Events Brochure: Feb-Apr 2016

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february/march/ april 2016

From Thucydides to Twitter: towards a history of the Soundbite

conference explores the ‘soundbite’ as a feature of political rhetoric 22–23 april 2016

hundreds of events highlighting research in the humanities


The School of Advanced Study, University of London (SAS) is the UK’s national humanities research hub, dedicated to the promotion and support of research. The institutes of SAS collectively offer a rich programme of seminars, workshops, lectures, conferences and other academic events. Each year around 1,800 events are organised on humanities topics, attracting over 68,000 participants from around the world, including scholars, representatives from academic, public and private organisations, policymakers, professional experts, and the interested public. Senate House Library is the central library of the University of London. With more than two million books and over 1,200 archival collections, it is one of the UK’s largest academic libraries focused on the arts, humanities and social sciences. A number of the School’s collections are housed within the Library, which holds a wealth of primary source materials from medieval times to the modern age. The Library organises a number of events and exhibitions throughout the year, which are open to all to attend. The majority of these events and exhibitions are free and open to the public. All are welcome and encouraged to take advantage of the access to current research and the interdisciplinary cross-fertilisation these events afford. The full list of events held by the School can be found at www.sas.ac.uk/events and by Senate House Library at senatehouselibrary.ac.uk.

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blogs senatehouselibrary.ac.uk/blogs


Contents

Event highlights – timeline

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Event highlights

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Speaker highlights

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Exhibitions

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Events calendar – listings

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Seminar series

80

Research training

87

Calls for papers

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How to find us

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Key Subject area

How to use this guide

Events are listed in date and time order. On the left we list the department responsible for organising the event, the time, type of event or series and the venue. On the right we list the event title, speaker(s) and a short description where appropriate. There is further information about the highlighted events at the start of the guide, and about research training events and calls for papers at the end. Please check our websites for the latest information or email SAS at sas.events@sas.ac.uk or Senate House Library at senatehouselibrary@london.ac.uk

Booking

Human rights

The majority of our events are free and open to the public, unless stated otherwise. Some events have limited capacity and advance booking is advisable. The event information in this brochure was correct at the time of going to press, but may be subject to change. Please check our websites for the latest information or email SAS at sas.events@sas.ac.uk or Senate House Library at senatehouselibrary@london.ac.uk

Politics

Mailing list

Classics History Philosophy culture, language & literature

Law Music Highlights Highlights Member institutes of the School Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Institute of Classical Studies Institute of Commonwealth Studies Institute of English Studies Institute of Historical Research Institute of Latin American Studies Institute of Modern Languages Research Institute of Philosophy The Warburg Institute

Sign up to our mailing lists to receive information on events of interest to you by emailing SAS at sas.events@sas.ac.uk or Senate House Library at senatehouselibrary@london.ac.uk

Event podcasts

Selected events are recorded and available to view, listen to, or download online at www.sas.ac.uk/events, on iTunes U, and on YouTube.

Blog

The School’s flagship blog, Talking Humanities, is a hub for comment and analysis of research, events, training and policy in the UK humanities and beyond. Written by academics from around the world, it provides a range of thought-provoking articles on subjects that matter to humanities researchers. Talking Humanities can be found at talkinghumanities.blogs.sas.ac.uk, and we would be very pleased to consider short articles from humanities researchers. Just contact us at sas.info@sas.ac.uk with your proposal. 03


Event highlights timeline February

March

Do social practices shape morality? Professor Joseph Raz, an Israeli legal, moral and political philosopher, is a prominent advocate of legal positivism and well known for his conception of perfectionist liberalism. This talk is part of a regular Institute of Philosophy seminar addressing practical, political, and ethical aspects of philosophy.

Jane Austen Society Study Day: Persuasion Dr Peter Sabor, professor of English and director of the Burney Centre at McGill University, will deliver the Brian Southam Memorial Lecture as part of this year’s Jane Austen Society Study Day. Professor Sabor will discuss how Austen’s use of portrait scenes illuminates the psychology of her characters.

Language, literacy, literature and the mind This one-day event sponsored by The Human Mind Project brings together leading academics to discuss the importance of literacy and story-telling in human culture.

Time: 17:30–19:30 Date: 9 February

Time: 09:00–16:30 Date: 13 February

Time: 09:30–17:30 Date: 9 March

See page 13 for event information

See page 14 for event information

Units of comparison: the paths of comparative literature and the rise of ‘world literature’ Galin Tihanov, George Steiner Professor of Comparative Literature, Queen Mary, University of London, discusses the changing prisms of comparative literature since the 18th century. He argues that by describing successive units of comparison, one can begin conceptualising the history and current predicaments of comparative literature as a discipline. Time: 17:30–19:30 Date: 11 February See page 13 for event information

See page 9 for event information

School of Advanced Study humanities open day This event will showcase the School’s vast array of resources, including postgraduate courses, research training, libraries, archives and digital tools. It will include tours of Senate House and will culminate with a sneak peek and talk on Senate House Library’s upcoming ‘Shakespeare: Metamorphosis’ exhibition. Time: 16:00–20:00 Date: 10 March See pages 6–7 for event information

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Event highlights

April

Britain and Brazil: political, economic, social, cultural and intellectual relations, 1808 to the present This two-day conference explores the past and present of Britain’s relationship with Brazil. Organised by Professor Leslie Bethell, Brazil Institute, King’s College London, and Alan Charlton, Robin Humphreys Fellow, Institute of Latin American Studies.

From Thucydides to Twitter: towards a history of the soundbite This conference explores the nature and history of the ‘soundbite’ as a feature of political rhetoric and other forms of communication in the classical and modern worlds. Participants will explore the history of the phenomenon, compare its ancient and modern manifestations in theory and practice, and highlight its advantages and disadvantages in the context of public debate.

Time: 10:00–17:30 Date: 10–11 March

Time: 09:30–18:00 Date: 22–23 April

Time: 15 March: 16:00 and 17:30; 17 March: 17:30 Date: 15 and 17 March See page 15 for event information

Deep decolonisation: Latin America and the connected histories of the postcolonial world This interdisciplinary conference will feature debate and dialogue among leading international scholars of decolonisation. Participants will present new research on the rarely recognised role of Latin America and the Caribbean as historical thresholds and vanguards of decolonisation, with particular emphasis on connections with Africa, Asia and Europe.

Gerald Aylmer Seminar 2016: the experience of the archive This seminar will focus on the critical questions that surround the individual, personal and community experience of the archive and the ways in which that experience affects how the archive is understood and used.

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

E H Gombrich Lecture Series on the Classical Tradition Professor Joseph Koerner, Victor S. Thomas Professor of the History of Art and Architecture, Northern Renaissance and Nineteenth Century at Harvard University, will deliver The Warburg Institute’s E H Gombrich Lecture Series on the Classical Tradition this year. His subject will be ‘The evidence of images: Hieronymus Bosch, Max Beckmann and William Kentridge’.

See page 12 for event information

Time: 10:00–17:00 Date: 29 April See page 12 for event information

www.sas.ac.uk

See page 10 for event information

Time: 10:00–17:30 Date: 17–18 March See page 11 for event information

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Event highlights School of Advanced Study humanities open day 10 March 2016

School of Advanced Study humanities open day 10 March 2016 This event will showcase the School’s vast array of resources, including information about postgraduate courses, research training, libraries, archives and digital tools. The day will include tours of Senate House and Senate House Library as well as talks on some of the biggest issues facing the humanities today. It will culminate with a sneak peek and talk on the Library’s upcoming ‘Shakespeare: Metamorphosis’ exhibition commemorating the 400th anniversary of the playwright’s death. For more information and to register for this free event, please visit bit.ly/SASopenday.

See pages 56 for event information

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Event Calls for highlights papers

As a student, you’ll benefit from the vibrant and collaborative research environment created by our nine institutes. You’ll study with leading specialists in your field, hone your research skills in our highly regarded training programmes, expand your knowledge through our extensive calendar of events, and become part of a worldwide network of humanities scholars. Our graduates are awarded a University of London degree. Funding opportunities include AHRC-sponsored London Arts and Humanities Partnership studentships, SAS studentships, and a number of subject-specific bursaries and awards offered by our institutes. The School offers nearly 30 full- and part-time postgraduate programmes (MA, MRes, LLM, MPhil, and PhD) in a wide range of humanities subjects. Master’s degrees • L LM in Advanced Legislative Studies, also offered via distance learning (Institute of Advanced Legal Studies) • L LM in International Corporate Governance, Financial Regulation and Economic Law (Institute of Advanced Legal Studies) • M A in Art History, Curatorship and Renaissance Culture (The Warburg Institute) • M A in Cultural and Intellectual History 1300–1650 (The Warburg Institute) • M A in Garden and Landscape History (Institute of Historical Research) • M A/MRes in Historical Research (Institute of Historical Research) • M A/MRes in the History of the Book (Institute of English Studies) • M A in Refugee Protection and Forced Migration Studies (Refugee Law Initiative)

• M A in Understanding and Securing Human Rights – Latin American Pathway (Institute of Latin American Studies) • M A in the Making of the Modern World (Institute of Commonwealth Studies) • M Res in Modern Languages (Institute of Modern Languages Research) Research degrees MPhil and PhD programmes are offered in a broad range of humanities subjects, including: • Art history • Classics • Commonwealth studies • English language and literature • History • Latin American studies • Law • Modern languages Short courses and summer schools • C ertificate in International Commercial Arbitration (Institute of Advanced Legal Studies) • E U Law Making, Legislation and Language (Institute of Advanced Legal Studies) • I nternational Protection of Refugees and Displaced Persons (Refugee Law Initiative, Human Rights Consortium) • T he London Palaeography Summer School (Institute of English Studies) • L ondon Rare Books School (Institute of English Studies) • O ral History Spring School (Institute of Historical Research) • P rofessional Legislative Drafting Course (Institute of Advanced Legal Studies) • T . S. Eliot International Summer School (Institute of English Studies) 07

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

The School is the UK’s national centre for the support and promotion of research in the humanities. Part of the University of London, located in the heart of Bloomsbury, the School provides an unrivalled scholarly community in which to pursue postgraduate study and research.

• M A in Understanding and Securing Human Rights (Institute of Commonwealth Studies)

www.sas.ac.uk

Why study with us?


