Abouts Programs People Old & New Contact Yale Links

Agrarian Studies Archive File

AgrStds Home

Archive Index


TEXT ONLY:

AgrStds Home

Archive Index

Colloquium Series Fall 2006–2007

September 8 Frieda Knobloch
American Studies, University of Wyoming
“Beautiful Wreck: A Red Desert View on Ruin in Wyoming”
September 15 Jessica Allina-Pisano
Political Science, Colgate University
“Post-Socialist Potemkin Villages”
September 22 Ravi Rajan
Environmental Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz
“Sustenance, Security, and Suffrage: An Essay on Environmental Justice”
September 29 Elizabeth Dore
Latin American Studies, University of Southampton
“Memories of the Cuban Revolution”
October 6 David Hughes
Human Ecology, Rutgers University
“The Craft of Belonging: Whites, Water, and Wilderness in Africa”
October 13 Thomas Harttung
Chairman, Aarstiderne (The Seasons)
“21st-Century Sustainable Food Systems: Walking the Tight Rope between Deep Ecology and Corporate Ultra-Light Sustainability, or How to Square the Virtuous Circle without Becoming Square Yourself”
October 20

Durland Fish
School of Public Health, Yale University
“Zoonotic Disease: Intimacy with the Natural World”

Instead of a paper, Dr. Durland Fish will present a brief lecture on zoonotic diseases and the micro-biological history of the domestication of livestock and poultry.

October 27 Jimmy McWilliams
History, Texas State University- San Marcos
“The Bug Wars: Early America’s Vexed Relationship with the Insect Empire”
November 3 Virginia Anderson
University of Colorado at Boulder
“History in a Minor Key, or The Life of a Seventeenth-Century New England Farmer”
November 10 Prakash Kumar
History, Colorado State University
“Science and the Improvement of Indigo Dye in Colonial India, 1897–1913”
November 17 Gail Hershatter
History, University of California, Santa Cruz
“The Gender of Memory: Rural Women and Collectivization in 1950s China”
December 1 Ignacio Chapela
Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley
“Science, Seeds, Sovereignty: Biotech Enters the Genetic Resource Commons”
December 8 Ann Gold
Religion, Syracuse University
“Tasteless Profits and Vexed Moralities in Rural Rajasthan”

Colloquium Series Spring 2006–2007

January 19 Conevery Bolton Valencius
History of Science, Harvard University
“Earthy Science of the Nineteenth-Century U.S.: Understanding the New Madrid Earthquakes of 1811–12”
January 26 Janisse Ray
Author
“The Bleeding Fields: Rural Exodus, Cultural Depauperization, and Right-Wing Uprise in the American South”
February 2 Arvid Nelson
School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale
“German Forest and Farm Landscapes and the Onset of the Cold War, 1945–1949: Evidence from the Soviet Zone Countryside”
February 9 Richard Schroeder
Geography, Rutgers University
“The Great Trek to Tanzania:  South African Capital, Race, and National Sovereignty in the Post-Apartheid Era”
February 16 Valentine Cadieux
Yale Sustainable Food Project
“Beyond the Rural Idyll: Agrarian Problems and
Promises in Exurban Sprawl”
February 23 Thomas Barfield
Anthropology, Boston University
“Weapons of the not so Weak in Afghanistan: Pashtun Agrarian Structure and Tribal Organization for Times of War or Peace”
March 2 Vaclav Smil
Geography, University of Manitoba
“The Next Fifty Years: Catastrophes and Trends”
March 9 Finn Stepputat
Danish Institute for International Studies
“Democratarianism? Politics and Shifting Hegemonies in Rural Guatemala”
March 30 John Varty
History, McGill University
“On Breathless Cows and Mad Science: The Anatomy of a 19th-Century Dispute”
April 6 David Guterson
Independent Author
“The Kingdom of Apples: Picking the Fruit of Immortality in Washington’s Laden Orchards”
April 13 Erika Olbricht
English, Pepperdine University
“Robin Hood's Complaint:  Tithes and Agrarian Theology in Early Modern England”
April 20 Richard Kernaghan
Anthropology, Columbia University
“Asphalt Trenches: Peruvian Maoism, Mobile Checkpoints, and Other Questions of Historical Sedimentation” 
April 27 Liza Grandia
Clark University, Department of International Development, Community and Environment
“‘The Tragedy of the Enclosures’:  Rethinking Primitive Accumulation from the Guatemalan Hinterland”


Top  Site Home  SiteMap  Text Only  Yale Home  ISPS  MacMillan Cntr  FAQ

Program in Agrarian Studies
Yale University
Box 208209
New Haven, CT 06520-8209
U.S.A.
campus address: 204 Prospect Street, Room 204
tel 203/432-9833   fax 203/432-5036
email  agrarian.studies@yale.edu
Contents copyright © 2008
Yale University Program in Agrarian Studies
All rights reserved.

Web Design by H.G. Salome, MetaGlyfix
email: hgs@metaglyfix.com
Design copyright © 1998-2008 MetaGlyfix
[http://www.metaglyfix.com]