Fourth Annual Undergraduate History Conference – “From the Global to the Local: Connected Histories”
6275 Bunche HallFrom the Global to the Local: Connected Histories Fourth Annual Undergraduate History Conference FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 2019 │8:00AM - 5:00PM │BUNCHE HALL 6275 8:00am – 8:15am Welcoming Remarks (Check-In and Continental Breakfast) 8:15am – 9:50am Panel 1: Formations of National Identity in an International Context Chair: Jade Quintero Gordon Nenadovic, “Philip II and Athenian […]
Nwando Achebe – “The Politics of Knowledge Production—A Reflective Journey and Dance about the Epistemology and Practice of African Gender History”
11360 Charles E. Young Research LibraryProfessor Nwando Achebe will be giving the James S. Coleman Memorial Lecture (through the African Studies Center) on Monday, April 29th, from 4:30 – 6:30 in 11360 YRL. Here is the link: https://www.international.ucla.edu/asc/event/13743 The History Department is co-sponsoring the talk, and Nwando (daughter of famed Chinua Achebe) received her Ph.D from our department in […]
A Book Talk With Max Felker-Kanto
6275 Bunche HallKevin Y. Kim – “America’s ‘Third Worlding’ in Korea”
6275 Bunche HallTeo Ruiz – “Becoming Human”
6275 Bunche HallMemorial for Professor Stanley Wolpert
UCLA Faculty Center Dining RoomThe Memorial for Professor Stanley Wolpert will be held on May 26 from 1-4 in the UCLA Faculty Center dining room. Please plan to join in this celebration of his life, and do convey this information to any others you know who would like to attend.
Mangroves as Habitat for African Survival in the Atlantic World
6275 Bunche HallHistory and the Contest over Memory Today, a Discussion with Jim Grossman, Wendy Lower, and Robin Kelly
6275 Bunche HallMay 30, 4:00-6:00 pm, Bunche 6275 For more information about this event, click here. RSVP: rsvpluskin@history.ucla.edu.
Ryan Hilliard – “Sexual Honor, Social Capital, and the Single Woman in Eighteenth-Century Paris”
6275 Bunche HallIn this talk, Ryan Hilliard explores how single women in eighteenth-century Paris acknowledged, negotiated with, and responded to prescriptive sexual norms in their daily lives and in moments of crisis. Unmarried women utilized legal action to protect their reputations against accusations of sexual impropriety. In the complaints they filed with Parisian police commissioners, single women […]
“Million Dollar Hoods: Mapping the Fiscal and Human Costs of Mass Incarceration”
California Room, UCLA Faculty CenterJoin us Tuesday, June 4 Darnell Hunt Dean of Social Sciences and Carla Pestana Chair and Professor Joyce Appleby Endowed Chair of America in the World UCLA Department of History invite you to attend the installation celebration of Professor Kelly Lytle Hernández as the holder of the Thomas E. Lifka Chair in History speaking on the […]