Electrical Engineering 123, 001 - Spring 2015 Digital Signal Processing - Shimon Michael Lustig Creative Commons 3.0: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs
The American Cultures Engaged Scholarship Program (ACES), a partnership between the American Cultures Center and the UC Berkeley Public Service Center, connect the Berkeley campus to community through responsive research made possible by engaged scholarship projects created by Berkeley faculty and students and the surrounding community. Responsive research is evident in all ACES research projects and engaged scholarship opportunities, some of which are highlighted in this video to show the interaction and exchange of questions and answers posed by the community in collaboration with the University. Many key highlights in the video include: EOYDC, NCLR, Building Blocks for Kids.
Carla Hesse, Dean of Social Sciences within the College of Letters and Science in conversation with renowned historian Natalie Zemon Davis of the University of Toronto.
Natalie Zemon Davis is one of the most distinguished and versatile historians of modern times. A graduate of Smith College, she received her master's degree at Radcliffe College and her Ph.D. from the University of Michigan. Her teaching career has taken her to Brown University, the University of Toronto, the University of California, Berkeley, and Princeton University. Davis was president of the American Historical Association for 1987, the second woman to hold the position. Emerita from Princeton, she is currently adjunct professor of history and anthropology and professor of medieval studies at the University of Toronto.
An author of eight books, Davis is a pioneer of anthropological and literary approaches to writing history. Her first book, Society and Culture in Early Modern France (1975), is widely acknowledged as a path-breaking study of women, religion, and cultural change, and The Return of Martin Guerre (1983) delights undergraduate and general readers worldwide. It served as the basis for the acclaimed film starring Gerard Depardieu, released the same year. This past May, she published A Passion for History, which set out - in conversation with Denis Crouzet - her views on history, its methods, and philosophies. Davis was awarded the prestigious Holberg International Memorial Prize for 2010.