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The Versailles Treaty and Its Legacies

Chapel Hill Campus Please Contact Carolina Public Humanities for exact location

The enormous human and financial costs of the First World War created the emotionally charged context for the 1919 Versailles peace conference. The victorious Allies wanted to hold their enemies responsible for the conflict, but they also sought to create … Read more

New Media, the Newspaper Crisis, and the Future of Democracy

Chapel Hill Campus Please Contact Carolina Public Humanities for exact location

Local newspapers have long been essential contributors to public debates, investigations of government institutions, economic information, community identities, and demo- cratic political life.The rise of new social media and the rapid decline of newspapers, however, is now transforming the ways … Read more

Authoritarian Populism and Endangered Democracies

Chapel Hill Campus Please Contact Carolina Public Humanities for exact location

The end of the Cold War led some analysts to believe that the demise of communism in Eastern Europe would ensure a steady expansion of democracy throughout the world. Democratic values and institutions are currently facing new challenges around the … Read more

Pillars of Antiquity: Space and Time in Egypt, Greece, and Rome

Chapel Hill Campus Please Contact Carolina Public Humanities for exact location

People in the ancient world developed complex ideas about time and place to help them understand their place in the geographic and cosmological order.This seminar will provide new perspectives on how ancient cultures in Egypt, Greece, and Rome described the … Read more

Notre Dame Cathedral and French Culture: The Meaning of a National Monument

Chapel Hill Campus Please Contact Carolina Public Humanities for exact location

The great fire in the famous Notre Dame Cathedral badly damaged a great Parisian monument, but it seemed to affect French national identity almost as profoundly as it damaged the church itself. How does the history of this iconic cathedral … Read more

International Trade and Cultural Exchange from the Renaissance to Today

Chapel Hill Campus Please Contact Carolina Public Humanities for exact location

What do we learn when we exchange goods and ideas with other cultures? How does engagement with the wider world help us understand ourselves? This seminar explores connections among commerce, art, and culture in three eras. We’ll travel to early … Read more

The Atomic Bomb and the End of the Second World War *Sold Out*

Chapel Hill Campus Please Contact Carolina Public Humanities for exact location

*This event is sold out. To be added to the waitlist, email human@unc.edu with your First & Last Name, Email address, & phone number.* Political and military leaders in the United States planned a final military campaign that could end … Read more

The Postwar Boom: American Musicals of the 1950s

Chapel Hill Campus Please Contact Carolina Public Humanities for exact location

A Distinguished Scholar Seminar featuring Tim Carter “You’ve never had it so good,” proclaimed the U.S. Democratic party in the 1952 presidential election.The fact that the Democrats lost, however, suggests that despite the postwar boom, not everything in the garden … Read more