Enrique Rivera - “Resistance to Primitive Accumulation or Racial Capitalism? European Textile Production and the 1795 Anti-slavery Rebellion of Coro, Venezuela”
Kishinev’s 1903 pogrom was the first instance in Russian Jewish life where an event received international attention. The riot, leaving 49 dead in an obscure border town, dominated headlines in the western world for weeks. It intruded on Russian-American relations and inspired endeavors as widely contradictory as the Hagannah, the precursor to the Israeli army, […]
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 […]
Carla Pestana Professor and Chair Joyce Appleby Endowed Chair of America in the World UCLA Department of History invites you to attend the annual ALDEN-BERG LECTURE featuring David N. Myers Professor and Sady and Ludwig Kahn Chair in Jewish History Director, UCLA Luskin Center for History and Policy speaking on the topic of "Only in America? How […]
Carla Pestana Professor and Chair Joyce Appleby Endowed Chair of America in the World UCLA Department of History invites you to attend WHY HISTORY MATTERS The Slow Food Movement: Beyond Good, Clean, and Fair Food with panel discussion featuring Richard McCarthy Executive Director, Slow Food USA Maricel Presilla chef and author David Shields Carolina Distinguished […]
Filip Erdeljac "Indifference and Extremism in World War II Croatia: Non-elite Engagements with Nationalism and Mass Violence in East Central Europe and the Balkans, 1918-1948"
Kristen Block, Associate Professor of History, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, “Holistic Medicine, Spiritual Healing, and Dis-ease in the Early Caribbean”