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Beer: From Prohibition to America’s Emblem of the Good Life?

UC Santa Barbara Arts and Humanities "Nature and Culture" Series at the Wine Cask Join UC Santa Barbara historian Lisa Jacobson for a spectacular Wine Cask artisan dinner and talk at the inaugural UCSB public humanities Culture and Nature Series event. For more information about the series, please click here. Thursday, October 10, 2013 6:00 […]

Namibia’s Red Line: On the History of a Fence in Southern Africa

A massive fence, more than two metres high, stretching over a thousand kilometres from East to West effectively separates the southwest African region into two parts. The fence, generally known as the Red Line, is a persistent legacy of South Africa’s colonial occupation of Namibia. Its construction in the 1960s marked the end of a […]

“Something there is that doesn’t love a wall”: Border Crossings and the Imperatives of American Border Control

Patrick Ettinger, Professor of History and Director of the Capital Campus Public History Program at CSU Sacramento, will speak about the history of the US-Mexican border in the context of popular constructions of American immigration and current policy debates. Sponsored by the UC Santa Barbara Public History Program. Lunch will be provided. jdm/10/3/13

Bookscapes: Trading Knowledge in British Colonial India

Professor Swati Chattopadhyay (Department Chair, History of Art & Architecture) and Mira Rai Waits (doctoral candidate) will offer a curators' talk in conjunction with the exhibition "Conjuring India: British Views of the Subcontinent, 1780-1870," on view in the UCSB Library's Special Collections (third floor) through December 15, 2013. "Conjuring India" explores the divergent perspectives of […]

Films of the Cold War: “Lady Bug, Lady Bug” (1963)

The Center for Cold war Studies and International History (CCWS) will kick off the new year by showing the classic 1963 film "Lady Bug, Lady Bug," about the impact of an urgent nuclear alert on a rural American school. (See description below). After the screening, Kenneth Hough, a PhD student in history at UCSB, will […]

Cavafy at the Margins: Geography, History, Desire

For more information on this lecture, click here or contact Prof. Helen Morales in the UCSB Department of Classics. Sponsored by the UCSB Argyropoulos Endowment in Hellenic Studies. jwil 16.viii.2013

“Do not forget to send the Negro”: Elite ties, enslaved lives in colonial Massachusetts and New York, 1660-1720

Dr. Maskiell is an expert on family and household relationships within slavery as well as on slave networks in both Dutch and English colonial Atlantic America. The author of "Elite Slave Networks in the Dutch Atlantic," published in Shifting the Compass: Pluricontinental Connections in Dutch Colonial and Post Colonial Literature, (ed. Dewulf, Praamstra and van […]

“The Story of Por-Por”

This new film is located at the intersection of labor history and music history - about union drivers and the invention of honkhorn music in Accra, Ghana. Steven Feld is an anthropologist/ethnomusicologist, who is currently Distinguished Professor of Music at the University of New Mexico. hm 10/9/13

“Beer, Beer, Beer!”

Beer has become a familiar presence in American life, but it was once an oft-despised commodity,banned as part of Prohibition. How did this remarkable transformation from banned commodity to emblem of the good life occur? Join us at the UCSB Faculty Club for an evening of celebration and enlightenment, as History Prof. Lisa Jacobson explores […]