Roii Ball: Indebted Settlement : Rural Credit, National Segregation, and ‘Internal Colonization’ in the German-Polish Borderlands before the First World War

6275 Bunche Hall

Tuesday, January 29, 2019 12PM Bunche 6275 European Colloquium Speaker Series Roii Ball - "Indebted Settlement : Rural Credit, National Segregation, and ‘Internal Colonization’ in the German-Polish Borderlands before the First World War" Roii Ball - PhD candidate, UCLA Roii Ball is a sixth year graduate student at the UCLA History Department. He earned a […]

Herrick Chapman – “France’s Long Reconstruction: In Search of the Modern Republic”

6275 Bunche Hall

Thursday, March 7, 2019 4PM Bunche 6275 European Colloquium Speaker Series Herrick Chapman - "France’s Long Reconstruction: In Search of the Modern Republic" Herrick Chapman - Professor, New York University Historian Herrick Chapman explores how the French, in reconstructing their country after World War II, sought to combine a top-down modernization drive with a rejuvenation of democracy. […]

The Kids Aren’t All Right: Historians and the Problem of Childhood

6275 Bunche Hall

Can children be historical actors? The proposition that children have historical agency has been a rallying cry for many historians of childhood who seek to recover the voices and actions of young people in the past, arguing that their history is analogous to that of other disenfranchised and marginalized groups and must be recovered in […]

William Sewell, “A Concrete History of Abstraction: Explaining the Emergence of Civic Equality in Eighteenth-Century France”

6275 Bunche Hall

A Concrete History of Abstraction: Explaining the Emergence of Civic Equality in Eighteenth-Century France William Sewell Professor Emeritus of Political Science and History The University of Chicago Thursday, October 10, 2019 4-6pm Bunche 6275 One of the most important changes introduced by the French Revolution was the codification of civic equality as a fundamental right. […]

Dr. Maria Todorova, “Imagining Utopia: The Lost World of Socialists at Europe’s Margins”

"Imagining Utopia: The Lost World of Socialists at Europe’s Margins" a Talk by Dr. Maria Todorova Gutgsell Professor of History and Center for Advanced Study Professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Presented by the UCLA Department of History's European Colloquium Thursday, January 30, 2020, 4-6PM UCLA Faculty Center, Sierra Room

Glenn Penny’s “German History Unbound” Book Discussion

6275 Bunche Hall

The European Colloquium will host a discussion of Glenn Penny's new book, "German History Unbound" on Monday  October 17, at 4 PM in 6275 Bunche Hall. The discussant is Professor Carina Johnson of Pitzer College.

Patrícia Martins Marcos, UC Chancellor’s Postdoctoral Fellow Rising to the Challenge “The Empire of White Patriarchs: Population, Race-Making, and the Sciences of Human Improvement in the Afro-Luso-Brazilian Atlantic (1730-1800)”

6275 Bunche Hall

In 1750, when the Brazilian border expanded by several orders of magnitude, Portuguese Crown officials, administrators, and men of science received the news with hope and apprehension. While the growth of frontiers of Portugal’s possession in the Americas was celebrated, it also presented formidable challenges for settlement. How could a diminutive metropole whose empire stretched […]

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