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DTSTAMP:20260107T144751
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260212T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260212T173000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:EIHS Lecture: Labor\, Spirit\, and Sovereignty: Africa’s Great War\, Dr. Stephen and Lee Gork Endowed Lecture
DESCRIPTION:In writing histories of World War I\, the pull of linear narrative is an ever-present temptation\, holding out the promise of making the global conflict comprehensible. Yet under the surface of the war’s grand narratives are the many wayward histories that refuse to get in formation. The history of World War I in the African world can be\, and often has been\, written as military or political history\, in which imposing order on unruly details and examples compensates for Eurocentric sidelining or exclusion of African and African descended peoples from the historiography. This lecture examines sites of unruliness and insurgency in African histories of the war by analyzing African refusals of European imperial extraction. Faced with war-driven colonial labor and tax demands\, African peoples decried these unrelenting abuses in modes that drew on ancestral\, spiritual\, medicinal\, and Biblical authority\, gesturing towards sovereignty and political reconfiguration. Using examples from different parts of the African world\, this lecture argues for understanding the war years as a temporal frame for recognizing and naming multimodal African insurgencies against imperial extractivism and violence.\n\nMichelle Moyd is Associate Professor of History and Red Cedar Distinguished Professor at Michigan State University. She is the author of \"Violent Intermediaries: African Soldiers\, Conquest\, and Everyday Colonialism in German East Africa\,\" published by Ohio University Press in 2014. Her peer-reviewed articles have appeared in Radical History Review\, Slavery and Abolition\, and International Labor and Working Class History. She is currently working on \"The African World and the First World War\,\" under contract with Cambridge University Press for the New Approaches to African History series.\n\nThis event presented by the Eisenberg Institute for Historical Studies. It is made possible in part by generous contributions from Kenneth and Frances Aftel Eisenberg and Stephen and Lee Gork.
UID:141693-21889190@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/141693
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:African American,History,Humanities
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260205T140618
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260213T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260213T140000
SUMMARY:Workshop / Seminar:EIHS Workshop: Political Mobilization\, Authority and Collaboration
DESCRIPTION:We live in a moment of intense global political mobilization. Popular movements—both state and non-state—are reshaping political life by preserving\, contesting\, and reworking state power. As the boundaries between citizen and subject\, resistance and authority\, become increasingly blurred\, long-standing frameworks for understanding collaboration and power demand reconsideration.\n\nThis workshop centers the figure of the intermediary—particularly colonial intermediaries who operated as both agents and instruments of imperial rule. We invite scholars to explore how these actors complicate binary narratives of resistance and collaboration\, coercion and consent. How do we account for the moral ambiguity\, partial complicity\, and aspirational authority of those who worked in the shadow of power as translators\, clerks\, soldiers\, chiefs\, informants\, and community figures within popular movements and state-making projects?\n\nJoin us for a conversation that revisits power\, agency\, and political belonging across historical and geographic contexts.\n\nThis event presented by the Eisenberg Institute for Historical Studies. It is made possible in part by a generous contribution from Kenneth and Frances Aftel Eisenberg.
UID:142516-21891065@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/142516
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Graduate School,Graduate Students,History,Humanities,Interdisciplinary,political science,Politics
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260119T121705
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260213T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260213T173000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:CSAS Lecture Series | Revolutions Half-Made: The Political Effects of Education Expansion in India
DESCRIPTION:Please note: This lecture will be held in person and virtually on Zoom. The webinar is free and open to the public\, but registration is required. Once you've registered\, joining information will be sent to your email. Register for the Zoom webinar at: https://myumi.ch/dg461\n \nOver the last forty years\, the Government of India has rapidly expanded access to primary education. As a result\, India has achieved near-universal enrollment in education\, previously a pox on India's social development record. At the same time\, there has been an explosion in private education. What explains this double movement? I argue that the expansion of government education in a society marked by caste hierarchies has led to the exit of upper caste groups to private schools and a decrease in state-level public funding for governmentm education. Together\, they help explain the case of Indian education that exhibits high enrollment\, high aspirations\, high private school access\, and low quality.\n   \n   Emmerich Davies is a research fellow at the School for Environment and Sustainability at the University of Michigan. He works on comparative politics with a regional focus on South Asia and comparative work in Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa. He is interested in the politics of service provision and bureaucratic politics. His work has been published in the British Journal of Political Science\, Comparative Political Studies\, and Governance\, and his work has won awards from the Comparative and International Education Society. He received his Ph.D. and M.A. in political science from the University of Pennsylvania\, and his B.A. in political science and economics from Stanford University.\n   \n*Accommodation: If there is anything we can do to make this event accessible to you\, please contact us at  csas@umich.edu. Please be aware that advance notice is necessary as some accommodations may require more time for the university to arrange.*
