Archive File
Colloquium Series, Fall 1998�1999
September 11
Alex Lichtenstein
History, Florida International University
�Peasants or Proletarians?: Sharecroppers and the Politics of Protest in the Rural South 1880-1940�
September 18
Carlos A. Forment
Politics and Sociology, Princeton University
�Democracy in Spanish America: Civic Society and the Invention of Politics�
September 25
G�ran Djurfeldt
Sociology, Lund University
�Essentially Non-Peasant?: Some Critical Remarks on the Post-Modern on the Peasantry�
October 2
Arun Agrawal
Political Science, Yale University
�The Production of Community-in-Conservation�
October 9
Rebecca J. Scott
History, University of Michigan
�Reclaiming Gregoria�s Mule: Nationalist Insurgency and Local Assertion in the Postemancipation World of Cane (Cienfuegos, Cuba, 1884-1902)�
October 16
S. Ravi Rajan
Environmental Studies, University of California/Santa Cruz
�Bhopal: Erasure, Vulnerability, and the Chronic Disaster�
October 23
Jeya Kathirithamby-Wells
Cambridge University
�Forest Frontier and Hinterland in Peninsular Malaysia: The Twentieth-Century Convergence�
October 30
Annie Proulx
Writer, Centennial, WY
�Dangerous Ground: Landscape in Contemporary American Fiction�
November 6
Nicholas Dawidoff
Writer, New York, NY
�In the Country of Country�
November 13
Megan Haney and Dave Forman
Mad Mares Farm, Bethany, CT
�Mad Mares Farm: The Farmers in Your Neighborhood�
November 20
Steve Striffler
Anthropology, New School for School Research
�Communists, Communists Everywhere!: Understanding Defeat and Betrayal in Ecuador�s Coast�
December 4
Amitava Kumar
English, University of Florida
�Against Mandarin Modernity: The Case of Fiction from Small Town India�
Colloquium Series, Fall 1998�1999
January 15
Tamara L. Whited
Department of History, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
�Pastoralists and Geographers in Turn-of-the-Century France�
January 22
Vincent J. Knapp
Department of History, SUNY/Postdam
�What Europeans Ate in Agricultural Times: Eighteenth-Century Levels of Food Consumption and Nutrition�
January 29
Gloria Davis
The World Bank
�Social Development Update: Making Development More Inclusive and Effective�
February 5
Douglas R. Weiner
Department of History, University of Arizona
��Resistance� Reconsidered: Do we Need a New Framework to Describe Responses to Violence?�
February 12
Henry Bernstein
Programme in Public Policy and Management, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London
�The Rise and Fall of King Maize on the South African Highveld, or the Boys from Bothaville�
February 19
Joan Mart�nez-Alier
Department of Economics and Economic History, Autonomous University of Barcelona
�Environmentalism of the Poor�
February 26
Christopher Udry
Department of Economics, Yale University
�Learning and Innovation: The Adoption of Pineapple in Ghana�
March 5
Jan Douwe van der Ploeg
Wageningen Agricultural University, The Netherlands
�The Agrarian Question Reconsidered�
March 26
James McCann
African Studies Center, Boston University
�Maize and Grace: Africa�s Green Revolution and Landscapes of Memory, 1500-1999�
April 2
Jin Sato
Advanced International and Social Studies, University of Tokyo
�People in Between: Conservation and Conversion of Forest Land in Thailand�
April 9
Kathy J. Cooke
History, Quinnipiac College
�Breeding for Character: The Frontier and the Development of Eugenics in Early Twentieth-Century America�
April 16
Fredrik Barth
Etnografisk Museum, University of Oslo, Department of Anthropology, Boston University
�Power and Compliance in Bhutanese Rural Society�
April 23
Tamara Giles-Vernick
History, University of Virginia
�Cutting the Vines of the Past: Environmental Histories of Loss in the Sangha River Basin