Originating in 2009, H-France Salon is an interactive journal that welcomes proposals which will enhance the scholarly study of French history and culture. The following webinars have been a part of the Salon.
Volume 15, Issue 11
Webinar: “The Great Plague Scare of 1720: Reflections in the COVID Era”
June 9, 2023
Moderator: Christine Adams, St. Mary’s College of Maryland
In this webinar, Cindy Ermus (University of Texas, San Antonio) discusses her recently published book, The Great Plague Scare of 1720: Disaster and Diplomacy in the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic World (Cambridge University Press, 2023) and its implications for today with panelists Junko Takeda (Syracuse University), Jessie Hewitt (University of Redlands), Sara Black (Christopher Newport University) and a live audience.
Video available HERE
Volume 14, Issue 24
Webinar: “NCFS Unbound: Mother’s Milk and Male Fantasy in Nineteenth-Century French Narrative ”
October 14, 2022
In the second episode of NCFS Unbound! (formerly NCFS in Captivity) for the 2022-2023 academic year, Lisa Algazi Marcus (Hood College) discussing her new book Mother’s Milk and Male Fantasy in Nineteenth-Century French Narrative (Liverpool University Press, 2022) with Mary Jane Cowles (Kenyon College).
Introduction by Masha Belenky (George Washington University)
Video available HERE
The schedule of past and future episodes is available HERE. For more information about NCFS Unbound!, contact series organizers Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) at ncfsbookseries@gmail.com.
Volume 14, Issue 23
Webinar: “NCFS Unbound: Reading Baudelaire’s Le Spleen de Paris and the Nineteenth-Century Prose Poem”
September 15, 2022
NCFS Unbound! (formerly NCFS in Captivity) returns for the 2022-2023 academic year with Seth Whidden (Oxford University) discussing his new book Reading Baudelaire’s Le Spleen de Paris and the Nineteenth-Century Prose Poem (Oxford University Press, 2022) with Catherine Witt (Reed College).
Introduction by Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University)
Video available HERE
The schedule of past and future episodes is available HERE. For more information about NCFS Unbound!, contact series organizers Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) at ncfsbookseries@gmail.com.
Webinar: “NCFS Unbound: Literary Slumming”
May 12, 2022
For the final NCFS Unbound! webinar of the 2021-2022 academic year, Eliza Jane Smith (University of California San Diego) discusses her new book Literary Slumming: Slang in Nineteenth-Century France (Lexington, 2021) with Carolyn Betensky (University of Rhode Island).
Introduction by Masha Belenky (George Washington University)
Video available HERE
The schedule of past and future episodes is available HERE. For more information about NCFS Unbound!, contact series organizers Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) at ncfsbookseries@gmail.com.
Volume 14, Issue 19
French Presse: “Pasteur’s Empire: Bacteriology and Politics in France, its Colonies, and the World”
February 27, 2022
Sponsored by the Society for French Historical Studies, the French Presse dialogue series features discussions with authors about their new and forthcoming books on French and francophone history.
In this webinar, Aro Velmet (University of Southern California Dornsife) discusses his book Pasteur’s Empire: Bacteriology and Politics in France, its Colonies, and the World (Oxford University Press, 2020) with Alice Conklin (The Ohio State University) and answers questions from the audience watching the event live.
Introduction by Judith Coffin (University of Texas at Austin)
Video available HERE
Volume 14, Issue 18
French Presse: “Futures of French History: Lightning Presentations by Early Career Scholars II”
March 20, 2022
Sponsored by the Society for French Historical Studies, the French Presse dialogue series features discussions with authors about their new and forthcoming books on French and francophone history.
In this webinar, early career scholars in early modern French and francophone history offer 5-minute lightning presentations on their current projects, each followed by 15 minutes of questions from the audience watching the event live.
Introduction: Sally Charnow, Hofstra University
Moderator: Julie Hardwick, University of Texas at Austin
Panelists:
Video available HERE
Volume 14, Issue 17
French Presse: “Futures of French History: Lightning Presentations by Early Career Scholars I”
March 13, 2022
Sponsored by the Society for French Historical Studies, the French Presse dialogue series features discussions with authors about their new and forthcoming books on French and francophone history.