UID:144121-21894692@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/144121
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Asian Languages And Cultures,India,political science,Politics,South Asia
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - Room 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260128T123104
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260216T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260216T173000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:Liberation Statistics: Making Data for Alternative Worlds in India and West Africa
DESCRIPTION:This talk explores the role of statistical practices in decolonizing the world. It follows the work of Pandurang Sukhatme at the Indian Council of Agricultural Research and at the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and Amílcar Cabral as surveyor for the Portuguese colonial government and guerrilla leader in Guinea Bissau. Their engagement with statistics\, namely with sampling and randomization\, enables the historical weaving of projects of world governance at the UN\, Indian independence\, and West African liberation movements. In this connected history of decolonization\, statistical methods are central to denounce the injustices of the colonial order\, but also to unveil forms of agency from below for worldmaking after empire.\n\nTiago Saraiva is Professor of History at Drexel University\, author of Fascist Pigs: Technoscientific Organisms and the History of Fascism (MIT Press\, 2016)\, which was awarded the Pfizer Prize for best scholarly book by the History of Science Society in 2017\, and co-author of Moving Crops and the Scales of History (Yale University Press\, 2023)\, also awarded best book in 2024 by the Society for the History of Technology and the World History Association. He is an historian of science and technology interested in the connections between science\, technology\, crops\, and politics at the global scale. After revisiting the history of European fascism through stories of technoscientific organisms such as wheat\, pigs\, and sheep\, he has recently completed a transnational study on the history of cloning oranges and cultivating whiteness in California\, South Africa\, Algeria\, Palestine\, and Brazil. His new project explores the connected histories of statistical methods and liberation movements in the global south\, from India to West Africa\, from Brazil to the South of the US. Saraiva is now finishing coediting the three volumes of the Cambridge History of Technology to be published in 2026/2027.
UID:144687-21895692@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/144687
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:African Studies,History,India
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260107T144911
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260226T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260226T173000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:EIHS Lecture: Historicizing Transness Otherwise: Asia Narratives and Decolonial Thought
DESCRIPTION:This lecture develops transtopia as an unruly concept that emboldens a continuum model of transness\, thereby activating a mode of historical inquiry that dismantles both the transphobic order of the past and the transgender presumption of the present. That is\, it challenges both the assumption that gender nonconforming figures did not exist historically and the idea that the Western category of transgender delivers the best framework for understanding their experience. To unveil and remedy some of the most salient flaws of epistemic convention in historical inquiry\, historical exemplars from the Sinophone Pacific will be analyzed and weighted in decolonial terms.\n\nHoward Chiang holds the Lai Ho & Wu Cho-liu Endowed Chair in Taiwan Studies at the University of California\, Santa Barbara\, where he is Professor of East Asian Languages & Cultural Studies\, Director of the Center for Taiwan Studies\, and an affiliated faculty of History and Feminist Studies. He is the author of two award-winning monographs: \"After Eunuchs: Science\, Medicine\, and the Transformation of Sex in Modern China\" (Columbia\, 2018) and \"Transtopia in the Sinophone Pacific\" (2021). Between 2019 and 2022\, he served as the Founding Chair of the Society of Sinophone Studies.\n\nThis event presented by the Eisenberg Institute for Historical Studies. It is made possible in part by a generous contribution from Kenneth and Frances Aftel Eisenberg.
UID:141696-21889197@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/141696
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Asia,History,Humanities,International
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260218T160802
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260227T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260227T140000
SUMMARY:Workshop / Seminar:EIHS Workshop: Gender Unruliness\, Power\, and Order
DESCRIPTION:How does gender shape power\, knowledge\, and lived experience across imperial and post-imperial worlds? This graduate workshop explores gender not just as a social category but as a critical lens for analyzing colonial power\, resistance\, and postcolonial critique. Inspired in part by Howard Chiang’s concept of transtopia\, which highlights gender transgression across times and cultures\, this workshop challenges Western-centric frameworks and invites broader\, global perspectives on gender variance.\n\nThis workshop brings together scholars to examine how gender constructs and disrupts hierarchies of power\, intersects with race and imperialism\, and reshapes scientific\, cultural\, and political authority.\n\nJoin us for a conversation to reconsider the entanglements of gender\, power\, and order across historical geographies and contexts.\n\nThis event presented by the Eisenberg Institute for Historical Studies. It is made possible in part by a generous contribution from Kenneth and Frances Aftel Eisenberg.
