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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Department of History, UC Santa Barbara
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20110223T000000
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DTSTAMP:20260430T062230
CREATED:20150928T112825Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150928T112825Z
UID:10001919-1298419200-1298419200@www.history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:4th Annual Ask-A-Vet Forum
DESCRIPTION:A panel of UCSB student veterans will participate in this event\, now in its fourth year.  The students will discuss their experiences in the armed forces\, including service in Iraq and Afghanistan\, and their transition to university life.  This event is sponsored by Student Veterans at UCSB\, a non-partisan student group sponsored by the Office of Student Life.  Professor John Lee from the Department of History will serve as moderator for the forum.\njwil 15.ii.2011
URL:https://www.history.ucsb.edu/events/4th-annual-ask-a-vet-forum/
LOCATION:CA
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20110224T000000
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DTSTAMP:20260430T062230
CREATED:20150928T112825Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150928T112825Z
UID:10001921-1298505600-1298505600@www.history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Migrant Rights and Migrant Melodrama\, or Elvira Arellano as Suffering Mother and Evil Mother\, Criminal and Saint
DESCRIPTION:Date: Thursday\, Feb. 24th from 5:00-6:00 p.m.Location: 2nd Floor conference room\, #2135\, Social Sciences and\nMedia  Studies building \nAbstract of Talk: \nAna Elena Puga trains a theater/performance studies lens on the\nstruggle to control public perception of undocumented migrant rights\nactivist Elvira Arellano\, who was deported in 2007. Puga coins the\nterm “migrant melodrama” to describe how key media coverage\,\ncultural  production\, and social performance in Arellano’s case\nrecycled and  deployed tropes from nineteenth-century melodrama.\nMigrant melodrama  was used by Arellano herself\, as well as by both\nsupporters and  detractors of the single mother\, who sought\nsanctuary in a Chicago  church together with her US-born son. Can\nmelodramatic spectacles of  suffering insist on a common humanity\nand make ethical claims for  inclusion into an imagined community?\nYet can they also backfire by  setting the price of inclusion at an\nimpossibly high level of virtue? \nBio of Speaker:\nAna Puga’s current book project\, Desperate Acts: Melodrama and\nSpectacles of Suffering in the Performance of Migration\,\ninterrogates  the reliance on melodrama in late twentieth and\ntwenty-first century  artistic and social performances featuring\nundocumented migrants from  Latin America\, especially women and\nchildren.  Desperate Acts shows how  performances that involve\nsuffering migrant bodies often re-circulate  nineteenth-century\nmelodramatic tropes from race\, domestic\, and  sensation melodramas\,\nasking how those tropes circumscribe  contemporary political agency.\nPuga is the author of Memory\, Allegory\, and Testimony in South\nAmerican Theatre: Upstaging Dictatorship (Routledge 2008) and\ntranslator\, with Mónica Núñez-Parra\, of Finished from the Start and\nother Plays\, an anthology of six works by Chilean playwright Juan\nRadrigán (Northwestern University Press 2008). Puga has published\narticles in Latin American Theatre Review and Theatre Journal\,\namong other journals. She co-founded LaMicro Theatre\, dedicated to\nthe  staging of contemporary Spanish\, Latin American and US Latino\nplays in  English and bilingual productions. \nhm 2/21/11; jwil 22.ii.2011
URL:https://www.history.ucsb.edu/events/migrant-rights-and-migrant-melodrama-or-elvira-arellano-as-suffering-mother-and-evil-mother-criminal-and-saint/
LOCATION:CA
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DTSTAMP:20260430T062230
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LAST-MODIFIED:20150928T112823Z
UID:10001710-1298592000-1298592000@www.history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:When Wall Street Met Main Street\, 1890-1932
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a talk by JULIA OTT\, New School for Social Research\, “When Wall Street Met Main Street\, 1890-1932.” Ott’s book of the same title will be published by Harvard University Press in the spring of 2011. Her next project considers the enduring influence of financial institutions and pro-investor ideology in recent U.S. political history.\nThe talk\, and subsequent discussion\, is part of the History 294: Colloquium in Work\, Labor\, and Political Economy\, 2010-2011 lecture series.\nThe Winter Quarter topic is “The Financial Crisis and its Origins.” \nThe Colloquium meets on Friday\, January 25 at 1 p.m. in 4041 Humanities and Social Science Building.  \njmj 01/03/2011
URL:https://www.history.ucsb.edu/events/when-wall-street-met-main-street-1890-1932/
LOCATION:CA
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