Atlanta History Center Lecture Series

Posted by Admin On 9:37:00 PM
The Atlanta History Center offers lectures on a wide variety of topics, from presidential history and gardens to social history and non-fiction adventures. Past lecturers have included such world-renowned authors as Walter Isaacson, Richard Russo, and Alice Hoffman. The Atlanta History Center’s summer/fall lecture line-up continues to offer audiences a wide variety of subject matter with current and award-winning authors.
Each lecture program is designed to join authors and audiences in an intimate setting complete with author presentation, audience discussions, and book signings. Admission to attend a lecture program is $5 for Atlanta History Center members and $10 for nonmembers and free for AHC Insiders, unless otherwise noted. Lectures are held at either the Atlanta History Center in Buckhead or at the Margaret Mitchell House in Midtown. Reservations are required; please call 404.814.4150 or purchase advance tickets online at AtlantaHistoryCenter.com/Lectures.

For a Full list of upcoming speakers and lectures, Click Read More.
September 2013

History Matters: Four Days of Fury: Atlanta 1906
September 20, 21, 22, and 23, 2013
Location: Atlanta History Center
Back by popular demand after a sold-out series in February, the Atlanta History Center presents the unique, immersive experience inspired by the events of the Race Riot of 1906. The gallery-based performance, Four Days of Fury: Atlanta 1906, by Atlanta History Center playwright Addae Moon, involves audiences in the ideas, debates, emotions, and perspectives that led to this pivotal, yet unfamiliar event in Atlanta history.

Participants dive into the past and discover why History Matters. Within the museum gallery, the participants move through a series of memory stations with trailblazing African American editor and journalist J. Max Barber. There, they actively participate in multiple stories and interact with historic characters who were involved in the explosion of frustration and fear near Five Points. Along with the residents caught up in the conflict, they will witness the tenuous attempts at reconciliation that established the city’s narrative as one “too busy to hate.” This hour-long theatre experience is recommended for young adults, sixteen and up, based on language and sensitive subject matter. Visitors who take advantage of the experience should understand this is an immersive encounter with history that is challenging and provocative, yet stimulating, inspiring, and motivating as well.

There is limited capacity per performance and reservations are required. Admission is $15 for Atlanta History Center members, $20 nonmembers. Reserve your tickets by phone at 404.814.4150 or online at AtlantaHistoryCenter.com.

Schedule of Performances:
  • Friday September 20 5:00 PM, 6:30 PM, 8:00 PM
  • Saturday September 21 5:00 PM, 6:30 PM, 8:00 PM
  • Sunday September 22 2:00 PM, 3:30 PM, 5:00 PM
  • Monday September 23 5:00 PM, 6:30 PM, 8:00 PM
This History Matters production is part of a series of gallery-based offerings using museum theatre to explore the diversity of Atlanta’s past, present, and future, which seeks to literally place visitors inside history to learn why it matters to our community today.


Elson Lecture: Eric Schlosser, Command and Control: Nuclear Weapons, the Damascus Accident, and the Illusion of Safety
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
8:00 PM
Location: Atlanta History Center
Journalist Eric Schlosser uncovers secrets about America’s nuclear arsenal in Command and Control, a groundbreaking account of accidents, near misses, heroism, and technological breakthrough. One central dilemma exists in the nuclear age: How to deploy weapons of mass destruction without being destroyed by them. Interweaving the story of a missile silo accident in rural Arkansas with fifty years of historical narrative, Schlosser depicts efforts to prevent the detonation of a ballistic missile carrying the most powerful nuclear warhead ever built by the United States.
Eric Scholsser is the author of the New York Times bestsellers Fast Food Nation and Reefer Madness. His work has appeared in Atlantic Monthly, Rolling Stone, New Yorker, Vanity Fair, and Nation.  Support: The Elson Lectures feature scholarly addresses by our nation’s prominent historians and are made possible with generous funding from Ambassador and Mrs. Edward Elson.