UID:142517-21891066@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/142517
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Graduate School,Graduate Students,History,Humanities
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260205T145330
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260312T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260312T173000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:EIHS Lecture: Once Were Warriors: Colonial Mimesis\, Martial Masculinity\, and Imperial Nostalgia in Amazigh Morocco
DESCRIPTION:Amazigh cultural-political activism in North Africa is premised on a rhetoric of resistance for territorial autonomy against imperial invaders from the Roman empire through the Islamic conquest and the French protectorate to contemporary Arab nationalist regimes. Yet\, filtering through this dominant discourse are subaltern scripts that register nostalgia for particular pasts when\, even under colonial tutelage\, Amazigh groups felt recognized and effectively acted as self-determining agents of their own history making.  In this paper\, I draw on my research in southeastern Morocco to explore how Amazigh activists narrate the colonial past and memorialize martial masculine resistance and collaboration within it.\n\nPaul A. Silverstein is professor of anthropology at Reed College. He is author of Algeria in France: Transpolitics\, Race\, Nation (Indiana\, 2004) and Postcolonial France: Race\, Islam\, and the Future of the Republic (Pluto\, 2018)\, and co-editor of Bourdieu in Algeria (Nebraska\, 2009)\, among other publications. He has done extensive ethnographic and archival research on Amazigh cultural politics in southeastern Morocco. His translation of Moha Layid’s The Sacrifice of Black Cows—a Moroccan novel set during the nationalist uprising against French colonialism— was recently published by the MLA. He chairs the MERIP Board of Directors.\n\nThis event presented by the Eisenberg Institute for Historical Studies. It is made possible in part by a generous contribution from Kenneth and Frances Aftel Eisenberg.
UID:142518-21891067@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/142518
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Global,History,Interdisciplinary,International,Multicultural
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260305T104122
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260313T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260313T140000
SUMMARY:Workshop / Seminar:EIHS Workshop: Transpolitics of Postcolonial Orders
DESCRIPTION:Colonial power does not simply disappear at independence. It mutates\, reappearing through contemporary institutions\, political discourses\, and racial hierarchies\, complicating any clean break between colonial and postcolonial eras. Ann Laura Stoler’s concept of duress captures this ongoing condition: colonial power persists as a lived\, material\, and affective force\, embedded in social life even when presumed to be over.\n\nRacialized and minoritized communities actively confront and reshape these postcolonial conditions. In France\, for example\, immigrant communities and descendants of colonial subjects engage in memory-work\, cultural production\, and political mobilization to challenge assimilationist ideologies\, securitized Islamophobia\, and exclusionary myths of national universalism. These interventions contest dominant narratives of belonging and insist on political futures that reckon with imperial histories rather than disavow them.\n\nJoin us for a panel that examines how postcolonial orders are inhabited\, contested\, and reimagined across diverse contexts.\n\nThis event presented by the Eisenberg Institute for Historical Studies. It is made possible in part by a generous contribution from Kenneth and Frances Aftel Eisenberg.
UID:142519-21891068@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/142519
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Graduate Students,History,Humanities
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260223T143232
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260316T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260316T173000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:Common Circuits: Hacking Alternative Technopolitical Futures
DESCRIPTION:A digital world in relentless movement---from artificial intelligence to ubiquitous computing---has been captured and reinvented as a monoculture by Silicon Valley \"big tech\" and venture capital firms. Yet very little is discussed in the public sphere about existing alternatives. Based on long-term field research in the Pacific Rim\, Common Circuits explores a transnational network of hacker spaces and projects that stand as potent\, but often invisible\, alternatives to the dominant tech industry. In what ways have hackers challenged corporate projects of digital development? How do hacker-activist collectives prefigure alternative technological futures through community projects? In this talk\, I will address these questions through the analysis of the hard challenges of collaborative\, autonomous community-making through technical objects conceived by hackers as convivial\, shared technologies.\n\nLuis Felipe R. Murillo is Assistant Professor in Anthropology at the University of Notre Dame. His work is dedicated to the anthropological study of the \"commons\" in science and technology with a focus on the intersections between moral economies\, political cultures\, and infrastructures of computing.
UID:144689-21895694@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/144689
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:History,Science
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260216T101438
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260323T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260323T140000
SUMMARY:Presentation:FORMS: Glenn Ellis (Middle East Studies)\, Title TBD
DESCRIPTION:Please join The Forum for Research in Medieval Studies (FoRMS) on Monday\, March 23rd\, in 1014 Tisch for a presentation from Glenn Ellis (Middle East Studies)\n\nLunch will be provided.
