History of Science Colloquium: Ylva Soederfeldt (Uppsala/ UCLA)
May 16 Ylva Soederfeldt (Uppsala/ UCLA) “Acting out Disease: Patient Organizations in Twentieth-Century Medicine” Zoom RSVP: https://ucla.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJMod-qhqz0oE9RdqRTVRaedLGCFEIrVhUfd In Person RSVP: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1b1K-Jc87ZdjECauHsSaH4JWGu4G-t30dAoQfsk3SHbQ
Data Deluges: Histories Past and Present
Royce 306“Data Deluges: Histories Past and Present” a conference organized by Ted Porter September 14 and 15 Royce 306 RSVP: cbellwilson@g.ucla.edu For more details, click here
Glenn Penny’s “German History Unbound” Book Discussion
6275 Bunche HallThe 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.
Euclid and Descartes on the Potomac: The Geometrical Battle for the National Capital” Presenter: Amir Alexander (UCLA)
Bunche 5288 & ZoomIn person RSVP Zoom RSVP
Women in the Early Modern City: Suzhou and Paris
6275 Bunche HallView the event flyer and register here
Cuba and Cape Verde: Revolutionary Connections across the Pan-African Atlantic
Bunche 6275 & ZoomZoom: RSVP
History of Science Colloquium: E. Bennett Jones (The Huntington Library)
Bunche 5288 & ZoomThe Indians Say: Storytelling, Settler Colonialism and American Natural History, 1722 to 1846 This talk discusses the use of information attributed to Indigenous sources within eighteenth and nineteenth century Anglophone natural history. Early modern naturalists studying North American flora and fauna frequently sought out the expertise of Indigenous people, who they simultaneously regarded as authoritative […]
Where Memory Leads: A Conversation with Saul Friedländer (with Sanjay Subrahmanyam)
6275 Bunche HallMore info to come.
Atlantic History Colloquium: Melissa Morris, Assistant Professor of History, University of Wyoming
Bunche 6275 & ZoomPirates which infest that coast’: Illicit Trade and Imperial Rivalry in Seventeenth-Century Western Hispaniola This presentation considers the illicit trade of tobacco and other goods from Western Hispaniola. French, Dutch, and English ships came from the 1560s to trade with the diverse groups living there—Indigenous, Spanish, and African. In response, in 1605-6, western and northwestern […]
Dr. Elise Mitchell, History of Medicine, “Morbid Geographies: Smallpox and Slavery in the Early Modern Atlantic”
6275 Bunche HallRSVP Link: https://forms.office.com/r/vWQgY5yDQs