In this webinar, early career scholars in 20th-century French and francophone history offer 5-minute lightning presentations on their current projects, each followed by 10 minutes of feedback from the audience watching the event live.
Introduction: Judith Coffin, University of Texas at Austin
Moderator: Lisa Leff, American University
Panelists:
Video available HERE
Volume 14, Issue 16
French Presse: “Muslims and Citizens: The French Revolution and Islam”
April 24, 2022
Sponsored by the Society for French Historical Studies, the French Presse dialogue series features discussions with authors about their new and forthcoming books on French and francophone history.
In this webinar, Ian Coller (University of California, Irvine) discusses his book Muslims and Citizens: The French Revolution and Islam (Yale University Press, 2020) with Judith Surkis (Rutgers University) and answers questions from the audience watching the event live.
Introduction by Sally Charnow (Hofstra University) and Judith Coffin (University of Texas at Austin)
Video available HERE
Volume 14, Issue 7
Webinar: “NCFS Unbound: Unmaking Sex”
April 7, 2022
For the fifth NCFS Unbound! webinar of the 2021-2022 academic year, Anne Linton (San Francisco State University) discusses her new book Unmaking Sex: The Gender Outlaws of Nineteenth-Century France (Cambridge, 2022) with Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University).
Introduction by Susan McCready (University of South Alabama)
Video available HERE
The schedule of past and future episodes is available HERE. For more information about NCFS Unbound!, contact series organizers Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) at ncfsbookseries@gmail.com.
Volume 14, Issue 6
Webinar: “NCFS Unbound: Women, Citizenship, and Sexuality”
February 18, 2022
For the fourth NCFS Unbound! webinar of the 2021-2022 academic year, Melanie Hawthorne (Texas A&M University) discusses her new book Women, Citizenship, and Sexuality: The Transnational Lives of Renée Vivien, Romaine Brooks, and Natalie Barney (Liverpool, 2021) with Gretchen Schultz (Brown University).
Introduction by Masha Belenky (George Washington University)
Video available HERE
The schedule of past and future episodes is available HERE. For more information about NCFS Unbound!, contact series organizers Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) at ncfsbookseries@gmail.com.
Volume 14, Issue 5
French Presse: “Minerva’s French Sisters: Women of Science in Enlightenment France”
February 6, 2022
Sponsored by the Society for French Historical Studies, the French Presse dialogue series features discussions with authors about their new and forthcoming books on French and Francophone History.
In this webinar, Nina Gelbart (Occidental College) discusses her book Minerva’s French Sisters: Women of Science in Enlightenment France (Yale University Press, 2021) with Kathleen Wellman (South Methodist University) and answers questions from the audience watching the event live.
Introduction by Sally Charnow (Hofstra University) and Judith Coffin (University of Texas at Austin)
Video available HERE
Volume 14, Issue 4
French Presse: “At Home in Our Sounds: Music, Race, and Cultural Politics in Interwar Paris”
January 23, 2022
Sponsored by the Society for French Historical Studies, the French Presse dialogue series features discussions with authors about their new and forthcoming books on French and Francophone History.
In this webinar, Rachel Anne Gillett (Utrecht University) discusses her book At Home in Our Sounds: Music, Race, and Cultural Politics in Interwar Paris (Oxford University Press, 2021) with Jonathyne Briggs (Indiana University Northwest) and Kesewa John (University College London Institute of the Americas) and answers questions from the audience watching the event live.
Introduction by Sally Charnow (Hofstra University)
Video available HERE
Volume 14, Issue 3
Webinar: “NCFS Unbound: The History of French Literature on Film”
December 16, 2021
For the third NCFS Unbound! webinar of the 2021-2022 academic year, Kate Griffiths (Cardiff University) and Andrew Watts (University of Birmingham) discuss their new book The History of French Literature on Film (Bloomsbury, 2020) with Susan Harrow (University of Bristol).