UID:145525-21897470@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/145525
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Medieval Studies,Middle East Studies
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260302T113105
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260325T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260325T180000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:Capturing Prestige: Human Trafficking in Japan's Maritime Borderlands\, c. 1350-1600
DESCRIPTION:This presentation traces the evolution of human trafficking networks among so-called Japanese pirates (Kn. Waegu\, Ch. Wokou) from the island of Tsushima located in the maritime borderlands between Japan\, Korea\, and China. It excavates the foundations of the East Asian dimensions of the early modern global circulation of enslaved peoples and shows how medieval Japanese transformations in commercialization\, local lordship\, and the integration of the archipelago into domestic and East Asian shipping circuits all depended on flows of captives. The lords of Tsushima\, the Sō family\, integrated slavery into the administrative machinery of their territorial domain and incentivized military service with awards tied to trafficking. For retainers\, local elites\, and commoner mariners\, such sanctioned trafficking became a source of prestige and family legacies. Incentivized by the promise of tax exemptions and other awards from the Sō\, their piratical enterprises raided Korean and Chinese coasts\, engaged in military campaigns in Kyushu\, and resocialized captives into slaves by modifying regional ascriptive ethnic and status categories. Patronage by the Sō connected Tsushima slavers to the apex of Japan’s warrior hierarchy\, the Ashikaga shogunate. This history invites reconsideration of trafficking in medieval Japan as a low-status\, opportunistic\, and declining trade.
UID:143500-21893296@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/143500
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:History,japan,japanese studies
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260227T142231
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260326T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260326T173000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:EIHS Lecture: Ordering the Sky: The Atmospherics of Sovereignty in the Hellenistic World
DESCRIPTION:This lecture will explore the relationship between unruly weather and ancient kingship\, proposing: first\, a widely acknowledged mode of meteorological legitimacy\; second\, that in certain configurations the atmospheric sky became an available object for management and manipulation\; and third\, that\, in consequence\, it became a landscape for thinking through the limits of sovereignty.\n\nPaul J. Kosmin (Philip J. King Professor of Ancient History at Harvard University) works on the political\, cultural\, and intellectual history of the ancient Greek world\, broadly understood. The core of his work to date has focused on the Hellenistic east – the political landscape that extended from the Greek mainland to India and Central Asia in the last three centuries BCE – and on three broad historical themes: the relationship between empires and systems of knowledge\; the interaction between the Greek world and its Near Eastern neighbors\; and ancient societies’ engagement with the “planetary”.\n\nThis event presented by the Eisenberg Institute for Historical Studies. It is made possible in part by a generous contribution from Kenneth and Frances Aftel Eisenberg.
UID:142520-21891069@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/142520
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Classical Studies,Graduate,Graduate Students,History,Humanities
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260305T171044
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260327T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260327T140000
SUMMARY:Workshop / Seminar:EIHS Workshop: Identity-Making and the Environment
DESCRIPTION:More details forthcoming.\n\nThis event presented by the Eisenberg Institute for Historical Studies. It is made possible in part by a generous contribution from Kenneth and Frances Aftel Eisenberg.
UID:142521-21891070@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/142521
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Eisenberg Institute For Historical Studies,Graduate Students,History,Humanities
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260119T161319
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260327T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260327T173000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:CSAS Lecture Series | Ghosts of Scandals Past: Inter-Caste Relationships and the Question of the Village in Himalayan India
DESCRIPTION:Please note: This lecture will be held in person and virtually on Zoom. The webinar is free and open to the public\, but registration is required. Once you've registered\, joining information will be sent to your email. Register for the Zoom webinar at: https://myumi.ch/W64N7. Note\, this lecture will not be recorded and published at a later date.\n\nThis talk explores how the political economy of sexuality is at the heart of the question of the village in South Asia. It draws on ethnographic fieldwork in the Indian Himalaya to examine how specters of caste violence (literally) haunt the present in ways that disrupt idealized theories of the village as a distinct social formation. \n\nRadhika Govindrajan is an associate professor of anthropology and international studies at the University of Washington\, Seattle. She is the author of *Animal Intimacies: Interspecies Relatedness in India’s Central Himalayas* published by the University of Chicago Press in 2018 and Penguin India in 2019.
