The Nationality Basic Law in Israel: is it the End?
Isser and Rae Price Library of Judaica, 1545 West University AvenueA talk by Raef Zreik (SJD, Harvard Law School), the academic co-director of the Minerva Center for the humanities at Tel Aviv University. Is the National State Law legislated this year in Israel really new or just a continuation of old, settled and known Zionist ideology and practice? In many ways the new basic law …
A Conversation with Raef Zreik: “What’s in the Apartheid Analogy? Palestine/Israel Refracted”
Turlington Hall, Room 3302In this conversation I will probe the political imaginary that frames and nurtures the increasingly used analogy of present-day Palestine/Israel to apartheid South Africa. This inquires as to why the analogy has gained momentum only in the last two decades and seeks to explain the circumstances of its emergence. First, I discuss the construction of …
Book Talk: Sharon Austin and Paul Ortiz
Pugh HallDr. Austin will talk about her book, The Caribbeanization of Black Politics: Race, Group Consciousness, and Political Participation in America and Dr. Ortiz will talk about his recent work, An African American and Latin History of the United States.
Mediterranean and North African Jewish History Lectures: “The Rise and Fall of Salonica, the ‘Jerusalem of the Balkans'”
Isser and Rae Price Library of Judaica, 1545 West University AvenueProfessor Devin Naar (University of Washington) will present the paper. Abstract: The Mediterranean port city of Salonica (Thessaloniki) was once home to the largest Sephardic Jewish community in the world. The collapse of the Ottoman Empire and the city's incorporation into Greece in 1912 provoked a major upheaval for Salonica's Jews. This lecture tells the …
Faculty & Grad Student Workshop: “‘Like Negros . . . and Mohammedans’: Levantine Jews and the American Racial Imagination”
Conference Room, Keene FlintWorking paper presented by Professor Devin Naar (University of Washington) Abstract: Speaking Ladino rather than Yiddish, with different customs and appearances, Sephardic Jews from the Ottoman Empire who arrived in the United Stated during the early twentieth century did not fit the typical American Jewish mold, not even in New York. The Jewishness of these …
Jews and the Americas
The 68th Annual Conference of the Center for Latin American Studies at the University of Florida. Co-sponsored by the Alexander Grass Chair in Jewish Studies and the Isser and Rae Price Library of Judaica at the University of Florida. This multidisciplinary conference aims to explore various facets of the Jewish experience in the Americas from …
Disabilities Studies Seminar: Key Words & Concepts, an Introduction to Disability Theory
Speaker: Dr. Heather Vrana, Assistant Professor of History & DRC Faculty Fellow
Graduate Student Symposium: Water and Wine: Disruption and Fluidity Over the Long Durée
The 2019 UF History Graduate Symposium will honor the 90th anniversary of the first publication of the Annales Journal, which dramatically transformed the post-WWII historical field. We invite graduate students to present their research influenced and inspired by, or disrupting, this varying legacy. In keeping with the interdisciplinary nature of histoire totale and mentalités, which …
From Segregation to Black Lives Matter: A Symposium and Celebration of the Opening of the Joel Buchanan Archive of African American Oral History at the University of Florida
George Smathers LibrariesNational Symposium organized by the Samuel Proctor Oral History Program and the George A, Smathers Libraries to commemorate the opening of the Joel Buchanan Archive of African American Oral History, a collection of more than six hundred oral histories with African Americans on topics including slavery, segregation, and civil rights. This is part of a …
Gainesville, A Flashpoint of Feminist Revolution
Ustler Hall, University of Florida Gainesville, FLHonors Thesis Conference and Awards Luncheon
Smathers 100 Library EastSlavery and the University of Florida: Exploring the Connections
Pugh Hall OcoraDouglas Brinkley Talk
Sponsored by the Bob Graham Center, the Rothman Family Chair in the Humanities, the Department of Journalism, and the Gus Burns Fund of the Department of History
“Workers Movements and the Arab Popular Uprisings of 2011”
Pugh Hall OcoraA talk by Joel Beinin, Stanford University Arab workers, especially in Egypt and Tunisia, participated prominently in the popular uprisings of 2011. They were motivated by declining standards of living and loss of job security in the decades preceding the uprisings. In Tunisia, the mid-level leaders of the national trade union federation (the UGTT) and …
