April 8–9, 2022 | A workshop sponsored by the Department of History, Department of Art History, Pacific Basin Institute, Middle Eastern Studies/Asian Studies, Benton Museum of Art at Pomona College, and Environmental Analysis.
Khazeni's new book The City and the Wilderness recounts the journeys and microhistories of Indo-Persian travelers across the Indian Ocean and their encounters with the Burmese Empire at the turn of the nineteenth century.
Her research has primarily developed around three areas: the lived experience of ‘race’ and racism; feminist theory and the interconnections between beauty, emotions and racism; visual methodologies and applied research.
Check out upcoming Spring 2018 History events.
History is all about researching the past, a process that usually culminates in an essay or paper. But that’s not the only way to share the results of our research.
Ben Madley (UCLA) comes to campus this Thursday, April 6 at 4:15p.m. in Hahn 108 to speak about his new book, An American Genocide: The United States and the California Indian Catastrophe.
James C. Scott, the 2017 Ena H. Thompson Distinguished Lecturer, delivers two public lectures on Tuesday, March 28 and Thursday, March 30, at 11:00 a.m. in Rose Hills Theater.
Native American scholar Dr. Kiara M. Vigil (Amherst College) visits Pomona College this Thursday, March 23 at 4:15 (Hahn 108) to share her latest work, “Natives in Transit: Indian Entertainment, Urban Life, and Activism.”
William Bauer (Associate Professor of History at UNLV) visits Pomona College to give a talk titled "Healing California: California Indians and American Violence." The event is Thursday, Feb. 23 @4:15 (Hahn 108).
A slate of cutting-edge scholars--whose work helps shed light on the dynamic history of indigenous Americans--is coming to Pomona College this spring. You won't want to miss "Indigenous Americans: New Perspectives on the Past."