May
14 - May 21, 2006 (back to top)
- SCREENING: Network: The Antiquities Trade, directed
by Andreas Apostolidis
Monday, May 15 / 5:00 PM, History Department, HSSB
4020
NETWORK, an eye-opening
documentary by Andreas Apostolidis, focuses on the illicit trade of
Greek antiquities and how it mirrors the deeper crisis facing our shared
global cultural heritage. The film takes viewers from locations in Greece,
Southern Italy, and Turkey, straight through to the auction floor at
Christie’s. It also highlights important cases such as the Euphronios
krater, Corinth Museum theft, the Getty Museum, and the Robin Symes
and Giacomo Medici prosecutions.
Sponsored by: Interdisciplinary Archaeology Research Focus Group
- Hostage with filmmaker Constantine Giannaris
Monday, May 15 / 7:30 pm / Campbell Hall (2004, 105
min.)
Compelling, chilling
and immediate -- Variety
Inspired by the real-life story of a bus hijacking in Greece, Hostage
explores the sensitive issue of Greek-Albanian relations through the
story of a young man who takes over an intercity bus headed toward the
Albanian border. The tension builds to a harrowing conclusion.
Co-presented with the James & Sarah Argyropoulos Endowment in Hellenic
Studies at UCSB in association with the Consulate General of Greece
in Los Angeles
General public $6 / UCSB students $5
- TALK: The Poet's Duty in Time of War, by Sojourner
Kincaid Rolle
Tuesday, May 16 / 12:00 PM, McCune Conference Room,
6020 HSSB
In early 2003, a
White House symposium was planned to discuss the role of writers in
American society and those invited prepared to comment on the about
to be launched war in Iraq. Claiming it was "inappropriate to turn
a literary event into a political forum", Mrs. Bush canceled the
symposium. What is the work of poets during wartime? Is it to write
the obituaries for the newspapers or the eulogies for the mourning church?
Memorials for the park dedication and inscriptions for the obelisks
and headstones?
Sojourner Kincaid Rolle, poet, freelance writer, playwright, is the
author of Common Ancestry (Mille Grazie, 1999). Her work is
included in the anthologies, The Geography of Home (Heyday
Press, 1999) and The Poetry of Peace (Capra Press, 2002). Rolle's
current project is a memoir, The Promise, inspired by William Stafford,
a 20th century poet who spent World War II in a camp for conscientious
objectors. Rolle is the Community Outreach Coordinator for the UCSB
Center for Black Studies.
- Post-Traumatic Slave Syndrome, discussion by Joy DeGruy Leary
Tuesday, May 16, 6:30 PM / MultiCultural Center Lounge
A theory developed by Dr. Leary, Post-Traumatic Slave Syndrome is an
explanation of the adaptive survival behaviors in African American Communities
throughout the United States and the Diaspora. This discussion aims
to address some of these behaviors. Among other works, Dr. Leary has
published Post Traumatic Slave Syndrome - America's Legacy of Enduring
Injury and Healing, in addition to leading numerous workshops and lecturing
on race around the world.
- **"IRAN:
The Next War?": PANEL DISCUSSION
Tues, May 16, 7:00 pm, IV Theater II
Organized by Reza Aslan, author of No God But God
Panelists: Dr. Juan Campo, Religious Studies;
Dr. Richard Falk, Global Studies
Mateo Farzaneh, History Ph.D. Candidate
Moderated by Dr. Lisa Hajjar, Law and Society
- **Film:
WALKOUT (1968 East LA high schools), with special guest Sal
Castro
May 17, 2006, 7:00 p.m., IV Theatre, Free Admission
This event brings
to campus the great teacher and community activist Sal Castro, along
with the film he helped to inspire. Walkout is the stirring true story
of the Chicana/o students of East LA, who in 1968 staged several dramatic
walkouts in their high schools to protest academic prejudice and dire
school conditions. Along the way, the students learn profound lessons
about embracing their own identity and standing up for what they believe.