Research in Progress Lunch: Dr. Daniel Rood
Conference Room, Keene Flint“The Rural Afterlives of Slavery: Landownership, Politics, and Farming Practice Among Black Farmers in Clarke County, Georgia, 1865-1980” Motivated by the controversy over the University of Georgia’s 2016 disturbance of a burial ground of enslaved people, this paper examines the "rural afterlives" of slavery by looking at the dynamics of race, land ownership, and agricultural transformation in …
Decarcerating Disability: Deinstitutionalization and Prison Abolition
Ustler Hall, University of Florida Gainesville, FLTalk by Dr. Liat Ben-Moshe, Assistant Professor, Criminology, University of Illinois at Chicago. Recent scholarship and activism paint a troubling picture of the American carceral state and chart a way out by utilizing the framework of abolition. But disability and madness and their histories of oppression and resistance are largely missing from as ways to …
Islam and the Spice Trade: Profit and Prophecy in the Global Middle Ages
Conference Room, Keene FlintA talk by Joel Blecher (Ph.D. Princeton) is Assistant Professor of History at George Washington University. He is the author of Said the Prophet of God: Hadith Commentary across a Millennium (University of California Press, 2018). His current book project on Islam and the Spice Trade has been awarded fellowships from the National Endowment for the …
When They See Us: A Discussion of Race, Crime, and Justice
Holland Hall Room 180Panel discussion sponsored by the W. George Allen Chapter of the Black Law Students Association, speakers: Professor Kenneth Nunn, Levin College of Law Professor Sarah Wolking, Levin College of Law Moderator: Professor Katheryn Russell-Brown, Levin College of Law
Museums & Slavery: Engaging the Past & the Present in the Public Sphere
Smathers 100 Library EastA talk by Ana-Lucia Araujo, Department of History, Howard University. This talk is part of the 2019-2020 Series "Rethinking the Public Sphere, Part I"
History Department Working Paper Series: “Pseudo-Martin of Braga and the Slavs: a re-examination of the poem ‘In basilica'”
Conference Room, Keene FlintA work in progress by Florin Curta. If you are interested in reading the paper before the talk, please contact Dr. Curta at fcurta@ufl.edu
Prince of the Press
Isser and Rae Price Library of Judaica, 1545 West University AvenueA talk by Joshua Teplitsky Assistant professor in the Department of History and the Program in Judaic Studies at Stony Brook University. He specializes in the history of the Jews in Europe in the early modern period, with a particular interest in cultures of knowledge-making, printing, and book collecting David Oppenheim (1664–1736), chief rabbi of Prague …
“The Social Lives of Books from Print to Pixel”
Isser and Rae Price Library of Judaica, 1545 West University AvenueMovie Screening: Women of the Gulag
This screening will be followed by a discussion with the director, Marianna Yarovskaya
2019 Conference: Society for the History of Discoveries
Smathers Library EastThe Caribbean: A Cultural Encounter The conference schedule is here: https://discoveryhistory.org/2019-conference-schedule/ Throughout time, humans have ventured over the hill, beyond their own territories. Wherever such journeys of exploration have taken us, we have learned about ourselves while interacting with others and sharing our ideas, history, and culture. The Society for the History of Discoveries celebrates the …
History Department Working Paper Series: “’Unfitting words or speeches’ in Ireland’s 1641 depositions”
Conference Room, Keene FlintA work in progress presented by Grace Hoffman. If you would like a copy of this paper in advance, please contact Dr. Curta at fcurta@ufl.edu
Ibram Kendi
Phillips Center for the Performing ArtsIbram Kendi will speak about his new book, How to Be an Antiracist This talk is sponsored by the Rothman Family Chair in the Humanities
History Department Working Paper Series: ”Land reform and nationalism. Negotiating national loyalty in interwar Transylvania”
Conference Room, Keene FlintA work in progress presented by Bogdan Dumitru. If you are interested in seeing a draft of this paper, contact Dr. Curta at fcurta@ufl.edu
History Department Working Papers: “Facing infant mortality: parental grief in the Roman Empire”
Conference Room, Keene FlintPresentation by Ciprian Cretu, Fulbright Scholar from Bucharest, Romania. For advanced copies of the paper, contact the author: ciprian.cretu@drd.unibuc.ro
2019-2020 History of Capitalism Roundtable
Pugh Hall OcoraHistory Department Working Papers: “Post colonialism and the Holocaust: The Klaus Barbie Trial, 1987”
Conference Room, Keene FlintPresentation by Norman Goda.