Livingston Lecture: A. Scott Berg, Wilson
Monday, September 30, 2013 
8:00 PM
Location: Atlanta History Center
One hundred years after his inauguration, Woodrow Wilson stands as one of the most influential and enigmatic figures of the twentieth century. After over decade of research and writing, Pulitzer Prize-winning author A. Scott Berg completed Wilson, the most personal and penetrating biography written about the twenty-eighth president. In addition to the hundreds of thousands of documents in the Wilson Archives, Berg was the first biographer to gain access to two recently discovered caches of papers belonging to those close to Wilson. This is not just Wilson the icon, but Wilson the man.

A. Scott Berg is the author of four best-selling biographies: Max Perkins: Editor of Genius, winner of the National Book Award; Goldwyn; Lindbergh, winner of the Pulitzer Prize; and Kate Remembered.  The Livingston Lectures are made possible with generous funding from the Livingston Foundation of Atlanta.


Nelson DeMille, The QuestThursday, September 26, 2013 
7:00 PMLocation: Margaret Mitchell House
From the Vatican archives to overgrown jungles, an unlikely trio undertakes a deadly search for the Holy Grail – Christ's cup from the Last Supper. It begins with the trio lost in a jungle where a dying man tells them an amazing story. He escaped that night from forty years in a prison, held there after finding the Holy Grail. Though his freedom lasts for one short night, it is long enough for him to describe the cup’s location and long enough to make them believe his story. Thus begins their quest – an adventure that pits them against the Vatican, deadly tribesmen, and assassins, monks and the powers of the Grail itself.

Nelson DeMille’s previous works include Word of Honor, The Charm School, The Gold Coast, Plum Island, and The General's Daughter. He has contributed short stories, book reviews, and articles to numerous magazines and newspapers, and wrote the Joe Ryker series under the pen name Jack Cannon.


October 2013

Cherokee Garden Lecture Series: An Evening with Mario Nievera, Forever Green: A Landscape Architect’s Innovative Gardens Offer Environments to Love and Delight
Wednesday, October 2, 2013 
7:00 PM
Location: Atlanta History Center
Join renowned landscape architect Mario Nievera who will lead us on an illustrated tour of his landscapes throughout the United States as featured in his first book, Forever Green: A Landscape Architect’s Innovative Gardens Offer Environments to Love and Delight. Nievera will showcase his extensive range of designs for civic spaces, parks, and residential estates, such as a garden terrace overlooking New York's Central Park to a public garden attached to The Flagler Museum in Palm Beach. His design work provides an extraordinary opportunity for ideas on how to create your own fabulous landscapes. Mario Nievera has a keen eye and talent to combine hardscape materials and lush plantings creating unique landscape compositions, which are admired and published in design magazines and newspapers throughout the world.
Mario Nievera, ASLA, is principal and partner of Nievera Williams Design, one of the top landscape architectural firms in the United States with offices in Palm Beach and New York. Nievera and his partner, Keith Williams, plan and develop diverse projects for residential estates, community parks, and corporate and institutional properties, both nationally and abroad. Nievera received his Bachelor of Landscape Architecture degree from Purdue University in 1987. He frequently lectures about his firm's work throughout the United States. He is actively involved with the American Society of Landscape Architects and donates his firm's design and consulting services for many nonprofit organizations, as well as serving as a member of the board of directors of several nonprofit organizations. Nievera's work has been featured in many national and international design publications, including Architectural Digest, W, Southern Accents, The New York Times, Town & Country, House Beautiful, The Wall Street Journal, Vanity Fair, and Garden Design. His firm has earned numerous awards and recognitions for their superlative and sensitive design work.
Lecture followed by book signing and reception. Admission to this lecture is $25.00. Reservations are required; please call 404.814.4150 or reserve your tickets online at AtlantaHistoryCenter.com/Lectures.

Allan Gurganus, Local Souls: Novellas
Wednesday, October 2, 2013 
7:00 PM
Location: Margaret Mitchell House 
Allan Gurganus’ first book in a decade, Local Souls, returns to Falls, North Carolina, the mythic site of Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All. With three linked novellas, he charts adultery, obsession, and incest in our New South. Gurganus finds new pathos in old tensions between marriage and eros, with gigantic hopes battling smalltown conventions. Told with brio and sympathy, Local Souls is a universal work about a village. Its black comedy creates affection for its characters and an aching aftermath of human consequences.

