Race, Empire, and the Origins of American International Relations
or
Why Do All the White Political Scientists Sit Together at the Professional Meetings?
January 31st 2008
6 o Clock PM
Refreshments will be served.
Professor Vitalis is the author of America's Kingdom: Mythmaking on the Saudi Oil Frontier and When Capitalists Collide. He teaches classes on American Foreign Policy, Middle Eastern Politics, and International Relations. He is the recipient of fellowships from The American Research Center in Egypt, the Social Science Research Council, the Woodrow Wilson Center, the American Council of Learned Societies, The International Center for Advanced Studies, the MacArthur Foundation, and the Shelby Cullom Davis Center. In 1996, the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations awarded him a Bernath Prize for his work on Egyptian political economy (from his website).
This is sure to be a fantastic event. Below are some articles on and by Professor Vitalis:
"No 'Miracles' in the desert" by Tim Hyland (Penn Current article on Vitalis' research on American empire)
"In Princes' Pockets" by Tariq Ali (London Review of Books review of America's Kingdom)
"International Studies in America" by Robert Vitalis (part of the Social Science Research Council's Roundtable on Rethinking International Studies in a Changing Global Context)
6 o Clock PM
Refreshments will be served.

This is sure to be a fantastic event. Below are some articles on and by Professor Vitalis:
"No 'Miracles' in the desert" by Tim Hyland (Penn Current article on Vitalis' research on American empire)
"In Princes' Pockets" by Tariq Ali (London Review of Books review of America's Kingdom)
"International Studies in America" by Robert Vitalis (part of the Social Science Research Council's Roundtable on Rethinking International Studies in a Changing Global Context)
2 comments:
What is the precise location of the lecture...?
The precise location of, indeed, all lectures is the 4th Floor of College Hall, otherwise known as the Philomathean Halls. To get to the Philomathean Halls, make your way to the 3rd floor of College Hall by any means possible. You may enter through any door during regular business hours and take one of the two staircases, or during evening Philo events, a member will greet guests at the East entrance of College Hall
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