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Susan Elaine Chaput, C. George Chaput, Kantilal Rathod
Summary:
Uses the story, drawings, and narration of a nine-year-old girl to tell of the fantasy world in which all of the people look like vegetables. Points out how Mr. Peacock who looks like a potato does not want any children until one is born who looks just like what Mrs. peacock wants. He changes his mind about not liking children.
"In the United States as in other countries, many people genuinely concerned to right historical wrongs have woven together an ideology often called “the woke left.” I will argue that this ideology is not, in fact, genuinely leftist, as it challenges many of the crucial ideas that have traditionally been central to all leftwing movements. I will argue for a new understanding of ideas of solidarity, justice and progress that have their roots in the much-maligned Enlightenment, and discuss how those ideas might be applicable today."
"My most recent book argued that Americans--and other peoples--have much to learn from Germany about historical reckoning. Historically, nations cultivate heroic narratives; failing that, they seek narratives of victimhood. Germany was the first nation to confront its vast crimes during World War II, and acknowledge that it had been neither hero nor victim but perpetrator.
This may seem obvious to outside observers, but this process was a long and hard one; in the first four decades after the war, West Germany considered itself the war’s worst victim. Dedicated grassroots work, along with foreign policy considerations, forced far-reaching changes in attitude. In the past two years, however, German historical reckoning has gone awry in many ways. I will discuss this, along with parallels to current developments in the U.S."
Susan, Glorianne, Jennifer Bass; Betsy Jose; Stephanie Sanders
Summary:
Marriage Equality Collection includes audio and video files, photographs, historical documents and ephemera representing experiences of same-sex couples married in the decade of legal marriage in the U.S. Particular focus is on the experience of couples in Indiana. This archive is growing in both content and scope.
This talk will explore Dr. Sutton’s introduction to Digital and Public History through the Remembering Freedom: Longtown and Greenville History Harvest. It will discuss the method she termed Descendant Archival Practices– a method that reveals new ways of writing histories of Black women and acknowledges the preservation and memory work of Black women elders as an alternative to mainstream archives–and how she incorporates the skills and methodological approaches she learned from HASTAC and IDAH in her research and classrooms.
Sutton, Percy E., Carter, Lisle C., Jr., Owens, Major, Wiley, George A., Elliott, Osborn
Summary:
Moderator: Percy Sutton (President, Borough of Manhattan). Panelists: Lisle C. Carter, Jr. (Director, Program Development, Urban Coalition); Major R. Owens (Commissioner of the Community Development Agency, NYC Human Resources Administration); Dr. George Wiley (Executive Director, National Welfare Rights Organization); Osborn Elliott (Editor, Newsweek).
Moderator: Percy Sutton (President, Borough of Manhattan). Panelists: Prof. James Farmer (Adjunct Professor, School of Education, New York University; founder and former National Chairman of CORE); Eldridge Waith (assist. Chief Inspector, NYC Police Depart.); Dr. Nathan Wright Jr. (Exec. Dir., Diocese of Newark, NJ; Plans Committee Chairman, 1967 National Conference on Black Power); Osborn Elliott (Editor, Newsweek).
Sutton, Percy E., Haughton, James, 1929-, Holloman, John S., Poussaint, Alvin F., Clark, Matt
Summary:
Moderator: Percy Sutton (President, Borough of Manhattan). Panelists: Dr. James G. Haughton (First Deputy Administrator, NYC Health Services Administration); Dr. John S. Holloman (Former President, National (Negro) Medical Association); Dr. Alvin Poussaint (Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Tufts University); Matt Clark (Associate Editor for Medicine, Newsweek).