1968 Conference Continues through Saturday 11/22
See the 11/20 event link for more information, or go directly to the program.
See the 11/20 event link for more information, or go directly to the program.
The Center for Cold War Studies and International History (CCWS) will hold the first workshop event of the 2008-2009 academic year. Professor Nelson Lichtenstein of the Department of History will join us to discuss his original essay, “Did 1968 Change History?”, a reflection on the political and cultural legacy of that momentous year, from both […]
Wuzhaishan, a second-century family cemetery site in Shandong Province, was the first site in China to be excavated by amateur antiquarian archaeologists in 1786, a few decades after similar excavations began at Pompeii. Excavations continued in the twentieth century by European, Japanese, and Chinese archaeologists. My approach has been to analyze finds from these excavations […]
Good luck with your final exams! hm 11/26
Classes start Monday, January 5. You can check the dept's course listings for any changes in room or schedule information, and for possible links to syllabi. The link below leads to a full calendar with all Winter 2009 dates and deadlines. hm 12/20/08
Click here for more information. jwil 05.i.09
This conference explores the hostility of the political right to American trade unionism, both in terms of management-labor conflict and in the world of politics, ideas, and cultural imaginings. All sessions will take place in HSSB 6020. Visit the conference home page for more information. This conference is sponsored by the Center for the Study […]
This colloquium will be held from 3:00-6:00 p.m. at the Marine Sciences Institute Auditorium (Room 1302). Speakers: Alison Frazier, University of Texas: “Machiavelli, Trauma, and the Scandal of the Prince.” Kenneth Pennington, The Catholic University of America: "Women on the Rack: Three Trials.” Comment: Lisa Hajjar, Law and Society, UCSB For more information contact Ed […]
Jones is author of The Tribe of Black Ulysses: African American Lumber Workers in the Jim Crow South (2005). His new book project is The New Color of Class: Race and Inequality in the Service Economy. jwil 23.i.09
William P. Jones is an Associate Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Jones is author of The Tribe of Black Ulysses: African American Lumber Workers in the Jim Crow South, and is currently writing a book titled The New Color of Class: Race and Inequality in the Service Economy. He is the […]