Public Lecture Winter 2012

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Public lectures Autumn/winter 2012


Information

All lectures are free except where otherwise stated. Access for Disabled Visitors Most areas of the University campuses are accessible. Reserved parking bays may be arranged. Please discuss your requirements in advance by calling 01482 466326.

Parking and Travel Hull Campus Parking on campus is free after 6 pm.

Scarborough Campus Parking is free after 5.15 pm. If you arrive for an event starting before this time please report to reception for a permit.

Mailing List To join our mailing list and be updated about events, please email k.slater@hull.ac.uk or call 01482 466326.

Disclaimer The information in this booklet is subject to change and review. Every effort is made to ensure details are accurate at time of publication but the University of Hull cannot accept liability for errors or omissions.


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Public lectures/seminars The Annual Bronowski Lecture Business School (including JSG Wilson Lecture) Chemistry Chemistry Seminar Programme Classical Association, Hull and District Branch East Riding Archaeology Society Engineering English Lecture Ferens Distinguished Lecture History Lecture History of Art Hull and District Theological Society Hull Geological Society Humanities/Religion HUU LGBT+ Trans/Gender Awareness Week Inaugural Lectures Institute of Physics Sponsored Lecture Josephine Onoh Memorial Lecture Music Events Music Research Seminars Polish Season Religious Services Scarborough Public Lectures St John’s College Lecture Wilberforce Institute (WISE) Public Lectures

10 11 13 14 16 18 19 20 23 25 26 29 31 33 34 36 41 42 43 44 46 51 50 48 49

Contents

At a glance

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At a glance Key Music Lectures Seminars Date

Event

Venue (All at Hull Campus unless indicated otherwise)

4 Oct

WISE Public Lecture: The Zong. slavery, evil deeds, and re-thinking the past: a basis for discussion

WISE, Oriel Chambers, 27 High Street, Hull HU1 1NE

4.30pm

01482 305176

49

4 Oct

Classical Association: What Made the Greeks Laugh?

Seminar Room, Graduate School

7.30pm

01482 470119

16

5–7 Oct

Hull Geological Society: Sedimentology: process and product

Cohen Building

01482 346784

31

16 Oct

Music Research Seminar: Creative performers – creative performances: Constructs and processes

L201, Larkin Building

4.15 pm

a.binns@hull.ac.uk

44

Chemistry Seminar: Soft Matter Chemistry at the Proto-life/Synthetic Biology Interface

Lecture Room A, Department of Chemistry

4.15pm

01482 465027

14

17 Oct

Engineering Lecture: Siemens Power Gas Turbines

Robert Blackburn Building

7.00pm

07772 714597

19

17 Oct

East Riding Archaeology Society: The Roman pottery kilns at Market Rasen, Lincolnshire: some thoughts on landscapes of production

LT1 Wilberforce Building

7.30pm

01482 465543

18

Hull and District Theological Society: Ordinary Christology: Answers from the Pews

Seminar Room, Graduate School

7.30pm

01482 466548

29

Inaugural Lecture: Crime, Life, Death and Recovery: 25 years of research on heroin injectors

Middleton Hall

6.00pm

01482 466326

36

Chemistry Seminar: New functional polymeric materials for delivery, catalysis and sensing

Lecture Room A, Department of Chemistry

4.15pm

01482 465027

14

Ferens Distinguished Lecture: How a Hull invention helped to change the way we see electronic information

Middleton Hall

6.00pm

01482 465845

22

History of Art Public Lecture: Art and the Sea. Poems to the Sea: Lyrical Waves in the work of Turner, Monet and Twonbly

Middleton Hall

6.00pm

01482 465035

26

17 Oct

17 Oct 22 Oct 24 Oct 24 Oct 25 Oct

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Start time Enquiries

Page

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Date

Event

Venue (All at Hull Campus unless indicated otherwise)

Start time Enquiries

29 Oct

Annual Bronowski Lecture

Middleton Hall

6.00pm

01482 465845

10

29 Oct

Business School Seminar: Decision making capabilities for competitive advantage – part of the Business Bites seminar series

Nidd Building

5.30pm

01482 347500

11

Chemistry Seminar: Small molecules and functionalised carbon nanotubes for biomedical imaging applications

Lecture Room A, Department of Chemistry

4.15pm

01482 465027

14

31 Oct

JSG Wilson Lecture: Central Banking in Boom and Slump

Hull Campus

6.00pm

01482 347500

12

1 Nov

History of Art Public Lecture: Art and the Sea. Translucent waters of the sea / Mirror of Heaven’s lucid splendour: Dutch Art and the Sea

Middleton Hall

6.00pm

01482 465035

26

Classical Association: The Emperor and his Passions: the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius

Seminar Room, Graduate School

7.30pm

01482 470119

16

Inaugural Lecture: Overdue and overspent – why do our projects go so badly wrong?

Middleton Hall

6.00pm

01482 466326

37

Music Research Seminar: Adam Zamoyski Chopin with Adam Zamoyski

Middleton Hall

6.00pm

a.binns@hull.ac.uk

44

Chemistry Seminar: Nature’s nanoparticles: the bionanoscience of plant viruses

Lecture Room A, Department of Chemistry

4.15pm

01482 465027

15

Humanities/Religion Lecture: When religious communities meets new media: negotiating technology religiously

SR1, Foss Building

2.15pm

01482 465995

33

Annual English Lecture: Bram Stoker Birthday Lecture: Visual Gothic: how artists have seen the unseen

Middleton Hall

6.00pm

01482 465315

20

9 Nov

Music Lecture: Poles Apart: Chopin Transformed

Middleton Hall

4.00pm

01482 462045

43

10 Nov

Music Lecture: Graham Saunders on Arensky

Middleton Hall

6.30pm

01482 465998

43

12 Nov

St John’s College Lecture: The protein tangles that killed Chopin

Middleton Hall

6.00pm

01482 465131

48

13 Nov

Music Research Seminar: Music and the Politics of Piety in Renaissance Italy

L201, Larkin Building

4.15pm

a.binns@hull.ac.uk

45

31 Oct

1 Nov 5 Nov 6 Nov 7 Nov 8 Nov 8 Nov

4

Page

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Date

Event

Venue (All at Hull Campus unless indicated otherwise)

Start time Enquiries

14 Nov

Annual History Lecture: The Battle of the Somme, 1916: New Perspectives

Leslie Downs Lecture Theatre, Ferens Building

6.00pm

01482 465192

25

14 Nov

Josephine Onoh Memorial Lecture: title tbc

LT15, Wilberforce Building

4.15pm

01482 465857

42

14 Nov

Hull and District Theological Society: The Book of Common Prayer, 1662–2012: Relic or Resource?

