
International Affairs Building 802
420 W 118th St.
Join us for a 2 day conference in collaboration with the University of Connecticut’s (UConn) Department of History, Columbia Department of History, Columbia Center for the Study of Ethnicity & Race, and the University Seminars of Columbia University.
This conference will revisit the discussion on the comparative historiography of indigenous borderlands. Beginning from with mid-1990s scholarship, it will incorporate the great but until now largely separate advances in South and North America, while taking stock of important shifts towards the more prominent role of indigenous scholars, settler colonialism theory, environmental history, and scholarly engagement with contemporary struggles. The conference will bring together scholars working in History, Anthropology, Native American and Indigenous Studies, and related fields. The proposal is to go beyond national historiographical frameworks, opening the way to transnational approaches. The workshop aims to deepen the continental comparisons of indigenous borderlands, tracing similarities and differences to develop connected approaches.
More details and RSVP here.