Event highlights

Senate House Library: rise of the phoenix Charles Holden Lecture 1 March 2016

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In this lecture, Senate House Librarian Jackie Marfleet traces the history of the Library from its creation to the present day, and looks at the external factors influencing its growth. She will share a number of anecdotes regarding the development of the Library’s collections, and conclude with a discussion of the challenges and opportunities it now faces, as well as an outline of its ambitious plans for the future.

The Charles Holden Lecture is an annual event organised by the Friends of Senate House Library. Find out more about the Friends and how you can support Senate House Library at senatehouselibrary.ac.uk/ about-us/friends. See page 47 for event information


Event highlights

The afterlife of Apuleius?

See page 48 for event information

Language, literacy, literature and the mind 9 March 2016 This one-day event sponsored by The Human Mind Project brings together leading academics to discuss the importance of literacy and story-telling in human culture. The workshop will represent a range of approaches in the study of language across the human, social and natural sciences; it also aims to encourage an interdisciplinary discussion on issues such as the emergence and biological basis of both written and

spoken language, as well as the relationship between literature and cognition. Launched in December 2013, The Human Mind Project is an international effort to define the major intellectual challenges in understanding the nature and significance of the human mind. It is guided by a steering group from University College London and the universities of Durham, Oxford, Sussex and Cambridge, as well as SAS. See page 56 for event information

www.sas.ac.uk

Organised by The Warburg Institute and the Institute of Classical Studies, this two-day conference will investigate the legacy of Apuleius’ literary and rhetorical works, focusing on the ancient and early modern periods. Lectures will feature internationally renowned specialists in the fields of classics, Renaissance studies and comparative literature; a workshop will be devoted to discussions of Apuleianism in Renaissance rhetoric. Speakers include Florence Bistagne (Avignon), Carole Boidin (Paris Ouest), Igor Candido (Freie Universität Berlin), Robert Carver (Durham), Julia Gaisser (Bryn Mawr), Stephen Harrison (Oxford), Ahuvia Kahane (Royal Holloway), Andrew Laird (Warwick), Françoise Lavocat (Paris 3/Institut Universitaire de France), Raphaële Mouren (Warburg), Loreto Núñez (Lausanne) and Olivier Pédeflous (Paris).

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

3–4 March 2016

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Event highlights

Fifth London AngloSaxon symposium: Anglo-Scandinavian England 12 March 2016

Britain and Brazil: political, economic, social, cultural and intellectual relations, 1808 to the present 10–11 March 2016 This conference explores the past and present of Britain’s political, economic, cultural and intellectual relationship with Brazil. A wide range of subjects will be discussed, including: Britain and the independence of Brazil; British-Brazilian commercial and financial relations; British travellers in Brazil; Britain and Brazil’s wars in the Rio de la Plata, 10

1825–70; British social, cultural and intellectual influence in Brazil; Britain and the Brazilian navy; political, economic and cultural relations since the Second World War. Organised by Professor Leslie Bethell, Brazil Institute, King’s College London, and Alan Charlton, Robin Humphreys Fellow, Institute of Latin American Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London. See page 56 for event information

The London Anglo-Saxon Symposium provides a forum for the multidisciplinary discussion of Anglo-Saxon topics, bringing together internationally renowned experts and interested members of the public in a relaxed and engaging conversation. The 2016 symposium will focus on Anglo-Scandinavian England, including the presence of Scandinavians in England and the nature of Scandinavian influence on English practices. Speakers include Timothy Bolton (Bloomsbury Auctions), Alison Finlay (Birkbeck), Letty Ten Harkel (Oxford), Katrin Thier (Oxford English Dictionary), Richard North and Sara Pons-Sanz (Cardiff). See page 59 for event information


Event highlights

Work stories: documenting, narrating and representing the French workplace 15–16 April 2016

See page 63 for event information

Work has become a critical site for understanding broad changes in France’s society, culture and economy and their imprint on individual and collective life. At once localised and enclosed, the workplace is traversed by structural transformations at national and international levels. This conference brings together a wide range of disciplinary and critical perspectives from across social theory, politics, cultural studies, film, literature, philosophy, history, economics and psychology as it considers how work is documented, narrated and represented in cultural production, theoretical work and testimonial narratives. Keynote speakers include Christophe Dejours, professor of psychology at the Conservatoire National des Arts et des Métiers, and Thierry Beinstingel, novelist and author of CV (2007), Retour aux mots sauvages (2010) and Ils désertent (2012). See page 73 for event information

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www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

17–18 March 2016 This major interdisciplinary conference, led by the Institute of Latin American Studies and co-sponsored by the Centre for Postcolonial Studies, the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, and the Institute of Modern Languages Research, will feature debate and dialogue among leading international scholars of decolonisation. Papers will present new research on the rarely recognised role of Latin

America and the Caribbean as historical thresholds and vanguards of decolonisation, with particular emphasis on connections with Africa, Asia and Europe. The conference seeks to expand the horizons of postcolonial and decolonial studies by mapping the ways and means by which Latin American and Caribbean challenges to colonial rule were, and remain, critical to any deep historical understanding of our contemporary world. Keynote speakers include Frederick Cooper, Ricardo Salvatore and Barbara Weinstein.

www.sas.ac.uk

Deep decolonisation: Latin America and the connected histories of the postcolonial world


Event highlights

Gerald Aylmer Seminar 2016: the experience of the archive 29 April 2016

From Thucydides to Twitter: towards a history of the soundbite 22–23 April 2016 This conference aims to explore the nature and history of the ‘soundbite’ as a feature of political rhetoric and other forms of communication in the classical and modern worlds. It will bring together classical scholars, researchers in the fields of rhetoric, media and communication, and practising speechwriters, broadcasters and journalists, to explore the history of the phenomenon, compare its ancient and modern manifestations in theory and practice, and highlight its advantages and disadvantages in the context of public debate. Speakers include 12

Tom Clark (Melbourne), Michael Edwards (Roehampton), Bruce Gibson (Liverpool), Richard Hawley (Royal Holloway), Brian Jenner (UK Speechwriters Guild), Joshua Katz (Princeton), Asako Kurihara (Osaka), Christian Kock (Copenhagen), Simon Lancaster (Bespoke Speechwriting Services Ltd), Nigel Rees (BBC broadcaster and author), Peter Rhodes (Durham), Catherine Steel (Glasgow), Anne Ulrich (Tübingen) and Lisa S. Villadsen (Copenhagen). See page 75 for event information

This seminar will focus on the critical questions that surround the individual, personal and community experience of the archive and the ways in which that experience affects how the archive is understood and used. Following the keynote by Professor Carolyn Steedman (In the archive, hearing things: Lord Mansfield’s voices), the seminar will offer four thematic sessions in which speakers will address issues from multiple archival and scholarly perspectives. Other speakers include historian Filippo de Vivo and archivist Claudia Salmini, who have collaborated on the European Research Council-funded AR.C.H.I.ves project on early modern Italy. See page 78 for event information


Event highlights

Speaker highlights

Units of comparison: the paths of comparative literature and the rise of ‘world literature’ 11 February 2016

9 February 2016 Joseph Raz Professor of law, Columbia University Law School and a part-time professor at King’s College London Professor Joseph Raz, an Israeli legal, moral and political philosopher, is one of the most prominent advocates of legal positivism known for his conception of perfectionist liberalism. He has spent most of his career as a professor of philosophy of law at the University of Oxford associated with Balliol College, but is now professor of law at Columbia

University Law School, and a part-time professor at King’s College London. In 2005 he received the International Prize for Legal Research ‘Hector Fix-Zamudio’ from the National Autonomous University of Mexico, and in 2009 a VicePresidency Award from the Law Society of University College Dublin. See page 28 for event information

See page 31 for event information

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www.sas.ac.uk

Do social practices shape morality?

In his examination of the changing prisms of comparative literature since the 18th century, Professor Tihanov uses methodological nationalism as the starting point of his analysis. He will demonstrate that the discourse of comparative literature begins with attention to formations larger than national literatures, before dwelling on developments in the 20th century that have tended to emphasise supranational categories. Finally, he will address the question of the rise of ‘world literature’ as a response to the unresolved issue of the underlying unit of comparison. By describing successive units of comparison, one can commence the process of conceptualising the history and current predicaments of comparative literature as a discipline.

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Galin Tihanov George Steiner Professor of Comparative Literature, Queen Mary, University of London


Speaker highlights

Jane Austen Society Study Day: Persuasion 13 February 2016 Peter Sabor Past president of the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada Dr Peter Sabor, professor of English, Canada Research Chair and director of the Burney Centre at McGill University, Montreal, will deliver the Brian Southam Memorial Lecture as part of this year’s Annual Jane Austen Society Study Day. Dr Sabor, who is the editor of Jane Austen’s Juvenilia in the Cambridge Edition of the Works of Jane Austen, will focus on the author’s usage of portrait scenes to throw light on the psychology of her characters. The study day will explore Jane Austen’s last completed novel, published shortly after her death, and also look at its historical and literary background, its structure and the protagonist’s evolution throughout. See page 33 for event information

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Surveillance and civil Grotte Scalina: a liberties new monumental Etruscan tomb near 8 March 2016 Kirsty Brimelow QC Viterbo Barrister, Doughty Street Chambers and chairwoman of the Bar Human Rights Committee of England and Wales

Kirsty Brimelow, an expert in public and criminal international, constitutional and human rights law, is instructed in overseas jurisdictions by governments and private clients. In 2014, she successfully judicially reviewed a decision by the DPP that Prince Nasser bin Hamad Al Khalifa was protected from prosecution for alleged torture by state immunity. She represented Amnesty International in its complaint that the data collection programmes Prism, Upstream and Tempora were in breach of Articles 8, 10 and 14 of the European Convention on Human Rights. Since 2007 she has ranked in the Times top 100 lawyers and has been named by The Guardian as one of the ‘stars’ in the Queen’s Counsel list. See page 54 for event information

Rome-London Lecture in association with the British School at Rome 9 March 2016 Vincent Jolivet Research director, French National Centre for Scientific Research After a PhD at the Paris IV University, dedicated to the Etruscan red-figured ceramic in the Musée du Louvre, Vincent Jolivet became a member of the École française de Rome. He was then appointed researcher at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, where he is currently research director. He has excavated in Syria and Turkey, and has directed two long-term excavations in Italy. Vincent Jolivet is particularly interested in topography and material culture, especially for the hellenistic period. Since 2011, he has directed the excavation of the Etruscan rockcut tomb of Grotte Scalina. See page 55 for event information


Speaker highlights

Professor Joseph Koerner, who wrote and presented the three-part series Northern Renaissance and the featurelength documentary ‘Vienna: city of dreams’ for the BBC, will give three lectures on ‘The evidence of images: Hieronymus Bosch, Max Beckmann and William Kentridge’. His books include Caspar David Friedrich and the Subject of Landscape, The Moment of Self-Portraiture in German Renaissance Art, The Reformation of the Image, Dürer’s Hands, and the forthcoming Bosch and Bruegel: From Enemy Painting to Everyday Life. Currently he is working on a documentary film that explores homemaking in Vienna from its emergence as a major metropolis around 1900 until Hitler’s annexation of Austria in 1938. See pages 60, 61, 64 for event information

Thyra Alleyne Memorial Lecture 14 April 2016 Rachel Sieder Senior research professor, Center for Research and Graduate Studies in Social Anthropology, Mexico City, associate senior researcher at the Chr. Michelsen Institute, Norway, and associate fellow at the Institute for the Study of the Americas, University of London Dr Rachel Sieder’s research interests straddle anthropology, comparative politics and law, with a current focus on indigenous social movements’ encounters with the law, violence and the state in Latin America. She has written on indigenous rights and forms of self-governance, and on indigenous women’s uses of law in contexts of legal pluralism.

29 April 2016 Carolyn Steedman Emeritus Professor, University of Warwick Carolyn Steedman is Emeritus Professor in the University of Warwick’s history department. Prior to retiring two years ago, her research has focused on English social and cultural history of the 18th and 19th centuries, particularly on categories such as ‘law’ and ‘labour’ in the making of selfhood and identity. A prolific author, Professor Steedman has published a number of books. They include Policing the Victorian Community, Labours Lost: Domestic Service and the Making of Modern England, An Everyday Life of the English Working Class: Work, Self, and Sociability in the Early Nineteenth Century and After the Archive. See page 78 for event information

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Architecture, Northern Renaissance and 19th Century, Harvard University

Gerald Aylmer Seminar 2016: the experience of the archive

www.sas.ac.uk

E H Gombrich Legal pluralities Lecture Series on the and fragmented Classical Tradition sovereignties: reflections on law, 15 and 17 March 2016 Joseph Koerner illegality and the state Victor S. Thomas Professor in Latin America of the History of Art and

See page 72 for event information

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Senate House Library Since its founding, Senate House Library has amassed numerous artefacts to support teaching, to record the history of the University of London, to honour their original owners or simply as curiosities. Amongst the Library’s millions of printed volumes and archival papers, the significance of these objects is often unclear or contentious. An eclectic selection of works of art, ancient writing, hair samples, and medals and coins make the Library a secular reliquary and private museum as well as a centre of learning. This exhibition showcases some of the Library’s most remarkable objects and encourages viewers to reflect on their lasting meaning. The exhibition is free and no registration is required. Please contact Richard Espley with enquiries at richard.espley@london.ac.uk.

15 April–17 September 2016 Senate House Senate House Library presents ‘Shakespeare: Metamorphosis’, an exciting new exhibition and season of events that commemorate the 400th anniversary of the Bard’s death. Drawing on some of the strongest Shakespearean holdings in the country, the exhibition will explore texts, scholarship, and identity over four centuries — from the original sources behind the plays to the process by which the folios were created and amended, as well as the myriad ways in which Shakespearean texts have been translated and appropriated. Lectures, talks and symposia will feature leading scholars and address such topics as ‘cultural appropriation’, ‘Shakespeare’s identity’ and ‘The Victorian Shakespeare’. A full calendar of events will be published on the Library’s website (www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk). Please contact Nick Barratt with enquiries at nick.barratt@london.ac.uk.

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

18 January–1 April 2016

Shakespeare: Metamorphosis

www.sas.ac.uk

Not with Words but with Things: Objects and Their Meaning in an Academic Library

Exhibitions

Exhibitions

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Events calendar

Events calendar February Subject area key Classics History Philosophy culture, language & literature Human rights Politics Law Music Highlights

www.sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Highlights

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Events calendar February Monday 01 Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 10:00–12:00 Room 246

Thinking being

Warburg Institute Seminar 14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute

Arabic philosophy reading class

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 IALS

What’s new in the EU: a round-up of developments in European criminal law during 2015

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 243

Temporality and genre in early Greek literature

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 349

The economic strategies of Plautus

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Olga Crisp Room, 102, North Block

Consumption in mandate Palestine

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

The last lynching: miscegenation and racial violence in Virginia

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Transforming the radical right in France and North Africa: gender, race and religion in the Croix de Feu and Parti Social Français, 1927–45

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Registration required Fee applicable johan.siebers@sas.ac.uk

Participants should have a basic reading knowledge of Arabic | Registration required Free charles.burnett@sas.ac.uk

U,P

U,P

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Professor John Spencer QC | Organised with the European Criminal Law Association (UK) | Registration required Free belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk Barbara Sattler (St Andrews) | ICS ancient philosophy seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Matthew Fox (Glasgow) | ICS ancient literature seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Hizky Shoham (Bar Ilan University) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

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Nicola Price (Royal Holloway) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Caroline Campbell (North Dakota) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

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Events calendar

Events calendar February Tuesday 02 Warburg Institute Seminar 13:00–14:15 Warburg Institute

From devilry to divinity: readings in the Divina Commedia

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Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 243

After Beirut

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Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:00 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Art for art’s sake? Commemorating the ‘War at Sea’, 1914–45

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Jordan’s Arab legion and the 1948–9 Arab–Israeli War: an operational assessment

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Room 246

Political meetings mapper with British Library mabs: mapping the origins of British democratic movements with text-mining, NLP, geo-parsing and crowdsourcing

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

Who was then the ‘second patriarch’? Gendering the eldest brother in Georgian England

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

Medieval manuscripts seminar

Warburg Institute Seminar 17:30–19:00 Warburg Institute

Marsilio Ficino’s De amore

Alessandro Scafi (Warburg Institute), John Took (UCL) | Registration required £80 standard | £50 concessions | Free for Warburg/UCL warburg@sas.ac.uk Claire Launchbury (IMLR/IHR) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

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Christine Riding (Royal Museums, Greenwich) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

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Matthew Hughes (Brunel) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

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Katrina Navickas (Herfordshire) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Chair: Tim Reinke-Williams | Speaker: Tul Israngura (Chulalongkorn) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Guido Giglioni (Warburg Institute), Dilwyn Knox (UCL) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

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www.sas.ac.uk

Richard Sharpe (Wadham College, Oxford) Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

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Events calendar February Institute of English Studies Institute of Historical Research | Warburg Institute Seminar 17:30–19:30 Warburg Institute

The library of Cardinal Richelieu: an ongoing study of his manuscripts

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 243

Logic, epistemology and metaphysics seminar

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:45–19:45 Room 304

The May Day rooms

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 North Block

War short of war: the United States and political warfare at the outset of Cold War

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François Bougard (Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes, CNRS, Paris) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Thomas Crowther (Warwick) Free corine.besson@sas.ac.uk

Iain Boal, Riley Linebaugh (May Day Rooms) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

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Kaeten Mistry (East Anglia) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Wednesday 03 Institute of Historical Research Seminar 12:45–14:00 TBC

Bludgeoned into accepting what is good for us: fear, risk, fluoridation and the home in post-war Britain

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Cultures of settlement, 1660–1780

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–17:30 John S Cohen Room, 203, North Block

The city as phoenix: ruination and recovery in 20th-century Tokyo

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room G37

London Old and Middle English research seminar

22

H

Glen O’Hara (Oxford Brookes) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Naomi Tadmor (Lancaster) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

H

Mark Pendleton (Sheffield) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U


Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Olga Crisp Room, 102, North Block

Judenexerzieren: the role of ‘sport’ for constructions of race, body and gender in the early concentration camps, 1933–4

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

The colonial home in sub-Saharan Africa: an entangled history

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Trust me, I’m a doctor: shaping medical identity in early medieval charters, AD 800–1000

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 234

The Centre for Integrated Caribbean Research (CICR) Caribbean regional seminar

Warburg Institute Research training 17:30–19:30 Warburg Institute

Plotinus study group

Warburg Institute Lecture 17:30–19:30 Warburg Institute

The host, the world and the sign of God: ‘Maiestas Domini’ from the 9th to the 13th centuries

Events calendar

Events calendar February H

Kim Wünschmann (Sussex) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Britta Schilling (Utrecht) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Luca Larpi (Manchester) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U,O

Maria Kaladeen (Visiting Fellow, ICWS) Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

U

U,H

François Bougard (Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes, CNRS, Paris) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 04 School of Advanced Study Research training 14:00–16:00 Room G34

Conducting interviews: oral history

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–19:00 Room 349

From the city’s second foundation to the creation of the West-Pontic Koinon: the Gerousia of Istros revisited

Sue Onslow (ICWS) | Registration required Fee applicable kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

H

C,H

www.sas.ac.uk

Valentin Bottez (Bucharest) | ICS ancient history seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Harold Tarrant, Dilwyn Knox, Guido Giglioni Free georgiostsagdis@outlook.com

23


Events calendar February Warburg Institute Seminar 17:00–18:30 Warburg Institute

Construction and reconstruction: investigating how portolan maps were produced by reproducing a 15th-century chart of the Mediterranean

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 234

The German enlightenment in philosophy and literature: ideas, aporias, legacy

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room II, North Block

European court and state manufactures in the early modern period: the Italian model

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 TBC

It sends its bloodhounds everywhere: the evolution of the CIA’s lethal drone programme

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 243

Movement control and military adaptation in late colonial South Asia

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 304

The past in print: history and the print media in early 19th-century English architectural topography

Human Rights Consortium Seminar 18:00–19:30 IALS

Solidarity or self-interest? The EU’s common asylum policy between politics, law and desperation

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Wolfson Room I, North Block

What is a native?

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G34

LAGLOBAL seminar @ ILAS

24

U

Kevin Sheehan (Durham) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U,P

Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

H

Luca Mol (European University Institute) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Christopher Fuller (Southampton) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Michael Charney (SOAS) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H,P

Stephen Bann (Bristol) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

R

Madeline Garlick (Radboud, Nijmegen) | Registration required Free hrc@sas.ac.uk Panel discussion Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra (University of Texas at Austin/Leverhulme Visiting Professor, ILAS) Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

H

H


Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:30–20:30 Room 104

London theatre seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Events calendar

Events calendar February U

Friday 05 Warburg Institute Research training 13:00–14:15 Warburg Institute

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 14:30–16:00 Room 243

The late success of early Hellenism: some observations based on the pottery from Priene

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 246

‘They dig up from the bowels of the earth hoards buried in time of war’ (Sil. Ital., Punica II.606–607): storage pits in NE Iberia, from hilltop oppida to the Roman domination (ca. 225 BC to AD 50)

U,P

Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

C

Lars Heinze | ICS early career seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

C

Mateo González-Vázquez (Barcelona) | ICS postgraduate work-in-progress seminar Free postgradwip@gmail.com Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 John S Cohen Room, 203, North Block

Women and work in provincial English towns: 1851–1911

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Jack of Hilton: the strange history of a medieval hearth blower

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Landscapes of non-capitalism: historicising the distinctiveness of Soviet architecture

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 102

The Charles Peake Ulysses seminar

H

H

Anthony Gross Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U,H

Owen Hatherley Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U

www.sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Amanda Wilkinson (Essex) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

25


Events calendar February Saturday 06 Institute of English Studies Seminar 11:00–13:00 Room 349

London modernism seminar

Institute of English Studies Seminar 14:00–16:00 Room 246

EMPHASIS (early modern philosophy and the scientific imagination) seminar

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 14:00–18:00 Room 243

Friends of Italian Studies reading group: ‘Gruppo scrittura creativa’

Dirk Van Hulle (Antwerp): ‘Sheherazade’s notebook: archival modernism and the enactment of enactive cognition’ | Dennis Duncan (Jesus College, Oxford): ‘Sally Hero: Joyce, Raymond Queneau and Sally Mara’ Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U

U

Joe Moshenska (CRASSH, University of Cambridge): ‘Kenelm Digby’s eggs’ | Harry Pearse (King’s College, Cambridge): ‘Locke’s disciplinary boundaries: natural theology, biblical faith and probable philosophy’ Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U

A space for aspiring writers in Italian to meet Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Monday 08 Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 10:00–12:00 Room 246

Thinking being

Warburg Institute Research training 14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute

Arabic philosophy reading class

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:00–17:00 Room 349

The most democratic play of all time? Revisiting Aristophanes’ Knights

C

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:15–19:00 The Senate Room

London Shakespeare seminar

U

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Gendering the poetry of the anti-Frankish Jihad

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Postgraduate forum

26

Registration required Fee applicable johan.siebers@sas.ac.uk

Participants should have a basic reading knowledge of Arabic | Registration required Free charles.burnett@sas.ac.uk

U,P

U,P

Edith Hall (King’s, London) | ICS ancient literature seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk Marjorie Garber (Harvard) Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Osman Latiff (Royal Holloway) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Aislinn Muller (Cambridge): ‘Transmitting the excommunication of Elizabeth I: distribution, communication and awareness of “Regnans in Excelsis”’ Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

H


Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Past & Present Room, 202, North Block

Women as rulers, royals and affines: a global comparison

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Room 243

Ephebic iconography in late Roman art: the case of Endymion and Jonah

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 304

The politics of public space in 19th-century England

Events calendar

Events calendar February H

Jeroen Duindam (Leiden) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

C,U

Nicoletta Bonansea (Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, Rome) | Roman art seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

H

Katrina Navickas Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Tuesday 09 Warburg Institute Seminar 13:00–14:15 Warburg Institute

From devilry to divinity: readings in the Divina Commedia

U

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 349

Pots, past, present and future: translating the Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum

C

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 TBC

Points de re-père: paternal hauntings in Marie Nimier’s works

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room I, North Block

From the winds of the Bay of Bengal: knowledge, empire and self

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Room 304

Such obscene language and practices, as no woman ought to witness: vice and moral reform in 18th-century St Clement Danes

Warburg Institute Seminar 17:30–19:00 Warburg Institute

Marsilio Ficino’s De amore

Alessandro Scafi (Warburg Institute), John Took (UCL) | Registration required £80 standard | £50 concessions | Free for Warburg/UCL warburg@sas.ac.uk

Lucy Shipley (Southampton) | ICS classical archaeology seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

H

Sujit Sivasundaram (Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Francis Calvert Boorman Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Guido Giglioni (Warburg Institute), Dilwyn Knox (UCL) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U 27

www.sas.ac.uk

Adina Stroia (King’s, London) Free dominic.glynn@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

U


Events calendar February Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

(Trans)nationalism: migrant and diasporic radicalism in early Cold War Latin America

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 TBC

Meretricious musick and tossing of tennis balles: why did the Puritans find it so hard to argue their case at Hampton Court in 1604?

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Past & Present Room, 202, North Block

The most improbable Diocese of the Anglican Communion: mission, church and revolution in Lebombo, Mozambique, 1961–76

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room G34

Do social practices shape morality?

Human Rights Consortium Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 234

The making of the modern world: surveillance and student activism

R

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 IALS

The future of the World Trade Organization: overcoming challenges to avoid demise

L

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G37

Collecting Wilde: inspiring a new generation of collectors

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 246

Life writings and sexual sciences: writing the queer self in early 20th-century Germany and Austria

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 102

Tales of commerce and imagination: literary and cinematic contributions to the department store debate in the early 20th century

28

H

Bill Booth (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Mark Byford (London) | Joint meeting with the Friends of Lambeth Palace Library Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

John Stuart (Kingston) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Joseph Raz (King’s, London) | The practical, the political, the ethical philosophy seminar Free ip@sas.ac.uk

PS

Free hrc@sas.ac.uk

Nikolaos Theodorakis (Oxford/IALS) | Registration required Free belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk

U

Kayleigh Betterton | Book collecting seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

H

Tommy Dickinson (Manchester) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Geoffrey Crossick (London), Detlef Briesen (Giessen) | Registration required Fee applicable jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

U


Institute of Historical Research Seminar 19:00–20:30 Wolfson Room I, North Block

‘In extremo Europae’: the Genoese colonies in Crimea before and after 1453

Events calendar

Events calendar February H

Serena Ferente (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Wednesday 10 Institute of Philosophy Seminar 16:00–18:00 Room 243

Inner envisioning in literary reading: challenges in Rilke and Kafka

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 King’s College London, WC2B 6NR

John Christie, John Maynard Keynes and the National Council of Music, 1938–44

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–18:30 Pollard Room, N301, North Block

Re-staging Mafeking in Muswell Hill: patriotism, imperialism, militarism and philanthropy in London’s Boer War carnivals

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:00 Room G22

Thomas More’s Utopia and the politics of civic panegyric

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Olga Crisp Room, 102, North Block

‘This is your hour’: crisis, cultural renewal and a Christian intellectual circle in Britain, 1937–49

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 103

On a contrary trend in James Strachey’s thinking about metapsychology

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

The Komnenian emperors: a Latinophile dynasty?

P

Jennifer Gosetti-Ferenci (Fordham) | London aesthetics forum Free ip@sas.ac.uk

H

Howard Webber (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H,U

Dion Georgiou (Queen Mary) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

O,H

Richard Serjeantson (Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

John C. Wood (Leibniz Institute of European History, Mainz) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Dee McQuillan (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

www.sas.ac.uk

Alex Rodriguez Suarez (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

H

29


Events calendar February Warburg Institute Lecture 17:30–19:30 Warburg Institute

Dürer and the aesthetics of ‘non-art’ images

Warburg Institute Research training 17:30–19:30 Warburg Institute

Plotinus study group

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–19:30 Wolfson Conference Suite, North Block

History now and then: pictures of the past

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 234

Andean studies seminar

Alexander Marr (Cambridge) | Bilderfahrzeuge project lecture Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Harold Tarrant, Dilwyn Knox, Guido Giglioni Free georgiostsagdis@outlook.com

Vic Gatrell, Simon Goldhill, Marion Kant, Simon Shaw-Miller | Seminar followed by refreshments in the IHR common room | Registration required £5 per session | £25 for all 6 sessions | Free for Friends of the IHR ihr.events@sas.ac.uk

Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra (University of Texas at Austin/Leverhulme Visiting Professor, ILAS), Mark Thurner (ILAS) Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

U

U

H

O

Thursday 11 School of Advanced Study Research training 14:00–16:00 Room G34

Using social media

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–19:00 The Court Room

The foundation of Olbia Portica: new evidence on the Greek colonisation of the North-Western Black Sea Littoral

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 246

CenSes seminar

P

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Pollard Room, N301, North Block

When is a skimmington not a skimmington? The shaming of the vicar of Waterbeach, 1602

H

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Insolita sed grata: making time musical, 1321–c.1500

30

Matt Phillpott (SAS-Space Manager/SAS Digital Project Officer) Fee applicable kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

C,H

Alla Buyskikh (Kiev) | ICS ancient history seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk Free ip@sas.ac.uk

Brian Weiser (Metropolitan State College of Denver) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Matthew Champion (St Catz, Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H


Events calendar

Events calendar February Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 304

Reading Persian in Britain and India, 1790–1810

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Past & Present Room, 202, North Block

Starlings of the screen: media celebrity, consumer culture and ‘star search’ contests in 1920s Britain

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 234

Extractive agenda versus environmentalism: mobilising indigeneity and conservation for the Isiboro secure indigenous territory and National Park (Tipnis), Bolivia

Institute of Modern Languages Research Lecture 17:30–19:30 Room 243

Units of comparison: the paths of comparative literature and the rise of ‘world literature’

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 19:00–20:30 Institut Français

Le Condottière (Georges Perec)

U

Institute of Modern Languages Research 1-day workshop 10:00–17:00 Room 349

Researching multilingually: possibilities and complexities

U

Warburg Institute Colloquium 10:30–17:30 Warburg Institute

French renaissance narrative: soundings and explorations

Warburg Institute Research training 13:00–14:15 Warburg Institute

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

Zahra Shah Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

H

Chris O’Rourke (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

O

Jessica Hope (Cambridge) | Latin American anthropology seminar Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

US

Galin Tihanov (Queen Mary) Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Dominic Glynn (IMLR) | Part of a new bilingual reading group focusing on testing translations Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

U

Pollie Bromilow (Liverpool), Emmanuelle Lacore-Martin (Edinburgh), Thibaut Maus de Roley (London), Pascale Mounier (Caen), Jenny Oliver (Oxford), Jonathan Patterson (Oxford) | Registration required £25 standard | £12.50 concessions warburg@sas.ac.uk

U,P

Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

31

www.sas.ac.uk

Registration required Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Friday 12


Events calendar February Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 246

Exploring phasma: a cultural and semiotic analysis of one aspect of the uncanny in ancient Greece

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:00–20:00 Room 234

How to remember in Gaelic: the poetry of Sorley MacLean

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Room 304

Credibility or necessity? Supply and demandbased interpretations of the creation (or not) of long-term public debts in the middle ages

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Designing markets for gambling in the 15th- and 16th-century Low Countries: the case of lotteries

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Preventing the plague: an early example of English quarantine measures at St. George’s, Windsor Castle

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G37

Ezra Pound Cantos reading group: Canto XX

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 104

Irish studies seminar

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 243

Waiting time: slow modernism and the embodied mind

32

C

Flaminia Beneventano della Corte (Siena) | ICS postgraduate work-in-progress seminar Free postgradwip@gmail.com

U

Máire Ní Annracháin (University College Dublin) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

H

Tony Moore (Reading) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Jeroen Puttevils (Antwerp) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Euan Roger (Royal Holloway) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Annabel Haynes (Durham) Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Eugenio Biagini (Cambridge) Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Laura Salisbury (Exeter) | The London Beckett seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U

U

U


Events calendar

Events calendar February Saturday 13 Institute of English Studies 1-day conference 09:30–17:00 Institute of English Studies (TBC)

Jane Austen Society Study Day: Persuasion

Institute of Modern Languages Research Research training 11:00–17:00 Room 243

IMLR research training: visual languages

Linda Bree (Cambridge University Press), Hazel Jones (Jane Austen Society), Peter Sabor, McGill), Maggie Lane (Jane Austen Society) | www.ies.sas.ac.uk/ persuasion | Registration required £35 standard | £25 JAS members/unwaged | £15 students iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Carla Mereu-Keating (IMLR), Theresa Mikuria (West London), Ben Thomas (Kent), Dominic Glynn (IMLR) | Registration required Fee applicable kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

US

U

Monday 15 Institute of Classical Studies 3-day conference 10:00–18:45 Room G37

10th London ancient science conference

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 10:00–12:00 Room 246

Thinking being

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 243

Lucretius’ reception of Plato’s metaphors for the body and soul

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:00–19:30 Room 234

Francophone metronomes: worldwide women’s writing in Paris

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Room 246

Open University book history and bibliography research seminar

U

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

The return of Alsace to France in 1918

H

Free andrew.gregory@ucl.ac.uk

Registration required Fee applicable johan.siebers@sas.ac.uk

C

U,P

C,P

Matthew Johncock (Wellington College) | ICS ancient philosophy seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Alison Rice (Notre Dame) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Alison Carrol (Brunel) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

U

33


Events calendar February Tuesday 16 Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:00 Wolfson Room I, North Block

A most active, enterprising officer: Captain John Perkins, the Royal Navy and the boundaries of slavery and liberty in the Caribbean

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Crown Prince Rupprecht and the German Army on the Western Front, 1914–18

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

Seminar title TBC

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 243

Logic, epistemology and metaphysics seminar

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 North Block

Anglo-American relations in the Kennedy Era

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 243

Nautical language: Conrad’s flying Moors and crimson barometers

H

Douglas Hamilton (Winchester) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Jonathan Boff (Birmingham) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Chris Millard Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Helen Beebee (Manchester) Free corine.besson@sas.ac.uk

Toshi Aono (LSE) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

P

H

U

Robert Hampson (Royal Holloway) | LINKS comparative studies seminar Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Wednesday 17 School of Advanced Study Seminar 13:00–14:00 Room 243

Social Scholar: digital visualisation and mapping communities of practice

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 15:30–18:00 Room G22/26

Digital Nestor: Aegean scripts in the 21st century

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room I, North Block

The Jacobites in 1715: reconsidering the Battle of Preston

34

U

Martin Zaltz Austwick Free matt.phillpott@sas.ac.uk Dimitri Nakassis (Toronto) | ICS Mycenaean series Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Jonathan Oates (London Borough of Ealing Archives), Ralph Thompson (National Archives): ‘The Jacobites and international intrigue, 1708–59’ Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

C

H


Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Does the study of Byzantium before 1200 have anything to gain from global history?

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

German Protestant nationalism during the Second World War

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 John S Cohen Room, 203, North Block

‘Only a local affair’? Local identities and communities in London’s Boer War Carnivals of 1900

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 243

The Centre for Integrated Caribbean Research (CICR) Caribbean regional seminar

Warburg Institute Research training 17:30–19:30 Warburg Institute

Plotinus study group

Human Rights Consortium Human rights film festival 17:30–21:00 Room 349

Justice in action: a series of human rights films: The True Cost

Events calendar

Events calendar February H

Catherine Holmes (Oxford) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Thomas Brodie (Oxford) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Dion Giorgiou (Queen Mary) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U,O

Rosemarijn Hofte (KITLV/Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies) Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk Harold Tarrant, Dilwyn Knox, Guido Giglioni Free georgiostsagdis@outlook.com

U

R,L

Institute of Philosophy 2-day conference 09:00–19:00 Room 349

The 3rd iCog conference: sense and space

School of Advanced Study Research training 14:00–16:00 Room G34

Teaching skills for the PhD student

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 234

The German enlightenment in philosophy and literature: ideas, aporias, legacy

Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

P

Richard Freeman (Institute of Education) | Registration required Fee applicable kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

U,P

Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

35

www.sas.ac.uk

Thursday 18

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Showing of ‘The True Cost’ with Q&A panel | See also 27 April Free hrc@sas.ac.uk


Events calendar February Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Some further light on Benjamin Kohl’s account of the fall of the Carrara

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 243

Endorsed by western privilege: modelling imperial power in Western Indian Ocean commerce

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 304

Is there such a thing as the history of science outside the history of science?

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 TBC

Syndicates, chains and the nationalising of US newspapers, 1880–1930

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 104

Title TBC

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Past & Present Room, 202, North Block

The affective economy of social relations in early modern England

Institute of Modern Languages Research Research training 18:00–19:30 Room 246

IMLR graduate forum

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 IALS

Non-judicial remedies in the EU system of protection of rights

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 104

Media history seminar

36

H

John Law (Swansea) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Rebecca Darley (Birkbeck) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H,P

Jamie Melrose (Bristol) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Julia Guarneri (Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Laura Marcus (Oxford) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

U,H

Hillary Taylor (Yale) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Arabella Hobbs (UPenn): ‘Calvary or catastrophe? Reinterpreting French Catholicism and the First World War’ | Katie Cattell (Royal Holloway): ‘Heidegger and Adorno: a philosophical interpretation of Franz Schubert’s “Winterreise”’ Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

U

L

Paola Chirulli (Sapienza University of Rome/IALS Visiting Fellow) | Registration required Free belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk Laura Marcus Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U,H


Events calendar

Events calendar February Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Wolfson Room I, North Block

The tuberose: the history of its arrival in Europe

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G34

LAGLOBAL seminar @ ILAS

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:30–20:30 Room G35

London theatre seminar

U

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 16:00–18:00 Room 234

How to create a celebrity translator

U

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 243

Denouncement, slander, imperial harangue and the decline of oratory in Roman Empire: power, rhetoric and oratory in the work of Tacitus’

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 John S Cohen Room, 203, North Block

Battered but not broken: women’s resistance to marital violence in post-independence Ireland, 1922–70

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–20:00 Room 246

Pride of place: England’s LGBTQ heritage

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Capitalism, colonialism & silver: Harun Farocki, The Silver & the Cross (17 mins)

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Reflections on a Roman rubbish dump: medieval perceptions of Monte Testaccio

Sally Jeffrey, Catherine Davis (independent scholars) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Lina del Castillo (University of Texas at Austin/Visiting Research Fellow, SAS/ ILAS) Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

H

H,O

Friday 19 Motoko Akashi (East Anglia) | Part of a new seminar series on advances in translation research Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

C

Juan Carlos Barrasús (Madrid) | ICS postgraduate work-in-progress seminar Free postgradwip@gmail.com

Cara Diver (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Rosie Sherrington (Historic England), Alison Oram (Leeds Beckett), Justin Bengry (Birkbeck/Leeds Beckett) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

U

Lucy Donkin (Bristol) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk

Kodwo Eshun (Goldsmiths), Juan Grigera (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

H

37


Events calendar February Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 18:00–19:00 IALS

A fine sauce of wormwood and aloes: philosophy and common law crimes in Enlightenment Scotland

Human Rights Consortium Other events 18:00–19:30 The Senate Room

Book launch: seeking asylum in the European Union

L

Chloe Kennedy (Edinburgh) Free belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk

R

Céline Bauloz, Meltem Ineli-Ciger, Sarah Singer, Vladislava Stoyanova Registration required Free hrc@sas.ac.uk

Saturday 20 Institute of Classical Studies 1-day workshop 10:00–17:30 Room G35

Cognitive approaches to classical literature

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 11:00–16:00 Room 243

Catching up with memory studies

Free felix.budelmann@magd.ox.ac.uk

Centre for the Study of Cultural Memory seminar Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

C

U,H

Monday 22 Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 10:00–12:00 Room 246

Thinking being

Warburg Institute Research training 14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute

Arabic philosophy reading class

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 349

Eudocia’s ‘Martyrdom of St Cyprian’: between Pagan vision and Christian voice

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room II, North Block

From ‘abandoned place’ to ‘vision of peace’: representations of Jerusalem in troubadour lyric, 1150–1300

38

Registration required Fee applicable johan.siebers@sas.ac.uk

Participants should have a basic reading knowledge of Arabic | Registration required Free charles.burnett@sas.ac.uk

U,P

U,P

C

Pavlos Avlamis (King’s, London) | ICS ancient literature seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Lauren Mulholland (Queen Mary) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H


Events calendar

Events calendar February Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Star Chamber Elizabeth: some early results from the listing project

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Past & Present Room, 202, North Block

Time, history and memory in later Lutheran culture

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Room 243

The ‘Horti’ of ancient Rome: new research

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Room G35

Open University book history and bibliography research seminar

U

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 304

Paris at war, 1939–44

H

H

Helen Good (Hull) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Kat Hill (East Anglia) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Chrystina Häuber (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München) | Roman art seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

C

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

David Drake Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

From devilry to divinity: readings in the Divina Commedia

U

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 15:00–16:30 Room 304

On the uses and abuses of the East India Company’s history for life

H

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 246

Politics of controversy: theatre, power and society in 17th-century France

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Room 304

Contrasting communities: open and closed parishes revisited

Alessandro Scafi (Warburg Institute), John Took (UCL) | Registration required £80 standard | £50 concessions | Free for Warburg/UCL warburg@sas.ac.uk

Philip Stern (Duke) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U

Clotilde Thoret (Paris-Sorbonne) | French theatre seminar | Registration required Free dominic.glynn@sas.ac.uk

H

Kate Tiller (Oxfordshire Victoria Country History Trust) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

39

www.sas.ac.uk

Warburg Institute Seminar 13:00–14:15 Warburg Institute

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Tuesday 23


Events calendar February Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Laud and Scotland

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Piratical states: British imperialism in the Indian Ocean world

Warburg Institute Seminar 17:30–19:00 Warburg Institute

Marsilio Ficino’s De amore

U

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

New considerations behind the fiscal failure of the first Mexican Republic, 1824–37

H

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 243

In search for the facts: justice, feasibility requirements and social science as it is

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 19:00–20:30 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Summary justice in a church: the murder of Laurence Duket at St Mary-le-Bow in 1284

Leonie James (Kent) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

H

Simon Layton (Queen Mary) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Guido Giglioni (Warburg Institute), Dilwyn Knox (UCL) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Luis Jauregui (Instituto Mora, Mexico) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

P,O

Emily McTernan (UCL) | The practical, the political, the ethical aspects of philosophy seminar Free ip@sas.ac.uk

H

Kenneth Duggan (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Wednesday 24 Institute of Philosophy Seminar 16:00–18:00 Room 243

London aesthetics forum: truth and beauty: aesthetic normativity in the Kantian tradition

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 King’s College London, WC2B 6NR

Women, work and selfhood in postwar Britain

40

P

Ingvild Torsen (Oslo) Free ip@sas.ac.uk Eve Worth (Oxford) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H


Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–18:30 Pollard Room, N301, North Block

Exploring the trenches: ethnographic encounters with tourists on the Western Front battlefields

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:00 Wolfson Room I, North Block

John of Salisbury: literal historia, the ‘presentness’ of the past, and the logical method of the historian reconstructing timeless probable truths

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Olga Crisp Room, 102, North Block

Henry Hart Milman’s history of Latin Christianity

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room G37

Ideology and the death drive in the art of Adrian

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 304

Red lights on the Black Sea: the traffic in women and the production of Imperial Russia’s southern border

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 102

Andean studies seminar

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–21:00 Room G35

Contemporary innovative poetry research seminar

Events calendar

Events calendar February H

Jennifer Iles (Roehampton) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Janet Coleman (LSE) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Joshua Bennett (Oxford) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Kirsten Haywood (East Anglia) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

H

H

H,O

U

Edmund Hardy Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 25 Warburg Institute Seminar 17:00–18:30 Warburg Institute

Cartography in the sands: mapping Oman at 1:100,000 and fixing the position of the Kuria Muria Islands in 1984

U

Tony Keeley (Royal School of Military Survey) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

41

www.sas.ac.uk

Sabine Hyland (St Andrews) Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Philippa Hetherington (UCL), Kate Marsh (Liverpool): ‘Une association mondiale de trafiquants: Le Havre and the politics of trafficking, 1919–39’ | Discussant: Christian Noack (Amsterdam) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk


Events calendar February Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 246

CenSes seminar

P

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Pollard Room, N301, North Block

Distinguished guests and Stuart foreign policy relations: the Duchesse de Chevreuse and Marie de Medicis at the Court of Charles I, 1638–41

H

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Access to justice: villagers in the royal courts in the 14th century

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 304

The Church of England, Anglican Protestantism and colonial society in Later Stuart Barbados

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 234

Local perceptions of bureaucracy and the state among the Pemon of La Gran Sabana: the many vicissitudes of filing a form

Institute of Modern Languages Research Lecture 18:00–20:00 Room 243

‘A global mission’: The Goethe Society of Weimar in the Third Reich

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:30–20:00 Room G37

Postgraduate feminist reading group

Free ip@sas.ac.uk

Sara Wolfson (Canterbury Christchurch) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Chris Briggs (Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Philip Abraham (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

O,H

Natalia Garcia Bonet (Kent) | Latin American anthropology seminar Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

U

Daniel Wilson (Royal Holloway) Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U

Friday 26 Institute of Classical Studies 2-day conference 09:30–20:00 Beveridge Hall

42

Current Archaeology Live! Day 1: 09:30–20:00, day 2: 9:30–17:00 | Registration required Fee applicable valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

CH


Events calendar

Events calendar February Institute of Modern Languages Research Workshop 10:00–14:30 British Academy

Transnationalising modern languages: reshaping the discipline for the 21st century

Warburg Institute Research training 13:00–14:15 Warburg Institute

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

Institute of English Studies Seminar 14:00–17:00 Room 349

Pedagogic criticism workshop

U

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 14:30–16:00 Room 243

Strangers in the night: Indo-European perspectives on ‘Iliad 10’ and the ‘Rhesus’ attributed to Euripides

C

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 246

Comedy of the absurd or absurd philosophy?

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Room 304

Disciplining credit: the civic model of public pawnshops in early modern Italy

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

The Fitzherberts of Norbury: war and peace in the 15th century

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 103

London 19th-century studies seminar

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 234

Finnegans Wake research seminar

U

Registration required Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

U,P

Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Almut Fries | ICS early career seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk Claudio Garcia Ehrenfeld (King’s, London) | ICS postgraduate work-in-progress seminar Free postgradwip@gmail.com

C

H

H

Matthew Ward (Nottingham) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U

U

www.sas.ac.uk

Susan Civale (Canterbury Christ Church), Carolyn Oulton (Canterbury Christ Church) Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Mauro Carboni (Bologna) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

43


Events calendar February Saturday 27 School of Advanced Study Colloquium 10:00–17:00 TBC

Screen studies group postgraduate training day Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

U

Monday 29 Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 10:00–12:00 Room 246

Thinking being

Warburg Institute Research training 14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute

Arabic philosophy reading class

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 243

Callimachus and the pleasure of knowledge (Aetia, fr. 43.12-17)

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 349

ICS ancient literature seminar

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

We are ourselves: theatre and the politics of decentralisation in the Lille Municipal Council, 1881–1911

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–20:00 Room 246

Psychoanalytic thought, history and political life forum

U

Human Rights Consortium Seminar 18:00–19:30 IALS

Terrorism and exclusion from refugee status in the UK: asylum seekers suspected of serious criminality

R

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 19:15–19:15 Olga Crisp Room, 102, North Block

Christian philosemitism in London, 1810–50

44

Registration required Fee applicable johan.siebers@sas.ac.uk

Participants should have a basic reading knowledge of Arabic | Registration required Free charles.burnett@sas.ac.uk

U,P

U,P

C,P

Daniele Iozzia (Catania) | ICS ancient philosophy seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk Graduate presentations Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

C

U,H

Harry Stopes (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Registration requried Free hrc@sas.ac.uk Rodney Curtis (IHR) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H


Events calendar

Events calendar February March Subject area key Classics History Philosophy culture, language & literature Human rights Politics Law Music Highlights

www.sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Highlights

45


Events calendar March Tuesday 01 Warburg Institute Seminar 13:00–14:15 Warburg Institute

From devilry to divinity: readings in the Divina Commedia

U

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 15:00–16:30 Room 304

The East India Company and naval convoying in the long 18th century

H

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:00 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Ships, plants, people: Joseph Banks and the circulation of the natural world, 1780–1820

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room II, North Block

A strange kind of honeymoon: the British Army and politics in the streets of Northern Ireland, 1969–71

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

The archaeology of old age: past and present perspectives

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

Medieval paper and English cursive hands

Warburg Institute Seminar 17:30–19:00 Warburg Institute

Marsilio Ficino’s De amore

U

Institute of Historical Research | Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Guard Room, Lambeth Palace

A projected new history of the Bodleian

H

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 243

Logic, epistemology and metaphysics seminar

46

Alessandro Scafi (Warburg Institute), John Took (UCL) | Registration required £80 standard | £50 concessions | Free for Warburg/UCL warburg@sas.ac.uk

Helen Paul (Southampton) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Jordan Goodman (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Huw Bennett (Cardiff) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Catriona McKenzie (Exeter) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Orietta da Rold (St John’s College, Cambridge) | Medieval manuscripts seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Guido Giglioni (Warburg Institute), Dilwyn Knox (UCL) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Richard Ovenden (Bodley’s Librarian, Oxford) | Registration required; please email archives@churchofengland.org by 25 February Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Nat Hansen (Reading) Free corine.besson@sas.ac.uk

U

P


Institute of Classical Studies Lecture 17:30–20:00 Room G22/26

Supplying Rome between the 4th and 6th centuries AD: results of recent excavations at the Portus Romae

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:45–19:45 Room 304

Panel on scientific archives

School of Advanced Study Lecture 18:00–19:00 Chancellor’s Hall

Senate House Library: rise of the phoenix

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 North Block

International history seminar

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 246

Venereologists across Europe: Soviet sexual science as cosmopolitan practice 1917–37

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 243

Big things can’t be understood without small ones: the Europe of small literatures

Events calendar

Events calendar March C

Accordia Lecture | Simon Keay (Southampton/British School at Rome) Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk Various speakers Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Jackie Marfleet (Librarian, Senate House Library) | Charles Holden Lecture Free holly.peterson@london.ac.uk

James RV Ellison (Queen Mary) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

US

H

H

Philippa Hetherington (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U

Wednesday 02 Senate House Library Research day 10:00–16:00 Beveridge Hall/MacMillan Hall

Psychology research day 2016

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 12:45–14:00 Lucas Room, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London

How not to write the history of refugees: health and safety in Britain

Meet and learn about libraries, archives, digital resources and research methods: a one-day programme for postgraduates and early career researchers in psychology | Registration required Free mura.ghosh@london.ac.uk

U

H

www.sas.ac.uk

Chris Sirrs (Centre for History in Public Health, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Cesar Dominguez (Santiago de Compostela) | LINKS comparative studies seminar Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

47


Events calendar March Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Ned Ward’s ‘knack of pleasing’: practices of laughter in the 18th century

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 TBC

Miscellanies, Christian reform and early medieval encyclopaedism: a reconsideration of the pre-bestiary Physiologus manuscripts

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 John S Cohen Room, 203, North Block

Performing propaganda: music and national identity in Paris and London, 1914–8

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

Settling at home: class, gender and domesticity in the settlement house, 1880–1914.

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 234

Andean studies seminar

H

Kate Davison (Sheffield) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Anna Dorofeeva (Frankfurt) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Rachel Moore (Oxford) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Lucinda Matthews-Jones (Liverpool John Moores) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Chair: Mark Thurner (ILAS) Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

O,H

Thursday 03 Institute of Classical Studies | Warburg Institute 2-day conference 10:30–17:30 Warburg Institute

The afterlife of Apuleius?

School of Advanced Study Research training 14:00–18:00 Room 243

Getting research published

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–19:00 Room 349

More than money: commemoration and visual communication in the Black Sea coinage

48

Florence Bistagne (Avignon/Institut Universitaire de France), Carole Boidin (Paris Ouest), Igor Candido (Freie Universität Berlin), Robert Carver (Durham), Julia Gaisser (Bryn Mawr), Stephen Harrison (Oxford), Ahuvia Kahane (Royal Holloway), Andrew Laird (Warwick), Françoise Lavocat (Paris 3/Institut Universitaire de France), Clementina Marsico (Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Neo-Latin Studies, Innsbruck), Regine May (Leeds), Loreto Núñez (Lausanne), Olivier Pédeflous (Paris), Andrea Severi (Bologna) | Registration required £40 standard | £25 concession warburg@sas.ac.uk

C,U S

Jane Winters (IHR) | Registration required Fee applicable kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Vladimir Stolba (Aarhus) | ICS ancient history seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

C,H


Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 234

The German enlightenment in philosophy and literature: ideas, aporias, legacy

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Sexuality and Eden/heaven

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 304

Hitler in French fiction, 1945–2015

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room G37

Title TBC

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 243

War, the state and the formation of the North Korean industrial working class, 1931–60

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 TBC

You are come here this day: revolutionary ephemera and the intellectual life of the inarticulate, 1765–75

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–19:30 John S Cohen Room, 203, North Block

‘Cricket was my escape’: oral histories of women’s cricket and women’s leisure in 20thcentury Britain

Senate House Library Seminar 18:00–19:30 Durning Lawrence Library, Senate House Library

Bronze, silver and hair: an evening of discussion

Events calendar

Events calendar March U,P

Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Alessandro Scafi (Warburg) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Manuel Bragana (Queen’s University, Belfast) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Sean Cubitt (Goldsmiths) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

H,P

H

H

Owen Miller (SOAS) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

H

Raf Nicholson (Queen Mary) | Joint session with the sport and leisure seminar Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U,H

www.sas.ac.uk

Ruth Richardson, Professor Elizabeth Valentine, Jane Wildgoose | To coincide with the Library’s exhibition, ‘Not with Words but with Things’, three speakers will reflect upon three diverse objects in our care: a silver teaspoon belonging to Charles Dickens’ companion Ellen Ternan, a Carpenter medal awarded by the University of London to Nellie Carey, and a generous hair sample, seemingly of William Cobbett. Join us for an exploration of the residual value of such relics in an academic library | Registration required Free shl.officeadmin@london.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Angel Luke O’Donnell (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

49


Events calendar March Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G37

Media history Seminar

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Loddiges of Hackney and the introduction of hundreds of trees, shrubs and garden flowers from across the world

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G34

LAGLOBAL seminar @ ILAS

Sean Cubitt (Goldsmiths) Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U,H

H

David Solman Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Chair: Mark Thurner (ILAS) Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

H,O

Friday 04 Institute of Philosophy Research training 09:30–18:00 Room G37

Spring 2016 London graduate conference

Warburg Institute Research training 13:00–14:15 Warburg Institute

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 15:00–17:30 Room 234

Love and hate in Vienna

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 246

A comparative reassessment of the Arab conquests of the 7th century: ethnogenesis and the enemy within

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 John S Cohen Room, 203, North Block

Married women pleading their cases in 17thcentury England

50

Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

P

U,P

Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk Part of a seminar series entitled ‘Vienna tales on page and screen’ Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

U

C

James Moreton Wakeley (Oxford) | ICS postgraduate work-in-progress seminar Free postgradwip@gmail.com

Tim Stretton (Saint Mary’s University, Nova Scotia/Cardiff) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H


Events calendar

Events calendar March Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Lexis of cloth and clothing in medieval royal wardrobe, c.1272–1377

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room I, North Block

The torn halves: conflicts over a Marxist aesthetic in Weimar Germany

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 104

The Charles Peake Ulysses seminar

U

Institute of English Studies Seminar 11:00–13:00 Room 349

Modernism in sickness and in health

U

Institute of English Studies Seminar 14:00–16:00 Room 246

The Renaissance reception of the ancient Greek myths of the magic power of music

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 14:00–16:00 Past & Present Room, 202, North Block

Needlework education in the long 18th century

Institute of Classical Studies Lecture 14:30–17:00 Room G22/26

Virgil and Neptune: defying Homer?

H

Charles Farris (Westminster) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U,H

Martin Gaughan (Cardiff Metropolitan), Grant Mandarino (Michigan): ‘Sardonic vision: graphic satire and Weimar communism’ Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Saturday 05 Abbie Garrington (Durham): ‘The fallen: modernism’s mountain dead’, Peter Fifield (Birkbeck): ‘D. H. Lawrence and sick thoughts’ | London modernism seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U

Jacomien Prins (Warwick): ‘Girolamo Cardano and the exceptional, lost powers of ancient music’ | EMPHASIS (early modern philosophy and the scientific imagination) seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

C

Monday 07 Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 10:00–12:00 Room 246

Thinking being Registration required Fee applicable johan.siebers@sas.ac.uk

U,P

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Anton Powell | ICS Virgil Society Lecture Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

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www.sas.ac.uk

Rosanne Waine (Bath Spa) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk


Events calendar March Warburg Institute Research training 14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute

Arabic philosophy reading class

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 349

The cultural politics of Plautine topography

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:15–19:00 The Senate Room

On the capabilities of groundlings

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Reading his way to royalism: the library, politics and religion of Sir Thomas Myddelton, 1639–66

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Past & Present Room, 202, North Block

Rome and the Enlightenment: Benedict XIV and the myth of the ‘Enlightenment pope’

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Tolerating the religious other in French epic (crusading) texts

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Room 243

Looking like Caesar: a case-study of assimilation in late Republican portraiture

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Room G35

Jane Austen alone in the library: the books at Godmersham Park

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 304

Letters & writings

52

Participants should have a basic reading knowledge of Arabic | Registration required Free charles.burnett@sas.ac.uk Sophia Papaioannou (Athens) | ICS ancient literature seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Ellen Mackay (Indiana) | London Shakespeare seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U,P

C

U

H

Sarah Ward (Oxford/IHR) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Maria Pia Donato (CNRS-ENS-Paris 1) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Marianne Ailes (Bristol) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

CU

Nigel Spivey (Emmanuel College, Cambridge) | Roman art seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

U

Peter Sabor (McGill), Gillian Dow (Southampton) | Open University book history and bibliography research seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk Ben Lewis, Clara Zetkin Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H


Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

Race women across borders, 1920s–60s

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 18:30–20:00 King’s College London, WC2B 6NR

Centre for the Study of Contemporary Women’s Writing (CCWW) Spanish reading group

Imaobong Umoren (Oxford) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Events calendar

Events calendar March H

U

Registration required Fee applicable maria-jose.blanco@kcl.ac.uk

Tuesday 08 Warburg Institute Seminar 13:00–14:15 Warburg Institute

From devilry to divinity: readings in the Divina Commedia

U

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 349

Photographs in the antiquities trade

C

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 234

French postgraduate seminar

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Room 304

A disappearing landscape: the heathlands of the Surrey, Hampshire and Berkshire borders 1750–1914

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Mediterranean passes, North African corsairs and maritime regionalisation in the long eighteenth century

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Rethinking religious violence in Ireland, 1641–60

Alessandro Scafi (Warburg Institute), John Took (UCL) | Registration required £80 standard | £50 concessions | Free for Warburg/UCL warburg@sas.ac.uk

Alice Haylett Bryan (King’s, London): ‘Politics and contemporary French horror film’ | Kate Brook (King’s, London): ‘Visuality in Proust’ | Registration required Fee applicable dominic.glynn@sas.ac.uk

U

H

Alan Crosby (British Association for Local History) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Tristan Stein (Kent) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

www.sas.ac.uk

Joan Redmond (Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Vinnie Nørskov (Aarhus) | ICS classical archaeology seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

53


Events calendar March Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

A fresh look at Boethian beginnings in 12thcentury Scotland: prospects and possibilities

Warburg Institute Seminar 17:30–19:00 Warburg Institute

Marsilio Ficino’s De amore

U

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Past & Present Room, 202, North Block

Healing, exorcism and charismatic powers in 19th and 20th-century Chinese Christianity

H

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

Slavery and anti-slavery in the Spanish American Republics during the 19th century

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room G35

The individual’s place in the justification of her rights

Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 246

Surveillance and civil liberties

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G37

A brief history of a bookshop collector

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 19:00–20:30 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Title TBC

54

U

Kylie Murray (Balliol College, Oxford) | Medieval manuscripts seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Guido Giglioni (Warburg Institute), Dilwyn Knox (UCL) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Lars Laamann (SOAS) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Marcela Echeverri (Yale) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

P,O

Rowan Cruft (Stirling) | The practical, the political, the ethical aspects of philosophy seminar Free ip@sas.ac.uk Kirsty Brimelow QC Free olga.jimenez@london.ac.uk

Julian Nangle | Book collecting seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Federico Botana (Queen Mary) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

R,O,S

U

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Events calendar

Events calendar March Wednesday 09 Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 16:00–18:00 Room 246

Challenges to translation and interpreting: practical, ethical and political aspects

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 King’s College London, WC2B 6NR

Thatcher, Delors and their respective visions of ‘Europe’

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 243

IP evening seminar: your consciousness is what? Where?