Seminar Room, Graduate School

7.30pm

01482 466548

29

15 Nov

Chemistry Seminar: Symposium on Analytical Chemistry

To be conďŹ rmed

2.00pm

01482 465027

15

15 Nov

WISE Public Lecture: The archaeology of slavery: some recent work in Nevis and St Kitts

WISE, Oriel Chambers, 27 High Street, Hull HU1 1NE

4.30pm

01482 305176

49

History of Art Public Lecture: Art and the Sea. Picturing the Sea in Eighteenth-Century Britain

Middleton Hall

6.00pm

01482 465035

27

Institute of Physics Sponsored Lecture: Making use of uncertainty: From quantum physics to quantum technologies

Basil Reckitt Lecture Theatre, Ferens Building

6.30pm

01482 465050

41

15 Nov

Hull Geological Society: The Geology of Malta

Department of Geography

7.30pm

01482 466548

31

19 Nov

Inaugural Lecture: Shining Stones and Marble Halls: encountering sculpture in the long nineteenth century

Middleton Hall

6.00pm

01482 466326

38

HUU LGBT+ Seminar: Transgender people and the media: the good, bad and ugly

Lecture Theatre 27, Wilberforce Building

7.15pm

huulgbt@gmail.com 34

HUU LGBT+ Seminar: Overcoming the barriers: Trans inclusion in Sport

Lecture Theatre 27, Wilberforce Building

7.15pm

huulgbt@gmail.com 34

Chemistry Seminar: From anion receptors to transporters

Lecture Room A, Department of Chemistry

4.15pm

01482 465027

Lecture Theatre 27, Wilberforce Building

7.15pm

huulgbt@gmail.com 35

East Riding Archaeology Society: Olive oil and wine producing Roman North Africa

LT1 Wilberforce Building

7.30pm

01482 465543

18

History of Art Public Lecture: Art and the Sea in Renaissance Venice

Middleton Hall

6.00pm

01482 465035

27

15 Nov 15 Nov

19 Nov 20 Nov 21 Nov 22 Nov 21 Nov 22 Nov

6

HUU LGBT+ Seminar: The Law and the Transgender person

Page

15

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Date

Event

Venue (All at Hull Campus unless indicated otherwise)

Start time Enquiries

27 Nov

Music Research Seminar: The Invention of Global Opera

L201, Larkin Building

4.15pm

a.binns@hull.ac.uk

45

2 Dec

University of Hull Carol Service

Holy Trinity Church, Market Place

4.30pm

01482 466326

51

3 Dec

Inaugural Lecture: ‘Zombies, Run!’ Can we use technology to build pro-societal behaviours?

Middleton Hall

6.00pm

01482 466326

39

5 Dec

Polish Season: Zygmunt Bauman Seminar

Hull Campus

3.15pm

k.tester@hull.ac.uk

46

6 Dec

Classical Association: Olympic Myths from Pelops to the Present Day

Seminar Room, Graduate School

7.30pm

01482 470119

16

6 Dec

Polish Season: Facing the Future, Facing the Past

Hull Campus

6.00pm

01482465620

47

12 Dec

Engineering Lecture: Effects of Fluid Dynamics on High Performance Sports

Robert Blackburn Building

7.00pm

07772 714597

19

Hull and District Theological Society: Some popcorn and a movie: Thoughts on what Theology can/should learn from Moving Images

Seminar Room, Graduate Room

7.30pm

01482 466548

30

WISE, Oriel Chambers, 27 High Street, Hull HU1 1NE

4.30pm

01482 305176

49

Hull Geological Society: Stacking it up: glacitectonics and moraine development in north Norfolk during the Middle Pleistocene

Department of Geography

7.30pm

01482 466548

32

17 Dec

Chemistry Lecture: Primary Schools’ Show

Middleton Hall

10.30am

01482 465464

13

17 Dec

Chemistry Lecture: Public Show for all the Family

Middleton Hall

7.00pm

01482 465464

13

17 Dec

Chemistry Lecture: Secondary Schools’ Show

Middleton Hall

10.30am

01482 465464

13

19 Dec

East Riding Archaeology Society: Fin Cop Hillfort – Archaeology of a Massacre?

LT1 Wilberforce Building

7.30pm

01482 465543

18

East Riding Archaeology Society: Aspects of burial archaeology in Yorkshire

LT1 Wilberforce Building

7.30pm

01482 465543

18

17 Jan

Classical Association: Everyday Latin in the Empire

Seminar Room, Graduate School

7.30pm

01482 470119

17

17 Jan

Hull Geological Society: A History of the Glacial Formations at South Landing, Danes Dyke and the Sewerby Buried Cliff over the last 120 years in old and new photographs and maps: Recent processes of deposition and erosion.

Department of Geography

7.30pm

01482 466548

32

12 Dec 13 Dec 13 Dec

16 Jan

8

WISE Public Lecture: Why was the Atlantic slave trade so big?

Page

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The Annual Bronowski Lecture

Monday 29 October Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6.00 pm Professor Lisa Jardine CBE, MA PhD (Cambridge) Further information: Lesley Dye, l.dye@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465845

Decision making capabilities for competitive advantage – part of the Business Bites seminar series Monday 29 October 2012 Nidd Building, Hull Campus, 5.30 to 7.00 pm Making decisions in an atmosphere of increasing time pressure, uncertainty, and conicting expert opinions creates challenges for any director. Presented by Professor L Alberto Franco, Hull University Business School, and Kevin Walsh, Chief Executive of Kcom, this seminar looks at the process of decision making and how critical business decisions are made. It will present a roadmap for making winning decisions every time, by alerting directors to common thinking traps and by offering practical remedies.

Business School

Title to be confirmed

The seminar will be followed by a Q&A panel with the guest speakers. Sponsored by Grant Thornton, presented in conjunction with The Institute of Directors. Further information: Ian Calvert, Hull University Business School, hubscomms@hull.ac.uk, 01482 347500.

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Business School: JSG Wilson Lecture

Wednesday 31 October 2012 Business School, Hull Campus, 6.00 pm Charles Bean, Deputy Governor Monetary Policy, Bank of England Through the generosity of JSG Wilson, we are pleased to present this prestigious lecture, delivered by senior figure Charles Bean of the Bank of England.

