Photo by Jack Devlin

Workshops

The workshop meets regularly on Fridays during term to discuss precirculated papers. The papers represent the cutting edge of scholarship at the interface between historically-inflected work in the humanities and the social sciences. Each workshop will begin with the response from an affiliated graduate student, to be followed by free-ranging discussion.

Instructions for responding at CHESS.

Fall 2019 Workshops

11:30-1:00 PM , Rosenkranz 241

Light lunch served from 11:30 AM

September 6

Carlos Hernandez, Graduate Student in History, Yale University. 

“Building the Tourist City: Pioneros and Pioneras in an Island of Immigrants, ca. 1970-1975’”

September 20

Chloe Sariego, Graduate Student in Sociology, Yale University. 

“Reproducing the Nation: Immigration and Reproductive Control in Madrigal v. Quilligan and Azar v. Garza”

October 4

Huseyin Rasit, Graduate Student in Sociology, Yale University. 

“Competing Revolutionaries: Legitimacy and Leadership in Revolutionary Situations”

November 15

Arthur Spirling, Professor of Politics and Data Science, New York University.

“An Introduction to Analyzing Political Texts”

November 22 [Chicago]

The Future of Comparative Historical Sociology?