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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20191018T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20191018T170000
DTSTAMP:20260510T162922
CREATED:20191014T224500Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191015T192754Z
UID:10006788-1571410800-1571418000@thi.ucsc.edu
SUMMARY:Discussion with Marcelo Hernandez Castillo
DESCRIPTION:Join us to discuss excerpts from author Marcelo Hernandez Castillo. Please email Micah Perks at (meperks@ucsc.edu) for the readings and to RSVP for the discussion. \nMarcelo Hernandez Castillo is a poet\, essayist\, translator\, and immigration advocate. He is the author of Cenzontle (BOA editions\, 2018)\, chosen by Brenda Shaughnessy as the winner of the 2017 A. Poulin Jr. prize and winner of the 2018 Northern California Book Award. Cenzontle maps a parallel between the landscape of the border and the landscape of sexuality through surreal and deeply imagistic poems. Castillo’s ﬁrst chapbook\, Dulce (Northwestern University Press\, 2018)\, was chosen by Chris Abani\, Ed Roberson\, and Matthew Shenoda as the winner of the Drinking Gourd Poetry Prize. His memoir\, Children of the Land is forthcoming from Harper Collins in 2020 and explores the ideas of separation from deportation\, trauma\, and mobility between borders.
URL:https://thi.ucsc.edu/event/discussion-with-marcelo-hernandez-castillo/
LOCATION:Humanities 1\, Room 620\, Humanites 1 University of California\, Santa Cruz Cowell College\, Santa Cruz\, CA\, 95064\, United States
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140204T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140204T160000
DTSTAMP:20260510T162922
CREATED:20140122T195927Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20140122T195927Z
UID:10004896-1391522400-1391529600@thi.ucsc.edu
SUMMARY:Kristin Ross: "Notes on the 'Cellular Regime of Nationality': Internationalism & The Paris Commune"
DESCRIPTION:The talk is taken from Communal Luxury (forthcoming from Editions La fabrique). Ross discusses the political imaginary that fueled and outlived the Paris Commune of 1871\, here considered within frames provided by contemporary militant concerns: the problem of refashioning an internationalist conjuncture; the future of education\, labor and the status of art; the commune-form and its relation to ecological theory. The “communal luxury” produced by the Commune’s “working existence” was prolonged and elaborated in the political thought produced in the 1870s and the 1880s\, when Communard exiles met up and collaborated with a number of their supporters and fellow travelers\, notably Marx\, Kropotkin and William Morris. \nKristin Ross is Professor of Comparative Literature at New York University. She is the author of The Emergence of Social Space: Rimbaud and the Paris Commune (1988); Fast Cars\, Clean Bodies: Decolonization and the Reordering of French Culture (1995); and May ’68 and its Afterlives (2002). \nThis talk is presented by the Crisis in the Cultures of Capitalism Research Cluster\, and the History of Consciousness and Literature Departments.
URL:https://thi.ucsc.edu/event/kristin-ross-notes-on-the-cellular-regime-of-nationality-2/
LOCATION:Humanities 1\, Room 620\, Humanites 1 University of California\, Santa Cruz Cowell College\, Santa Cruz\, CA\, 95064\, United States
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120502T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120502T140000
DTSTAMP:20260510T162922
CREATED:20120430T075505Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20120430T075505Z
UID:10004695-1335960000-1335967200@thi.ucsc.edu
SUMMARY:Lisa Kaborych of the Medici Archive Project and Its New Digital Interactive Platform
DESCRIPTION:The Medici Archive Project Presents: \n \n\n\n\n\n\n\nPreview a presentation by Lisa Kaborycha of the Medici Archive Project\, Florence\, of  a new\, interactive digital platform that will debut as freeware this July. This platform is adaptable for the needs of many kinds of document management\, and Lisa will be on hand to discuss its properties and capacities.
URL:https://thi.ucsc.edu/event/lisa-kaborych-3/
LOCATION:Humanities 1\, Room 620\, Humanites 1 University of California\, Santa Cruz Cowell College\, Santa Cruz\, CA\, 95064\, United States
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101202T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101202T150000
DTSTAMP:20260510T162922
CREATED:20101119T180456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20101119T180456Z
UID:10004521-1291298400-1291302000@thi.ucsc.edu
SUMMARY:Ethan Michaeli: The Holocaust and 'The Defender:' Two Generations of Jewish Reporters at a Black Newspaper
DESCRIPTION:Ethan Michaeli will explore how The Chicago Defender\, the nation’s most important African American newspaper for much of the twentieth century\, covered the Holocaust.   During the 1940s\, the newspaper’s multi-racial roster of writers\, including a young Jewish editor named Ben Burns\, connected the struggle of African Americans for equal rights to Nazi persecution of Jews. Burns worked closely with poet Langston Hughes and others who placed the Holocaust in the top rank of their concerns. But Burns\, who had started his journalistic career at the Communist publication The Daily Worker\, did not address the Holocaust directly as a Jew.  Instead\, he subsumed his Jewish identity and re-cast himself as a “black newspaperman\, black in my orientation and thinking\, in my concerns and outlook\, in my friends and associations\, black in everything but my skin color.”  A half-century later\, from 1991-1996\, Ethan Michaeli worked as a copy editor and investigative reporter at The Defender\, during a period in which the newspaper was still one of three dailies in Chicago. For Michaeli\, the child of Holocaust survivors from Hungary\, working at The Defender provided a vantage point to re-evaluate American society\, as well as his own identity. \nBio:  Ethan Michaeli is the author of the forthcoming book\, The Defender: How Chicago’s Legendary Black Newspaper Changed America\, from the Age of the Pullman Porters to the Age of Obama (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt\, forthcoming).  In 1991\, Michaeli began working for The Chicago Defender\, the historic African American-owned daily newspaper\, where his investigative reporting on the homeless\, environmental racism\, and police brutality won him awards from the Chicago Association of Black Journalists and the Muhammad Ali Foundation. In 1996\, Ethan launched Residents’ Journal\, an independent news magazine written for and by tenants of Chicago’s low-income public housing developments. He and the staff of Residents’ Journal have won numerous honors\, including the 2006 Studs Terkel Award\, and his writing has appeared in The Nation\, The Chicago Tribune\, In These Times\, and The Forward.  Michaeli’s social justice work is inspired by his parents\, who survived the Auschwitz concentration camp and the Nazi occupation of their native Budapest before emigrating to Israel in 1949 and the United States in 1963.
URL:https://thi.ucsc.edu/event/ethan-michaeli-title-tba-2/
LOCATION:Humanities 1\, Room 620\, Humanites 1 University of California\, Santa Cruz Cowell College\, Santa Cruz\, CA\, 95064\, United States
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