1920-2020: A Century of Suffrage and Voter Suppression
Ustler Hall, University of Florida Gainesville, FLThe Gary C. and Eleanor G. Simons Lecture on American History. Speaker: Liette Gidlow, Associate Professor of History, Wayne State University
Colonial Fantasies, Imperial Realities
Smathers 100 Library EastA book talk with affiliated professor Lenny A. Ureña Valerio, presentations by Geoff Eley and Sueann Caulfield, University of Michigan.
Hidden Lives Illuminated
The Wooly @ 20 N. Main Street, GainesvilleScreening at the Museums Challenge Symposium presented by the Mellon Intersections Group on Mass Incarceration. At The Wooly (20 N. Main Street) Hidden Lives Illuminated is a project commissioned by Eastern State Penitentiary Historic Site of animated short films created by artists incarcerated at the Pennsylvania State Corrections Institution at Chester and Philadelphia’s Riverside Correctional Facility for …
“‘In Questionable Taste’: Performing Capitalism in the Gilded Age”
Conference Room, Keene FlintLunchtime seminar featuring Dr. Jennifer Le Zotte, UNC Wilmington. This talk is funded by Sean Adams, the Hyatt and Cici Brown Professor of History.
Migrating to Prison: America’s Obsession with Locking Up Immigrants
Smathers 100 Library EastLecture by Cesar Cuauhtemoc Garcia Hernandez, Sturm College of Law, University of Denver. Presented by the Mellon Intersections, Mass Incarceration Working Group See details here: https://humanities.ufl.edu/event/migrating-to-prison-americas-obsession-with-locking-up-immigrants-cesar-cuauhtemoc-garcia-hernandez/
“Is American ‘Different?’ Antisemitism and the Belief in American Exceptionalism”
Dr. Tony Michels, Department of History, University of Madison will be the speaker. The event is sponsored by Mitchell Hart, the Alexander Grass Chair in Jewish History.
History Department Honors Conference
Smathers 100 Library EastThe eleventh annual Honors Thesis Conference is the culmination of a process that students in the History Department’s honor’s seminar have been working on since last summer. In the summer of 2019, students began collecting and reviewing primary source material from a wide range of archives. Some students, used documents UF’s own Smathers Library. Others …
UF Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar Public Lecture – Professor Joan Waugh
The UF Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa invites you to join us on Monday, October 19, for a public lecture by Joan Waugh, renowned historian from UCLA and President-elect of the Society of Civil War Historians. Her talk is entitled “Lizzie Borden Took an Axe”: The Crime of the Century. Professor Waugh researches and writes about 19th-century America, …
Achebe-Baldwin: Interrogate and Commemorate
In April 1980 renowned African writer Chinua Achebe and African American literary giant James Baldwin met for the first time at the African Literature Association conference devoted to the African Aesthetic. On the 40th anniversary of Achebe and Baldwin's historic encounter at the University of Florida, The Center for African Studies invites guests to a two-day …
Research in Progress: From the Wobblies to the Grateful Dead: The Long Strange Posthumous Journey of Casey Jones
This paper will be presented by Zoom. A copy of the paper is available before the talk. To obtain a copy of the paper or to receive the zoom link to this talk, contact Professor Sean Adams. This presentation is sponsored by the Hyatt and Cici Brown Chair of History.
2021 Milbauer Symposium: Reimagining the Black Past: The Futures of Black Power
"Twenty Years of Black Power Studies: Reflections and Horizons" Dr. Ashley Farmer (UT-Austin) Abstract: When Peniel Joseph published “Black Liberation Without Apology: Reconceptualizing the Black Power Movement” in 2001, he ushered in the field of Black Power Studies. Since the publication of this Black Scholar article twenty years ago, the field has grown in depth …
2021 Milbauer Symposium: Reimagining the Black Past: The Futures of Black Power
“ ‘Something Bigger and Better’: The Rebirth of Black Banking in the United States, 1964-1983” Dr. Brandon Winford (University of Tennessee) Abstract: After the passage of milestone civil rights legislation in the mid-1960s, the United States experienced a rebirth in black banking. In particular, the emergence of new black-owned banks coincided with the passage of …
Blues for the 1980s: Roger Troutman & Zapp and Dayton, OH
A Talk by Dr. Scot Brown, Associate Professor of African American Studies & History, UCLA Questions: contact Elizabeth Dale (edale@ufl.edu)
The Influence of African Americans on French Caribbean and Black French Social Movements, 1920s-2020
A talk by Felix Germain, Assoc Professor Africana Studies, University of Pittsburg This talk will be on Zoom. For more information contact Elizabeth Dale (edale@ufl.edu)
2021 Milbauer Symposium: Reimagining the Black Past: The Futures of Black Power
“Armed Mothering: Activism and Armed Black Women in the United States” Dr. Jasmin Young (UC-Riverside) Abstract: This article and talk is based on the experiences of several women who were armed revolutionaries and also mothers. While scholars of revolutions in Latin America, Africa and Asia have considered motherhood and armed resistance, scholars of the U.S. …
His Truth Is Marching On: John Lewis and the Power of Hope
Jon Ellis Meacham will give the Inaugural lecture honoring Dr. Michael Gannon, Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of History at the University of Florida. Jon Ellis Meacham is a writer, reviewer, and presidential biographer. A former Executive Editor and Executive Vice President at Random House, he is a contributing writer to The New York Times Book Review, …
2021 Milbauer Symposium: Reimagining the Black Past: The Futures of Black Power
“‘Mr. Muhammad Says All of This is Possible for You and Me’: Elijah Muhammad, Muhammad Speaks, and Black Nationalism during the Space Age” Dr. D'Weston Haywood (Hunter CUNY) Abstract: Scholars have analyzed Elijah Muhammad and the NOI’s demands for a separate Black territory within the United States, but have missed another critical side of their …
“Monstrous Births: Race and Defective Reproduction in 19th-Century U.S. Medical Science.”
A zoom talk by Miriam Rich, History of Medicine, Yale University For more information, contact Elizabeth Dale (edale@ufl.edu)
2021 Milbauer Symposium: Reimagining the Black Past: The Futures of Black Power
TBA Dr. Hassan Jeffries (Ohio State University
Search committee meeting
Meeting of 19th century VAP search committee. Questions, contact Sean Adams, chair of the search committee: spadams@ufl.edu
Search committee meeting
Questions? Contact Sean Adams, Chair of the Committee (spadams@ufl.edu)
UF History’s Workshop
Historians learn from each other and fine-tune their work by workshopping in-progress papers and chapters.
History Workshop with Sean Adams
Historians refine their ideas and texts by sharing -- "workshopping" -- their work-in-progress chapters and articles with colleagues and graduate students in and beyond their fields.
The Trouble with Conversion: Jewish Converts and Christian Responses
The History Workshop at the University of Florida presents Nina Caputo with a work-in-progress chapter on Europe’s high middle ages.
Poekhali! Gender and Cosmic Dreaming in Young People’s Letters to Early Cosmonauts (Roshanna Sylvester, University of Colorado, Boulder)
005 Keene-Flint Hall University of Florida CampusHistory Workshop with Alice Freifeld, “Forced Labor: A Tour of Europe”
Zoom RoundtablePlease join us for our next History Workshop which will feature a pre-circulated paper by our esteemed colleague Alice Freifeld, recently retired but still flourishing with her scholarship. Alice has assembled a stunning array of three discussants, whose scholarship spans Germany (with our very own Norm Goda), France (Jean-Marc Dreyfus of Manchester), and Poland (with …
All the Glory in the World: How hubris and Diffidence Ignited the Streets of Cuba
Smathers Library Room 100For more than six decades, Cuba and its leaders have played an outsized role in international affairs, dominating discourse far beyond what a small island nation could expect. And yet, the ordinary Cubans who have lived with the interminable revolution have rarely been heard from.
Historical Writing (& Practice) Since Black Lives Matter
VirtualA roundtable with four historians from the University of Florida, including Bill Link, David Canton, Lillian Guerra and James Gerien-Chen.
CIFNAL Speaker Series: French Medieval Manuscripts at the BnF—Current Research Programs and Future Perspectives
Charlotte Denoël, Chief Curator of the Bibliothèque nationale de France's Manuscripts Department, presents on the Bibliothèque's collections and programs.
History Workshop: Prof. Lillian Guerra’s Patriots and Traitors in Revolutionary Cuba, 1961-1981
We will be discussing two chapters from Lillian Guerra’s forthcoming book, Patriots and Traitors in Revolutionary Cuba, 1961-1981. The workshop will take place over Zoom. Contact Prof. Phillip Janzen for the chapter and link to the meeting. The discussant will be María de los Ángeles Torres, Distinguished Professor of Latin American and Latino Studies at the University of …
Soccer Diplomacy World Cup Watch Party
Pugh Hall OcoraSoccer is the only sport played in every corner of the world. Can soccer also be an effective means of global diplomacy?
History Honors Info Session
Keene-Flint LibraryBeyond the Headlines: Exploring Race and Newspaper Coverage in the Gainesville Sun from Reconstruction to the Present
Cotton Club Museum and Cultural Center 837 SE 7th Ave, Gainesville, FLPlease join the Samuel Proctor Oral History Program at the Cotton Club Museum and Cultural Center on January 14, 4:30 pm for the inaugural event in the 2023 Challenging Racism public program series. Staff and students at the Gainesville Sun and the Proctor Program have embarked upon a partnership to explore the history of the Sun’s coverage of race relations from …
Gannon Lecture with Pulitzer Prize Winner Ada Ferrer
George A. Smathers Library: Grand Reading Room and Judaica Suite University of Florida, GainesvilleBernice Lerner, The Meaning of Liberation: Holocaust Remembrance Day Reflections
UF Hillel 2020 W University AvenueMichael Brenner, Munich 1923: Hitler’s Insurrection and the Rise of Antisemitism
Judaica Suite, Library East Smathers Library, Gainesville, FL, United StatesUniversalizing the Holocaust – An International Conference
Dauer Hall 319Dan Simone, Racing, Region, and the Environment: A History of American Motorsports
05 Flint--Department Conference RoomDr. Dan Simone earned his Ph.D. from UF in 2009. He wrote his dissertation, “Racing, Region, and the Environment: A History of American Motorsports," under the guidance of Dr. Jack Davis. While at UF, he also served as Program Coordinator of the Samuel Proctor Oral History Program. From 2010-2015, Dr. Simone taught World History and …
(Re)Writing Southern History A Conference in Honor of Dr. William A. Link
Keene Faculty Center, Dauer HallA Conversation with Chief Afukaka: Indigenous Peoples and Partnerships in the Brazilian Amazon
Smathers 100 Library EastIzabela Wagner, From The Warsaw Ghetto To Human Rights Organizations: The Extraordinary Life Of Alina Margolis
George A. Smathers Library: Grand Reading Room and Judaica Suite University of Florida, GainesvilleHistory Honors Conference
Smathers 100 Library EastOur annual showcase of theses by undergraduate honors students. For more on our program, check out its homepage here: https://history.ufl.edu/undergraduate-studies/undergraduate-honors-program/
The American Jewish Experience
Pugh Hall OcoraJonathan Dekel-Chen, Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine and East European Jews: What’s New, What’s Not
Isser and Rae Price Library of Judaica, 1545 West University AvenueThomas van Gaalen, “Amigos de los Muelles.” Mapping how transatlantic solidarities shaped the Curaçaoan Radical Movement, 1900-1940
Towards the late 19th century, heightened patterns of exchange and interaction emerged between socialists across the world. The ideal of international solidarity, which had become increasingly important for socialists, attracted a wide variety of radicals from a wide variety of regions. Where historical scholarship has often treated socialism as, with Talbot Imlay, a “European phenomenon,” …
Digital Archives as Decolonial Practice
Dr. Ricia Anne Chansky, Professor and Director of the Oral History Lab, UPR Mayaguez; Jose Morales Benitez, Librarian, UPR Mayaguez & Christina Boyles, Assistant Professor of Culturally Engaged Digital Humanities, Michigan State University Traditional academic research often relies on the violence of extraction—the taking of people, resources, goods, and ideas from the marginalized in order …
Ukraine and the Jews: An Interdisciplinary Conference
George A. Smathers Library: Grand Reading Room and Judaica Suite University of Florida, GainesvilleThe Dialectics of the Antiquities Rush with Suzanne Marchand
Fine Arts Building B 105Organized by UF’s Phi Beta Kappa Society Chapter.
The Criminalization of Whooping in the Nineteenth-Century Choctaw Nation: A Case Study in Language and History
Turlington Hall, Room 1208In the 19th century, the Choctaw Nation passed a law to criminalize whooping, and many Choctaw citizens were prosecuted for this crime in the period between 1880 and 1906. This talk considers the linguistic, historical, and anthropological meanings of whooping for Choctaw people and the forces that led to its eventual criminalization.
Pub Trivia Event
Pugh Hall OcoraJoin the Bob Graham Center and the Department of History for a fun night of trivia, food, and prizes! Trivia will include questions on history, international affairs, pop culture, and more.