Enjoy an entertaining morning of Christmas themed chemical curiosities for Primary school pupils We will be presenting three shows, one aimed for primary schools, one for secondary schools and one for the rest of the family. Primary schools’ show Monday 17 December 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 10.30 am

Sponsored by JSG Wilson To book your place please email hubscomms@hull.ac.uk, 01482 347500.

Public show for all the family Monday 17 December 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 7.00 pm

Chemistry Lectures

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Central Banking in Boom and Slump

Tickets £4. Free to students and under 18’s. Secondary schools’ show Tuesday 18 December 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 10.30 am For more information and tickets please contact: Mrs Margaret Fitzsimmons, m.e.fitzsimmons@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465464 or Mrs Maxine Tyler, m.tyler@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465434, Department of Chemistry

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Chemistry Seminars

Soft Matter Chemistry at the Proto-life/Synthetic Biology Interface

Nature’s nanoparticles: the bionanoscience of plant viruses

Wednesday 17 October 2012 Lecture Room A, Department of Chemistry, Hull Campus, 4.15 pm

Wednesday 7 November 2012 Lecture Room A, Department of Chemistry, Hull Campus, 4.15 pm

Professor Steve Mann, University of Bristol

Professor David Evans is a newly appointment academic member of staff in the Department of Chemistry. He will introduce his research into ‘Nature’s nanoparticles: the bionanosciene of plant viruses’.

The lecture is co-organised by the Royal Society of Chemistry who awarded Professor Mann with the de Gennes Prize 2011 for ‘outstanding and exceptional work in the field of materials chemistry’. Sponsored by: Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

New functional polymeric materials for delivery, catalysis and sensing Wednesday 24 October 2012 Lecture Room A, Department of Chemistry, Hull Campus, 4.15 pm Professor Rachel O’Reilley, University of Warwick Professor O’Reilley has recently been awarded the RSC Hickingbottom Award for ‘ground-breaking work in the synthesis of new macromolecular architectures and in the development of novel functionalisation reactions and organic transformations for materials chemistry’.

Small molecules and functionalised carbon nanotubes for biomedical imaging applications Wednesday 31 October 2012 Lecture Room A, Department of Chemistry, Hull Campus, 4.15 pm Dr Sofia Pascu, Research Fellow and Lecturer in the Department of Chemistry, University of Bath. Dr Pascu will be presenting a lecture into small molecules and functionalised carbon nanotubes which have applications, for example, in medical imaging.

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Symposium on Analytical Chemistry Thursday 15 November 2012 Venue to be confirmed, 2.00 pm The Department of Chemistry in connection with the Royal Society of Chemistry will be hosting an award ceremony with presentation from two recent prize winners. Professor Aaron Wheeler from the University of Toronto in Canada will speak on "Digital microfluidics for chemical synthesis, processing, and analysis". Professor David Stuckey from Imperial College London will present on "Recycling treated wastewater: Feasible and sustainable?" The seminar is supported by a talk from local Dr Nicole Pamme on "Attraction and Repulsion – magnetic forces inlab-on-a-chip devices”. Sponsored by: Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

From anion receptors to transporters Wednesday 21 November 2012 Lecture Room A, Department of Chemistry, Hull Campus, 4.15 pm Professor Philip Gale, University of Southampton Professor Gale’s lecture is on his research into the chemistry of anion transporters which have potential applications in the development of future treatments for cystic fibrosis and cancer. Further information: Dr Nicole Pamme, n.pamme@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465027 15


Classical Association

What Made the Greeks Laugh?

Everyday Latin in the Empire

Thursday 4 October 2012 Seminar Room, Graduate School, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm

Thursday 17 January 2013 Joint lecture with the Roman Society

Professor J Michael Walton, University of Hull

Seminar Room, Graduate School, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm

Michael Walton joined the Drama Department of the University of Hull in 1965 and remained there until his retirement 38 years later, having been awarded a professorship in 1992. Classical theatre was one of his main areas of teaching. He also directed about 50 plays, including many Greek plays in his own translations. He has published many translations from Greek, and these have been widely performed .

Professor David Langslow, University of Manchester

The Emperor and his Passions: the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius

David Langslow came to the University of Manchester in 1999 after 14 years at Wolfson College, Oxford. His main research interests lie in the history of Latin and Greek language and linguistics and include work on a comprehensive grammar of ancient Greek. His publications include The Latin Alexander Trallianus (2006) and Medical Latin in the Roman Empire (2000) Further information: Margaret Nicholson, m.nicholson@hull.ac.uk, 01482 470119

Thursday 1 November 2012 Seminar Room, Graduate School, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm David Walker, University of Hull David Walker taught for almost 40 years in the Philosophy Department of the University of Hull. He has written on moral philosophy and Greek philosophy

Olympic Myths from Pelops to the Present Day Thursday 6 December 2012 Joint lecture with the Hellenic Society Seminar Room, Graduate School, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm Dr Emma Stafford, University of Leeds Emma Stafford specialises in Greek cultural history, especially religion. Her works include Life, Myth and Art in Ancient Greece (2004) and Herakles (2012). At present she is writing books on Nemesis and on the Trojan War

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East Riding Archaeology Society

Wednesday 17 October 2012 LT1, Wilberforce Building, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm Ian Rowlandson, Freelance Ceramic researcher

Olive oil and wine production in Roman North Africa Wednesday 21 November 2012 LT1, Wilberforce Building, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm Matthew Hobson, University of Leicester

Fin Cop Hillfort – Archaeology of a Massacre? Wednesday 19 December 2012 LT1, Wilberforce Building, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm Jim Brightman

Aspects of burial archaeology in Yorkshire Wednesday 16 January 2013 LT1, Wilberforce Building, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm Dr Malin Holst, University of York/York Osteoarchaeology Further information: Dr Helen Fenwick, Department of History h.fenwick@hull.ac.uk 01482 465543

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Siemens Power Gas Turbines Wednesday 17 October, 2012 Robert Blackburn Building, Hull Campus, 7.00 pm Refreshments 6.30 pm Presentation on the latest developments undertaken within Siemens Gas Turbines. Sponsored by The Institute of Mechanical Engineers (IMechE)

Effects of Fluid Dynamics on High Performance Sports Wednesday 12 December 2012 Robert Blackburn Building, Hull Campus, 7.00pm

Engineering Lectures

The Roman pottery kilns at Market Rasen, Lincolnshire: some thoughts on landscapes of production

Refreshments 6.30 pm This presentation gives an overview of the effects of uid dynamics on high performance sports and focuses on a study of the aerodynamics of a snowboarder. A combination of athlete scanning, CFD analysis and wind tunnel testing has been the route taken on many projects. Sponsored by The Institute of Mechanical Engineers (IMechE) Further information: Paul Cunningham, IMechE East Yorkshire Secretary, eyorkssec@imechenetwork.org, 07772 714597

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(Bram Stoker Birthday Lecture)

The Annual English Lecture

Visual Gothic: how artists have seen the unseen Thursday 8 November 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6 pm Professor Sir Christopher Frayling Sir Christopher is an internationally eminent historian, critic and broadcaster. He was until recently Rector of the Royal College of Art in London and is currently Professor Emeritus of Cultural History there. He was the College’s first professor of Cultural History and founded the Department of Cultural History. He was also until recently Chairman of the Arts Council England. On New Year’s Eve 2000 he was knighted for services to art and design education. He has served as a Chairman or as a member on all the major UK committees/funding bodies for art, craft, design, film, and the performing arts. Sir Christopher has published eighteen books, including: The Vampyre: Lord Ruthven to Count Dracula (1977; 1991), Nightmare: The Birth of Horror (1996), and critical editions of The Hound of the Baskervilles (2001) and Dracula (2003). He has written and presented numerous TV series including The Face of Tutankhamun (BBC2, 1992), Strange Landscape – The Illumination of the Middle Ages (BBC2, 1995), and Nightmare – the Birth of Horror (BBC 1, 1996–1997). Sir Christopher is a passionate campaigner for the importance of arts education in the UK and breaking down the boundaries between ‘high’ and ‘low’ in the arts. He is currently Fellow of Churchill College Cambridge and an 1851 Commissioner and Visiting Professor at Lancaster University. Further information: Pru Wells, Department of English, p.r.wells@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465315

Professor Sir Christopher Frayling. 20

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Wednesday 24 October 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6.00 pm (doors open at 5.30 pm) Professor Peter Raynes, Leverhulme Emeritus Research Fellow, University of York Liquid crystal displays now completely dominate the way we see information generated within electronic equipment. LCDs are found in a range of products from simple watches and calculators through mobile phones, all forms of computers, to large area televisions. In 1972 chemists at Hull led by Professor George Gray FRS invented the world’s first stable room temperature liquid crystal material which helped change LCDs from a laboratory curiosity into the multibillion dollar industry of today. The lecture will describe the background to the technology, the Hull invention itself, and how it was developed into highly successful commercial products. As the LCD market developed towards larger displays showing ever larger amounts of information, the technology diversified considerably, and the lecture will conclude with a glimpse of the UK’s wider contribution to this development.

Ferens Distinguised Lecture

How a Hull invention helped to change the way we see electronic information

Following a PhD in low temperature Physics at Cambridge, Peter Raynes joined the Royal Signals and Radar Establishment (now part of QinetiQ) at Malvern in 1971 where he started research into liquid crystals materials and devices. In 1992 he moved to the Sharp Laboratories of Europe Ltd at Oxford, where he was Director of Research until he took up the Chair of Optoelectronics in the Department of Engineering Science at Oxford in 1998. In 2010 he retired from Oxford and moved to York, where he is now a Leverhulme Emeritus Research Fellow and an Honorary Visiting Professor in the Department of Chemistry. Earlier this year he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Hull.

Liquid crystals. 22

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Further information: Lesley Dye, Marketing and Communications, l.dye@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465845

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The Battle of the Somme, 1916: New Perspectives Wednesday 14 November 2012 Leslie Downs Lecture Theatre, Ferens Building, Hull Campus, 6.00 pm Professor William Philpott Professor William Philpott lectures in military history in the internationally-renowned Department of War Studies at King’s College, London. He is a specialist in the history of the First World War, in particular British strategy and the history of the French Army. He has published widely in the field of AngloFrench relations in the era of the two world wars. His book Bloody Victory: The Sacrifice on the Somme (2009) was awarded the 2010 Templer Medal for British military history.

Annual History Lecture

Throughout his research career Peter has worked on liquid crystal materials and displays, and for many years worked closely with Professor George Gray FRS and his Liquid Crystal Group in the Department of Chemistry at Hull. His work with Hull University and BDH Chemicals Ltd helped develop several highly successful ranges of liquid crystal materials which for many years dominated the world market; this work gained two Queen’s Awards for Technological Achievement. He also made many contributions to liquid crystal displays; some of these are still in widespread use including one, known as the supertwist display, used in the first generation of mobile phones and laptop computers. Professor Raynes was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1987.

Further information: Laura Wilson, Department of History, 01482 465192

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History of Art Public Lectures

LECTURES ON ART AND THE SEA

Picturing the Sea in Eighteenth-Century Britain

Poems to the Sea: Lyrical Waves in the Work of Turner, Monet and Twombly

Thursday 15 November 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6.00 pm

Thursday 25 October 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6.00 pm

Geoffrey Quilley

Eleanor Clayton Eleanor Clayton is Assistant Curator: Exhibitions and Displays at Tate Liverpool, having trained at the Courtauld Institute. She has recently been working on the exhibition, Turner, Monet, Twombly: Later Paintings, which runs until 28 October at Tate Liverpool. The sea provided a frequent and important theme for all three of these prolific and celebrated artists.

Translucent waters of the sea / Mirror of Heaven’s lucid splendour: Dutch Art and the Sea Thursday 1 November 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6.00 pm Jenny Gaschke Dr Jenny Gaschke is currently Collections Officer, Bristol Museum and Art Gallery. She was formerly Curator of Fine Art at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, where she curatored the exhibition (and edited the catalogue) Turmoil Tranquility: the Sea through the Eyes of Dutch and Flemish Masters, 1550–1700. Before that she was Assistant Curator at the Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart. She examines Dutch marine painting at its height. The quotation in her title comes from Karel van Mander, the sixteenth-century Dutch painter and poet.

Dr Geoffrey Quilley is Senior Lecturer in Art History at the University of Sussex. He was previously Curator of Fine Art at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich. He has been responsible for two major exhibitions at Greenwich and the establishment of a new research centre for the study of art and travel. He has published extensively on a wide range of themes and his most recent book is the very well received, Empire to Nation: Art, History, and the Visualisation of Maritime Britain (Yale, 2011)

Art and the Sea in Renaissance Venice Thursday 22 November 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6.00 pm John Bernasconi John Bernasconi is Director of Fine Art at Hull University. He examines not only the treatment of maritime themes in Venetian painting and sculpture but Renaissance Venetians’ relationship with the sea as expressed in writings and civic ritual and their perception of their unique floating city, at times very from ours today. Further information: John Bernasconi, Department of History, j.g.bernasconi@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465035

Jacopo de Barbari, Bird’s eye view of Venice, 1500, woodcut (detail). 26

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Wednesday 17 October 2012 The Seminar Room, Graduate School, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm Dr Ann Christie, York St John University Jesus once asked his disciples, ‘Who do you say that I am?’ Christology – the question of who Jesus is and what he has done for us – has been debated ever since by generations of theologians. But how do Christians who have received little or no theological education answer Jesus’s question? Ann Christie’s research has focussed on mapping and critically analysing ‘ordinary Christology’, using social-scientific methods, and her findings have recently been published in a monograph of the same name by Ashgate. Dr Christie, a former biochemist, is Senior Lecturer in Theology and Ministry at York St John University.

The Book of Common Prayer, 1662–2012: Relic or Resource? Wednesday 14 November 2012 The Seminar Room, Graduate School, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm Dr David Bagchi, University of Hull

Hull and District Theological Society

Ordinary Christology: Answers from the Pews

After the Bible, the Book of Common Prayer is the most frequently cited book in the Oxford Dictionary of Quotations, and must be one of the few world liturgies regularly to supply titles for detective novels. But does this make it a cultural museum piece rather than a theological resource from which Christians today can still learn? In the 350th anniversary year of the famous 1662 BCP, David Bagchi will look at the Prayer Book’s past, its present, and its potential for the future. Dr Bagchi is Senior Lecturer in Ecclesiastical History at the University of Hull, and is the author of several studies on Reformation theology, including the early Tudor chapter for the Oxford Handbook of Early Modern English Literature and Religion (forthcoming).

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Wednesday 12 December 2012 The Seminar Room, Graduate School, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm Dr Alexander Ornella, University of Hull Alexander Ornella joined the University of Hull from the University of Graz in 2011 as Lecturer in Religion. He is also the Coordinator of the Austrian-Swiss-Italian research project Commun(icat)ing Bodies. His particular interests lie in the relationship of religion to media, culture, and the arts, and his publications include ‘Posthuman pleasures’ (2009), The Networked Subject (2010), Identity 2.0: Between Tradition and New Media (2010) – and a theological treatment of Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds (sic) (2011). Further information: Dr David Bagchi, Department of History, d.v.bagchi@hull.ac.uk, 01482 466548

Sedimentology: process and product Friday 5 to Sunday 7 October 2012 Weekend Conference and field meeting Cohen Building Joint meeting with the Hull Geological Society, University of Hull and Yorkshire Geological Society. Speakers include • Emrys Phillips, British Geological Survey • Jim Best , University of Illinois • Martyn Pedley, University of Hull • Maurice Tucker, University of Durham • Mike Horne and Rodger Connell, Hull Geological Society. • Rachel Flecker, University of Bristol • Pete Talling, National Oceanographic Centre

Hull Geological Society

Some Popcorn and a Movie: Thoughts on What Theology Can/Should Learn from Moving Images

(registration required £50 for the weekend) • Friday – Conference lectures with Keynote speakers • Saturday Morning – ‘Talking Posters’, displays and posters Saturday Afternoon – YGS Lectures – speakers include Maurice Tucker and Emrys Phillips free admission • Sunday – HGS field meeting.

The Geology of Malta Thursday 15 November 2012 Department of Geography, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm David Hill of the Hull Geological Society

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When Religious Communities Meet New Media: Negotiating Technology Religiously

Thursday 13 December 2012 Department of Geography, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm

Thursday 8 November 2012 SR1, Foss Building, Hull Campus, 2.15 pm

Dr Jonathan Lee of the British Geological Survey

Professor Heidi Campbell

A History of the Glacial Formations at South Landing, Danes Dyke and the Sewerby Buried Cliff over the last 120 years in old and new photographs and maps: Recent processes of deposition and erosion. Thursday 17 January 2013 Department of Geography, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm Ian Heppenstall of the Hull Geological Society Further information: Mike Horne, secretary@hullgeolsoc.org.uk, 01482 346784, website www.hullgeolsoc.org.uk

This talk will explore how and why religious communities make certain choices regarding their new media usage. Through the lens of the religious-social shaping of technology we see several distinct factors shaping Jewish, Muslim and Christian groups’ negotiation with new technologies. This process is explored through the rise of the kosher cell phone in Israel and how religious values and practices influenced ultra-Orthodox Jews’ response and innovation to the mobile phone. Heidi Campbell is Associate Professor of Communication at Texas A&M University where she teaches in Telecommunications and Media Studies. Since 1997 she has studied religion and the internet and what impact new media technologies are having on religious communities. She has written on a variety of topics including religion online, new media ethics, technology and theology and religious communities response to mass media. Her work has appeared in a variety of books and journals on themes related to religion and media including New Media and Society, Journal of Media and Religion, Journal of Contemporary Religion, the book Religion Online (Dawson & Cowan, Routledge 2004). She is author of Exploring Religious Community Online (Peter Lang, 2005) and When Religion Meets New Media (Routledge, 2010).

Department of Humanities/Religion Lecture

Stacking it up: glacitectonics and moraine development in north Norfolk during the Middle Pleistocene

Further information: Dr Alexander D Ornella, a.ornella@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465995

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HUU LGBT+ – Trans/Gender Awareness Week 34

Transgender people and the media: the good, bad and ugly

The Law and the Transgender Person

Monday 19 November 2012 Lecture Theatre 27, Wilberforce Building, Hull Campus, 7.15 pm

Thursday 22 November 2012 Lecture Theatre 27, Wilberforce Building, Hull Campus 7.15 pm

HUU LGBT+ are delighted to welcome Jenny-Anne Bishop, from TransForum Manchester and the Parliamentary Forum on Gender Identity, for an informed and relaxed discussion about the representation of trans people in the papers and on television. This talk will consider the information and misinformation surrounding trans people, their lives and their experiences. All welcome.

Professor Stephen Whittle, from Manchester Metropolitan University, has been cordially invited to lecture on the history and consideration of transgender people and their place in the UK’s legal system. His work, personal experience and research into the development of this area is unparalleled and will afford the audience with a unique insight into the legalities of gender identity.

Overcoming the barriers: Trans inclusion in sport

Further information: huulgbt@gmail.com

Tuesday 20 November 2012 Lecture Theatre 27, Wilberforce Building, Hull Campus, 6.15 pm Dave Merchant will be leading a session on the inclusion of trans people in sport at all levels. The session will include an introduction to some of the issues facing trans people when accessing sport, current legislation and the duty that sports clubs have to ensuring that they are accessible for trans people, and examples of good practice. There will be an opportunity to ask questions and discuss the issues raised. All are welcome to attend – no prior knowledge or experience is assumed! Dave is the founder of Marlin Swimming Group, the longest continually running trans swimming group in the UK. He has worked with Pride Sports to promote the inclusion of trans people in sport, and has spoken at a number of events around the UK and in Europe, including the launch of LGBT History Month in 2010 and 2011, LGBT Question Time and the European Gay and Lesbian Sport Federation Annual General Assembly in 2012.

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Inaugural Lectures

Crime, Life, Death and Recovery: 25 years of research on heroin injectors

Overdue and overspent – why do our projects go so badly wrong?

Monday 22 October 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6.00 pm

Monday 5 November 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6 pm

Professor Richard Hammersley, Professor of Health Psychology

Professor Terry Williams, Professor of Management Science and Dean of Hull University Business School

There is great concern about drug problems and drug injecting, but interventions to prevent and treat them are not as successful as they could be. The most common explanation of addiction is that it is something like a brain disease so that when people take certain drugs like heroin they cannot help but become addicted. Research on drug problems has found that the reality is more complex and involves a mixture of psychological and social factors. This lecture will draw upon 25 years of research to explore the following questions: Why is heroin use linked to crime? Why do people take drugs? Why do most drug users not become addicted? Why do people overdose? What patterns of drug dependence are there? What can be done to help recovery? What options are there for changing drug laws? Richard Hammersley is Professor of Health Psychology in the Department of Psychology. He has been researching drug use and drug problems since 1986 in work that crosses boundaries between psychology, sociology and health. His publications include books on drugs policy, drugs and crime, ecstasy, and cocaine, and a number of major reports for the Home Office, the Scottish Office and the Youth Justice Board. His many papers include work on how young people grow out of crime and grow into drug use, on drug overdoses in Scotland, on cannabis and on ‘legal’ highs. He has just completed a large study collecting the life stories of people who have injected drugs, to improve understanding of their pathways into and out of drug injecting and identify the strengths that they bring to recovery.

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This lecture will look at why many of our major projects can go so drastically wrong. By modelling those projects and getting a better understanding of how they behave, we’ll look at some implications not only for how we manage projects, but also what ‘complexity’ is, how we think about risk, and the place of some philosophical ideas in business studies. Terry Williams has 35 years experience in Management Science. After degrees at Oxford and Birmingham, and a few years lecturing, he spent 9 years building up a successful practice (and a small team) in Management Science in engineering consultancy YARD; this started in logistics but later specialised in Project-Risk Management (PRM) of major projects, including acting as Risk Manager for some major defence projects. He then spent 13 years in the Management Science Department of Strathclyde University, latterly as Professor and Head of Department. A team was developed to support major postproject litigation claims, which supported major post-project claims, particularly Delay and Disruption, totalling over $1.5billion in Europe and North America. On his 2005 marriage he moved to the University of Southampton, later becoming Head of the School of Management there. In 2011 he became Dean of the Hull University Business School. His research and consultancy continues in project behaviour, and particularly in post-project claims. He has become a thought-leader in the worldwide Project Management research community, particularly playing a role in the US-based Project Management Institute. He maintains his discipline as a Management Scientist – as well as project modelling His research has covered modelling many uncertain systems, from 37


the economics of the UK renewable energy market to battles to production systems – and for 10 years he was joint editor of the Journal of the Operational Research Society. He is the author of around 70 peer-reviewed papers and a considerable number of monographs and books.

Shining Stones and Marble Halls: encountering sculpture in the long nineteenth century. Monday 19 November 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6.00 pm Professor Alison Yarrington, Professor of Art History and Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences Viewing sculpture in the historic interior can be an unsettling business, as the heroines of the film adaptations Room with a View (1985) and Pride and Prejudice (2005) demonstrate. The experiences of Lucy Honeychurch ‘in Santa Croce with no Baedeker’ or Elizabeth Bennet suddenly seeing the light as a tourist visiting Pemberley, are indicative of the ways in which the interplay between theatre, literature, history and art can contribute to sculpture’s impact in particular settings: a palimpsest of past and present, intention and reception. This lecture will consider modes of displaying and viewing sculpture in specific private and public locations, including Chatsworth, London, Florence and Rome, and will suggest several questions to ask of some key objects. Alison Yarrington was appointed Dean of FASS in May 2011. Her degree in Fine Art and the History of Art (Reading University) was followed by a PhD (Darwin College, University of Cambridge). Her first academic post was at the University of Leicester, where she was promoted to a personal chair in Art History. She was Dean of the Faculty of Arts at Leicester before her appointment as Richmond Professor of Fine Art at the University of Glasgow in 2003. Her research and publications are in the history of sculpture in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, including BritishItalian marble trade and cultural transactions, women and sculpture, public sculpture, and collecting and display. 38

Recently completed major research projects include the AHRCfunded Mapping the Practice and Profession of Sculpture in Britain and Ireland 1851–1951 and Mobilising Mapping, both collaborative, inter-institutional research projects with colleagues at the University of Glasgow, the V&A Museum, and the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds. She was academic advisor to the Chatsworth Sculpture Gallery redisplay that opened in March 2009 and continues to research this collection. She is also developing research with colleagues at Hull into maritime sculpture, in particular figureheads and associated sculptural decoration. Alison is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London, and FRSA. She is Chair of the Association of Art Historians, a Governor of the Glasgow School of Art, and on the Advisory Council of the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art

‘Zombies, Run!’ Can we use technology to build prosocietal behaviours? Monday 3 December 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6.00 pm Professor Richard Vidgen, Professor of Systems Thinking Society is facing many challenges. Poor diet and lack of exercise contribute to obesity and an unsustainable burden on health services; many households are in fuel poverty while as a nation we need to reduce carbon emissions; greater social engagement and participation in communal life are needed to improve wellbeing. This lecture will consider how technology can be used to encourage pro-societal behaviours. Richard Vidgen is Professor of Systems Thinking in the Hull University Business School. He worked for fifteen years in the IT industry as a project manager and consultant. On leaving industry he studied for a PhD in Information Systems at the University of Salford and then worked at the School of Management, University of Bath and the Australian School of 39


