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Grand Domestic Revolution: Recovering the Forgotten History of Feminism and Housing Design
Please join us for the fifth lecture in “The Past, Present, and Future of U.S. Women’s History” lecture series, a joint venture between the The National Women’s History Museum (NWHM) and the Woodrow Wilson Center. This series is aimed at promoting the need for a national museum to focus on women’s lives over the course of United States history. Our goal is to cover diverse topics in women’s history, explore leading scholarship and address the question, “Why women’s history?”
Please check back to this site for updated information about the lecture series. The lectures will be held monthly at the Wilson Center thoughout the 2011-2012 academic year. A reception will follow the lecture from 5:30-6.
This event is free and open to the public, but RSVPs are requested. Please respond with acceptances only to swinston@nwhm.org
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Professor of Architecture and Urbanism Professor of American Studies, Yale University
Program Menu
Program Topics
- Arts and Literature
- Border Security
- Child Care
- Climate
- Conflict Resolution and Peacebuilding
- Congress
- Democracy
- Demography
- Disaster Management
- Economics and Globalization
- Education
- Environment
- Environmental Security
- Gender
- Gender Equality
- Global Governance
- Global Health
- Governance
- History
- Human Rights
- Migration
- Military History
- Old-age Security
- Population
- Race and Ethnicity
- Religion
- Security and Defense
- Society and Culture
- U.S. Domestic Policy
- U.S. Foreign Policy
- U.S. History
- U.S. National Security
- U.S. Politics
- Urban Studies
- Water
- Women's History
- Women's Rights
- Fewer Topics
- More Topics
