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Fall 2001 and Spring 2002 Programs
POLITICAL VIOLENCE
Fall 2001 Program
September 24
SEMINAR
Killing: Representation of Violence and the Body at War
1102 Francis Scott Key Hall (Dean's Conference Room), 4:00-6:00 p.m.
Joanna Bourke
Birkbeck College, University of London
October 15
SEMINAR
Riots by Those Who Worked against Those Who Took: New York's Anti-Rent Mobs, American Capitalism, and Jacksonian Politics, 1839-1860
1102 Francis Scott Key Hall (Dean's Conference Room), 4:00-6:00 p.m.
David Grimsted
University of Maryland
October 26-27
CONFERENCE
Violence and the French Revolution
Maryland Room, Marie Mount Hall
Philippe Bourdin, Universit0?4 de Blaise-Pascal (Clermont Ferrand)
Howard G. Brown, SUNY Binghamton
Haim Burstin, Universit08 di Milano Bicocca
Dominique Godineau, Universit0?4 de Haute-Bretagne, Rennes II
Patrice Gueniffey, Centre Raymond Aron, EHESS
Carla Hesse, University of California, Berkeley
Colin Jones, University of Warwick
Ted Margadant, University of California, Davis
Jean-Cl0?4ment Martin, Paris I-Sorbonne
Timothy Tackett, University of California, Irvine
Charles Tilly, Columbia University
Michel Vovelle, Paris I-Sorbonne
November 5
SEMINAR
The Holocaust in Hungary, 1944: The Role of the Non-Jewish Hungarians
Symons Hall, Room 3121, 4:00-6:00 p.m
Christian Gerlach
Center for Historical Studies Fellow, 2001-2002
University of Maryland
November 26
SEMINAR
The Gender of Reconstruction: "Night Riders," Race, and Sexual Violence in the Postemancipation South
1102 Francis Scott Key Hall (Dean's Conference Room), 4:00-6:00 p.m.
Hannah Rosen
University of Michigan
December 3
NATHAN AND JEANETTE MILLER DISTINGUISHED LECTURE
IN HISTORY AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS
A Tale of Three Cities: How the United States Won World War II
Multipurpose Room, Nyumburu Cultural Center, 4:00 p.m
David Kennedy
Stanford University
December 4
SEMINAR
Rewriting the Twentieth Century
1102 Francis Scott Key Hall (Dean's Conference Room), 12:30-2:00 p.m.
(Buffet lunch beginning at 12:00 p.m.)
David Kennedy
Stanford University
James Gilbert
University of Maryland
Spring 2002 Program
Political Violence
March 4
SEMINAR
0?6Without these compromises it would be impossible to exist in this country0?7
Allegiance, Neutrality, and Violence in Acadia, 1604-1755
Symons Hall, Room 3121, 4:00-6:00 p.m.
John Mack Faragher
Yale University
March 18
SEMINAR
The Memory Box of Pinochet's Chile: Politics, Culture, and Truth, 1973-2001
Symons Hall, Room 3121, 4:00-6:00 p.m.
Steve Stern
University of Wisconsin
April 8
LECTURE
One Palestine Complete: Jews and Arabs under the British Mandate, 1922-1948
Multipurpose Room, Nyumburu Cultural Center, 4:00 p.m.
Tom Segev
Author and Journalist, Haaretz
Co-sponsored by the Joseph and Rebecca Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Studies
April 9
SEMINAR
Post-Zionism and Israel's New Historians
Maryland Room, Marie Mount Hall, 12:30-2:00 p.m.
(Buffet lunch beginning at 12:00 p.m.)
Tom Segev
Author and Journalist, Haaretz
Madeline Zilfi
University of Maryland
April 15
SEMINAR
Monstrous Regiments? Robertson and Burke on Women and the Public Scene
Francis Scott Key Hall, Dean0?9s Conference Room, 4:00-6:00 p.m.
Laszlo Kontler
Central European University, Budapest
May 3-4
WORKSHOP
Political Violence in Russia and the Soviet Union
Multipurpose Room, Nyumburu Cultural Center
Samuel Baron, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Sally Boniece, Frostburg State University
Chester S. L. Dunning, Texas A&M University
Peter Holquist, Cornell University
Claudio Sergio Ingerflom, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Paris
Eric Lohr, Harvard University
Georg Michels, University of California, Riverside
Kenneth Pinnow, Allegheny College; Amir Weiner, Stanford University
Paul Werth, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Glennys Young, University of Washington
Walter Rundell Lecture in American History
May 6
Whiteness and Citizenship on the Southwestern Frontier, 1900-1945
Multipurpose Room, Nyumburu Cultural Center, 4:00 p.m.
Linda Gordon
New York University
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