06/11/2022
Atlantic Exiles : une autre histoire de "l'âge des révolutions",
intervenant Jan Jansen (Univ. Tübingen)/ discutante Louise Guttin-Vidot (doctorante, CHSP)
Event in Français
Des frontières-fantômes en Europe centrale : histoire, géographie, littératures
lundi 20 novembre 2023,
17h00-19h30
Avec
Béatrice HIRSCHHAUSEN
(CNRS, Géographie-cités) et
Sabine DULLIN
(Sciences Po, Centre d'histoire)
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Séance format hybride
Event in Français
Jeudi 23 novembre 2023, 12h30-14h00
Juifs et capitalisme. Aux origines d'une légende (Seuil, 2023)
Séance en anglais, en présence de Francesca Trivellato (Princeton, Institute for Advanced Study)
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Event in Français
Location:
10 novembre 2023, 12h30-14h30
Séance coordonnée par Evan Bonney
Moritz von Brescius (Université de Berne)
"The Battle of Materials: Rubber "Research and Propaganda" and the Road Towards Immoderate Consumption, 1900-1980"
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Event in Anglais
Location:
Speaker: Andrew Preston (Cambridge U),
From Planning to Strategy: New Deal Liberalism and the Invention of National Security
Date: Monday 20 November 2023
Time: 5:00 pm - 6:30 pm CEST (Hybrid Event)
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Event in Anglais
Cooperating with the Colossus:
US Military Basing in World War II Latin America
Rebecca HERMAN (Associate professor of History at the University of California, Berkeley)
Rebecca Herman is associate professor of history at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of Cooperating with the Colossus and a number of articles and essays that have appeared in The American Historical Review, Diplomatic History, and Gender & History. Her broader research agenda is concerned with the complicated relationship between international cooperation and global inequality, and is marked by an interest in grounding big questions of international politics in local histories and the lives of "ordinary" people. Her newer work explores these tensions and methodological inclinations in the realm of environmental politics. She is currently working on a book about Antarctica in the 1970s and 80s that reconstructs a fraught period in Antarctic governance through the stories of the soldiers and scientists, military wives and children, artists, writers, and activists who traveled to the frozen continent in growing numbers during these years. Her most recent article, "Greenpeace Goes South: The Promise and Pitfalls of Global Environmentalism in Argentina," tells the story of Greenpeace International's first office in the global South, which opened in Buenos Aires in the 1980s. It is due out in Environmental History in January 2024.
In her talk, Rebecca Herman will discuss her last book, Cooperating with the Colossus, which was published by Oxford University Press in 2022 and won the 2023 Tonous & Warda Johns Family Book Award given annually to an outstanding book on the history of US foreign relations, military history, or immigration history by the Pacific Coast Branch of the American Historical Association. The book brings together the diplomatic history of US military basing in Latin America during World War II with the social and political histories of the communities where the bases were built to better understand the tensions between sovereignty and cooperation that have profoundly shaped the modern history of the Americas.
REGISTRATION
Event in Anglais
Cooperating with the Colossus:
US Military Basing in World War II Latin America
Rebecca HERMAN (Associate professor of History at the University of California, Berkeley)
Rebecca Herman is associate professor of history at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of Cooperating with the Colossus and a number of articles and essays that have appeared in The American Historical Review, Diplomatic History, and Gender & History. Her broader research agenda is concerned with the complicated relationship between international cooperation and global inequality, and is marked by an interest in grounding big questions of international politics in local histories and the lives of "ordinary" people. Her newer work explores these tensions and methodological inclinations in the realm of environmental politics. She is currently working on a book about Antarctica in the 1970s and 80s that reconstructs a fraught period in Antarctic governance through the stories of the soldiers and scientists, military wives and children, artists, writers, and activists who traveled to the frozen continent in growing numbers during these years. Her most recent article, "Greenpeace Goes South: The Promise and Pitfalls of Global Environmentalism in Argentina," tells the story of Greenpeace International's first office in the global South, which opened in Buenos Aires in the 1980s. It is due out in Environmental History in January 2024.
In her talk, Rebecca Herman will discuss her last book, Cooperating with the Colossus, which was published by Oxford University Press in 2022 and won the 2023 Tonous & Warda Johns Family Book Award given annually to an outstanding book on the history of US foreign relations, military history, or immigration history by the Pacific Coast Branch of the American Historical Association. The book brings together the diplomatic history of US military basing in Latin America during World War II with the social and political histories of the communities where the bases were built to better understand the tensions between sovereignty and cooperation that have profoundly shaped the modern history of the Americas.
