History and Gender Workshop For graduate students in history: a discussion for Graduate Students on ways to bring Issues of gender and sexuality into the classroom. contact: Derrick Angermeier Read more about History and Gender Workshop
Burgers in the Age of Black Capitalism: How Civil Rights and Fast Food Changed America after 1968 Marcia Chatelain presents “Burgers in the Age of Black Capitalism: How Civil Rights and Fast Food Changed America after 1968”. Dr. Chatelain is an Associate Professor at Georgetown University. Read more about Burgers in the Age of Black Capitalism: How Civil Rights and Fast Food Changed America after 1968
Black History Month Book Club: Heather Thompson, U Michigan This presentation of the history department's Black History Month book club features Heather Thompson's Blood in the Water: The Attica Prison Uprising of 1971 and Its Legacy. Heather Thompson (U Michigan) and Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor (Princeton U) author of #BlackLivesMatter to Black Liberation, featured last week, will be participating in a spotlight event for Black History month Feb 13 (see the history calendar for more details). Read more about Black History Month Book Club: Heather Thompson, U Michigan
PDW - Conflict De-escalation Training This is a history graduate student professional development workshop (PDW): Conflict De-escalation Training with Dr. John Newton from the Office of Emergency Preparedness. Contact: Whitney Priest Read more about PDW - Conflict De-escalation Training
Dirty History: Marcia Chatelain, Georgetown U Dirty History is an Interdisciplinary Workshop in Agriculture, Environment, and Capitalism for faculty and advanced graduate students (space is limited, please contact us if you would like to attend). Today's speaker Marcia Chatelain (Georgetown U) will present “From Fighting for the Franchise to Fighting for a Franchise: Civil Rights Heroes at the Drive-thru”. Contact: Dan Rood, History Department Read more about Dirty History: Marcia Chatelain, Georgetown U
Dirty History: Ashley Roseberry, UGA Dirty History is an Interdisciplinary Workshop in Agriculture, Environment, and Capitalism for faculty and advanced graduate students (space is limited, please contact us if you would like to attend). Ashley Roseberry (PhD candidate, history) will present “The Color of Yerba Mate: Cultivation, Industrialization, and Nationalism in the Argentine Yerba Mate Industry, 1901-1940”. Contact: Dan Rood, History Department Read more about Dirty History: Ashley Roseberry, UGA
Dirty History: Gabriel Rosenberg, Duke U Dirty History is an Interdisciplinary Workshop in Agriculture, Environment, and Capitalism for faculty and advanced graduate students (space is limited, please contact us if you would like to attend). Today's presentation is by Gabriel Rosenberg (Duke U): "The Trial of the Scrub Sire: Animal Gender and Eugenic Logics in the USDA’s ‘Better Sires-Better Stock’ Campaign, 1919-1940". Contact: Dan Rood, History Department Read more about Dirty History: Gabriel Rosenberg, Duke U
History Graduate Program Accepted Student Days, March 1-2 The graduate program in history will be hosting a two day accepted student open house. Invited guests will visit graduate classes and department programs, meet with faculty and graduate students, and take a campus tour. By invitation only. Sponsored by the History Department. Read more about History Graduate Program Accepted Student Days, March 1-2
UGA Spring Break No classes during spring break. UGA offices will be open. Read more about UGA Spring Break
Black History at UGA Panel Discussion UGA's chapter of the NAACP and Phi Alpha Theta, Epsilon Pi (UGA's chapter of the National History Honor Society, Inc.) are hosting a panel discussion about how Black History is represented on our campus. From street and building names to historic markers, our surrounding campus landscape may appear to present a white-washed history. However, just beneath the surface is a wealth of black history that extends far beyond Hunter, Holmes, and desegregation. In what ways does our campus fail to tell this story? Read more about Black History at UGA Panel Discussion