SAVE THE DATE: Leader in Historic Preservation Thought and Activism, Dr. Ned Kaufman Will Speak in Southern California, March 11 and 13, 2014
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Dr. Ned Kaufman will do an evening public lecture entitled “Extraordinary Prizes in Ordinary Places: How Preserving Everyday Things Can Save People and the Planet” on Tuesday, March 11, 2014 at 7.00pm at University of Southern California’s (USC) Pierre Koenig Lecture Hall/School of Architecture.

In his USC evening presentation Dr. Kaufman will discuss the general themes of rethinking the economics of heritage and historic preservation as a tool for achieving social justice, and how the field is forging new interdisciplinary alliances with public history, folklore, community planning and tourism promotion. Reception to follow.

Also on March 11, Dr. Kaufman will do a lunchtime program for graduate students, faculty, administrators and other interested parties at USC’s History Department Conference Room/SOS Room 250 from 12.00–1.30pm. He will talk about his current research around historic conservation, social justice, intangible resources, sustainability and the economics of heritage. He will also discuss his career inside and outside of academia. As more Ph.D.’s are seeking alternative careers, by choice and by necessity, Dr. Kaufman’s academic and non-academic career offers an example of a path of intellectually challenging and worthwhile work as a consultant, a public historian and a professor. A light lunch will be served at the session.

Admission is free to both USC programs. For more information contact me, Alison Rose Jefferson via this website.

Dr. Kaufman’s work is at the vanguard of historic preservation thought and activism. His scholarship, teaching and practice confront outmoded conventions and inspire us to question traditional methodologies for saving and interpreting historic sites. His scholarship reminds us why we must continue asking “why” we are preserving a site, challenging use to look beyond the analysis of beautiful buildings and materials conservation to connect with places through our shared life stories.

His work deepens public awareness of “race,” “place” and “story” through examining cultural, economic and theoretical challenges that are critical issues to the vitality and sustainability of the field for practitioners and the historic preservation movement generally. The need for enhancement of the inclusion of African American, Latino, and Asian experiences interpretation, identification and protection of sites of historical significance and conscience, and drawing diverse communities into American mainstream preservation conversations are themes Dr. Kaufman confronts head on in his work. Further his work considers the implications of emerging “transnational” group identities for interpretation and advocacy in the broader cultural landscape and historic preservation.

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(Click to enlarge for download)

Dr. Ned Kaufman is principal of Kaufman Heritage Conservation and Adjunct Professor of Historic Preservation at Columbia University. Previously, Dr. Kaufman served as director of historic preservation at the Municipal Art Society of New York, where he led campaigns to protect the African Burial Ground, Aubudon Ballroom, Ellis and Governors Islands, and other historic sites. He also founded and co-directed Place Matters as well as the international research and training program at Rafael Viñoly Architects. His books include Place, Race, and Story: Essays in the Past and Future of Historic Preservation (2009) and Pressures and Distortions: City Dwellers as Builders and Critics (2011), as well as histories of Sagamore Hill and Springfield Armory National Historic Sites. He has advised the National Trust on sustainability policy and is a U.S. voting member on the ICOMOS International Scientific Committee on Intangible Heritage.

Los Angeles–Program Co-Sponsors: USC History Department, USC Heritage Conservation Programs, and Elizabeth Edwards Harris, PhD. Co-Sponsors: The Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, and the University of California, Riverside, Public History Program/History Department. Marketing Partners: Los Angeles Conservancy and Santa Monica Conservancy.

For information on Dr. Kaufman’s Thursday, March 13, 2014 presentations at University of California, Santa Barbara and the Presidio at the Santa Barbara Trust for Historic Preservation, please see the attached flier. California Central Coast–Program Co-Sponsors: UCSB Grad Division Grant, UCSB Public History Graduate Student Association, UCSB Art, Designe & Architecture Museum, Santa Barbara Trust for Historic Preservation, UCSB History Department, UCSB Art History and Architecture Department, and UCSB Interdisciplinary Humanities Center (IHC).

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