VOLUME 33, NUMBER 2 |
THURSDAY,
September 6, 2001 |
Pan-Am
lecture series to be held at UB
Topics to range
from motivation of McKinley assassin to glitz of the midway
By SUE WUETCHER
Reporter Editor
Fascination with the 1901 Pan-American Exposition will continue at
UB this fall as the UB Pan-Am Community Partnership, in conjunction
with the Baird Foundation, present a lecture series entitled "The Latest
and Best Views of the Pan-American Exposition."
Topics to be addressed will range from the motivations of William
McKinley assassin Leon Czolgosz and the controversy surrounding the
African village at the exposition to the titillating midway rides and
the social impact of world's fair souvenirs.
All lectures in the series, which will be free of charge and open
to the public, will be held at 7 p.m. in the Screening Room of the Center
for the Arts on the North Campus. For further information, call Michele
Gallant at 645-6000, ext. 1171
The schedule:
- Sept. 8: "The Enigmatic Assassin: Anarchist Leon Czolgosz,"
Daniel Coleman, author of "The Anarchist," which explores the life,
motivations, political views and psychology of Leon Czolgosz, the
assassin of President William McKinley. Coleman will read from his
novel, discuss his research and answer questions about the event that
in September 1901, placed Buffalo at the center of world attention.
The lecture is co-sponsored by the Polish Collection of the UB Libraries.
- Sept. 11: "Treasured Objects or Meaningless Trinkets? Collecting
World's Fair and International Exposition Souvenirs," Jon B. Zachman,
researcher and cataloguer of the Larry Zim and the Edward J. Orth
World's Fair Collections at the National Museum of American History.
World's fairs and international expositions have generated a wealth
of material culture that survives long after the gates of these ephemeral
events close. This talk will survey the range of world's fair collectibles
and explore their potential meanings.
- Sept. 20: "The Invincible Eagle Greets the Dawn of a New
Century: Music at the Pan-American Exposition," Tom Bingham, free-lance
music journalist and lecturer. Music played such a significant role
at the Pan-Am that an entire buildingthe Temple of Musicwas devoted
to it. Bingham will discuss the musical life of the Pan-Am, which
went far beyond the temple and included band concerts, organ recitals
and a midway filled with strange new sounds from around the world.
- Oct. 9: "Midway Pan Am-ania: Thompson & Dundy's New Century
Buffalo Babylon of Technology, Tiny Tots, Thrills, Tom Toms and Titillation,"
Judith Adams-Volpe, director of university and external relations
for the Central Libraries of the University Libraries and author of
"The American Amusement Park Industry: A History of Technology and
Thrills." The Pan-Am midway reflected American popular culture at
the turn of the 20th century. Adams-Volpe will examine the career
of amusement entrepreneurs Thompson and Dundy; their use of technology
and illusion; the stereotypes and racial attitudes reflected by the
midway "shows," and the promotion of new technologies through the
fun and spectacle of the midway.
- Oct. 18: "Reflections on Africa at the Pan-American Exposition,"
Kevin P. Smith, associate curator of anthropology at the Buffalo Museum
of Science. One of the largest of the midway's installations, "Darkest
Africa," has become its most controversial. Darkest Africa was an
ethnological village where 98 Africans worked and performed for visitors.
In recent years, Darkest Africa and other such villages have been
interpreted as human zoos that served to justify the oppression of
non-western cultures and ridicule the heritage of African Americans.
It has been assumed that the Africans who lived in these villages
were forced to perform; that they were victims rather than active
and creative participants. Current research suggests that many of
these assumptions may be too simplistic. This presentation will introduce
some of the more recent research findings.
- Oct. 23: "Nikola Tesla and Niagara Falls," Robert Dischner,
director of corporate education and technical training for Niagara
Mohawk Power Corp. At the Chicago Colombian Exposition in 1893, President
Grover Cleveland pulled a switch that illuminated the grounds by means
of an alternating electrical currentthe product of the ingenuity
of George Westinghouse and a visionary immigrant named Nikola Tesla.
Tesla and Westinghouse would go on to harness the Niagara River to
produce hydroelectric power. The life and inventions of Tesla will
be discussed, with a special emphasis on his interest in developing
Niagara Falls and his controversial polyphase system of alternating
current power generation
- Oct. 25: "Reluctant Neighbor: Canada at the Pan-American
Exposition," Kerry S. Grant, vice provost for academic affairs and
dean of Graduate School, and author of "The Rainbow City: Celebrating
Light, Color and Architecture at the Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo
1901." This lecture will examine the initial resistance to Canadian
participation in the Pan-Am and the subsequent inclusion of the Dominion
of Canada in the exposition.
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