Events
Week of Events
Prisons, Histories and Erasures: Joanne Barker, Maria Gaspar and Kelly Lytle Hernandez
For the next Visualizing Abolition event, Joanne Barker, Maria Gaspar, and Kelly Lytle Hernández join us to discuss the histories and present struggles that disappear within the labyrinthian network of prisons, jails, and detention centers in the United States. Together, these influential artist and historians will talk about what is made visible when the settler […]
Inaugurating Alternative Futures: A Conversation with Melanie Yazzie and Michelle Daigle
The U.S. President’s Inauguration is on January 20th. We use that date as an occasion to think about alternative futures and political possibilities not beholden to colonial and capitalist dispossession, U.S. sovereignty, and the nation-state form, focusing in particular on Indigenous pathways to alternative political-ethical futures. Melanie Yazzie (University of New Mexico) and Michelle Daigle […]
Dina Danon: Modernity in the Eastern Sephardi Diaspora – The Jews of Late Ottoman Izmir
Dina Danon (Binghamton University) will speak in HIS 74B on her book titled The Jews of Ottoman Izmir: A Modern History (Stanford University Press, 2020). This lecture will tell the story of a long-overlooked Ottoman Jewish community in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Drawing extensively on a rich body of previously untapped Ladino […]
Nick Estes and Melanie K. Yazzie, of The Red Nation
Nick Estes (Lower Brule Sioux) and Melanie Yazzie (Diné) of The Red Nation, respond to the prompt: What lies beyond dystopian catastrophism, and how can we cultivate radical futures of social justice and ecological flourishing? Welcomed by Chairman Valentin Lopez (Amah Mutsun) Moderated by Mayanthi Fernando and T. J. Demos Nick Estes is Kul Wicasa […]
Book Talk – Christine Hong: A Violent Peace: Race, US Militarism, and Cultures of Democratization in Cold War Asia and the Pacific
Join us for a book Talk and celebration of Christine Hong's (Assoc Prof Lit and Director of CRES) new book A Violent Peace: Race, US Militarism, and Cultures of Democratization in Cold War Asia and the Pacific (Stanford U Press, 2020) with respondents: Neel Ahuja (Assoc Professor, FMST and CRES) and Alyosha Goldstein (Professor, American Studies, University […]




