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As one of the most consequential concepts in modern history, nationalism has reordered, and wrought havoc on, the world: In this episode of #AskDifferent, Michael Goebel, Einstein Professor of Global History at Freie Universität Berlin, explores the deep roots and global reach of nationalism. He explains why the rise of nationalism today isn't a contradiction to globalization but rather an integral part of it. In conversation with moderator Doris Hellpoldt, Goebel delves into the "chicken and egg" conundrum, asking whether the nation creates the state or vice versa, and wonders whether there is a viable alternative to the traditional nation-state model in the modern world.___#AskDifferent, the Einstein Foundation's podcast series, offers a unique behind-the-scenes opportunity to learn more about the pioneering minds affiliated with and funded by the Foundation, and to find out how their outstanding careers were shaped both by chance and circumstance. What is it that drives them to ask differently, to perpetually ask new questions, and explore the world in all its detail?Einstein Foundation Berlin Web: https://www.einsteinfoundation.de/en/
In this episode, Michael Goebel, President & CEO of AdventHealth Parker, joins Laura Dyrda to discuss the hospital's transformative $300 million expansion, the organization's mission-driven approach to care, and how AdventHealth is building for the future across the growing Denver metro area.
“Présences arabes”Art moderne et décolonisation, Paris 1908 – 1988au Musée d'Art moderne de Parisdu 5 avril au 25 août 2024Interview de Odile Burluraux, conservatrice au Musée d'Art moderne de Paris, et co-commissaire l'exposition,par Anne-Frédérique Fer, à Paris, le 22 avril 2024, durée 21'14,© FranceFineArt.https://francefineart.com/2024/04/23/3534_presences-arabes_musee-d-art-moderne-de-paris/Communiqué de presseCommissaires :Musée d'Art Moderne : Odile BurlurauxZamân Books & Curating : Morad Montazami, Madeleine de Colnet zamanbc.com Le Musée d'Art Moderne de Paris propose de redécouvrir la diversité des modernités arabes au XXe siècle et de renouveler le regard historique sur des scènes artistiques encore peu connues en Europe. À travers une sélection de plus de 200 oeuvres, pour la plupart jamais exposées en France, l'exposition Présences arabes – Art moderne et décolonisation – Paris 1908-1988 met en lumière la relation des artistes arabes avec Paris, tout au long du XXe siècle.L'exposition explore une autre histoire de l'art moderne, éclairée par de nombreuses archives sonores et audiovisuelles historiques présentes dans le parcours. Structurée de manière chronologique, elle débute en 1908, année de l'arrivée du poète et artiste libanais Gibran Khalil Gibran à Paris et de l'ouverture de l'école des Beaux-arts du Caire. Elle se termine en 1988, avec la première exposition consacrée à des artistes contemporains arabes à l'Institut du Monde Arabe (inauguré quelques mois plus tôt) à Paris et avec l'exposition Singuliers : bruts ou naïfs, avec entre autres l'artiste marocaine Chaïbia Tallal et l'artiste tunisien Jaber Al-Mahjoub, présentée au musée des enfants du Musée d'Art Moderne de Paris.Ainsi que l'écrit Silvia Naef, historienne d'art et l'une des autrices du catalogue de l'exposition Présences arabes au MAM : « Comment faire un art moderne et arabe ? un vrai projet esthétique se met en place au cours du XXe siècle : pensé à la fois en rupture avec l'art académique, en écho avec les avant-gardes occidentales, dans le cadre d'une identité nationale propre, sans retour pour autant à un art islamique. » L'exposition remet ainsi en lumière plus de 130 artistes dont les oeuvres constituent une contribution essentielle aux avant-gardes arabes et à l'histoire de l'art moderne du XXe siècle. Elle met également en évidence le rôle essentiel joué par Paris. Qualifiée de « capitale du tiers monde » par l'historien Michael Goebel, la ville est considérée dès les années 1920 comme un vivier des réseaux anticoloniaux et le foyer des nouvelles modernités cosmopolites.Le parcours de l'exposition est construit autour de différentes trajectoires d'artistes ayant étudié dans les écoles des beaux-arts de leurs pays avant de venir étudier et s'installer à Paris pour continuer leur formation. Tout au long du XXe siècle, Paris est le lieu de l'accès à la modernité, de la critique du colonialisme et le centre de nombreuses rencontres. Le Musée d'Art Moderne y a lui-même joué un rôle important dans la période d'après-guerre grâce à ses expositions (Salon des réalités nouvelles, Salon de la jeune peinture, Biennale des jeunes artistes de Paris…) et aux acquisitions initiées à partir des années 1960. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Openness, transparency & compassion enable us to get to know each other, to share, challenge, to build trust. Trust is a foundational component upon which positive and high performing cultures are built. Trust is also enriched with candid conversations, difficult decisions, holding people accountable and during these tougher moments, doing the right thing. Individual purpose is about people being at their best and making a difference. There is so much difference being made at Parker Adventist Hospital, thanks to CEO Michael Goebel. The open question for a future discussion and for our listeners to opine on, is “if we all knew each other better, what additional difference could we make?” Additional Resources Connect with Michael on LinkedIn Learn more about Parker Adventist Hospital Learn more about PeopleForward Network
Wir besprechen in loser Reihenfolge Bücher, die wir beim Entrümpeln unserer Regale entdeckt, wieder gefunden oder erneut gelesen haben. “Es handelt sich indes um ein wirklich gutes Buch. Auf über 500 Seiten breitet Pedersen die Geschichte der Mandatskommission aus, die sich nach der Gründung des Völkerbundes mit der Aufsicht über die 14 ehemals deutschen und osmanischen Kolonien befasste, die den Siegern des Ersten Weltkriegs als so genannte „Mandate“ zufielen.”(Michael Goebel, Freie Universität Berlin) Susan G. Pedersen, 1959 in Tokio geboren ist eine kanadische Historikerin. Ihre Forschungsschwerpunkte sind sehr vielseitig. Sie hat über Themen geschrieben, die von der Geschichte der Frauenbewegung über die Ursprünge des Wohlfahrtsstaates bis hin zur britischen Herrschaft in Kenia, Hongkong und Palästina reichen. Seit 2003 ist sie Fakultätsmitglied der Columbia University, wo sie britische und internationale Geschichte unterrichtet Marcus Weible, geboren 1968 in München. Nach Abitur und Bundeswehr habe ich Geschichte und Rechtswissenschaften in Erlangen und Würzburg studiert. Ich war 15 Jahre als Rechtsanwalt und juristischer Repetitor bei Kern – Nordbayern tätig. In dieser Zeit bereitete ich bundesweit zahlreiche Studenten und Referendare auf das Erste und Zweite Juristische Staatsexamen vor. Mittlerweile lebe ich in Regensburg und gehe dort dem Anwaltsberuf mit Schwerpunkt im Verwaltungsrecht nach. Neben meinem Hobby Geschichte, sind und waren SF und Fantasy meine große Leidenschaft. Ich bin Mitglied des Münchner Fankreises „Die Phantasten“ und betätige mich auf mehreren Literaturseiten als Autor und Rezensent.” Gabriele Leucht, geboren: 1981 in München, Ausbildung: von den alten Sprachen bis zur Avvocatessa der Juristerei in Rosenheim, Birmingham, Maryland, Neapel, Straßburg und München. Interessen: Kunst, je abstrakter desto lieber, Literatur, besonders Romane und Dramen, Opern-Musik, fürs Herz italienisch, für den Rest auch alles andere, Politik: Grundgesetz-Fanatikerin, Antirassistin u.v.m., Sport: nicht ohne meine Berge.
Michael Goebel, CEO at Parker Adventist Hospital, believes in the power of high trust and transparency to create a successful organization. Michael has led several businesses in the healthcare industry through extremely challenging times, including bringing a company back from the brink of bankruptcy and weathering the storm of the pandemic. In this episode, Michael discusses why no matter the circumstances, he always chooses transparency. He has found that approach is the most effective means of building not just trust but respect. Listen in to learn about the foundational actions required to earn the respect of your team and hear how to then tap into the motivation that lives inside of them.
Michael Goebel, the Chief Executive Officer of Parker Adventist Hospital, knows a supportive culture is necessary to create a thriving workplace, especially in healthcare. In this episode, Michael and special co-host John Levy, President of CCA, dig into how to build and sustain a supportive culture. Both of these experts have worked in the healthcare industry for many years and share their learnings to help organizations move their people forward. Book Recommendation: The Gap and the Gain by Dan Sullivan The SPEED of Trust by Stephen M.R. Covey The Upside of Stress by Kelly McGonigal Good to Great by Jim Collins Additional Resources: Connect with John: https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnlevycca/ Learn more about CCA: https://ccainc.com/ Connect with Mike: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-goebel-49313711/ Learn more about Parker Adventist Hospital: https://www.centura.org/location/parker-adventist-hospital Learn more about the PeopleForward Network: www.peopleforwardnetwork.com
Zu Gast bei mir der Schulterpapst und großartige Orthopäde Dr. Michael Goebel vom OrthoZentrum Rosenheim. Er betreut die STARBULLS Eishockeyprofis und andere Sportgrößen. Michael erzählt mir wie die Schulter aufgebaut ist und was meistens die Schmerzen in der Schulter auslöst. Ich erfahre, was ein Schlüssellocheingriff ist und welche Therapien und Rehabilitationen helfen. Herzlich willkommen, ich bin Dr. Christoph Pooth, Allgemeinmediziner, und in meinem Podcast "**Live Smart, Stay Healthy**" möchte ich jede Woche mit den Mythen rund um die Themen Gesundheit und Lifestyle aufräumen. In meiner Praxis für Gesundheitsmedizin muss ich häufig feststellen, dass ein Großteil der Probleme meiner Patienten nicht immer nur krankheitsbedingter Natur ist, sondern dass die oftmals ungesunde Lebensweise eine beträchtliche Rolle spielt. Mein Ziel ist es, Euch ein Rezept zum Gesundwerden und Gesundbleiben zu geben. Deshalb spreche ich in diesem Podcast mit interessanten Gästen aus verschiedenen Lifestylebranchen und großartigen Arztkollegen/-innen über deren Art und Weise sich fit und vital zu halten. Last but not least begrüße ich regelmäßig meine bessere Hälfte Rosalie, Ernährungsberaterin und Familienmanagerin, in dieser Show!
How do nationalist ideas emerge, evolve, and spread? How do urban spaces and the migration of people factor in? Dr. Michael Goebel joins Steven to discuss the arc of his research, ranging from nationalism in twentieth-century Argentina, to anti-imperialist activism in interwar Paris, to comparing urban inequality in specific global port cities between 1850 and 1950. He also comments on his interest in putting into dialogue discrete fields of history, the benefits of this engagement, and the impetus for co-creating the Global Urban History Network. Originally aired on April 9, 2018.
How do nationalist ideas emerge, evolve, and spread? How do urban spaces and the migration of people factor in? Dr. Michael Goebel joins Steven to discuss the arc of his research, ranging from nationalism in twentieth-century Argentina, to anti-imperialist activism in interwar Paris, to comparing urban inequality in specific global port cities between 1850 and 1950. He also comments on his interest in putting into dialogue discrete fields of history, the benefits of this engagement, and the impetus for co-creating the Global Urban History Network. Originally aired on April 9, 2018.
In this talk, Michael Goebel (Graduate Institute, Geneva) explores the prevalence of urban ethnic segregation in a range of port cities outside Europe in the period c.1870-c.1920. Amongst other things, he argues for a more complex and nuanced understanding of the spatial distribution of ethnic minorities in these cities. The talk is followed by a comment by Richard Rodger (Edinburgh). This is a recording of an event hosted by the CSMCH in November 2018.
Michael Goebel‘s Anti-Imperial Metropolis: Interwar Paris and the Seeds of Third World Nationalism (Cambridge University Press, 2015) thinks globally while focusing on the local, everyday histories of non-Europeans in Paris in the 1920s and 30s. Examining the myriad ways that Paris functioned as a hatchery or clearinghouse for the development of anti-imperial ideas and movements, the book argues that the social history of migration is central to any understanding of the political and intellectual histories of nationalism, from the interwar years through the period of decolonizations that followed the Second World War. Anti-Imperial Metropolis traces the experiences and statuses of different categories of non-Europeans in the city, groups identified variously as French citizens, colonial subjects, and foreigners. Interested in how non-European students, workers, and activists from various parts of the globe met and interacted in Paris, the book details how politicization happened when it did, and how differences between communities revealed crucial inconsistencies and contradictions in the ideological underpinnings and workings of imperialism itself. Moving from the private worlds of non-Europeans as they lived day-to-day in the city, to the work of mutual aid associations, to the impact these communities and their exchanges could have on international diplomacy, the book reveals much about the imbrication of culture and politics. Drawing on a wealth of archival material from several countries, Anti-Imperial Metropolis offers readers new perspective on Paris' interwar past while making a significant contribution to the transnational history of empires and their undoings. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Michael Goebel‘s Anti-Imperial Metropolis: Interwar Paris and the Seeds of Third World Nationalism (Cambridge University Press, 2015) thinks globally while focusing on the local, everyday histories of non-Europeans in Paris in the 1920s and 30s. Examining the myriad ways that Paris functioned as a hatchery or clearinghouse for the development of anti-imperial ideas and movements, the book argues that the social history of migration is central to any understanding of the political and intellectual histories of nationalism, from the interwar years through the period of decolonizations that followed the Second World War. Anti-Imperial Metropolis traces the experiences and statuses of different categories of non-Europeans in the city, groups identified variously as French citizens, colonial subjects, and foreigners. Interested in how non-European students, workers, and activists from various parts of the globe met and interacted in Paris, the book details how politicization happened when it did, and how differences between communities revealed crucial inconsistencies and contradictions in the ideological underpinnings and workings of imperialism itself. Moving from the private worlds of non-Europeans as they lived day-to-day in the city, to the work of mutual aid associations, to the impact these communities and their exchanges could have on international diplomacy, the book reveals much about the imbrication of culture and politics. Drawing on a wealth of archival material from several countries, Anti-Imperial Metropolis offers readers new perspective on Paris' interwar past while making a significant contribution to the transnational history of empires and their undoings.
