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X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.history.ucsb.edu
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Department of History, UC Santa Barbara
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20120208T000000
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CREATED:20150928T112836Z
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UID:10001808-1328659200-1328659200@www.history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:Animal Spirits Revisited:  An Emotional History of Capitalism
DESCRIPTION:Despite its manifest absurdity\, the rational actor model continues to domi-nate discussions of modern capitalism. This lecture proposes an alterna-\ntive perspective\, by deepening and broadening Keynes’s brief mention of\n“animal spirits” in economic decisions. Building on the work of anthropolo-\ngists and cultural historians\, Lears explores the tangled relationships be-\ntween capitalism and emotional life\, on the shop floor as well as on the\ntrading floor\, around the kitchen table as well as in the executive suite.  \nAbbreviated Bio\nBoard of Governors Professor of History\, Rutgers University\nEditor-in-Chief\, Raritan: a Quarterly Review\nHe has been a regular contributor to The New Republic\, The Nation\, The Los\nAngeles Times\, The Washington Post\, and The New York Times\, among other publications.\nIn April 2009 he became a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences.  \nPublications  \n. No Place of Grace: Antimodernism and the Transformation of American Culture\, 1880-\n1920 (New York: Pantheon\, 1981; reissued by University of Chicago Press\, 1994;\nJapanese translation by Shohakusha Publishing\, 2011)\n. Fables of Abundance: a Cultural History of Advertising in America (New York: Basic\nBooks\, 1994)\n. Something for Nothing: Luck in America (New York: Viking Penguin\, 2003)\n. Rebirth of a Nation\, the Making of Modern America\, 1877-1920 (Harper Collins\, 2009)  \nPresented through the Global & International Studies\nMaster of Arts Program  \nhm 1/27/12
URL:https://www.history.ucsb.edu/events/animal-spirits-revisited-an-emotional-history-of-capitalism/
LOCATION:CA
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UID:10002040-1328745600-1328745600@www.history.ucsb.edu
SUMMARY:The Past\, Present\, and Future of Feminist Studies
DESCRIPTION:Conference ScheduleThe Past\, Present\, and Future of Feminist Studies\nFebruary 9th – 11th 2012 \nThursday\, February 9th\n7 – 9 pm\nOpening Remarks – Eileen Boris\, Hull Professor and Chair\, Feminist  Studies and Patricia Cline Cohen\, Professor of History \nGenders and Sexualities \nChair: Leila Rupp (UCSB)\nPanelists:\n”	Matt Richardson (University of Texas\, Austin)\n”	Lynn Sacco (University of Tennessee\, Knoxville)\n”	Siobhan Somerville (University of Illinois\, Urbana-Champaign) \n10:30 am – 12:00 pm\nThe Past\, Present and Future of Feminist Studies\nWelcome – Melvin Oliver\, Dean of Social Sciences\, College of Letters & Science \nChair: Jacqueline Bobo (UCSB)\nPanelists:\n”	Nan Alamilla Boyd (San Francisco State University)\n”	Ednie Garrison (University of South Florida)\n”	Valerie Ann Johnson (Bennett College)\n”	Alison Kafer (Southwestern University) \n3:30 pm- 5:30 pm\nProductive and Reproductive Labors \nChair: Laury Oaks (UCSB)\nPanelists:\n”	Melissa Forbis (Stony Brook University)\n”	Francisca James Hernandez (Pima Community College\, Research  Associate at the Southwest Institute for Research on Women (SIROW) at  The University of Arizona)\n”	Lilia Soto (University of Wyoming)\n”	Ruby Tapia (University of Michigan\, Ann Arbor)\n”	Chikako Takeshita (University of California\, Riverside) \nDinner 6 pm\nAt the Faculty Club for invited guests\, members of the department\, and  affiliates who worked with our former ABD scholars.  RSVP  required–Leigh Dodson\, ldodson@umail.ucsb.edu and Eileen Boris\,  boris@femst.ucsb.edu \nSaturday\, February 11th\n9 am- 11:30 am\nRace and Nation \nChair: Mireille Miller-Young (UCSB)\nPanelists:\n”	Maylei Blackwell (University of California\, Los Angeles)\n”	Emily Hobson (University of Southern California)\n”	Paula Ioanide (Ithica College) and Felice Black (UCSB)\n”	Priya Kurian (University of Waikato)\n”	Judy Rohrer (University of Connecticut) \n12 pm – 1 pm\nRethinking the Field\nConcluding and Discussion \nhm 2/5/12
URL:https://www.history.ucsb.edu/events/the-past-present-and-future-of-feminist-studies/
LOCATION:CA
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