Walkout is a vivid reminder that people can change the world.
- TALK: Race, Crime, and Citizenship, by Kimberle'
Williams Crenshaw (Law, Columbia University/UCLA)
Thursday May 18, 5:00 PM, MultiCultural Center Theater
The system of imprisonment
has huge consequences, not only for those incarcerated and their families,
but for the society as a whole. Incarceration has been seen as a perverse
economic system: the "prison-industrial complex", but it is
also a threat to democracy. A relic of slavery, a system of racial despotism,
a deeply gendered institution, the criminal "justice" system
is also the nation's most comprehensive apparatus for disenfranchising
the poor and nonwhite population of the United States.
Kimberle' Williams Crenshaw is Professor of Law at Columbia University
and at the UCLA Law School. A pioneering voice in Critical Race Theory,
she has written widely on civil rights, race and racism, and black feminism.
Crenshaw's talk is the keynote address in the New Racial Studies Project's
Race, Crime, And Justice symposium that will take place on the UCSB
campus on May 18 and 19, 2006 http://www.newracialstudies.ucsb.edu
Sponsors: New Racial Studies Project; MultiCultural Center; Melvin Oliver,
Dean, Social Sciences; Eileen Boris, Hull Chair in Women's Studies,
Citizenship and Democracy in the 21st Century Research Focus Group,
IHC
- *TALK:
"Lyndon Johnson's Living-Room War: The Johnson
Administration, TV News, and Vietnam," by Chester Pach (History,
Ohio University)
Thursday, May 18 / 7:00 PM, McCune Conference Room,
6020 HSSB
Chester Pach, Associate
Professor of History at Ohio University, will speak on the role played
by the US news media in the Vietnam War, the subject of his forthcoming
book The First Television War: TV News, the White House, and Vietnam.
A specialist on the relationship between television news and presidential
policymaking, his books include Arming the Free World: The Origins of
the United States Military Assistance Program, 1945-1950 (1991). He
was a Fulbright professor at the University of Otago in New Zealand
and winner of the Stuart L. Bernath Article Prize from the Society for
Historians of American Foreign Relations (SHAFR).
- **Human
Rights Watch International Film Festival
Friday, May 19 / 7:30 pm / Lobero Theatre
Saturday, May 20 / 10 am-9:15 pm / Victoria Hall Theater
The most morally
engaged, socially far-reaching annual film series...offers a different
kind of global tour, conducted without the usual rose-colored glasses
and tourist distractions. —The New York Times
For the first time in Santa Barbara, the Human Rights Watch International
Film Festival is a program of 8 intelligent, inspiring and indispensable
feature films and documentaries from around the globe, articulating
many of the human, environmental and geo-political stories of our times.
For details see the Human
Rights Watch Film Festival page.
$6 individual tickets (advance sale: A&L box office
- NOTE: if you are planning on using one of these
films for your topic, since it is so close to the paper draft due
date, I recommend that you research the film in advance,
starting with the link on the festival page, but also googling for
reviews etc.
- **State
of Fear—The Truth About Terrorism, with filmmaker Peter
Kinoy and other guests
Friday, May 19 / 7:30 pm / Lobero Theatre
"One of
the most remarkable explorations of recent history ever conducted"
—Salon.com.
The acclaimed 2005 documentary State of Fear juxtaposes the spectacular
beauty of Peru with disturbing revelations about
the terrorism, violence, abuses of civil authority and social breakdown
that racked the Andean nation for several decades. (Pamela Yates,
Paco de Onís & Peter Kinoy, 2005, 94 min.)
- **Mardi
Gras—Made in China
Saturday, May 20 / 10 am / Victoria Hall Theater
Focusing on
the lives of four young Chinese women working in the largest Mardi
Gras bead factory in the world, this film tracks the bead trail
from Asia to Bourbon Street, poignantly exposing the inequities
of globalization. (David Redmon, 2004, 72 min.)
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