Queen's Global History Initiative Launches Monthly Workshop Series on the Global British Empire

The Queen's Global History Initiative launched its new monthly online workshop "Histories of the Global British Empire" organized by research affiliates Alex Martinborough, Elyse Bell, and Michael Borsk on February 12th.

At our first workshop, Catherine Evans shared her work on incendiarism in Turks and Caicos from a project on the history of fire an liberal governance in the British empire. 

The next workshop is March 12th at 4:00pm with Kate Reeve, "Widow Property: Leasing 'Indian Land' in Canada." 

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GHI Hosts Dr. Candace Fujikane and Dr. Anya Zilberstein for 2022 Conference Poverty and Scarcity in Global History

Poverty and Scarcity in Global History,鈥痶he virtual conference organized by 黑料吃瓜资源鈥檚 Global History Initiative and the University of Glasgow鈥檚 Poverty Research Network, successfully concluded on Friday, February 4th, 2022. Throughout its two-day duration, scholars interrogated the interface between poverty, scarcity, and the field of global history through three broad areas: production, power, and affect. In addition to a series of panels, the conference also featured two keynote speakers, Dr.

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Dr. Tony Ballantyne and Dr. Kris Manjapra deliver keynote addresses for Global Histories of Colonialism Workshop

Global Histories of Colonialism, the two-day virtual workshop organized by the Global History Initiative at 黑料吃瓜资源 in Kingston, Ontario, Canada, concluded on Saturday, November 6th, 2020. The workshop featured a series of panels in which scholars from around the world explored the relationship between colonial, imperial, and global history through discussions of their work. In addition to workshop panels, the event featured two keynote speakers, Dr. Tony Ballantyne from the University of Otago and Dr. Kris Manjapra of Tufts University.

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Global Histories of Colonialism Virtual Workshop

Start Date

Thursday November 5, 2020

End Date

Friday November 6, 2020

Time

8:00 am - 5:00 pm

Location

Zoom

This two-day virtual workshop explores the relationship between colonial, imperial, and global history, through papers from scholars at various career stages from around the world. This event will be held on Zoom on 5-6 November, 2020, and is hosted by the Global History Initiative at 黑料吃瓜资源, Kingston, ON, Canada.

The starting point for this workshop was a desire to interrogate the potential of global historical approaches to offer bridges between imperial and colonial history and connect forms of colonialism across the world that are increasingly seen as distinct. As global processes, imperialism and colonialism increasingly connected distant parts of the world as they shaped and were shaped by cultural, material, and social hierarchies of power. A global history perspective encourages the adoption of multiple vantage points to understand these power dynamics, unsettling the boundaries between metropoles and their peripheries. Even as imperial expansion and colonial entrenchment unfolded around the world, anticolonial and anti-imperialist activists challenged and disrupted the underpinnings of imperial power through the same, or parallel, global networks that facilitated and sustained the workings of empire.

If the continuing violence of extraction, dispossession, and oppression is rooted in connected historical processes, how might global history as a perspective offer a means of addressing these temporal, geographic, and historiographic divides? By privileging the global conditions that spread, upheld, and overturned regimes of colonial control, the papers in this workshop explore the causes and consequences of colonialism across multiple scales of time and space.

In addition to the workshop panels, we are extremely privileged to have two exciting keynote speakers for this event:

Tony Ballantyne (University of Otago) Scale and Connection: Thinking about the Global History of Empires and Colonialism in the Pacific (Thursday, November 5th @ 4:00 pm EST)

Kris Manjapra (Tufts University) Colonialism in Global Perspective (Friday, November 6th @ 4:00 pm EST)

Scale and Connection poster for event at Queen's Colonialism in Global Perspective poster for online event

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Registration

Attendance is free, but we ask that attendees register for the specific panel(s) and keynote(s) they would like to attend (see the for details). Panels will consist of short presentations and commentary from co-panelists and chairs, and then open up for wider discussion. The conference will be held over Zoom, and attendees will receive further details and a link closer to the event. Register at .

Poverty and Scarcity in Global History Conference

Start Date

Thursday February 3, 2022

End Date

Friday February 4, 2022

Time

9:30 am - 2:15 pm

Location

ONLINE

黑料吃瓜资源 Global History Initiative and the Poverty Research Network at University of Glasgow are proud to partner for the upcoming conference: 鈥淧overty and Scarcity in Global History,鈥 Feb. 3 & 4, 2022.

Keynote Speakers

Professor Candace Fujikane (University Hawai鈥檌 at M膩noa)

Professor Anya Zilberstein (Concordia University)

 

 

Poverty, or fear of poverty, is ubiquitous in global history. Local instances of want, shortage, and hunger have often been both causes and consequences of global processes. Global integration and trans-local interconnections since the premodern era underpinned the emergence of the global systems of capitalism and colonialism, which in turn have left us with structural inequality. New landscapes of poverty continue to be created by climate collapse, deepening for many the omnipresent fear of not having enough to get by. Nonetheless, our understandings of poverty鈥檚 multiple meanings have been historically shallow.

Poverty and Scarcity in Global History will interrogate the interface between poverty, scarcity, and the field of global history through three broad areas: production, power, and affect. How is poverty produced through global processes, and how are questions of resources鈥攁nimal, organic, and nonorganic鈥 tied to the production of poverty and its concomitant scarcity? Drawing from interdisciplinary vantage points and perspectives from both the premodern and the modern era, the conference seeks to uncover the agentive roles that turn real or perceived scarcity into structural poverty. We will examine the important role that the material conditions of poverty, and socio-political fears and anxieties of poverty, have driven global history across interlocking temporal and spatial scales and how ideas about poverty and scarcity have shaped the emergence of global connections and processes.

We aim to examine the role ideologies played in producing, shaping, limiting, and undergirding poverty by flowing through the globally encompassing power lines. Beliefs about the scarcity of natural resources in the late medieval and early modern periods shaped the course of transitions to capitalism and the pathways to global empires, creating new forms of poverty. Discrete examples from imperial British, Soviet, Nazi, among other contexts, show how scarcity was either justified or enforced according to ideological concerns that served the cause of the hubs and wheels of power. And through its global reach, capital itself has conjured up the threat of scarcity to banish its fears of abundance and crises of overproduction. How do powerplay and geopolitical processes produce scarcity, and how have social theories and intellectual currents explained, justified, and predicted scarcity as an arbiter of global poverty? Where, institutionally and in disciplinary thinking, should we locate the symptoms of scarcity that have served as the handmaiden of the powerful?

And finally, how have cultural productions of poverty and scarcity shaped global history? Whether resources, such as money, are imagined as scarce or abundant has profound effects on how societies are governed, unevenly shaping the lives of the rulers and the ruled. How do we remember scarcity, and how do such memories incite our emotions and guide our actions in navigating our worldview, agentive properties, and intellectual horizons? Alongside the material and ideological aspects of scarcity, we welcome papers that examine emotive and experiential aspects of scarcity, particularly those that evoke fear and keep alive the spectre of never-ending scarcity for those for whom poverty is a permanent home.

The conference is jointly organized by the Global History Initiative, 黑料吃瓜资源, Canada, and the Poverty Research Network, University of Glasgow, Scotland.

Fellowship Opportunities at Harvard University Weatherhead Institute

The Weatherhead Initiative on Global History (WIGH) at Harvard University identifies and supports outstanding scholars whose work responds to the growing interest in the encompassing study of global history. We seek to organize a community of scholars interested in the systematic scrutiny of developments that have unfolded across national, regional, and continental boundaries and who propose to analyze the interconnections鈥攃ultural, economic, ecological, political and demographic鈥攁mong world societies.

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