REGISTRATION
Event in Anglais
Cooperating with the Colossus:
US Military Basing in World War II Latin America
Rebecca HERMAN (Associate professor of History at the University of California, Berkeley)
Rebecca Herman is associate professor of history at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of Cooperating with the Colossus and a number of articles and essays that have appeared in The American Historical Review, Diplomatic History, and Gender & History. Her broader research agenda is concerned with the complicated relationship between international cooperation and global inequality, and is marked by an interest in grounding big questions of international politics in local histories and the lives of "ordinary" people. Her newer work explores these tensions and methodological inclinations in the realm of environmental politics. She is currently working on a book about Antarctica in the 1970s and 80s that reconstructs a fraught period in Antarctic governance through the stories of the soldiers and scientists, military wives and children, artists, writers, and activists who traveled to the frozen continent in growing numbers during these years. Her most recent article, "Greenpeace Goes South: The Promise and Pitfalls of Global Environmentalism in Argentina," tells the story of Greenpeace International's first office in the global South, which opened in Buenos Aires in the 1980s. It is due out in Environmental History in January 2024.
In her talk, Rebecca Herman will discuss her last book, Cooperating with the Colossus, which was published by Oxford University Press in 2022 and won the 2023 Tonous & Warda Johns Family Book Award given annually to an outstanding book on the history of US foreign relations, military history, or immigration history by the Pacific Coast Branch of the American Historical Association. The book brings together the diplomatic history of US military basing in Latin America during World War II with the social and political histories of the communities where the bases were built to better understand the tensions between sovereignty and cooperation that have profoundly shaped the modern history of the Americas.
REGISTRATION
Event in Anglais
Cooperating with the Colossus:
US Military Basing in World War II Latin America
Rebecca HERMAN (Associate professor of History at the University of California, Berkeley)
Rebecca Herman is associate professor of history at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of Cooperating with the Colossus and a number of articles and essays that have appeared in The American Historical Review, Diplomatic History, and Gender & History. Her broader research agenda is concerned with the complicated relationship between international cooperation and global inequality, and is marked by an interest in grounding big questions of international politics in local histories and the lives of "ordinary" people. Her newer work explores these tensions and methodological inclinations in the realm of environmental politics. She is currently working on a book about Antarctica in the 1970s and 80s that reconstructs a fraught period in Antarctic governance through the stories of the soldiers and scientists, military wives and children, artists, writers, and activists who traveled to the frozen continent in growing numbers during these years. Her most recent article, "Greenpeace Goes South: The Promise and Pitfalls of Global Environmentalism in Argentina," tells the story of Greenpeace International's first office in the global South, which opened in Buenos Aires in the 1980s. It is due out in Environmental History in January 2024.
In her talk, Rebecca Herman will discuss her last book, Cooperating with the Colossus, which was published by Oxford University Press in 2022 and won the 2023 Tonous & Warda Johns Family Book Award given annually to an outstanding book on the history of US foreign relations, military history, or immigration history by the Pacific Coast Branch of the American Historical Association. The book brings together the diplomatic history of US military basing in Latin America during World War II with the social and political histories of the communities where the bases were built to better understand the tensions between sovereignty and cooperation that have profoundly shaped the modern history of the Americas.
REGISTRATION
Event in Anglais
- 08/11/2023
Introduction du séminaire puis exposé de
Léa DELMAIRE (Sciences Po, CHSP)
La tuberculose en Turquie après 1945 et la perception des comportements et des populations à risques.
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Event in Français
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Event in Français
23/11/2023, 17h-19h
What role did minorities play in the Soviet "affirmative action empire"? Lessons from interwar Ukraine
Olena PALKO (Université de Bâle)
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Event in Français
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SAISON 31 | L'OSINT depuis la fin de la Guerre froide
L'Open Source Intelligence, soit le Renseignement en sources ouvertes, est réputé fournir aux services une masse d'informations cruciales pour éclairer, confirmer ou infirmer leurs investigations clandestines. Cette nouvelle saison de METIS (de septembre 2023 à janvier 2024) éclairera, au coeur du renseignement, la part véritable des informations clairsemées à travers les médias, la Toile, les réseaux sociaux mais aussi les témoignages divers, publics ou plus diffus.
20/11/2023 | 18:00-19:30
L'OSINT et l'Etat
groupemetis@gmail.com
ATTENTION : Nombre de places limité
Event in Français
mardi 21 novembre 2023, 17h00-19h00
Des mondes miniers perpétuellement en crise ? (XIXe-XXe siècle)
Bastien CABOT (post-doctorant Sciences Po, Centre d'histoire) ,
Marion FONTAINE (Sciences Po, Centre d'histoire)
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Event in Français
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Louis-Antoine PRAT
L'amateur et l'absolu, un itinéraire
On s’interroge depuis longtemps sur les collectionneurs, et, ces dernières années, le sujet est devenu central pour les historiens d’art, tout comme l’iconologie et les représentations sociales de l’œuvre d’art. Le problème posé n’est pas seulement pourquoi, mais aussi comment collectionner ? Faut-il privilégier la quantité ou bien la qualité dans la collecte des œuvres ? Les moyens classiques du collectionneur, le temps, l’argent, la connaissance (ou ce qu’on appelle aujourd’hui « l’œil ») sont-ils à la fois nécessaires et/ou suffisants ? Et quelle vision sociale peut-on donner à cette activité dans un monde désormais obsédé par les inégalités de patrimoine et le culte du moi ?
Louis-Antoine Prat est historien de l’art, écrivain, romancier, auteur de théâtre. Il a été professeur à l’École du Louvre et de son enseignement découlent trois ouvrages sur Le dessin français aux XVIIe, XVIIIe et XIXe siècles. Il est membre du Conseil artistique des musées nationaux, Président de la Société des Amis du Louvre. Il est l’auteur de très nombreux articles sur l’histoire du dessin français. Il a été commissaire de nombreuses expositions dont Nicolas Poussin, (1994), L’Empire du Temps (2000), Ingres (2006). Grand donateur des musées nationaux, il est le seul amateur français dont la collection de dessins ait fait l’objet d’une exposition aux États-Unis, au Canada et en France.
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Event in Français
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Louis-Antoine MÈGE
« Art for Society? ». Polémique et politique dans la pratique conceptuelle d’Art & Language (Angleterre, circa 1979)
« Art for Society? » En ajoutant un point d’interrogation au titre d’une exposition présentée à Londres, en 1978, Art & Language, groupes d’artistes conceptuels, provoque, dès la première ligne d’un article paru en 1980, une discrète mais sensible altération sceptique. Puis, au fil des pages, les auteurs affirment une visée polémique envers un certain art politique contemporain. Au demeurant, ils semblent ainsi chercher à raviver leur propre pratique conceptuelle, en proie à un inexorable désenchantement conjoncturel. En s’arrêtant sur ces troubles «années 1979», notre ambition pour cette séance sera de reconsidérer les déroutantes stratégies picturales et discursives d’Art & Language qui composent une œuvre conceptuelle exigeante et singulièrement politique.
Louis-Antoine Mège est actuellement doctorant en histoire de l’art contemporain à Sorbonne-Université, sous la direction de Valérie Mavridorakis. À partir de la notion de conversation, son travail doctoral s’attache à étudier les transformations de l’œuvre du groupe d’artistes conceptuels, Art & Language, du début des années 1970 à la fin des années 1990. Après avoir été assistant de recherche à la documenta institut (dir. Felix Vogel, Kassel), il est actuellement boursier annuel au Centre allemand d’histoire de l’art/DFK (dir. Peter Geimer et Georges Didi- Huberman, Paris).
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Event in Français
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19/12/2023 | 17h30-19h00
A la frontière du parti politique, du club et du think tank: l'exemple de l'Université 133, la fabrique des idées démocrates.
Invités :
Olivia Leboyer, docteur en science politique de l'IEP de Paris et responsable des études du MoDem, rédactrice en chef de la revue France-Forum
Charles Mercier, professeur d'histoire contemporaine à l'Université de Bordeaux, directeur de la publication de la revue France-Forum
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Event in Français
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17/10/2023 | 17h00-18h30
Les Think tanks : la politique autrement, l’influence sur les travaux et débats du Parlement. (France, Europe, Etats-Unis, 1860-2024)
Acteurs, réseaux, structuration et impact sur les travaux de législation et la décision publique
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Event in Français
Location:
23 novembre 2023, 17h-19h, séance exclusivement en italien
Intervenant :
Marcello Flores (Université de Sienne)
"Le memorie rimosse della Repubblica: il colonialismo fascista, i crimini del comunismo"
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Event in Français