The Clandestine and Heterodox Underground of Early Modern European Philosophy, 17th–18th Centuries

Royce 314

A conference organized by Margaret Jacob, University of California, Los Angeles; Gianni Paganini, Università del Piemonte Orientale; and John Christian Laursen, University of California, Riverside. Co-sponsored by the UCLA Department of History; Università del Piemonte Orientale, Vercelli; and Centro di Ricerca della Accademia dei Lincei, Rome. This conference explores philosophical writings that circulated clandestinely in the […]

Jean-Marc Dreyfus – “Comprehensive or focused? Which teaching of the Holocaust in the 21st Century?”

6275 Bunche Hall

Jean-Marc Dreyfus is Reader in History and in Holocaust Studies at the University of Manchester (History Division), United Kingdom. He was a post-doctoral fellow at the Centre for European Studies, Harvard and the Centre Marc-Bloch in Berlin. He is the author of six monographs, including L’impossible réparation. Déportés, biens spoliés, or nazi, comptes bloqués, criminels […]

Michael Rothberg – “Inheritance Trouble: Transmitting Holocaust Memory in a Society of Immigration”

Michael Rothberg is Professor of English and Head of the Department of English at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he is also Director of the Initiative in Holocaust, Genocide, and Memory Studies. His latest book is Multidirectional Memory: Remembering the Holocaust in the Age of Decolonization (2009), published by Stanford University Press in […]

Nancy O. Gallman – “American Constitutions: Life, Liberty and Property in Colonial East Florida”

6275 Bunche Hall

Nancy O. Gallman is a Ph.D. candidate in Early American History at the University of California, Davis.  Her dissertation, “American Constitutions: Life, Liberty, and Property in Colonial East Florida,” is a comparative legal history of eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Spanish–Native East Florida. It examines the interactions between Spanish colonial law and the customary law of […]

Dan Stone – “Rethinking Liberation”

UCLA Faculty Center

Seventy years after the end of the war, the liberation of the camps is still relatively understudied by historians. In this lecture, Dan Stone will give an overview of the different sorts of liberation experienced by the victims of Nazism and explain the importance of the liberation and what followed for understanding the history of […]

John Laslett – “My Brother Peter, E.P. Thompson and Me: A Personal Memoir”

6275 Bunche Hall

John Laslett is an Emeritus Research Professor in the History Department at the University of California, Los Angeles.  His research focuses on United States History: American labor and social movements; U.S., Asian, Black and Mexican immigration; and comparative Euro-American history.

Presentation on Juana Inés

6275 Bunche Hall

Students and faculty are cordially invited to a presentation on the critically critically acclaimed TV Series JUANA INES. Juana Inés centers on the personal life of the renowned writer and poet of the Colonial times in Mexico: Sor Juana. She is considered an outstanding early feminist of the Americas. The academic literature on Sor Juana is […]

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