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X-WR-CALNAME:Department of History, UC Santa Barbara
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.history.ucsb.edu
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Department of History, UC Santa Barbara
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DTSTAMP:20260418T042506
CREATED:20150928T112802Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150928T112802Z
UID:10001640-1236038400-1236038400@www.history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Staged Reading of Ida Fink's "The Table"
DESCRIPTION:directed by WILLIAM SMITHERS\nIn Ida Fink’s “The Table\,” four witnesses testify to mass murder in a\nsmall Polish-Jewish town during World War II. But does their testimony\nmatter in a court of law? \nCast:\nProsecutor: William Smithers\nFirst Man: George Backman\nFirst Woman: Dianne Hull\nSecond Man: Ed Giron\nSecond Woman: Danielle Aubuchon \nIda Fink was born in Zbaraz\, Poland (now in the Ukraine) in 1921. She\nspent 1941-42 in the ghetto and escaped using forged identity papers. She\nhas lived in Israel since 1967. “A Scrap of Time and Other Stories”\n(which includes “The Table”) was published in Polish in 1983. Two years\nlater it received the first Anne Frank Prize for Literature. The English\ntranslation\, by Madeline Levine and Francine Prose\, appeared in 1987. Ms.\nFinks’ other works include “The Journey” (1990) and “Traces”(1996) \nThe George J. Wittenstein lecture series\, created to commemorate and\ncontinue the legacy of civic courage of Dr. George J. Wittenstein\, who\nparticipated in two resistance groups against Hitler’s dictatorship\,\nsponsors one to three lectures every year. \nIn 2008-2009\, the series is made possible by the generous co-sponsorships\nof the following campus agencies and departments: Office of the Chancellor\,\nComparative Literature\, Feminist Studies\, Film and Media Studies\, French\nand Italian\, History\, Law and Society\, Religious Studies\, Theater and Dance. \nFor more information\, please visit:\nhttp://www.gss.ucsb.edu/index.php/news-a-events \nhm 2/19/09
URL:https://www.history.ucsb.edu/events/staged-reading-of-ida-finks-the-table/
LOCATION:CA
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DTSTAMP:20260418T042506
CREATED:20150928T112802Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150928T112802Z
UID:10001648-1236038400-1236038400@www.history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:CCWS Film Series Presents "Good Bye Lenin!"
DESCRIPTION:This German film directed by Wolfgang Becker comically portrays the  collapse of communism. Suffering a heart attack and falling into a coma after seeing her son arrested during a protest\, Alex’s (Daniel Brühl) socialist mother Christiane (Katrin Sass)\, remains comatose through the fall of the Berlin Wall and the German Democratic Republic. Knowing that the slightest shock could prove fatal upon his mother’s awakening\, Alex strives to keep the fall of communism secret for as long as possible by reconstructing the GDR in the family’s flat. Alex’s scheme works for a while\, but it’s not long before his mother is feeling better and ready to get up and around again.\nProfessor Harold Marcuse (UCSB History) will give a scholarly introduction and lead the post-screening discussion. \nFor further information please visit CCWS. \ntt 24.02.09
URL:https://www.history.ucsb.edu/events/ccws-film-series-presents-good-bye-lenin/
LOCATION:CA
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DTSTAMP:20260418T042506
CREATED:20150928T112802Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150928T112802Z
UID:10001651-1236211200-1236211200@www.history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Anti-Poverty Policy in the Obama Administration
DESCRIPTION:Peter B. Edelman is Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law Center and co-chair of the Task Force on Poverty for the Center for American Progress. In a career devoted to social thought\, social justice\, and public policy\, Professor Edelman has written extensively on poverty\, constitutional law\, and children and youth.  He is the author of Searching for America’s Heart: RFK and the Renewal of Hope\, and an award-winning Atlantic Monthly article on 1996 welfare reform\, entitled “The Worst Thing Bill Clinton Has Done.”  He is currently chair of the District of Columbia Access to Justice Commission and is board chair of the Public Welfare Foundation at the National Center for Youth Law.\nThis lecture will be followed by a Panel Discussion with Belen Seara\, Executive Director of PUEBLO (People United for Economic Justice Building Leadership Through Organizing); Marcos Vargas\, Executive Director of CAUSE (The Central Coast Alliance United for A Sustainable Economy); and Clyde Woods\, UCSB Department of Black Studies. \nThe aim of the Critical Issues program is to stimulate public conversation about long-standing problems of economic and political inequality\, widening insecurity\, and the policies and politics that helped to bring them about\, but also about how we might imagine and shape a different economic future through an equally concerted politics of reform. We plan also to situate the current\, potentially transformational moment in politics and political economy within a longer historical tradition of progressive reform. \nCo-sponsored by the Department of History\, Department of Feminist Studies\, and the UCSB Women’s Center.  For more information contact Alice O’Connor.   \nhm 2/25/09; jwil 26.ii.09
URL:https://www.history.ucsb.edu/events/anti-poverty-policy-in-the-obama-administration/
LOCATION:CA
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20090306T000000
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DTSTAMP:20260418T042506
CREATED:20150928T112802Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150928T112802Z
UID:10001638-1236297600-1236297600@www.history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:The AFL-CIA's Cold War in Honduras-- And How Hondurans Felt About It
DESCRIPTION:Professor Dana Frank is Co-Director of the UCSC Center for Labor Studies. Her books include Bananeras: Women Transforming the Banana Unions of Latin America (2008)\, Buy American: The Untold Story of Economic Nationalism (2000)\, and Purchasing Power: Consumer Organizing\, Gender\, and the Seattle Labor Movement\, 1919-1929 (1994).  \nWorkshop participants are invited to read Dana Frank’s article “Where is the History of U.S. Labor and International Solidarity?” in Labor\, volume 1\, pages 95-119. \nSponsored by the Center for the Study of Work\, Labor\, and Democracy. \njwil 17.ii.09
URL:https://www.history.ucsb.edu/events/the-afl-cias-cold-war-in-honduras-and-how-hondurans-felt-about-it/
LOCATION:CA
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