Allan Gurganus, winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize and a Guggenheim Fellowship, has written four other works of fiction, whose adaptations have earned him four Emmys. Gurganus lives in North Carolina.


John Ferling, Jefferson and Hamilton: The Rivalry That Forged a NationWednesday, October 9, 2013 
8:00 PM
Location: Atlanta History Center
A conflict that truly shaped our republic, the competing visions for America between Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton’s is recounted in Jefferson and Hamilton: The Rivalry That Forged a Nation. Both men were visionaries, but their dreams for the young nation were opposites. Jefferson believed passionately in individual liberty, an egalitarian society, and a weak central government with power left to the states. Hamilton sought a powerful national government to ensure the nation’s security and economic greatness. Those competing legacies continue to shape our politics and our nation to this day.

John Ferling has written about the Revolutionary War and the politics of independence, as well as biographies of George Washington and John Adams. He is professor emeritus of history at the University of West Georgia and is the author of the award-winning A Leap in the Dark: The Struggle to Create the American Republic. He and his wife, Carol, live near Atlanta.

Around the World in Eighty Clays: A Folk-Pottery Travelogue
Dr. John Burrison, United States and Latin American Pottery, with Emphasis on the American South
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
7:00 PM Reception; 7:30 PM Lecture
Location: Atlanta History Center
Around the World in Eighty Clays: A Folk-Pottery Travelogue, presented by The Fox Center for Humanistic Inquiry of Emory University and The Georgia Humanities Council, is a series of three lectures on international ceramics traditions held at Emory University’s Carlos Museum, the Decatur Library--The Georgia Center for the Book, and the Atlanta History Center.

Join the Atlanta History Center for the final lecture in the three part series. Dr. John Burrison, Regent’s Professor of English and Director of Folklore Curriculum at Georgia State University will discuss “United States and Latin American Pottery, with Emphasis on the American South”.

Admission is free to the public. For more information on this lecture or the series Around the World in Eighty Clays: A Folk-Pottery Travelogue, visit foxcenter@emory.edu. To make reservations, please contact the Fox Center at 404.727.6424.


Reza Aslan, Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of NazarethThursday, October 17, 2013
8:00 PM
Location: Atlanta History Center
Reza Aslan, bestselling author of No god but God, sheds new light on one of history’s most enigmatic men in Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth. In this meticulously researched biography, Aslan examines Jesus through the lens of the era in which he lived: first-century Palestine, an age awash in apocalyptic fervor. Scores of Jewish prophets, preachers, and would-be messiahs wandered the Holy Land,
bearing messages from God. This was an age of zealotry, a fervent nationalism that made resistance to Roman occupation a sacred duty incumbent on all Jews.

Reza Aslan is an internationally acclaimed writer and scholar of religions. His first book, No god but God: The Origins, Evolution, and Future of Islam, is translated into thirteen languages. He is also author of How to Win a Cosmic War: God, Globalization, and the End of the War on Terror, as well as editor of Tablet & Pen: Literary Landscapes from the Modern Middle East. Born in Iran, he lives in New York and Los Angeles with his wife and two sons.

Dave Isay, Ties that Bind: Stories of Love and Gratitude from the First Ten Years of Story
Thursday, October 24, 2013 
7:00 PM
Location: Atlanta History Center
Ties That Bind: Stories of Love and Gratitude from the First Ten Years of StoryCorps commemorates the StoryCorps project’s anniversary with a collection that celebrates the relationships that bring us purpose and joy, as well as the people who nourish and strengthen us. Between blood relations, friends, coworkers, and neighbors, in the most trying circumstances and in the unlikeliest of places, enduring connections are formed and lives changed forever. David Isay draws from the revolutionary oral history project’s rich archives, collecting conversations that celebrate the power of the human bond and capture the moment at which individuals become family. Founded by award-winning documentarian Dave Isay, StoryCorps has collected oral history interviews with everyday Americans nationwide for a decade. As a result, StoryCorps recordings are the single most important collection of American voices ever gathered. A celebration of America’s shared humanity and collective identity, StoryCorps captures and defines the stories that bond us.
This program is free and open to the public. Reservations are required for all lectures. Please call 404.814.4150 or reserve your tickets online at AtlantaHistoryCenter.com/Lectures.


November 2013

Livingston Lecture: Lawrence Wright, Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief
Wednesday, November 6, 2013 
8:00 PM
Location: Atlanta History Center
A deep penetrating look into the world of Scientology, Going Clear is by the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Looming Tower, the classic study of al-Qaeda’s 9/11 attack. Based on over two hundred interviews and years of research, Lawrence Wright uncovers the inner workings of the Church of Scientology. At the book’s center are brilliant science-fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard and David Miscavige, his successor faced with the unenviable task of preserving the church. In Going Clear, Wright examines what fundamentally makes a religion a religion and whether Scientology deserves this constitutional protection. Employing his journalistic skills of observation, understanding, and shaping a story into a compelling narrative, Wright delivers an evenhanded yet keenly incisive book that reveals the essence of Scientology.
Support: The Livingston Lectures are made possible with generous funding from the Livingston Foundation of Atlanta.

Richard Kurin, The Smithsonian’s History of America in 101 Objects
Wednesday, November 20, 2013 
7:00 PM
Location: Atlanta History Center
In The Smithsonian’s History of America in 101 Objects, Under Secretary for Art, History, and Culture Richard Kurin and a team of curators and scholars assemble an exhibition of objects from across the Smithsonian’s museums that offer a new perspective on the history of the United States. With objects ranging from the earliest years of the pre-Columbian continent to the digital age, each entry pairs fascinating history with the place it now occupies in our national memory. Kurin sheds light on objects we think we know, including Lincoln’s hat to Dorothy’s ruby slippers and Julia Child’s kitchen. Other objects are new discoveries for many, but no less evocative of the most poignant and important moments of the American experience. In Kurin’s hands, each object comes to life, providing a connection to American history.


Elson Lecture: John Heilemann and Mark Halperin, Double Down
Friday, November 22, 2014 
8:00 PM
Location: Atlanta History Center
John Heilemann and Mark Halperin set the national conversation on fire with their bestselling account of the 2008 presidential election, Game Change. In Double Down, they apply their storytelling to the 2012 election, rendering a compelling narrative about the Republican nomination, the rise and fall of Mitt Romney, and the trials, tribulations, and triumph of Barack Obama. For Obama, the victory passed positive judgment on his first term. For the Republicans, 2012 offers a crushing verdict and an existential challenge: to rethink and reconstitute the party or face irrelevance.
John Heilemann is national affairs editor for New York and a political analyst for MSNBC. An award-winning journalist and author of Pride Before the Fall, he is a former staff writer for New Yorker, Wired, and Economist.  Mark Halperin is editor-at-large and senior political analyst for Time and senior political analyst for MSNBC. Halperin has covered seven presidential elections and lives in New York City with Karen Avrich.

Support: The Elson Lectures feature scholarly addresses by our nation’s prominent historians and are made possible with generous funding from Ambassador and Mrs. Edward Elson.



December 2013

Edwidge Danticat, Claire of the Sea LightThursday, December 5, 2013
7:00 PM
Location: Margaret Mitchell House
From the best-selling author of Breath, Eyes, Memory and Krik? Krak!, comes a work of about the intertwined lives of a small town where a little girl, Claire has gone missing. As her father and others look for her, painful secrets and startling truths are unearthed among a host of men and women whose stories connect to Claire, her parents, and the town itself. Told with lyricism and economy, Claire of the Sea Light explores what it means to be a parent, child, neighbor, lover, and friend amid the magic and heartbreak of ordinary life.

Edwidge Danticat is the author of Brother, I'm Dying, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award; Breath, Eyes, Memory, an Oprah Book Club selection; Krik? Krak!, a National Book Award finalist; The Farming of Bones, an American Book Award winner; and The Dew Breaker, winner of the inaugural Story Prize.

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School of History and Sociology
Georgia Institute of Technology
Old Civil Engineering Building
221 Bobby Dodd Way
Atlanta, GA 30332-0225
www.hsoc.gatech.edu