History in a Time of Polarization Presented by the Medievalist Toolkit

Editor's note:

Event postponed in solidarity with SWC's strike; a future date will be scheduled.

December 11, 2021

This one-day virtual workshop  Saturday, December 11, 12pm 3:20pm EST 

This virtual workshop brings together professionals from fields that deal with the violent far-right. Hate groups' recruitment has consistently drawn from memories of the medieval past, and in recent years this effort has grown, particularly online. Scholars, social workers, and journalists all have unique viewpoints on this issue, but rarely have a single forum for discussion and problem solving. This workshop offers such a space. 

Keynote Address (12:00-1:00 pm EST) Sammy Rangel, co-founder of Life After Hate 

Panel 1 (1:15-2:15 pm EST) Sharing  Experiences 

Panel 2 (2:20-3:20 pm EST) Sharing  Solutions 

Panelists: 

Cord Whitaker (Wellesley College, History) 

Rosa Schwartzburg (The Guardian/ Jacobin, Journalism) 

Mary Rambaran-Olm (University of Toronto, Literary History) 

Eni Mustafaraj (Wellesley College, Computer Science) 

Bret Deveraux (UNC Chapel Hill, History) 

Shokoofeh Rajabzadeh (UC Berkeley, English) 

Andrew Guess (Princeton University, Politics and Public Affairs) 

Hannah Reall (Mount Carmel Health System, Social Worker) 

Matthew Gabriele (Virginia Tech, Religion and Culture) 

Register Here: 

https://columbiauniversity.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJ0ofu6qrTsuGt1MFV6Dt0h2uUfQGOVsXF S3 

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the  meeting. 

Do not hesitate to reach out to us with any questions! Sarina Kuersteiner (Haifa Center for Mediterranean History – University of Haifa, History),  [email protected] for the Medievalist Toolkit 

The Medievalist Toolkit is a public history group founded by Columbia graduate students in the  Fall 2017. The group aims to enable and facilitate conversation between academics and  activists, journalists, and public service providers. Awarded the Lehman Center Public History  Award (2020) and the History in Action Program Award (2018), we are currently creating a  website to make knowledge about the Middle Ages easily accessible to our partners.