UID:144146-21894725@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/144146
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Asian Languages And Cultures,Center For South Asian Studies,India,South Asia,South Asian Studies
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - Room 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260302T105414
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260330T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260330T173000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:Technology and Slavery in the Ancient Mediterranean
DESCRIPTION:Moses Finley (1965) famously argued that enslavement hindered technological development in antiquity\, on the grounds that cheap labor disincentivized automation. Many scholars have argued that Finley’s economic model was too simplistic and ultimately incorrect\, or they demonstrated just how much technological development did\, in fact\, take place across the ancient Mediterranean (Greene 2000\, Oleson 2008). Nevertheless\, even with his thesis significantly undermined\, the specific interactions of slavery and technology have been lost. Working from recent scholarship that has emphasized the huge variety of slaving systems in Classical Greece\, the Hellenistic Kingdoms\, and the Roman Empire (Porter 2025\, Larsen and Letteney 2025\, Vlassopoulos 2023)\, as well as frameworks that conceptualize technology beyond tools for accelerating efficiency\, this talk examines how different types of technology rose and fell with the expansion of various types of enslavement\, including in the fields of mining\, manufacturing\, farming\, infrastructure\, and medicine. Moreover\, by treating enslaved peoples as technologically proficient individuals\, who came from different regional traditions\, it acknowledges how enslavement distributed expertise across the ancient world. Overall\, it outlines how we might conceptualize the question of technology and freedom\, even in our current era\, where the future seems to hinge on this debate.\n\nDr. Webster investigates science\, technology\, medicine\, and philosophy in the ancient world. His current research projects include a study of medicinal plant exchange from the Mediterranean to India\, and an evaluation of enslavement's impact on technological development in antiquity. His first book\, Tools and the Organism (Chicago) won the Charles J. Goodwin Award of Merit and has been shortlisted for the William H. Welch Medal.
UID:146081-21898345@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/146081
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:History,Science
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260304T094315
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260407T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260407T173000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:Activating Doctrine: Buddhist Architecture in Late Chosŏn Korea
DESCRIPTION:This lecture examines a largely overlooked category of visual and textual material in late Chosŏn Buddhist art: inscriptions written on ceilings and other upper architectural surfaces. In temple halls rebuilt between the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries\, ceilings were densely inscribed with seed syllables\, dhāraṇī\, and doctrinal phrases distributed across lotus-painted coffered panels above the altar. The case studies discussed in this lecture show how these inscriptions articulated apotropaic concerns\, framed scriptural authority\, and enabled doctrinal hierarchy or simultaneity. By foregrounding ceilings as sites of doctrinal articulation\, the lecture reframes late Chosŏn Buddhist temples as epistemological environments in which knowledge was ordered and transmitted through architecture itself.
UID:143502-21893297@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/143502
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:History
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260130T122651
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260416T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260416T173000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:EIHS Lecture: A Pretense of Ownership: The Peremptory Enslavement of Rose Bazile (Port-au-Prince\, Santiago de Cuba\, New Orleans)
DESCRIPTION:Almost a decade after the Haitian Revolution led to the abolition of slavery in the French colony of Saint-Domingue\, Napoleon Bonaparte sent an expeditionary force to try to crush the Revolution and reverse emancipation. Though he failed on both counts\, the destruction his assault unleashed turned thousands into refugees. Among those who fled in 1803 were a man born in southern France named Pierre Bazy\, an African-born woman named Gertrude\, and Gertrude’s child named Rose.\n\nUpon arrival in Cuba and later in Louisiana\, Pierre claimed to own Rose\, and thus to control her labor\, her behavior\, and access to her body. Rose nonetheless found ways to live according to her own contrary claim to free status\, and to document that freedom. Enraged\, Pierre reported her to the New Orleans police as marronne (a runaway from slavery)\, leading to her arrest and jailing. Soon judges\, lawyers\, and dozens of witnesses had to address in court variants of the question: What is evidence of ownership\, and what is evidence of freedom? Or\, as we might put it: What could keep the legal fiction of property in a person afloat\, and what might sink it?\n\nThis event presented by the Eisenberg Institute for Historical Studies. It is made possible in part by a generous contribution from Kenneth and Frances Aftel Eisenberg.
UID:142524-21891076@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/142524
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Graduate Students,History,Humanities,Interdisciplinary,Law
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260216T101541
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20260420T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20260420T140000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:FoRMS: Mock Job Talk with Christopher DeCou (History)
DESCRIPTION:Please join The Forum for Research in Medieval Studies (FoRMS) on Monday\, April 20th\, in 1014 Tisch for a Mock Job Talk with Christopher DeCou (History).\n\nLunch will be provided.
UID:144102-21894658@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/144102
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Medieval,Medieval Studies
LOCATION:Tisch Hall - 1014
CONTACT:
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR