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Academic

UBC-GLOBAL INDIGENOUS CONFERENCE

The Global Indigenous Conference at the University of British Columbia (UBC) will be held on April 1st and 2nd, 2011 in Sty-Wet-Tan, the Great Hall of the UBC First Nations Longhouse in Vancouver Canada.

Indigenous and non-indigenous students at UBC have collaborated to bring together Canadian and international Indigenous activists, academics, and youth for this conference on Indigenous People’s and Globalization. A highlight of the conference will be a case study on mining and oil development within recognized Indigenous lands in Peru by Canadian and American companies.

Keynote Speaker:

DR DAVID SUZUKI, cofounder of the David Suzuki Foundation. A geneticist and broadcaster, Dr. Suzuki is well known as host of The Nature of Things and is a professor emeritus at UBC.

For more information please visit:

http://aboriginal.ubc.ca/gic/

Also, for a link to Dr. David Suzuki’s “The Real Avatar” on the Nature of things check out: http://www.cbc.ca/documentaries/natureofthings/2011/peru/

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Features

Why, ‘frankly my dear,’ you should give a damn!

Studying history can make you see things you didn’t before…

I am currently taking HIST 447B, a course entirely committed to analyzing the legacy racial slavery has had on the United States. For the past four years of my degree I have been a student of mainly twentieth century European history, and so I knew little to nothing about the slave history in America, except for what I had seen on television and in movies. Through my readings and the in-class discussions with Professor Paul Krause,  I increasingly could not believe I hadn’t gotten into this area of history before. It is so interesting and so unsettling, and the more you learn about it the more you notice things you’ve recently read in class emerge in your everyday life.

I am still a stickler for WWII history, but it doesn’t pop up on a daily basis like the topic of race does in the media. The cable channel Turner Classic Movies aired the classic 1939 film Gone with the Wind over reading break, and even though I had seen the film before and knew it dealt with racism through its storyline of the American Civil War, I had never realized how racist the film itself was. The two main black actors in the film are both portrayed as bumbling fools, while the white characters are portrayed as the paragons of honour and courage. Once you see it, you can’t un-see it, and I don’t know if I would have seen it before taking this course.

After watching the film I did some research, and the African-American woman who portrayed Scarlett O’Hara’s nurse, Hattie McDaniel, was the first African-American to both be nominated, and to win, an Academy Award. Clark Gable apparently became good friends with McDaniel during filming, and threatened to boycott the Atlanta, Georgia premiere of the film as McDaniel and her other African-American co-stars were barred from attending due to the state’s segregationist laws. It is amazing to think that the film itself deals so prominently with the problem of racism in The United States, yet when it was released, America was still a country largely troubled by its racist issues, and arguably, is still dealing with these problems today.

For me, this is a really excellent example of how studying history can not only open your eyes to things you may not have seen before or questioned before, but it allows us as students to look at the past and evaluate what it means for us today.

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Corrine Hof is completing her fifth year at UBC and is graduating this May. Historically, she interests herself with twentieth-century history. She has also just completed a semester abroad at at Leiden University in the Netherlands.

Categories
Academic

YouTube Video

Hey everyone,

This is also up on our events page But I just thought I’d also add it to our main blog page.

As you may know, a month or so ago one of our history professors Neil Safier  was presented at the “Celebrate UBC Authors” event held at the IK Barber Library on April 6th.

Dr. Safier presented on his new book Measuring the New World: Enlightenment, Science and South America, which was the winner of the 2009 Gilbert Chinard Prize from the Society for French Historical Studies and the Institut Français de Washington.

Allan Cho a Librarian at IK Barber was kind enough to provide us with a video link for the presentation, which I’ve embedded here ;). Enjoy!

YouTube Preview Image

Emily

VPX/AUSRep

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