Introduction by Masha Belenky (George Washington University)
Video available HERE
The schedule of past and future episodes is available HERE. For more information about NCFS Unbound!, contact series organizers Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) at ncfsbookseries@gmail.com.
Volume 14, Issue 2
Webinar: “NCFS Unbound: Precarious Partners”
November 19, 2021
For the second NCFS Unbound! webinar of the 2021-2022 academic year, Kari Weil (Wesleyan University) discusses her new book Precarious Partners: Horses and their Humans in Nineteenth-Century France (Chicago University Press, 2020) with Cheryl Krueger (University of Virginia).
Introduction by Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University)
Video available HERE
The schedule of past and future episodes is available HERE. For more information about NCFS Unbound!, contact series organizers Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) at ncfsbookseries@gmail.com.
Volume 14, Issue 1
Webinar: “NCFS Unbound: Mormons in Paris”
September 23, 2021
Following the postponement of the Nineteenth-Century French Studies Association’s annual colloquium in 2020, Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) arranged NCFS in Captivity, a series of conversations about new and forthcoming books relating to nineteenth-century France.
For season 2, NCFS in Captivity returns as NCFS Unbound! In the first webinar of the 2021-2022 academic year, Corry Cropper (Brigham Young University) and Christopher Flood (Brigham Young University) discuss their new book Mormons in Paris: Polygamy on the French Stage, 1874-1892 (Bucknell University Press, 2020) with Susan McCready (University of South Alabama).
Introduction by Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University)
Video available HERE
The schedule of past and future episodes is available HERE. For more information about NCFS Unbound!, contact series organizers Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) at ncfsbookseries@gmail.com.
Volume 13, Issue 20
French Presse: “Slave Revolt on Screen: The Haitian Revolution in Film and Video Games”
July 13, 2021
Sponsored by the Society for French Historical Studies, the French Presse dialogue series features discussions with authors about their new and forthcoming books on French and Francophone History. The Spring 2021 theme for the series is “Race, Gender, Colonialism, and Occupation.”
In the final webinar of the Spring 2021 series, Alyssa Sepinwall (California State University San Marcos) discusses her book Slave Revolt on Screen: The Haitian Revolution in Film and Video Games (University Press of Mississippi, 2021) with Christy Pichichero (George Mason University) and answers questions from the audience watching the event live.
Introduction by Christy Pichichero (George Mason University)
Video available HERE
Volume 13, Issue 17
Webinar: “NCFS in Captivity: Balzac’s Lives”
June 4, 2021
Following the postponement of the Nineteenth-Century French Studies Association’s annual colloquium, Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) arranged a series of conversations about new and forthcoming books relating to nineteenth-century France.
In the eleventh webinar of the series, Peter Brooks (Yale University) discusses his book, Balzac’s Lives (New York: Penguin Books, 2020), with Susanna Lee (Georgetown University).
Note: this webinar ends the NCFS in Captivity series for the 2020-21 academic year. The series will continue in September 2021 under its post-COVID title, NCFS Unbound. The schedule and registration information will be posted here when it is available.
Introduction by Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University)
Video available HERE
Volume 13, Issue 16
Webinar: “NCFS in Captivity: Working Girls”
May 21, 2021
Following the postponement of the Nineteenth-Century French Studies Association’s annual colloquium, Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) arranged a series of conversations about new and forthcoming books relating to nineteenth-century France.
In the tenth webinar of the series, Patricia Tilburg (Davidson College) discusses her book, Working Girls: Sex, Taste, and Reform in the Parisian Garment Trades, 1880-1919 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019), with Susan Hiner (Vassar College).
Introduction by Masha Belenky (George Washington University)
Video available HERE
Volume 13, Issue 12
French Presse: “Wicked Flesh: Black Women, Intimacy, and Freedom in the Atlantic World”
May 16, 2021
Sponsored by the Society for French Historical Studies, the French Presse dialogue series features discussions with authors about their new and forthcoming books on French and Francophone History. The Spring 2021 theme for the series is “Race, Gender, Colonialism, and Occupation.”