Further information: Karen Slater, k.slater@hull.ac.uk, 01482 466326

Making use of uncertainty: From quantum physics to quantum technologies Thursday 15 November 2012 Basil Reckitt Lecture Theatre, Ferens Building, Hull Campus, 6.30 pm Dr Jacob Dunningham, University of Leeds On a microscopic level the universe is governed by quantum physics. This is a strange wonderland where things are not as they seem. Objects can be in two places at once, cats can be both alive and dead, and objects can pass straight through walls. One of the most unsettling aspects of quantum physics is that it has at its very heart the idea that the universe is fundamentally uncertain. I will discuss the nature of this uncertainty and show how, far from being a hindrance, it can be put to use in a range of cutting edge new technologies. These include the codes that cannot be cracked, a new generation of superfast computers, and the ability to teleport objects over large distances. Further information: Dr Angela Dyson, Department of Physics and Mathematics, a.dyson@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465050 Sponsored by: The Institute of Physics

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Institute of Physics Sponsored Lectures

Business, University of New South Wales. He has published research articles in leading journals including Information Systems Research, Information and Management, European Journal of Information Systems, Journal of Information Technology, Omega, Journal of Strategic Information Systems, and the Information Systems Journal. He has also worked closely with industry in a number of UK Government funded knowledge transfer projects on e-commerce and worked with the Australian Government on a large survey of workplace performance. His current research interests include: the application of systems thinking and technology to organisational and societal issues; high performance workplaces and employee engagement; and, Internet quality and Website usability.

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Josephine Onoh Memorial Lecture

Poles Apart: Chopin Transformed

Wednesday 14 November 2012 LT15, Wilberforce Building, 4.15 pm

Friday 9 November 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 4.00 pm

Professor Malcolm Shaw QC

Rehearsal Orchestra Lee Tsang (conductor) Chopin-Stokowski Préludes, Op. 28, Nos. 4 and 24, ‘Funeral March’ from Op. 35

Having retired from the Sir Robert Jennings Chair in International Law, University of Leicester, in 2011, Professor Shaw is currently a Senior Fellow at the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law at the University of Cambridge, and part-time Research Professor in International Law at the University of Leicester – as well as a practising barrister with Essex Court Chambers. An eminent scholar and practitioner with numerous publications, Professor Shaw will be well known to students as the author of perhaps the leading textbook on international law (Shaw, International Law, Cambridge University Press), currently in its sixth edition. With enormous experience of advising foreign governments and international corporations, he has appeared in numerous cases before the International Court of Justice, the European Court of Human Rights, the House of Lords, the High Court and the Court of Appeal. He also served as a member of the Law RAE Panels in 1996 and 2001. Further information: Ann Ashbridge, Law School, a.k.ashbridge@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465857

Music Events

Title to be confirmed

Dr Lee Tsang introduces these epic, idiosyncratically sentimental and powerful transformations of Chopin’s music by Leopold Stokowski, the pioneering master orchestrator and conductor of the famous Philadelphia Orchestra. The event features a performance that will be led by members of Hull Sinfonietta and will feature school pupils, members of the University Orchestra, teachers and local amateurs. External players who are interested in participating on the day (9.45 am – 5.00 pm) should contact Dr Tsang as soon as possible on 01482 465019, l.tsang@hull.ac.uk. Further information: 01482 462045 or tickets@hull.ac.uk Supported by: Department of Drama and Music, Hull Sinfonietta, Longcroft College, Doncaster Music Service, Kingston upon Hull Music Service.

Graham Saunders on Arensky Saturday 10 November 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6.30 pm Graham Saunders has long been well-known in the region as a Lecturer in the University’s Department of Adult Education, and is welcomed back to Hull Chamber Music’s pre concert talk series. Please note this event is to be followed by a concert featuring the Atrium String Quartet, playing Arensky, Haydn and Schubert. For more details about tickets for the concert, please see the Hull Chamber Music (www.hullchambermusic.org.uk) brochure or the Arts Programme. Further information: Katie Manasse, Music Department, music@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465998

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Music Research Seminars

Creative performers – creative performances: Constructs and processes Tuesday 16 October 2012 L201, Larkin Building, Hull Campus, 4.15 pm Dr Mirjam James and Dr Karen Wise, University of Cambridge Research on creativity in educational environments mainly focuses on the creation of new musical material such as composition and improvisation. However, a growing number of studies recognise the need for spontaneous and creative decisions made by a performer while reproducing existing material. To date, studies of one-to-one teaching and learning within conservatoires have not adequately examined aspects that enable students to develop as creative performers. The study reported here has taken a novel approach to the investigation of concepts of creativity in performance and aspects of creative learning in a conservatoire environment. Sponsored by Sempre

Adam Zamoyski Chopin with Adam Zamoyski Tuesday 6 November 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6.00 pm (a reception will follow this event) We are delighted to welcome the acclaimed author Adam Zamoyski, who speaks about his recent book Chopin Prince of the Romantics (Harper Press, 2011). Drawn to Poland by his powerful family lineage and a fascination with its history, Adam Zamoyski’s insights on Chopin take us into the heart of Polish culture. In conversation with Dr Alexander Binns and you, the audience, interspersed with live musical performances of Chopin by music students at the University of Hull.

Music and the Politics of Piety in Renaissance Italy Tuesday 13 November 2012 L201, Larkin Building, Hull Campus, 4.15 pm Dr Timothy Shephard, University of Sheffield During the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, several Italian despots established large chapel choirs, and built magnificent court chapels to house them. Traditionally, musicologists read these choirs in terms of the ruler’s personal taste for music, but more recently it has become clear that large chapel choirs played important roles in establishing and sustaining a regime. In particular, a large choir could play a very visible role in presenting a ruler to his subjects in a favourable light, as a pious and powerful prince. In this paper, I use various contemporary writings on government and the ideal prince (including, of course, Machiavelli) to establish and describe the political importance of piety to the Renaissance prince, giving a couple of practical case studies involving chapel choirs.

