesting-colonial-and-classical-legacies-in-the-southwest/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Public Lecture
ORGANIZER;CN="IHC":MAILTO:events@ihc.ucsb.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201112T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201112T123000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20201110T224011Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201110T224136Z
UID:10002845-1605180600-1605184200@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Azaria Mbughuni\, "Tanzania and the Liberation Struggles in Southern Africa"
DESCRIPTION:All are cordially invited to a special guest lecture by Dr. Azaria Mbughuni on the role of Tanzania in Southern Africa’s liberation struggles. Dr. Mbughuni’s guest lecture will build onto Professor Mhoze Chikowero‘s ongoing graduate seminar on African Self-Liberation. \nDr. Mbughuni is Assistant Professor of History at Lane College\, where he is also the Chair of the Division of Business\, Social and Behavioral Sciences. Dr. Mbughuni was born in Dar es Salaam\, Tanzania. He earned his Ph.D. from Howard University. His research interests include the role of Tanzania and the Pan-African Diasporas in the struggles for African independence.  \nFor more information and to obtain relevant readings\, contact Professor Chikowero at chikowero@history.ucsb.edu. To download the flyer for this event\, click here. To attend Dr. Mbughuni’s lecture on Zoom\, use this link.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/azaria-mbughuni-tanzania-and-the-liberation-struggles-in-southern-africa/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Public Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Tanzania-Mbughuni-Poster-2020-page-001.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201106T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201106T133000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20201028T175749Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201105T202255Z
UID:10002842-1604664000-1604669400@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Public History Colloquium Event--"In the Spaciousness of Uncertainty is Room to Act": Public History’s Long Game
DESCRIPTION:Join the History Department’s Colloquium in Public History this Friday\, November 6 at noon for a Zoom talk by Professor Marla Miller (University of Massachusetts\, Amherst) about her recent article in The Public Historian\, “‘In the Spaciousness of Uncertainty is Room to Act’: Public History’s Long Game.” \nTaking her title from Rebecca Solnit’s Hope in the Dark\, an exploration of the long arc of historical change\, Miller engages with students and the public around the ideas\, questions and new directions posed in this address to the National Council for Public History\, public history’s major professional organization. Miller is a historian of US women’s work prior to the industrial revolution\, and is the NCPH’s immediate past president.  She is the author of many books\, including Betsy Ross and the Making of America and Entangled Lives: Labor\, Livelihood and Landscapes of Change in Rural Massachusetts. Her research\, teaching\, publications and consulting engage North American material culture\, museum and historic site interpretation\, historical interpretation in the National Park Service\, and the teaching of public history. \nEvent attendees are invited to read Professor Miller’s article in advance; it may be accessed here. \nPlease register to attend using this link.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/in-the-spaciousness-of-uncertainty-is-room-to-act-public-historys-long-game/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Colloquium Event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201022T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201022T170000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20201010T012553Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T012553Z
UID:10002840-1603382400-1603386000@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Lizabeth Cohen\, Struggling to Save America's Cities in the Suburban Age: Urban Renewal Revisited
DESCRIPTION:Click here to download the flyer for this event. \nREGISTER NOW \nFree to attend; registration required to receive Zoom webinar attendance link \nUrban Renewal of the 1950s through 1970s has acquired a very poor reputation\, much of it deserved. But reducing it to an unchanging story of urban destruction misses some important legacies and genuinely progressive goals. Those include efforts to create more socially mixed communities\, to involve suburbs—not just cities—in solving metropolitan inequality\, and most importantly\, to hold the federal government responsible for funding more affordable housing and other urban investments\, rather than turn to the private sector. Cohen will revisit this history by following the long career of Edward J. Logue\, who worked to revitalize New Haven in the 1950s\, became the architect of the “New Boston” in the 1960s\, and later led innovative organizations in New York at the state level and in the South Bronx. She will analyze the evolution in Logue’s thinking and actions\, when and how he met resistance and accommodation by communities\, and what he and many others who cared about cities learned in facing the challenges of urban revitalization during the suburban boom of the second half of the 20th century. Amid substantial challenges today in the realms of racial injustice\, public health\, economic viability\, and urban resilience\, it is more important than ever that we reexamine the history of efforts—successful and failed—to keep American cities vital. Audience Q&A will follow. \nLizabeth Cohen is the Howard Mumford Jones Professor of American Studies and a Harvard University Distinguished Service Professor in the Department of History at Harvard. Her most recent book is Saving America’s Cities: Ed Logue and the Struggle to Renew Urban America in the Suburban Age (October 2019)\, winner of the Bancroft Prize. It examines the benefits and costs of the shifting strategies for rebuilding American cities after World War II by following the career of urban redeveloper Edward J. Logue\, who oversaw major renewal projects in New Haven\, Boston\, and New York State from the 1950s through the 1980s. Cohen has been a fellow of the Guggenheim Foundation\, the National Endowment for the Humanities\, the American Council of Learned Societies\, and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. She is also a former president of the Urban History Association. \nTo learn more about or purchase a copy of Saving America’s Cities: Ed Logue and the Struggle to Renew Urban America in the Suburban Age\, please visit Chaucer’s Books online. \nSponsored by the IHC’s Living Democracy series; the IHC’s Harry Girvetz Memorial Endowment; the UCSB Blum Center on Poverty\, Inequality\, and Democracy; and the UCSB Department of History \nImage courtesy of Boston City Archives \nREGISTER NOW. ASL and Spanish interpretation will be provided. To view ASL interpretation\, please attend the webinar on a desktop computer.
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/lizabeth-cohen-struggling-to-save-americas-cities-in-the-suburban-age-urban-renewal-revisited/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:Public Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Cohen-Lizabeth-Struggling-to-Save-America-s-Cities-page-001.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201017T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201017T160000
DTSTAMP:20260419T193705
CREATED:20201014T222031Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201014T222031Z
UID:10002841-1602950400-1602950400@history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Sarah Case\, "The Woman Suffrage Movement: 'A Century of Struggle'"
DESCRIPTION:Join UCSB History Associates on Saturday\, October 17 on Zoom for their first public lecture of the academic year. Dr. Sarah Case will survey the woman suffrage movement for the hundred years or so before the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920. Her talk will consider why the idea of women voting was so controversial in the nineteenth\ncentury\, and examine how it became less so in the early twentieth century. Dr. Case will introduce some of the major activists and organizations in the women suffrage movement and highlight some of the turning points in the “century of struggle.” \nDr. Sarah Case earned her MA and PhD in history at the University of California\, Santa Barbara\, where she is a continuing lecturer in history\, teaching courses in public history\, women’s history\, and history of the South. She is also the managing editor of The Public Historian\, a journal focused on publicly engaged historical scholarship. She is the author of Leaders of Their Race: Educating Black and White Women in the New South (Illinois\, 2017) and articles on women and education\, reform\, and commemoration.\n \nThe Zoom link for this event is https://ucsb.zoom.us/j/82201755393. All are welcome!
URL:https://history.ucsb.edu/events/sarah-case-the-woman-suffrage-movement-a-century-of-struggle/
LOCATION:Zoom\, CA
CATEGORIES:History Associates
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://history.ucsb.edu/wp-content/uploads/Case-The-Woman-Suffrage-Movement.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR