University of Wyoming

07/08/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/08/2026 14:22

Three UW Faculty Members to Present International Research in Centennial July 15

Bernard Steinman

Adam Blackler

Ricki Klages

Three University of Wyoming faculty members will present research during "Bridging Global Gaps: Faculty International Research" as part of the Centennial Speaker Series Wednesday, July 15, from 4:30-6 p.m. in the Centennial Library, located at 27 Second St. in Centennial.

The speaker series, hosted by UW's Center for Global Studies (CGS) and the Centennial Library, brings international concerns and discussions to the southeast Wyoming community.

Speakers and their topics are:

-- Bernard Steinman, an associate professor and program coordinator of the Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, will present "Aging in Italy." Steinman will explore countries around the world that are undergoing a demographic revolution: Lower birth rates and longer lifespans mean older adults now make up a growing share of the population.

"This shift brings benefits -- more years with family and more time for pursuits -- but also major social and policy challenges," Steinman says. "Italy, with roughly one in four citizens aged 65 or older, has one of the oldest populations in the world (second only to Japan), and must find ways to support healthy, dignified aging for many more people."

Steinman, a gerontologist, spent his recent sabbatical at the Italian National Institute on the Health and Science of Aging in Ancona, Italy. Drawing on research and firsthand observation, he will explain the concept of "active aging," as practiced in Italy, and describe the long-term care systems that help older Italians who need assistance with daily living. He also will compare Italy's approaches with those in the United States, highlighting lessons and contrasts relevant to policymakers, caregivers and older adults.

As a bonus, Steinman will share photographs of the cathedrals, artworks and landscapes he encountered during his stay.

-- Adam Blackler, an associate professor in the Department of History, will discuss his new book "Echoes of Empire: Germany's Colonial Afterlife (Namibia)." The book project traces how Germans confronted the immediacy of colonial loss and its ramifications from the collapse of the Hohenzollerns to the rise of Hitler.

In the aftermath of Germany's imperial forfeiture in 1919, most erstwhile colonists sought personal or collective recompense in some fashion. A false sense of martyrdom fueled these efforts. Their experiences as survivors of British and South African occupation, as enemy belligerents, as expatriated "undesirables" and as documented pariahs stirred German-Southwest African settlers -- colonists in present-day Namibia -- to regard themselves as the actual victims of World War I.

"As embodiments of colonial rupture, victimized German colonists denote a broad spectrum of women and men who maneuvered to reclaim a piece of the former colony anew for themselves," Blackler says. "People, not monolithic states or international bodies, narrate the story of Germany's postcolonial epoch, helping uncover the human face of imperial revocation during a radical new age of state control and border proliferation."

Blackler is a historian of modern Germany and southern Africa, whose research emphasizes the transnational dimensions of imperial occupation and colonial violence in the 19th and 20th centuries. His scholarly interests also include the political and social dynamics of Germany's Weimar Republic and the interdisciplinary fields of Holocaust and genocide studies, as well as international human rights.

-- Ricki Klages, a professor of painting in the Department of Visual Arts, will present "Painting the Neolithic: Standing Stones and Stone Circles." Her talk represents an ongoing investigation resulting in a series of paintings depicting and influenced by ancient stone circles and standing stones as well as other Neolithic sites in the British Isles.

"With this award, I traveled into the Neolithic landscape of Ireland to document out-of-the-way and lesser-known sites -- primarily in the south and central region, the West Coast (the Ring of Kerry) and Newgrange, just outside of Dublin -- highlighting the unique features endemic to Irish stone circles and standing stones," Klages says.

Klages says smaller stone circles she viewed indicate more local, tribal religious practices using five to seven stones, often alongside tombs and singular standing stones. Standing stone and stone circles usually align with the winter solstice sunrise, she says.

About the UW Center for Global Studies

The CGS is a core unit of WyoGlobal and is the go-to resource on the UW campus for global success. CGS supports students, faculty, communities and businesses in generating internationally engaged research, teaching and program opportunities. With an array of fellowships, grants, awards, partnerships and events, CGS cultivates effective collaboration between Wyoming and the world.

For more information, email [email protected].

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