TV

PAST EVENTS

2023 – 2024: Cities in Historical Perspective

The series of panels and talks examined topics such as the problem of race and class in the American city, as well as historical perspectives on European cities, port cities, postcolonial cities, immigration and cities, Chinatown in Philadelphia, and memory in Philadelphia. The Center also hosted one-off events featuring speculative fiction, videogames, baseball, and and oral history in Ukraine.

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2022 – 2023: Climate Change in Historical Perspective

The Climate Change in Historical Perspective series offered robust discussions on how climate change affects and overlaps with scholarship and advocacy, policies of denial, justice, global security, refugees, migration, and more in the hopes of better equipping the Lepage public with the tools to understand the causes, consequences, and possible remedies of climate change.

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  • Climate Change in Historical Perspective: Historians, Scholarship, and Advocacy
    • by Dagomar Degroot in The Washington Post

  • Climate Change in Historical Perspective: Scientific, Corporate, and Political Denial
  • Climate Change in Historical Perspective: Climate Justice Movements
  • Climate Change and the Global Security Landscape
    • by Marisol Maddox at The Wilson Center
  • Climate Change, Refugees, and Migration

  • Climate Change and Cities
  • Climate Miseducation: An Evening With Award-Winning Journalist and Author Katie Worth
    •  from The New York Times
    •  by Katie Worth
    •  by Katie Worth in Scientific American
    •  by Katie Worth for This American Life
    • Award-Winning Interactives With PBS FRONTLINE
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    •  by Robin Globus Veldman

 

2021 – 2022: Turning Points in History

The Turning Points in History series offered discussions about contemporary global crises and moments of transition in historical perspective to deepen public understanding of the world around us.

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2020 – 2021: Decolonizing History

Decolonization may be familiar to some as a description of twentieth-century political movements that sought to overthrow European empires. But in recent years the word has come to acquire broader meanings in social and cultural debates, addressing concerns across society where the legacies of colonialism may still reside. It’s with that definition in mind that the Lepage Center presented a series of events examining what it might mean to “decolonize” the practice of history itself.

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Lepage Center blog posts

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2019 – 2020: Revisionist History

"Revisionist History" can be a controversial term, and sometimes carries negative connotations. The goal in this series was to show how revision is critical to all historical scholarship, and how new events and new sources continually challenge us to re-think what we know about the past.

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2018 – 2019: Histories of Democracy

Are we facing a crisis of democracy? By digging into the diverse histories of democracy, in the United States and around the world, the Lepage Center offers a chance to explore the promises and shortcomings of democracy.

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2017 – 2018: Fake News and Fake History; Endless War

Changes in politics, education, media, technology, and notions of trust and authority all play a role in "fake news." Examining the historical changes over time can reveal better ways of understanding our current moment and devising solutions. The Albert Lepage Center for History in the Public Interest held a roundtable discussion on “fake news” and “fake history” during its first-ever event in fall 2017. In spring 2018, the Center hosted a discussion on "Endless War."

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The Lepage Center records most of their events, making them accessible to the wider community. You can watch these recorded events on YouTube.