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Thursday, September 8, 2016

Lecture on History, Memory and Fiction in the Representation of Extreme Violence in Latin America

Wednesday, October 26, 4:00 PM
“Can the Story Be Told? History, Memory and Fiction in the Representation of Extreme Violence in Latin America” 
Lecture by CARLOS PABÓN, University of Puerto Rico
710 Social Sciences
Cosponsored by the Dept. of Spanish and Portuguese and the Dept. of History. 

Prof. Pabón will reflect on the relation between history, memory and fiction in the representations of traumatic pasts, with particular focus on the debates in Latin America. He will address the often contested politics of memory and the uses of forgetfulness with respect to events of massive political violence in cases such as Argentina and Chile; and the relation of these politics with historical writing and other modes of representation, such as witness testimony.

What aspects of a traumatic or catastrophic event must be remembered and how must we remember? What are the aesthetical, ethical and political implications of the narratives or representations of traumatic events of recent pasts? What are the limits of these representations?




Carlos Pabón is professor of History at the University of Puerto Rico. He is the author of the books Nación postmortem. Ensayos sobre los tiempos de insoportable ambigüedad (San Juan, Ediciones Callejón, 2002); Polémicas. Política, intelectuales, violencia (San Juan, Ediciones Callejón, 2014); and Mínima política: textos breves y fragmentos sobre la crisis contemporánea (San Juan, Ediciones La Secta de los Perros, 2015). He is editor of the collection of essays titled El pasado ya no es lo que era. La historia en tiempos de incertidumbre (San Juan, Ediciones Vértigo, 2005); and has published a great number of articles and essays on nationalism, globalization, intellectuals, historiography and memory. 

Sunday, September 4, 2016

October 7 HGMV: "Nostalgia as an Analytical Tool Applied to Turkey" presentation by Yagmur Karakaya

Thursday, October 6, 4:00pm
710 Social Sciences
Yagmur Karakaya: "Nostalgia as an Analytical Tool Applied to Turkey"

Yagmur is a PhD student at UMN Sociology department. She is interested in sociology of culture, collective memory and popular media analysis. Her dissertation is on Ottoman nostalgia in contemporary Turkey, which engages with this phenomenon in two levels: state (neo-Ottomanism) and popular (Ottomania), questioning the different ways in which these two domains interpret and use the Ottoman past. Currently she is also working on a comparative paper on collective memory of Holocaust in Turkey and Spain with Alejandro Baer.

Thursday, September 1, 2016

Workshop with Sidney Blanco, Chief Justice of El Salvador

Monday-Tuesday, November 14-15 “Futures, Challenges and Transformations for Transitional Justice” workshop with 
CHGS talk by SIDNEY BLANCO, Chief Justice of the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court of El Salvador
University of Minnesota Law School

Organized by the Transitional Justice Institute (Belfast), and UMN Human Rights Center and Human Rights Program; cosponsored by the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, the Arsham and Charlotte Ohanessian Chair, and Ohanessian Endowment Fund for Justice and Peace Studies of the Minneapolis Foundation.