2008 News & Events
January 9
The Kislak competitions with application dates
of January 31 and February 28 have been postponed.
January 17 at 4:00 pm
Lecture: "Globalization through the centuries," by Herman Van Der Wee,
holder of the Chair of the Countries and Cultures of the North in
the John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress. The lecture
starts at 4:00 pm, Thursday, January 17, in room 119 of the Thomas
Jefferson Building, 10 First St. S.E., Washington, D.C. [ More
Information - View
Webcast ]
January 23 at 12:00 pm
Lecture: "Consuming Landscapes: Parkways in Germany and the United
States, 1920-1970," by Tom Zeller, Kluge Fellow. One of the earliest
environmental repercussions of the 20th century's car culture were
new roads celebrating landscape. In a seemingly paradoxical fashion,
a new technology was used to embellish nature. This talk will explore
the way roads have been redesigned for the automobile as parkways
since the 1920s in the United States and Germany, what meanings they
acquired, and how drivers and passengers experienced them. The lecture
starts at 12:00 pm, Wednesday, January 23, in room 119, of the Thomas
Jefferson Building, 10 First St. S.E., Washington, D.C. [
View
Webcast ]
February
7
Symposium on Druze Heritage [ Press
Release ]
Webcast: Part
One -
Part
Two -
Part
Three -
Part
Four
March 13-14
Symposium
on New Deal [More
information]
March 20, 2008
Lecture: "The Second Great Migration: Religious Refugees and the
Remaking of America, 1678-1690," Owen Stanwood, Kluge fellow,
at 12:00 in LJ-119. Thomas Jefferson Building. [More
information] - [Webcast]
March 21
A lecture by Oussama Romdhani [More
information]
April 3, 2008
Lecture: "God and Gandhi: The radical spiritual politics of the Reverend
John Haynes Holmes (1879-1964)," Joseph Kosek, Kluge Fellow, in Dining
Room A, Madison Building, at Noon.
Webcast:
God and Gandhi
Though hardly remembered today, John Haynes Holmes was one of the most important American religious radicals of the twentieth century. A socialist, antiracist, and pacifist, he was also among the very first popularizers of Mohandas Gandhi’s ideas in the United States. More controversially, Holmes steadfastly opposed his country’s participation in both world wars. The career of this remarkable dissenter offers a window on the creative possibilities and wrenching paradoxes of religious nonviolence.
April 7, 2008
Distinguished scholar and child-development expert Edith Ackerman will present "The
Anthropology of Digital Natives" at 4 p.m. in the Montpelier Room on the
sixth floor of the James Madison Building. [More
information] [View
Webcast]
April 11, 2008
2008-09 Class of Kluge Fellows Selected [More
information]
April 16, 2008
Lecture: "Mapping the New Empire: Britain’s General Survey of North
America, 1763-1782," Max Edelson, Kislak Fellow, at 12 in Whittall
Pavilion, Thomas Jefferson Building [Webcast]
Britain’s decisive victory in the Seven Years’ War dramatically enlarged its American empire. Once confined to the coastal plain, British North America extended after 1763 from Hudson’s Bay to the Florida Keys and past the Appalachian Mountains to the Mississippi River, at least on paper. To understand these new territories and bring them under control, the Board of Trade launched the General Survey of North America. The maps and charts created by this vast cartographic project were intended as blueprints for an expansive new empire. Although the unfinished Survey collapsed during the chaos of the American Revolution, its findings were incorporated into the famed Atlantic Neptune atlas and appeared on maps issued to British commanders. Through the War for Independence and beyond, the General Survey provided a critical foundation of geographic knowledge about the continent.
April 17, 2008
Lecture: "An Empire for a King: The Conquest of Algeria at Louis-Philippe's
Versailles,"
Jennifer Sessions, Kluge Fellow, at 12, in Whittall Pavilion [Webcast]
Versailles is best known today as the palace of Louis XIV, but in the nineteenth century, the chateau had another life as a museum of national history. The history museum's galleries are now mostly closed to the public, but in its heyday, one of its largest and most popular sections was a suite of rooms devoted to the French conquest of Algeria. The creation and reception of these galleries, commissioned by King Louis-Philippe and decorated by the painter Horace Vernet over the 1840s, offers a unique window into the politics and culture of empire in nineteenth-century France.
April 17, 2008
Larson Fellowship application deadline
[More
information]
May 12, 2008
Digital Natives Series: "Everything Bad Is Good for You" [More
information - Webcast]
May 22
Lecture: "Poster mania in turn-of-the-century Paris," Karen Carter,
Kluge Fellow, at Noon in Whittall Pavilion, Thomas Jefferson Building
In the 1880s and 1890s illustrated posters displayed on walls throughout Paris were accused of turning the city into a bazaar and mounting an aggressive assault on the eyes and souls of passersby. This lecture will examine "poster mania," a topic of late nineteenth-century commentary that linked the viewing of publicity to pathology and madness. French writers appropriated the concepts of hypnosis and subconscious suggestion in order to investigate the powerful attraction of the poster's accentuated visuality and psychological impact.
May 29
Lecture: "Congress: Crucible of American democracy," Stephen Stathis,
Kluge Staff Fellow, at 4:00 P.M. LJ-119, Thomas Jefferson Building
Though often treated by historians, political scientists, and the American public as of lesser consequence than the Executive, the U.S. Congress has historically served as the crucible of American democracy. In continual interaction and evolution as an institution, Congress has molded and directed national policy affecting the lives of virtually every American citizen. Its history is as diverse and complex as the nation and is waiting to be told in its entirety. Stathis’ continuing effort to capture the essence of that story focuses on the historical evolution of the twin functions of Congress: to legislate for the nation and to represent the people.
