History HIST

Panel Discussion: "The Dark Side of Utopia"

Sponsored by:
History
Middlebury faculty discuss life under communism.
Kevin Moss, “Enemies of the People”
Sergei Davydov, “1917, 1945, 1968”
Nikolina Dobreva, “Exit Visa”
Roberto Veguez, “Why I Left?”
Ioana Uricaru, “Ideology and Ethics”
Tatiana Smorodinska, “Homo Sovieticus”

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Open to the Public

Panel Discussion: "The Revolution Abroad"

Sponsored by:
History
Historians discuss the reception of communist ideas in Japan, East Germany and France.
Nicholas Clifford (Middlebury College), “The Chairman’s New Paris Fashions, 1966-1980”
Max Ward (Middlebury College), “Translating the Revolution in Interwar Japan: Japanese Police Manuals on Political Crime”
Andrew Demshuk (American University), “1968 in Leipzig and the Demolition of Belief in Communism.”
Discussant: James Ralph (Middlebury College)

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Open to the Public

The Soviet Economy, 1917-1991: Its Life and Afterlife

Sponsored by:
Economics and History
Clifford Symposium closing keynote address by Mark Harrison (Professor, Department of Economics, University of Warwick).

A closing address by Andrea Lloyd, VP for Academic Affairs and Dean of Faculty precedes the lecture.

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Open to the Public

Charles S. Grant Memorial Lecture - Clayborne Carson

Sponsored by:
History
“’Where Do We Go From Here?’: Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Unanswered Question”, Clayborne Carson

Professor Carson is the founding director of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute. In 1985 the late Coretta Scott King asked him to oversee the King Papers Project. His book, “In Struggle: SNCC and the Black Awakening of the 1960s”, won the OAH’s Frederick Jackson Turner Prize. More recently, he is the author of “Martin’s Dream: My Journey and the Legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr.”

Dana Auditorium (Sunderland Language Center)

Open to the Public

"An Outrage"

Sponsored by:
History
“An Outrage” is a powerful new documentary film by Hannah Ayers and Lance Warren that takes a fearless look at lynching in the American South. Lynching, the unlawful murder of individuals witnessed by mobs, was at its most endemic in the 1890s, when one African American was killed in the South every four days. Filmed at actual lynching sites in six states, “An Outrage” shines a bright light on this dark chapter of American history, made tangible through the memories and thoughts of descendants of lynching victims, community activists, and scholars.

Twilight Auditorium 101

Open to the Public

Liz Kinnamon Guest Speaker Event

Liz Kinnamon, PhD Candidate, University of Arizona, will give a guest lecture, titled, “Undoing the Property Form: Feminist Consciousness Raising as a Practice of Freedom”.

This talk examines 1960s and 70s feminist Consciousness Raising as an example of creating positive freedom. Kinnamon paints a picture of what radical feminist Consciousness Raising was; how it developed out of Third World liberation movements, such as in Vietnam and China, and Civil Rights; how it spread across the US and transnationally; and what kinds of effects these group practices had.

Robert A. Jones '59 Conference Room

Screening: Screening of The Celine Archive and Discussion with Filmmaker

Virtual screening of the documentary, The Celine Archive, followed by an hour of discussion with the filmmaker, Prof. Celine Parreñas Shimizu, Distinguished Professor of Film and Digital Media at UC Santa Cruz and Dean of the Arts. Registration required; please register right here

Virtual Middlebury

Open to the Public