Michael Goebel‘s Anti-Imperial Metropolis: Interwar Paris and the Seeds of Third World Nationalism (Cambridge University Press, 2015) thinks globally while focusing on the local, everyday histories of non-Europeans in Paris in the 1920s and 30s. Examining the myriad ways that Paris functioned as a hatchery or clearinghouse for the development of anti-imperial ideas and movements, the book argues that the social history of migration is central to any understanding of the political and intellectual histories of nationalism, from the interwar years through the period of decolonizations that followed the Second World War. Anti-Imperial Metropolis traces the experiences and statuses of different categories of non-Europeans in the city, groups identified variously as French citizens, colonial subjects, and foreigners. Interested in how non-European students, workers, and activists from various parts of the globe met and interacted in Paris, the book details how politicization happened when it did, and how differences between communities revealed crucial inconsistencies and contradictions in the ideological underpinnings and workings of imperialism itself. Moving from the private worlds of non-Europeans as they lived day-to-day in the city, to the work of mutual aid associations, to the impact these communities and their exchanges could have on international diplomacy, the book reveals much about the imbrication of culture and politics. Drawing on a wealth of archival material from several countries, Anti-Imperial Metropolis offers readers new perspective on Paris’ interwar past while making a significant contribution to the transnational history of empires and their undoings. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Michael Goebel‘s Anti-Imperial Metropolis: Interwar Paris and the Seeds of Third World Nationalism (Cambridge University Press, 2015) thinks globally while focusing on the local, everyday histories of non-Europeans in Paris in the 1920s and 30s. Examining the myriad ways that Paris functioned as a hatchery or clearinghouse for the development of anti-imperial ideas and movements, the book argues that the social history of migration is central to any understanding of the political and intellectual histories of nationalism, from the interwar years through the period of decolonizations that followed the Second World War. Anti-Imperial Metropolis traces the experiences and statuses of different categories of non-Europeans in the city, groups identified variously as French citizens, colonial subjects, and foreigners. Interested in how non-European students, workers, and activists from various parts of the globe met and interacted in Paris, the book details how politicization happened when it did, and how differences between communities revealed crucial inconsistencies and contradictions in the ideological underpinnings and workings of imperialism itself. Moving from the private worlds of non-Europeans as they lived day-to-day in the city, to the work of mutual aid associations, to the impact these communities and their exchanges could have on international diplomacy, the book reveals much about the imbrication of culture and politics. Drawing on a wealth of archival material from several countries, Anti-Imperial Metropolis offers readers new perspective on Paris’ interwar past while making a significant contribution to the transnational history of empires and their undoings. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Michael Goebel‘s Anti-Imperial Metropolis: Interwar Paris and the Seeds of Third World Nationalism (Cambridge University Press, 2015) thinks globally while focusing on the local, everyday histories of non-Europeans in Paris in the 1920s and 30s. Examining the myriad ways that Paris functioned as a hatchery or clearinghouse for the development of anti-imperial ideas and movements, the book argues that the social history of migration is central to any understanding of the political and intellectual histories of nationalism, from the interwar years through the period of decolonizations that followed the Second World War. Anti-Imperial Metropolis traces the experiences and statuses of different categories of non-Europeans in the city, groups identified variously as French citizens, colonial subjects, and foreigners. Interested in how non-European students, workers, and activists from various parts of the globe met and interacted in Paris, the book details how politicization happened when it did, and how differences between communities revealed crucial inconsistencies and contradictions in the ideological underpinnings and workings of imperialism itself. Moving from the private worlds of non-Europeans as they lived day-to-day in the city, to the work of mutual aid associations, to the impact these communities and their exchanges could have on international diplomacy, the book reveals much about the imbrication of culture and politics. Drawing on a wealth of archival material from several countries, Anti-Imperial Metropolis offers readers new perspective on Paris’ interwar past while making a significant contribution to the transnational history of empires and their undoings. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Michael Goebel‘s Anti-Imperial Metropolis: Interwar Paris and the Seeds of Third World Nationalism (Cambridge University Press, 2015) thinks globally while focusing on the local, everyday histories of non-Europeans in Paris in the 1920s and 30s. Examining the myriad ways that Paris functioned as a hatchery or clearinghouse for the development of anti-imperial ideas and movements, the book argues that the social history of migration is central to any understanding of the political and intellectual histories of nationalism, from the interwar years through the period of decolonizations that followed the Second World War. Anti-Imperial Metropolis traces the experiences and statuses of different categories of non-Europeans in the city, groups identified variously as French citizens, colonial subjects, and foreigners. Interested in how non-European students, workers, and activists from various parts of the globe met and interacted in Paris, the book details how politicization happened when it did, and how differences between communities revealed crucial inconsistencies and contradictions in the ideological underpinnings and workings of imperialism itself. Moving from the private worlds of non-Europeans as they lived day-to-day in the city, to the work of mutual aid associations, to the impact these communities and their exchanges could have on international diplomacy, the book reveals much about the imbrication of culture and politics. Drawing on a wealth of archival material from several countries, Anti-Imperial Metropolis offers readers new perspective on Paris’ interwar past while making a significant contribution to the transnational history of empires and their undoings. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Michael Goebel‘s Anti-Imperial Metropolis: Interwar Paris and the Seeds of Third World Nationalism (Cambridge University Press, 2015) thinks globally while focusing on the local, everyday histories of non-Europeans in Paris in the 1920s and 30s. Examining the myriad ways that Paris functioned as a hatchery or clearinghouse for the development of anti-imperial ideas and movements, the book argues that the social history of migration is central to any understanding of the political and intellectual histories of nationalism, from the interwar years through the period of decolonizations that followed the Second World War. Anti-Imperial Metropolis traces the experiences and statuses of different categories of non-Europeans in the city, groups identified variously as French citizens, colonial subjects, and foreigners. Interested in how non-European students, workers, and activists from various parts of the globe met and interacted in Paris, the book details how politicization happened when it did, and how differences between communities revealed crucial inconsistencies and contradictions in the ideological underpinnings and workings of imperialism itself. Moving from the private worlds of non-Europeans as they lived day-to-day in the city, to the work of mutual aid associations, to the impact these communities and their exchanges could have on international diplomacy, the book reveals much about the imbrication of culture and politics. Drawing on a wealth of archival material from several countries, Anti-Imperial Metropolis offers readers new perspective on Paris’ interwar past while making a significant contribution to the transnational history of empires and their undoings. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Michael Goebel‘s Anti-Imperial Metropolis: Interwar Paris and the Seeds of Third World Nationalism (Cambridge University Press, 2015) thinks globally while focusing on the local, everyday histories of non-Europeans in Paris in the 1920s and 30s. Examining the myriad ways that Paris functioned as a hatchery or clearinghouse for the development of anti-imperial ideas and movements, the book argues that the social history of migration is central to any understanding of the political and intellectual histories of nationalism, from the interwar years through the period of decolonizations that followed the Second World War. Anti-Imperial Metropolis traces the experiences and statuses of different categories of non-Europeans in the city, groups identified variously as French citizens, colonial subjects, and foreigners. Interested in how non-European students, workers, and activists from various parts of the globe met and interacted in Paris, the book details how politicization happened when it did, and how differences between communities revealed crucial inconsistencies and contradictions in the ideological underpinnings and workings of imperialism itself. Moving from the private worlds of non-Europeans as they lived day-to-day in the city, to the work of mutual aid associations, to the impact these communities and their exchanges could have on international diplomacy, the book reveals much about the imbrication of culture and politics. Drawing on a wealth of archival material from several countries, Anti-Imperial Metropolis offers readers new perspective on Paris’ interwar past while making a significant contribution to the transnational history of empires and their undoings. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices