New Orleans and the Wider World


 

Thursday, January 3, 1:00 p.m.–3:00 p.m. Session 3 Henry Morton Stanley, New Orleans, and the Contested Origins of an African Explorer: Public History and Teaching Perspectives

Thursday, January 3, 1:00 p.m.–3:00 p.m. Session 4 Writing and Rewriting a Past: Lost Histories of Free People of Color in New Orleans

Thursday, January 3, 1:00 p.m.–3:00 p.m. Session 5 Claiming New Orleans for the Early American Republic

Thursday, January 3, 3:30 p.m.–5:30 p.m. Session 28 Ethnic Entrepreneurship in Nineteenth-Century New Orleans

Friday, January 4, 8:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m. Session 57 Public History Meets Digital History in Post-Katrina New Orleans

Friday, January 4, 8:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m. Session 58 Queer Souths, Part 1: Queer Southern Destinations: Tourism, Community, Policing, and Belonging

Friday, January 4, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Session 85 Self Defense, Civil Rights, and Scholarship: Panels in Honor of Gwendolyn Midlo Hall , Part 1: Gwendolyn Midlo Hall’s Africans in Colonial Louisiana Twenty Years Later

Friday, January 4, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Session 86 New Orleans and the Slave Trade

Friday, January 4, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Session 87 Immigrants and Food Culture in New York and New Orleans

Friday, January 4, 2:30 p.m.–4:30 p.m. Session 114 To Swim in Strange Waters: Memory, Ecology, and Landscape in the United Houma Nation of Southeastern Louisiana

Friday, January 4, 2:30 p.m.–4:30 p.m. Session 115 Self Defense, Civil Rights, and Scholarship: Panels in Honor of Gwendolyn Midlo Hall , Part 2: Armed Self Defense during the 1950s and 1960s: The Other Side of the Southern Civil Rights Movement

Saturday, January 5, 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Session 167 Possessing Indigenous Places: American Indian Land, Law, and Identity in Louisiana

Saturday, January 5, 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Session 168 Queer Souths, Part 5: Tales from the Queer South: Desire, Identity, and Community

Saturday, January 5, 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Session 169 Stories from a Caribbean World: New Orleans in the Age of Revolutions, 1769–1819

Saturday, January 5, 2:30 p.m.–4:30 p.m. Session 198 Before Katrina: The Decline of New Orleans from the Civil War to the Twenty-First Century

Saturday, January 5, 2:30 p.m.–4:30 p.m. Session 199 Lives, Places, and Stories of Oil in Water

Sunday, January 6, 8:30 a.m.–10:30 a.m. Session 223. New Orleans in the World: Race, Culture and Transnational Identity

Sunday, January 6, 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Session 248. Integrated World History in a Humanities Program at the New Orleans Center for Creative Arts: A Four-Year Study of Humanity

Sunday, January 6, 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Session 249 Beyond Bordellos: Race, Sex, and Jazz in Turn-of-the-Century New Orleans

Sunday, January 6, 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Session 250 Being and Building Wealth: Gendered Paths of Connection for Africans and Afro-Creoles in Early New Orleans Last Updated: November 2, 2012 4:49 PM