June 12
Derek Chollet and James Goldgeier to Discuss the Decade Prior to
September 11, "America Between the Wars"
[More information -
Webcast]
June 12
Lecture: "Breaking the Bonds of People and Land: Native
American Removal in the United States and Mexico," Claudia Haake,
Kluge Fellow, at 12:00 noon in Whittall Pavilion [More
information - Webcast]
June 16-July 11, 2008
"Rethinking America in a Global Perspective"
An NEH Summer Institute for College and University Teachers at the
Library of Congress
[More
Information]
June 23
Lecture: “The Anthropology of YouTube” with Michael Wesch, Kansas
State University
[More
information] [Webcast
on YouTube]
June 23
Library of Congress to Select $1 Million Kluge Prize Winner; "America's
Nobel" for Study of Humanity to be Given Dec. 10 [More
information]
June 30
Lecture: “Open Source Reality” with Douglas Rushkoff, New York
University
[More information]
[Webcast]
July 9
Dane Kennedy to Discuss "Decolonization and Disorder" [More
information] [Webcast]
July 10
Lecture: "Translating ‘History’: Rajatarangini and the
Making of India’s Past,” Chitralekha Zutshi, Kluge Fellow,
at 12:00 noon in Whittall Pavilion [Webcast]
Nineteenth-century European orientalists and philologists considered the Rajatarangini-a twelfth-century Sanskrit historical narrative from Kashmir-as the only Indian text to which the status of “history” could be accorded. This paper analyzes several late-nineteenth and early twentieth-century translations of this text by both Europeans and Indians to illustrate the mediated nature of the process of colonial and nationalist production of knowledge about India’s past-indeed of the idea of history itself-in British India.
July 15
Kluge Fellowship application deadline [More
information]
July 16
William Roger Louis to Discuss United Nations' Role in Creation of Israel at
Library of Congress [More
information] [Webcast]
July 17, 2008
Lecture: "'Remember Belgium'
- Poetry as Propaganda during the First World War," Geert
Buelens, Kluge fellow, at 12:00 in Whittall Pavilion, Thomas
Jefferson Building. [Webcast]
In 1914 the case of Gallant Little Belgium stirred political and artistic attention and emotion all over the world. Invaded by “the Huns”, the Belgians found themselves at the heart of a propaganda battle in both warring and neutral nations. The writing of war poems became part of the war effort. American poets as well joined in.
This talk will address the use of poetry as propaganda, using First World War poems about Belgium by poets such as e.e. cummings, Witter Bynner, Ford Madox Ford and prominent Russian, Italian and Scandinavian poets.
July 23, 2008
Lecture: “Cruelty, Savagery, and the Formation of a National
Community in the Bohemian Reformation,” Joel Seltzer, Kluge
fellow, at 12:00 in Whittall Pavilion, Thomas Jefferson Building.
[Webcast]
The Bohemian Reformation of the fifteenth century was a seminal event in the history of late medieval Europe. Seltzer contends that for the first time, the authority of the Roman Church over Latin Christendom was broken by a religious reform that sought to return to the primitive roots of the early Church. Anticipating the Protestant Reformation by a full century, the Bohemian reform emphasized the authority of the Bible, preaching and reading the Gospels in the vernacular, clerical poverty, and the lowering of divisions between clergy and laity. Additionally, this reform led to five crusades, civil war, and the hardening of linguistic divisions between Czechs and Germans.
This talk will explore the role of medieval chronicle writing in establishing and maintaining this national, Czech-speaking religious revolution. It will focus particularly on the rhetorical uses of violence as a means of binding the Czech community literally over the “dead bodies” of the fallen, and creating a sense of a national destiny centuries before the advent of the modern ideology of nationalism.
August 12, 2008
Lecture: “Death, Rebirth and Being Human in Tibetan Buddhism,” Frances Garrett,
Larson Fellow
This talk will consider images of dying, the afterlife and rebirth, and notions of human embodiment and personhood, in Tibetan Buddhist literature, art and medicine. Dr. Garrett argues that the use of knowledge about dying and birth in Buddhist meditation compels us to revise our understanding of the categories of medicine and religion. Tibetan medical and religious scholars alike have developed complex theories of embryology, for example, and this research has used the history of embryological knowledge in Tibet to emphasize the importance of maintaining a historically and culturally specific understanding of medicine and religion and their interaction.
September 18, 2008
Lecture: “‘Will there be peace again?’: some aspects of Vietnamese
representations of the Vietnam War and its aftermath,”
Subarno Chattarji, Kluge fellow [More
information]
September 23
Book Talk: "The Hemingses of Monticello: An American
Family" with author, Annette Gordon-Reed [More
information]
September 24
Book Talk: "‘From Vienna to Chicago and Back" with
author, Gerald Stourzh [More
information]
September 25, 2008
Lecture: “Abkhazia and the New Cold War,” Paul Crego, Kluge
Staff fellow, at 4:00 PM in West Dining Room, Thomas Jefferson
Building
Before the summer of 2008, it is likely that most Americans had never heard of Abkhazia. Dr. Crego discusses the history, language and culture of the Abkhazian people and the Georgian-Abkhazian conflict as it developed in the late Soviet period through the 1992-1993 war. Abkhazia in the context of geopolitical conflicts will also be covered. Further, he will discuss his assessment that Abkhazia has become a Russian military colony.