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DTSTART:20201101T020000
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UID:6732-4110a01e222f54a4d23b1da0ca0672d0@events.la.psu.edu
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20181102T180000
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SUMMARY:Steven and Janice Brose Distinguished Lecture Series with Stephen Kantro
	witz
DESCRIPTION:\nDr. Stephen Kantrowitz\,&nbsp\;Vilas Distinguished Achieve
	ment Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison\,&nbsp\
	;will deliver three lectures on&nbsp\;Citizenship and Civilization: A Ho
	-Chunk History of the Civil War Era for the 2018 Steven and Janice Brose
	 Distinguished Lecture Series. Taking place on&nbsp\;November 1\, 2\, an
	d 3 in Foster Auditorium\, 102 Paterno Library\, the lectures are free a
	nd open to the public. This lecture series is sponsored by the George an
	d Ann Richards Civil War Era Center at Penn State through the generosity
	 of an endowment by Steven and Janice Brose.\n\nHow did Native Americans
	 shape the emergence of national citizenship in the 1860s\, and how did 
	national citizenship reshape Indian life? How were jurisdiction and alle
	giance in the Civil War era mediated by notions of &ldquo\;civilization&
	rdquo\;? Citizenship and Civilization explores these questions through t
	he removal\, diaspora\, defiance\, and creativity of Wisconsin&rsquo\;s 
	Ho-Chunk people\, the settlers who sought to displace them\, and the off
	icials and politicians who oversaw the confusing and often violent world
	 of the mid-nineteenth-century Midwest.\n\nThe schedule is as follows:\n
	\n	6:00 p.m.&nbsp\;Thursday\, November 1:&nbsp\;&nbsp\;Hiding in Plain S
	ight: Native Americans and the History of American Citizenship\n	&nbsp\;
	\n	6:00 p.m.&nbsp\;Friday\, November 2:&nbsp\;&ldquo\;The Habits and Cus
	toms of Civilization&rdquo\;: Citizenship and Belonging in the Ho-Chunk 
	Diaspora\n	&nbsp\;\n	4:00 p.m.&nbsp\;Saturday\, November 3:&nbsp\;Conque
	red Citizens: Ho-Chunks and Settlers in Post-Removal Teejop\n\nDr. Kantr
	owitz is Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor of History at the Uni
	versity of Wisconsin-Madison\, where his scholarship and teaching focus 
	on race\, politics\, and citizenship in the nineteenth century. His work
	 includes More Than Freedom: Fighting for Black Citizenship in a White R
	epublic\, 1829-1889&nbsp\;(Penguin\, 2012)\, which was a finalist for bo
	th the Lincoln Prize and the Frederick Douglass Prize\; Ben Tillman and 
	the Reconstruction of White Supremacy&nbsp\;(UNC Press\, 2000)\, which w
	on several scholarly awards and was a&nbsp\;New York Times&nbsp\;Notable
	 Book\; articles in The Journal of American History\, Boston Review\, an
	d other periodicals\; and an edited collection on the history of African
	 American Freemasonry\, All Men Free and Brethren (Cornell University Pr
	ess\, 2013). He has been a Fulbright Distinguished Chair of American Stu
	dies at the University of Southern Denmark\, a fellow at the Radcliffe I
	nstitute for Advanced Study\, and an OAH Distinguished Lecturer. He is c
	urrently a Senior Fellow at UW-Madison&rsquo\;s Institute for Research i
	n the Humanities.\n\nFor more information\, contact the Richards Center 
	at&nbsp\;814-863-0151&nbsp\;or visit the website at&nbsp\;http://richard
	scenter.la.psu.edu/.\n\nFor more details: https://events.la.psu.edu/even
	t/steven_and_janice_brose_distinguished_lecture_series_with_stephen_kant
	rowitz_4804/
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<html><head></head><body><p><b>Dr.</b> <b>S
	tephen Kantrowitz</b>,&nbsp;Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor of
	 History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison,&nbsp;will deliver three
	 lectures on&nbsp;<i>Citizenship and Civilization: A Ho-Chunk History of
	 the Civil War Era </i>for the 2018 Steven and Janice Brose Distinguishe
	d Lecture Series. Taking place on&nbsp;November 1, 2, and 3 in Foster Au
	ditorium, 102 Paterno Library, the lectures are free and open to the pub
	lic. This lecture series is sponsored by the George and Ann Richards Civ
	il War Era Center at Penn State through the generosity of an endowment b
	y Steven and Janice Brose.</p><p>How did Native Americans shape the emer
	gence of national citizenship in the 1860s, and how did national citizen
	ship reshape Indian life? How were jurisdiction and allegiance in the Ci
	vil War era mediated by notions of &ldquo;civilization&rdquo;? <i>Citize
	nship and Civilization </i>explores these questions through the removal,
	 diaspora, defiance, and creativity of Wisconsin&rsquo;s Ho-Chunk people
	, the settlers who sought to displace them, and the officials and politi
	cians who oversaw the confusing and often violent world of the mid-ninet
	eenth-century Midwest.</p><p>The schedule is as follows:</p><ul>	<li>6:0
	0 p.m.&nbsp;Thursday, November 1:&nbsp;&nbsp;<b>Hiding in Plain Sight: N
	ative Americans and the History of American Citizenship</b></li>	<li>&nb
	sp;</li>	<li>6:00 p.m.&nbsp;Friday, November 2:&nbsp;<b>&ldquo;The Habit
	s and Customs of Civilization&rdquo;: Citizenship and Belonging in the H
	o-Chunk Diaspora</b></li>	<li>&nbsp;</li>	<li>4:00 p.m.&nbsp;Saturday, N
	ovember 3:&nbsp;<b>Conquered Citizens: Ho-Chunks and Settlers in Post-Re
	moval Teejop</b></li></ul><p><b>Dr. Kantrowitz</b> is Vilas Distinguishe
	d Achievement Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin-Madiso
	n, where his scholarship and teaching focus on race, politics, and citiz
	enship in the nineteenth century. His work includes <i>More Than Freedom
	: Fighting for Black Citizenship in a White Republic, 1829-1889&nbsp;</i
	>(Penguin, 2012), which was a finalist for both the Lincoln Prize and th
	e Frederick Douglass Prize; <i>Ben Tillman and the Reconstruction of Whi
	te Supremacy&nbsp;</i>(UNC Press, 2000), which won several scholarly awa
	rds and was a&nbsp;<i>New York Times&nbsp;</i>Notable Book; articles in 
	<i>The Journal of American History,</i> <i>Boston Review, </i>and other 
	periodicals; and an edited collection on the history of African American
	 Freemasonry, <i>All Men Free and Brethren</i> (Cornell University Press
	, 2013). He has been a Fulbright Distinguished Chair of American Studies
	 at the University of Southern Denmark, a fellow at the Radcliffe Instit
	ute for Advanced Study, and an OAH Distinguished Lecturer. He is current
	ly a Senior Fellow at UW-Madison&rsquo;s Institute for Research in the H
	umanities.</p><p>For more information, contact the Richards Center at&nb
	sp;<u><a href="callto:814-863-0151">814-863-0151</a></u>&nbsp;or visit t
	he website at&nbsp;<u><a href="http://richardscenter.la.psu.edu/" target
	="_blank">http://richardscenter.la.psu.edu/</a></u>.</p><p>For more deta
	ils: <a href='https://events.la.psu.edu/event/steven_and_janice_brose_di
	stinguished_lecture_series_with_stephen_kantrowitz_4804/'>https://events
	.la.psu.edu/event/steven_and_janice_brose_distinguished_lecture_series_w
	ith_stephen_kantrowitz_4804/</a></p></body></html>
URL:http://richardscenter.la.psu.edu/programs/brose-lecture-series
LOCATION:Foster Auditorium, 102 Paterno Library
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