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Archives Uncovered: Insights from SCUA Research Fellows

Archives Uncovered: Insights from SCUA Research Fellows Online

Another installment of an ongoing virtual series from Special Collections and University Archives (SCUA) where we spotlight the innovative work of archival research fellows from around the globe. Held monthly, this series offers a unique opportunity to engage with the latest in archival research across various disciplines. Each session will feature a different fellow presenting their findings and exploring how their work sheds new light on history, scholarship and research.

Date:
Thursday, November 14, 2024
Time:
12:00pm - 1:00pm
Time Zone:
Pacific Time - US & Canada (change)
Online:
This is an online event. Event URL will be sent via registration email.

Registration is required. There are 294 seats available.

November’s lecture, "From Australia, South Africa, and Canada through the John Birch Society: The Global Pro-Rhodesian Propaganda Network", features Aaron Coy Moulton, 2024 James Ingebretsen Memorial Travel Fellow. Multon is an Associate Professor of Latin American History at Stephen F. Austin State University. His research, supported by various institutions, focuses on transnational networks across the Western Hemisphere. He has published award-winning articles in Cold War History, The Americas, and the Journal of Latin American Studies. His recent project, Caribbean Blood Pacts: The Guatemalan Revolution and the Caribbean Basin's Cold War, examines how Guatemalan reactionaries, Caribbean Basin dictators, a transnational corporation, and British intelligence influenced the U.S. government’s actions that led to the collapse of Guatemalan democracy in the early 1950s. Moulton has previously received a Wallis Annenberg Research Grant from the University of Southern California Libraries and a Scholar Research Support Fellowship from Stanford University's Hoover Institution. He will soon be a Visiting Scholar at the Center for Right-Wing Studies at the University of California, Berkeley, and a Mayers Fellow at The Huntington Library.

Event Organizer

Emily Moore