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“The Recovery of Nazi-Looted Art: The Bloch-Bauer Klimt Paintings”

Los Angeles attorney specializing in recovery of property stolen by the Nazis responsible for the landmark Supreme Court case returning Gustav Klimt paintings–valued at $325 million–to their rightful heir. The Herman P. and Sophia Taubman Foundation Endowed Symposia in Jewish Studies at UC Santa Barbara, a program of the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center, is cosponsored by […]

Urbanizing Masculinity: Workers, Weavers and Futuwat in Violent Alliances and Fluid Identities

In this presentation, I employ urban violence to examine how men constructed, performed, and struggled for their masculine identity. I argue that gender identity, performing masculinity, and the construction of manhood were important sites of the adaptation to industrial urban life in crucial years of interwar Egypt. On the backdrop of rapid urbanization and industrialization, […]

“The Israeli-Palestinian Peace Talks in Historical Perspective”

U.S. Ambassador Dennis Ross serves as Counselor, The Washington Institute for Near East Policy and Ghaith al-Omari is Executive Director, American Task Force on Palestine. The event is free and open to the public. Ambassador Ross, the Washington Institute's Ziegler Distinguished fellow and counselor from 2001-2009, returned as its Counselor in December 2011 after serving […]

The Russians are Coming (1966)

The Center for Cold War Studies and International History (CCWS) will be showing the classic 1966 film, "The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming." Directed by Norman Jewison and starring Car Reiner, Eva Marie Saint, Jonathan Winters, and Alan Arkin, the film is a hilarious spoof on the U.S.-Soviet confrontation. It stands as a […]

Marxism and Classics

Sponsored by the Department of Classics. moved from News by hm 12/1/13

Extraordinary Prizes in Ordinary Places: How Preserving Everyday Things Can Save People and the Planet

Evening Public Lecture at The Presidio at the Santa Barbara Trust forHistoric Preservation, 7pm. Dr. Ned Kaufman's lecture is entitled "Extraordinary Prizes in Ordinary Places: How Preserving Everyday Things Can Save People and the Planet." He will make a presentation around the general themes of rethinking the economics of heritage and historic preservation as a […]

Public Lecture and Graduate Student Lunchtime Program; Dr. Ned Kaufman

Dr. Ned Kaufman will do a lunchtime talk about his current research around historic conservation, social justice, intangible resources, sustainability and the economics of heritage. He will also discuss his career inside and outside of academia. As more Ph.D.'s are seeking alternative careers, by choice and by necessity, Dr. Kaufman's academic and non-academic career offers […]

Japan Under Empire: A Guided Tour

In 1912, Japanese government railways embarked on a mission to remake how Europeans and Americans thought about Japan—through tourism. In this talk, historian Kate McDonald will explore how Japanese tourist organizations fought to transform the image of Japan from a looming threat to European and American interests in East Asia into a peaceful, industrial nation […]

Spring classes begin

Instruction begins on Monday March 31. Monday, May 26: Memorial Day holiday Friday, June 6: Last day of instruction. June 7-13: Final exams. final Exam Schedule hm 1/4/13, 10/3/13