Sue Peabody participated in a faculty manuscript workshop at the University of Copenhagen (UCPH) on November 19, seeking comments on the Sudanese graphic memoir recently retitled, “Many Names: The Life Journey of a Sudanese Poet.” The following day, she gave a keynote lecture, “Recentering the Subaltern: Microhistory as Method” hosted by UCPH’s Faculty of the Humanities and HUM: Global Framework. Then it was off to Uppsala for a workshop, “Caribbean Families and the Law: Kinship, Marriage, Inheritance, and Slavery,” where she presented a paper, “Family, Slavery, and Property in Île de France and Île Bourbon: A Case Study.” On 10 December she will deliver a keynote, “`Little’ Stories in `Big’ Histories: Families, Mobility, and Identity in the Indian Ocean” for the conference, “Becoming Local? Forgotten Lineages of Displaced Communities across the Indian Ocean World, 1650-1850,” at Leiden University. After that she will return to Vancouver for a few months before heading back to Berlin in March-June to complete her Humboldt Research Award.