The Invention of Global Opera Tuesday 27 November 2012 L201, Larkin Building, Hull Campus, 4.15 pm Dr Benjamin Walton, University of Cambridge In this presentation I want to address the question of the meanings of Italian opera beyond Europe during the first half of the 19th century. Taking as a starting point Jürgen Osterhammel’s remark that ‘opera globalized early’, I will use the case of the first opera company to go around the world to argue for an understanding of Italian operatic globalisation that differs both from its 18th-century antecedents, and from the steamship-driven network that would develop later in the century. In these terms, the performances of small and often precarious touring groups ended up resonating far beyond the sometimes ramshackle theatres in which they performed. Further information: Dr Alexander Binns, a.binns@hull.ac.uk

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Polish Season

Zygmunt Bauman Seminar

Facing the Future, Facing the Past

Wednesday 5 December 2012 3.15pm - 6.00 pm

Thursday, 6 December 2012, 6pm Identity and Self-Identity in Early Twentieth-Century Polish Art

3.15: Professor Keith Tester (University of Hull): Introduction

This lecture will examine different ways in which national and personal identity was represented in Polish painting and sculpture in the early 20th century. During a period marked by struggles for Poland’s independence, and by the changes of modernity across Europe, works of art variously looked to subjects and styles drawn both from the past, from artistic tradition or from the pantheons of national heroes, such as Adam Mickiewicz and Fryderyk Chopin, and looked to the future by creating new artistic idioms and drawing upon their modern surroundings. This lecture will consider sculpted portraits and public monuments by Xawery Dunikowski and Wacław Szymanowski, reinventions of folk art by Zofia Stryjeńska, and expressions of national identity in the paintings of Jacek Malczewski, as well as considering the brooding and more introspective self-portraits of Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz and Bruno Schulz.

3.45: Professor Zygmunt Bauman (Universities of Leeds and Warsaw) 'The Haunting Spectre of Westphalian Sovereignty' 4.30: Professor Aleksandra Kania (University of Warsaw) 'Polish Values in a European Context: Results of the European Values Study 1990-1999-2008' 5.15: Questions and Discussion Zygmunt Bauman is one of the most significant global social thinkers of our age. His work, spanning nearly five decades, steadfastly refuses to be constrained by arbitrary disciplinary boundaries within the arts, humanities and social sciences. An extraordinarily productive scholar, his writings continue to be relevant to his host subject of sociology, but also to social and political theory, philosophy, ethics, art theory, media/communications studies, cultural studies, and theology. His unique contribution of the conceptual framework 'liquid modernity' has influenced international research within all of these disciplines.

All Welcome. Venue to be confirmed. For further details please contact Marianne Lewsley-Stier (01482) 465620 or fass-events@hull.ac.uk

Prof. Aleksandra Jasińska-Kania works on sociological theory and studies national stereotypes, prejudices, and social values; she collaborates with the Sociology Committee of the Polish Academy of Sciences All Welcome. Venue to be confirmed. For further details please contact Prof. Keith Tester (k.tester@hull.ac.uk)

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St John’s College Lecture

Monday 12 November 2012 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6.00 pm Professor David Lomas PhD, ScD, FRCP, FMedSci Frederick Chopin was born in 1810 and had a distinguished career as a composer, pianist and sometimes crayon caricaturist. He was however a sickly man with recurrent episodes of breathlessness and coughing up blood. He spent time in the South of France and then in Majorca to help with this recovery but ultimately died at the young age of 39. It is long believed that he suffered with consumption (tuberculosis) however his postmortem carried out by an expert in tuberculosis showed that he had a disease that had not previously been encountered. This talk will focus on a disease called antitrypsin deficiency which may have accounted for the death of Chopin. It will describe our investigative studies into the cause of the disease and will demonstrate how understanding antitrypsin deficiency provides insights into a whole range of other diseases as diverse as blood clots (thrombosis) and dementia. Our understanding of the complexity of protein tangles allows the development of small molecules as potential therapies for this condition. One day we hope to be able to cure the disease that may have killed Frederick Chopin. Professor David Lomas is Fellow of St John’s College, Cambridge, University Professor of Respiratory Biology, Deputy Director of the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research and Honorary Consultant Physician at Addenbrooke’s and Papworth Hospitals. His research interests are focused on the pathobiology of α1antitrypsin deficiency, the serpinopathies and COPD.

The Zong. Slavery, Evil Deeds, and Re-thinking the Past: A basis for discussion Thursday 4 October 2012 WISE, Oriel Chambers, 27 High Street, Hull, HU1 1NE, 4.30 pm Professor James Walvin, Emeritus Professor of History, University of York

The Archaeology of Slavery: Some recent work in Nevis and St Kitts Thursday 15 November WISE, Oriel Chambers, 27 High Street, Hull, HU1 1NE, 4.30 pm Dr Rob Philpott, Curator of Roman and Later Archaeology, National Museums Liverpool

Why was the Atlantic Slave Trade so big? Thursday 13 December WISE, Oriel Chambers, 27 High Street, Hull, HU1 1NE, 4.30 pm Professor David Richardson, Department of History, University of Hull Further information: wise@hull.ac.uk, 01482 305176.

Wilberforce Institute (WISE) Public Lectures

The protein tangles that killed Chopin

Further information: Heather Budgen, Vice-Chancellor’s Office, heather.budgen@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465131

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Public Lectures at Scarborough

The University of Hull Carol Service Sunday 2 December 2012 Holy Trinity Church, Market Place, Hull, 4.30 pm Mulled wine and mince pies will be served afterwards. Everyone is welcome. Entry tickets are required and will be available for collection from the reception desks in the students’ union and the Venn Building from early November 2012. Further information: Karen Slater, k.slater@hull.ac.uk, 01482 466326.

The University of Hull Scarborough Campus Carol Service

Religious Services

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During the 2012/2013 academic year, the Scarborough Campus will host a series of public lectures. The lectures will be open to everyone and are free of charge. Details are available online at www.hull.ac.uk/scarborough

The University of Hull Scarborough Campus will be hosting its annual carol service in early December 2012. Further details will be available via the website in due course www.hull.ac.uk/scarborough

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Further information

Future events Details of all public lectures should be forwarded to Karen Slater for inclusion in the next programme, which will be published in late January. Contact address: Karen Slater, Marketing and Communications, University of Hull, Hull, HU6 7RX, email k.slater@hull.ac.uk.

Further information If you would like to receive further copies of this booklet or have your name and address included in the Public Lectures/Events mailing list, please contact Karen Slater Marketing and Communications University of Hull Hull, HU6 7RX 01482 466326 k.slater@hull.ac.uk

Front cover image Henry Redmore, Shipping of the Port of Hull, 1868, oil on canvas. Presented to the University of Hull Art Collection by Mrs Joan Marshall, 2012 Š University of Hull Published August 2012 2731~ME 52


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