1968, Fifty Years of Struggle
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Opening Remarks
Keynote Speaker: Todd Gitlin: “The Ambiguous Consequences of Failed Revolutions”
Politicization of Memory: Unstable History of 1968
Contested Legacies: Inspiration and Critique of Social Movements
Changing Power Structures: Decolonization, Ideologies, and Democratization
Protest Reimagined: Art and Activism Rethought within a Chaotic Time
Archive
Opening Remarks
Keynote Speaker: Todd Gitlin: “The Ambiguous Consequences of Failed Revolutions”
Global Maoism and Communism in Southeast Asia before and after 1968
Chile During the Late 60s: The Road to the Democratic Revolution of 1970
Rebuilding the Puzzle: Cameroonian Cultural Construction from 1968 to the Present
Mourning King: Memory, Black Rage, and Shaping of Black Power
Black Power at Columbia
How US Media Discourses Frames African-American Athletes’ Calls for Racial Justice
Acting Out: Performative Politics in the Age of the New Left and the Counterculture
Performing Gender in the “Anos de Chumba”
The Variants of 1968 Radicalism: Ousmane Sembene and Larisa Shepitko
“Two, Three, Many Columbias” or One Too Many San Fransisco States?
May ’68 and Younger Generations
What Happens When We Stop Dreaming?
Mexican Transition(s) and Youth Political Engagement after 1968 in Mexico City
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1968, Fifty Years of Struggle
A Conference by the Rohatyn Center for Global Affairs at Middlebury College
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