In the fifth webinar of the Spring 2021 series, Jessica Johnson (Johns Hopkins University) discusses her book Wicked Flesh: Black Women, Intimacy, and Freedom in the Atlantic World (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2020) with Lorelle Semley (College of the Holy Cross) and answers questions from the audience watching the event live.
Introduction by Jeff Horn (Manhattan College) and Sally Charnow (Hofstra University)
Video available HERE
Volume 13, Issue 11
French Presse: “Reproductive Citizens: Gender, Immigration, and the State in Modern France, 1880-1945”
April 18, 2021
Sponsored by the Society for French Historical Studies, the French Presse dialogue series features discussions with authors about their new and forthcoming books on French and Francophone History. The Spring 2021 theme for the series is “Race, Gender, Colonialism, and Occupation.”
In the fourth webinar of the Spring 2021 series, Nimisha Barton (University of California, Irvine) discusses her book Reproductive Citizens: Gender, Immigration, and the State in Modern France, 1880-1945 (Cornell University Press, 2020) with Emmanuelle Saada (Columbia University) and answers questions from the audience watching the event live.
Introduction by Jeff Horn (Manhattan College) and Sally Charnow (Hofstra University)
Video available HERE
Volume 13, Issue 10
Webinar: “NCFS in Captivity: The Fallen Veil”
April 16, 2021
Following the postponement of the Nineteenth-Century French Studies Association’s annual colloquium, Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) arranged a series of conversations about new and forthcoming books relating to nineteenth-century France.
In the ninth webinar of the series, Raisa Rexer (Vanderbilt University) discusses her book, The Fallen Veil: A Literary and Cultural History of the Photographic Nude in Nineteenth-Century France (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2021), with Alexandra Wettlaufer (University of Texas-Austin).
Special note: Rexer’s book and this recording contain images of nudity that may not be suitable for all audiences.
Introduction by Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University)
Video available HERE
Volume 13, Issue 8
Webinar: “NCFS in Captivity: Discomfort Food”
March 5, 2021
Following the postponement of the Nineteenth-Century French Studies Association’s annual colloquium, Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) arranged a series of conversations about new and forthcoming books relating to nineteenth-century France.
In the eighth webinar of the series, Marni Kessler (University of Kansas) discusses her book, Discomfort Food: The Culinary Imagination in Late Nineteenth-Century French Art (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2021), with Janet Beizer (Harvard University).
Introduction by Masha Belenky (George Washington University)
Video available HERE
Volume 13, Issue 7
French Presse: “The Memory of Colonialism in Britain and France: The Sins of Silence”
March 14, 2021
Sponsored by the Society for French Historical Studies, the French Presse dialogue series features discussions with authors about their new and forthcoming books on French and Francophone History. The Spring 2021 theme for the series is “Race, Gender, Colonialism, and Occupation.”
In the third webinar of the Spring 2021 series, Itay Lotem (University of Westminster) discusses his book The Memory of Colonialism in Britain and France: The Sins of Silence (Cambridge University Press, 2021) with Charlotte Faucher (University of Manchester) and answers questions from the audience watching the event live.
Introduction by Jeff Horn (Manhattan College) and Sally Charnow (Hofstra University)
Video available HERE
Volume 13, Issue 6
French Presse: “Militarizing Marriage” and “Hostages of Empire”
February 28, 2021
Sponsored by the Society for French Historical Studies, the French Presse dialogue series features discussions with authors about their new and forthcoming books on French and Francophone History. The Spring 2021 theme for the series is “Race, Gender, Colonialism, and Occupation.”
In the second webinar of the Spring 2021 series, Sarah Zimmerman (Western Washington University) discusses her book Militarizing Marriage: West African Soldiers’ Conjugal Traditions in Modern French Empire (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2020) and Sarah Ann Frank (University of St. Andrews) discusses her book Hostages of Empire: Colonial Prisoners of War and Vichy France (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2021, forthcoming) with Ruth Ginio (Ben Gurion University of the Negev), and they answer questions from the audience watching the event live.
Introduction by Jeff Horn (Manhattan College) and Sally Charnow (Hofstra University)
Video available HERE
Volume 13, Issue 5
French Presse: “White Freedom: The Racial History of an Idea”
January 24, 2021
Sponsored by the Society for French Historical Studies, the French Presse dialogue series features discussions with authors about their new and forthcoming books on French and Francophone History. The Spring 2021 theme for the series is “Race, Gender, Colonialism, and Occupation.”
In the first webinar of the Spring 2021 series, Tyler Stovall (Fordham University) discusses his book, White Freedom: The Racial History of an Idea (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2021), with Alyssa Sepinwall (California State University at San Marcos) and answers questions from the audience watching the event live.
Introduction by Jeff Horn (Manhattan College) and Sally Charnow (Hofstra University)
Video available HERE
Volume 13, Issue 3
Webinar: “NCFS in Captivity: The Culture of War”
February 12, 2021
Following the postponement of the Nineteenth-Century French Studies Association’s annual colloquium, Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) arranged a series of conversations about new and forthcoming books relating to nineteenth-century France.
In the seventh webinar of the series, Colin Foss (Austin College) discusses his book, The Culture of War: Literature of the Siege of Paris 1870-1871 (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2020), with Nick White (Cambridge University).
Introduction by Susan McCready (University of South Alabama)
Video available HERE
Volume 13, Issue 2
Webinar: “NCFS in Captivity: Popular Literature from Nineteenth-Century France”
January 22, 2021
Following the postponement of the Nineteenth-Century French Studies Association’s annual colloquium, Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) arranged a series of conversations about new and forthcoming books relating to nineteenth-century France.
In the sixth webinar of the series, Masha Belenky (George Washington University) and Anne O’Neil-Henry (Georgetown University) discuss their book, Popular Literature from Nineteenth-Century France (New York: The Modern Language Association of America, 2020), with Andrea Goulet (University of Pennsylvania). The book is part of the MLA Texts and Translations series.
Introduction by Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University)
Video available HERE
Volume 13, Issue 1
Webinar: “NCFS in Captivity: Reframing Japonisme”
December 18, 2020
Following the postponement of the Nineteenth-Century French Studies Association’s annual colloquium, Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) arranged a series of conversations about new and forthcoming books relating to nineteenth-century France.
In the fifth webinar of the series, Elizabeth Emery (Montclair State University) discusses her book Reframing Japonisme: Women and the
Asian Art Market in Nineteenth-Century France, 1853-1914 (New York: Bloomsbury, 2020) with Willa Z. Silverman (The Pennsylvania State University).
Introduction by Masha Belenky (George Washington University)
Video available HERE
Volume 12, Issue 12
Webinar: “NCFS in Captivity: Victims of the Book”
November 13, 2020
Following the postponement of the Nineteenth-Century French Studies Association’s annual colloquium, Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) arranged a series of conversations about new and forthcoming books relating to nineteenth-century France.
In the fourth webinar of the series, François Proulx (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) discusses his book Victims of the Book: Reading and Masculinity in Fin-de-Siècle France (Toronto, ON: University of Toronto, 2019) with Melanie Hawthorne (Texas A&M University).
Introduction by Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University)
Video available HERE
Volume 12, Issue 11
Webinar: “NCFS in Captivity: Before Trans”
October 23, 2020
Following the postponement of the Nineteenth-Century French Studies Association’s annual colloquium, Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) arranged a series of conversations about new and forthcoming books relating to nineteenth-century France.
In the third webinar of the series, Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University) discusses her book Before Trans: Three Gender Stories from Nineteenth-Century France (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2020) with Kirstin Ringelberg (Elon University.).
Introduction by Masha Belenky (George Washington University)
Video available HERE
Volume 12, Issue 10
Webinar: “NCFS in Captivity: Vénus Noire”
September 25, 2020
Following the postponement of the Nineteenth-Century French Studies Association’s annual colloquium, Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) arranged a series of conversations about new and forthcoming books relating to nineteenth-century France.
In the second webinar of the series, Robin Mitchell (California State University, Channel Islands) discusses her book Vénus Noire: Black Women and Colonial Fantasies in Nineteenth-Century France (Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 2020) with Pratima Prasad (University of Massachusetts, Boston).
Introduction by Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University)
Video available HERE
Volume 12, Issue 9
Webinar: “NCFS in Captivity: The Betrayal of the Duchess”
August 20, 2020
Following the postponement of the Nineteenth-Century French Studies Association’s annual colloquium, Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University), Masha Belenky (George Washington University), and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama) arranged a series of conversations about new and forthcoming books relating to nineteenth-century France.
In the first webinar of the series, Maurice Samuels (Yale University) discusses his book The Betrayal of the Duchess: The Scandal That Unmade the Bourbon Monarchy and Made France Modern (New York: Basic Books, 2020) with Andrew Counter (Oxford University).
Introduction by Rachel Mesch (Yeshiva University) and Susan McCready (University of South Alabama)
Video available HERE
Volume 11, Issue 13
H-France Webinar: “Democratic Problems in the Age of Revolution”
April 12, 2019
Hosted by Camille Robcis, Columbia University
Guest Participants:
Sophia Rosenfeld, University of Pennsylvania
Stephen Sawyer, The American University in Paris
Dan Edelstein, Stanford University
Video available HERE
Volume 11, Issue 12
H-France Webinar: “Memory in Post-War France”
October 26, 2018
Hosted by Camille Robcis, Columbia University
Guest Participants:
Claire Eldridge, University of Leeds
Emma Kuby, Northern Illinois University
Sandrine Sanos, Texas A&M University Corpus Christi
Video available HERE
Volume 10, Issue 2
H-France Webinar: “Early Modern Capitalism”
April 4, 2018
Moderator: Camille Robcis, Cornell University
Invited Participants:
Francesca Trivellato, Yale University
Michael Kwass, Johns Hopkins University
Charly Coleman, Columbia University
Video available HERE
Volume 9, Issue 16
H-France Webinar: “Colonialism and Sexuality”
October 20, 2017.
Host: Camille Robcis, Cornell Universirty
Invited Participants:
Judith Surkis, Rutgers University
Todd Shepard, Johns Hopkins University
Carolyn Eichner, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Video available HERE
Volume 6, Issue 2
H-France Webinar: “Environmental History: An Introduction”
April 9, 2014
Leader: Michael Bess, Vanderbilt University
Invited Participants:
Sara B. Pritchard, Cornell University
David Blackbourn, Vanderbilt University
Moderator: Darrin McMahon, Florida State University.
Video available HERE
Volume 6, Issue 1
H-France Webinar: “Emotions in History, An Introduction”
November 4, 2013
Leader: William Reddy, Duke University
Invited Participants:
Barbara Rosenwein, Loyola University of Chicago
Thomas Dodman, Boston College
Piroska Nagy, Université du Québec à Montréal
Moderator and Organizer: Darrin McMahon, Florida State University
Video available HERE
Note: The audio quality improves after about 1 minute.
Volume 5, Issue 8
H-France Webinar: “Writing the History of Empire: Past Approaches, New Perspectives”
April 18, 2013
Leader: Eric Jennings, University of Toronto
Invited Participants:
Alice Conklin, The Ohio State University
Laurent Dubois, Duke University
Moderator: Charles Walton, Yale University
Video available HERE
Volume 4, Issue 5
H-France Webinar: “Concessional Violence during the Wars of Religion”
October 4, 2012
Leader: Mack Holt, George Mason University
Moderator: Charles Walton, Yale University
Video available HERE
Volume 4, Issue 4
H-France Webinar: “Considering May ’68”
April 12, 2012
Guest Presenter: Julian Jackson, Queen Mary College, University of London
Organizer and Moderator: Charles Walton, Yale University
Video available HERE
The recording of the webinar begins about ten minutes into the seminar.
Volume 3, Issue 2
H-France Webinar: “The Age of Revolutions in Global Context”
October 6, 2011
Guest Presenter: Lynn Hunt, UCLA
Organizer and Moderator: Charles Walton, Yale University
Edited by David Kammerling Smith, Eastern Illinois University
Video available HERE