Sander Vanocur
January 21 &
January 25

Jared Diamond
January 26

Richard W. Murphy
February 5

Anita Roddick & Ben Cohen
February 10

Anita Roddick
February 16

Cristina Garcia
February 18

The Best of the Banff Mountain Film Festival
February 19

Nicole Hollander
February 26

Simon Schama
March 4

Maurice F. Strong
March 5

Deborah Tannen
March 12

Regents’ Lecturer in the UCSB Department of History
Sander Vanocur
News as Punditry: Less Is More


Thursday, January 21 / 4 p.m. / UCSB Corwin Pavilion / Free

History, Reality and Journalism

Monday, January 25 / 4 p.m. / UCSB Location TBD / Free


A forty-year veteran of print and broadcast journalism with extensive experience in national and international political reporting, Sander Vanocur’s career included work for The New York Times and Washington Post, NBC and ABC News where he was chief diplomatic correspondent and host of the weekly program Business World. He will give two talks during his residency at UCSB.

Jared Diamond
Driving Forces in Long-Term History


Tuesday, January 26 / 4 p.m. / UCSB Corwin Pavilion / Free


Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Society, Jared Diamond conceives a totally original approach to why the evolution of societies over the last thirteen thousand years proceeded so differently on different continents. A UCLA Medical School professor of physiology, he is the recipient of a prestigious MacArthur Foundation “genius” grant.

Richard W. Murphy
Middle East Challenges for America


Friday, February 5 / 3 p.m. / UCSB Hatlen / Free


Former Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, Richard W. Murphy is a Senior Fellow for the Middle East with the Council on Foreign Relations. Having served as the U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, the Philippines, Syria and Mauritania, he uses his personal and professional expertise to assess and address global trouble spots.
Part of the lecture series Global Peace, Security and Human Rights: The Next Millennium.


Regents’ Lecturer in the UCSB Department of Sociology
Anita Roddick
The Best of Times, The Worst of Times:
What You Never Learn in Business School

In conversation with Ben Cohen, co-founder of Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream

Wednesday, February 10 / 8 p.m. / UCSB Campbell Hall / Free


The New Global Model: Business as UNusual

Tuesday, February 16 / 4 p.m. / UCSB Corwin Pavilion / Free


Founder and chief executive officer of The Body Shop, Anita Roddick is a leading activist for socially responsible business practices, environmental conservation and human rights. She’ll give two public presentations during her residency at UCSB.

Cristina García
An Afternoon with the Author


Thursday, February 18 / 4 p.m. / UCSB Corwin Pavilion / Free


Born in Havana and raised in New York, Cristina García is the author of the National Book Award-nominated novel Dreaming in Cuban and more recently The Agüero Sisters. Her generous, affecting and personal storytelling style reaches deep into Cuban family life while addressing the impact of the revolution on Cubans, at home and in the U.S.

Special Event
The Best of the 23rd Annual Banff Mountain Film Festival

Friday, February 19 / 7 p.m. / UCSB Campbell Hall


An evening of exciting new films about outdoor sports, mountain culture and the beauty and danger of nature. Highlights include films about the tiny Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan, polar bears, snowboarding, extreme kayaking in Iceland and rock climbing in Vietnam.

Special Event
Nicole Hollander, the Creator of “Sylvia”


Friday, February 26 / 8 p.m. / UCSB Campbell Hall


One of the country’s few nationally syndicated female cartoonists, Nicole Hollander has written the sarcastic, astute and hilariously funny Sylvia comic strip since the late 1970s. Creator of the wise-cracking Sylvia, The Woman Who Does Everything More Beautifully Than You, Fashion Cop, a pair of malicious cats, the Devil, fairy godmothers and long-suffering family members, Hollander is the author of 16 books, a regular page in Mother Jones magazine, and a new musical revue called Female Problems: An Unhelpful Guide. She’ll show slides and discuss her work.

The Inaugural Idee Levitan
UCSB Interdisciplinary Humanities Center Lecture

Simon Schama
Rembrandt and Blindness


Thursday, March 4 / 4 p.m. / UCSB Corwin Pavilion / Free


Columbia University historian Simon Schama is noted for deeply probing the forces that shape how we understand the past—from the way a single painting can transform an ordinary man into a hero to the influence of hot air ballooning on the French Revolution. His many books include Landscape and Memory and Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution. The art critic for The New Yorker, Schama has written a forthcoming book on Rembrandt and Rubens. In this talk, he’ll examine Rembrandt’s fixation on sight.

Maurice F. Strong
A United Nations for the Next Fifty Years


Friday, March 5 / 3 p.m. / UCSB Corwin Pavilion / Free


Under-Secretary General and Special Advisor to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Maurice Strong is a senior advisor to the World Bank, Earth Council Institute and the World Economic Forum. Known for his skill, vigor, vision and aplomb, he is currently charged with reforming the U.N. to serve the 21st century.
Part of the lecture series Global Peace, Security and Human Rights: The Next Millennium.


Deborah Tannen
The Argument Culture: Stopping America’s War of Words


Friday, March 12 / 8 p.m. / UCSB Campbell Hall / Free


Deborah Tannen will address the subject of her new groundbreaking book, an examination of the way we communicate in public—in the media, in politics in our courtrooms and in our classrooms. Dr. Tannen is University Professor of Linguistics at Georgetown University and the author of the best-selling book You Just Don’t Understand, which looks at the differences in female-male communication.

The UCSB Bookstore will have copies of the authors’ books for purchase and signing at these events.

Winter lectures and special events are presented by UCSB Arts & Lectures; the UCSB Interdisciplinary Humanities Center; Departments of Chicano Studies and Religious Studies; Global and International Studies Program; MultiCultural Center; Women’s Studies Program; Writing Program; Hillel; Women’s Center; UCSB Adventure Programs; Herman P. and Sophia Taubman Foundation; Santa Barbara Committee on Foreign Relations; Nuclear Age Peace Foundation; Pax 2100; SBCC International Studies Association; International Studies Program at Ventura College; Institute for Global Conflict and Cooperation; Eagle Creek Travel Gear; Salomon Footwear; Sector Sport Watches; Sierra Designs Outerwear; PowerBar; Canadian Airlines International and National Geographic Society.

 
Lectures:  Fall | Winter | Spring

1998-1999 Season:  Calendar | Performances | Films

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