Institute of Classical Studies Lecture 17:00–19:30 Room G22/26

Grotte Scalina: a new monumental Etruscan tomb near Viterbo

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Pollard Room, N301, North Block

Ex-servicemen and the Liberal Party in the 1920s

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–20:15 Olga Crisp Room, 102, North Block

Dear (Reverend) Abby: negotiating Christian integrity and cultural change in postwar American-evangelical advice columns

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room G37

The long Great War: a family history

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room G34

The Centre for Integrated Caribbean Research (CICR) Caribbean regional seminar

Warburg Institute Lecture 17:30–19:30 Warburg Institute

‘Correspondence is equal to half meeting’ – or is it? What Jewish mercantile letters ‘did’ in the 12th-century Indian Ocean world

U

Jo Drugan (East Anglia) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

H

Helene von Bismarck (British Scholar Society) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

P

Ted Honderich (UCL) Free ip@sas.ac.uk

CS

Vincent Jolivet (French National Centre for Scientific Research) | Rome-London lecture Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

H

Amber Thomas (Edinburgh) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Michael Roper (Essex) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

U,O

All welcome Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

Elizabeth Lambourn (De Montfort) | Bilderfahrzeuge project lecture Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U

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Matthew Johnson (Durham) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk


Events calendar March Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–19:30 Wolfson Conference Suite, North Block

History now and then: uses and abuses of the past

Institute of Modern Languages Research Panel discussion 18:00–20:00 Keynes Library, Birkbeck College, 43 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PD

March 7/7 memory panel discussion

The Human Mind Project 1-day workshop 19:30–17:30 Senate House

Language, literacy, literature and the mind

H

Anne Curry, Peter Hennessy, Paul Preston, Donald Sassoon | Seminar followed by refreshments in the IHR common room | Registration required Free ihr.events@sas.ac.uk

Philip Nelson (Chair, 7/7 Memorial Trust), Gabriel Koureas (Birkbeck) | Centre for the Study of Cultural Memory event | Please note change of date from 14 March Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

A one-day event of The Human Mind Project bringing together leading academics to discuss the importance of literacy and story-telling in human culture | Registration required Fee applicable info@humanmind.ac.uk

U

P,U,S

Thursday 10 Institute of Latin American Studies 2-day conference 10:00–17:30 The Senate Room

Britain and Brazil: political, economic, social, cultural and intellectual relations, 1808 to the present

School of Advanced Study Research training 14:00–16:00 IHR computer training room, North Block

EndNote I research training

Institute of English Studies Colloquium 14:30–17:30 Room 246

Mapping the olfactory: modernist representation of body and the sensory aesthetics

School of Advanced Study Open day 16:00–20:00 Senate House

School of Advanced Study humanities open day

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–19:00 Room G22/26

Colonising Bosphorus: the creation of the Bosphoran Kingdom in the archaic period

56

H,O S

Fee applicable olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

SAS students only | Registration required Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

U

Fay Brauer (East London/New South Wales), Crispian Neill (Leeds), Yuko Ito (IES/Chubu, Japan) Free yuko.ito@london.ac.uk A showcase of the School’s vast array of resources, including information about postgraduate courses, research training, libraries, archives and digital tools. The day will culminate with a sneak peek and talk on Senate House Library’s upcoming ‘Shakespeare: Metamorphosis’ exhibition commemorating the 400th anniversary of the playwright’s death. | Registration required Free sas.info@sas.ac.uk

Catherine Morgan (Oxford) | ICS ancient history seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

U,H,S

C,H


Events calendar

Events calendar March Warburg Institute Seminar 17:00–18:30 Warburg Institute

Mental maps of the world in Great Britain and France, 1870–1914

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 246

CenSes seminar

P

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Pollard Room, N301, North Block

Mysticism and Catholicism in late Stuart England

H

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 The Court Room

Eschatology, war and peace: of Christ’s armies, Antichrist and the end of times between ca.1095 and ca.1170

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 304

India’s emergency, 1975–7: narratives of female political prisoners

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Past & Present Room, 202, North Block

It is a cinema property of world influence: Veronica Lake and the peekaboo hairstyle

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room G34

Power, resistance and resignation: narratives of obstetric violence in Chiapas

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 18:00–19:30 IALS

The transformation of the civil trial and the emergence of American tort law

Institute of Modern Languages Research Research training 18:00–19:30 Room 243

IMLR graduate forum

U

Isabelle Avila (Paris-Est Marne-la-Valle) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk Free ip@sas.ac.uk

Liam Temple (Northumbria) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Philippe Buc (Vienna) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Gemma Scott (Keele) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Jenna Murray De Lopez (Salford) | Latin American anthropology seminar Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

L

G Edward White (Virginia) | Registration required Free belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk

Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

U

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Kulraj Phullar (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk


Events calendar March Institute of Modern Languages Research Lecture 18:00–20:00 Room G35

Encounters: Ulrike Draesner and Lyn Marven in conversation

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:30–20:30 Room 104

London theatre seminar

U

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 19:00–20:30 Institut Français

L’Armée Furieuse (Fred Vargas)

U

Institute of Historical Research Workshop 09:30–17:00 Wolfson Room I, North Block

BGEAH postgraduate and early career workshop in early American history

H

Warburg Institute Research training 13:00–14:15 Warburg Institute

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 243

Revisiting pollution for homicide at Athens: a rhetorical perspective

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Paradigms of virtue: building moral character in the early modern Netherlands

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Room 304

Reassessing the great rebuilding, 1480–1700

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

And the king took the city into his hand: the liberties of London and royal interference, 1215–1327

U

Ulrike Draesner, Lyn Marven Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Dominic Glynn (IMLR) | Part of a new bilingual reading group focusing on testing translations | Booking required Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Friday 11

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Various speakers | Registration required £20 standard | £10 concessions ihr.events@sas.ac.uk

U,P

Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

C

Christine Plastow (UCL) | ICS postgraduate work-in-progress seminar Free postgradwip@gmail.com

H

Bart Ramakers (Groningen) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

John Broad (CAMPOP) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Ian Stone (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

H


Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 234

The old lady with the handbag: the mnemonic afterlives of Danuta Danielsson’s medial moment

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G35

Ezra Pound Cantos reading group: Canto XLIX

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G37

‘Proclaimed by poster’: rituals and reinventions of the Easter Rising

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 246

Beckett and medical culture

Events calendar

Events calendar March U

Samuel Merrill (Umeå /IMLR) Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Kent Su (UCL) Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U

U

Roisin Higgins (Teesside) | Irish studies seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk Ulrika Maude (Bristol) | The London Beckett seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U

Saturday 12 Institute of Modern Languages Research Research training 11:00–17:30 Room 243

IMLR research training: history and memory methods

Institute of English Studies 1-day symposium 14:15–19:00 The Court Room

Fifth London Anglo-Saxon Symposium: AngloScandinavian England

U

Carlos Galviz (ICWS), Michael Kandiah (King’s, London), Gabriel Koureas (Birkbeck), Claire Launchbury (IMLR/IHR), Sam Merrill (IMLR/Umeå), Philip Nelson (Tavistock Square Memorial Trust), Katia Pizzi (IMLR), Francesco Ricatti (Sunshine Coast), John Ryan (Edith Cowan, Australia) | Please bring a camera phone or digital camera | Registration requried Fee applicable kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Monday 14 Institute of Latin American Studies Workshop 09:45–18:15 The Senate Room

At the interface of nature and culture studies in Latin America: towards a new frame on discourse, society, development and the environment

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 10:00–12:00 Room 246

Thinking being

U,O

Graham Woodgate (UCL Institute of the Americas), Ana C. Dinerstein (Bath) Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

Registration required Fee applicable johan.siebers@sas.ac.uk

U,P

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Timothy Bolton (Bloomsbury Auctions), Alison Finlay (Birkbeck), Letty Ten Harkel (Oxford), Richard North, Katrin Thier (Oxford English Dictionary), Sara Pons-Sanz (Westminster) | Registration required £12 standard | £6 IES/students/concessions iesevents@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

US


Events calendar March Warburg Institute Research training 14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute

Arabic philosophy reading class

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies 2-day seminar 16:00–18:30 IALS

‘Lost in translations’: an examination of the legal problems associated with implementation (or non-implementation) of this road map right

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 243

Between the Dionysia and the Dialogues: Plato’s use of comedy

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 349

ICS ancient literature seminar

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Olga Crisp Room, 102, North Block

The new antisemitism in France

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

The creation of a postcolonial narrative? Comparing memories of empire in Britain and France

Participants should have a basic reading knowledge of Arabic | Registration required Free charles.burnett@sas.ac.uk

U,P

L

Registration required Free belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk

C,P

David Preston (Royal Holloway) | ICS ancient philosophy seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk Eric Csapo (Sydney): ‘Between democracy and autocracy: patterns in the spread of theatre through Classical Greece’ Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk Julia David (Paris/NYU) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

C

H

H

Itay Lotem (Queen Mary) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Tuesday 15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar 15:00–16:30 Room 304

Houses fit for office: the corporate spaces of the Drapers’ Company in early modern London

Warburg Institute Lecture 16:00–17:30 Warburg Institute

The evidence of images: Hieronymus Bosch

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 246

La scène indisciplinée: the renewal of theatricality on the contemporary French stage

60

H

Sarah Ann Milne (Westminster) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Joseph Koerner (Harvard) | E H Gombrich Lecture Series on the Classical Tradition: lecture 1 | See 17 March for lecture 3 Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Laure Fernandez (Roehampton) | French theatre seminar | Registration required Free dominic.glynn@sas.ac.uk

U,S

U


Events calendar

Events calendar March Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:00 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Civility at sea: from murmuring to mutiny

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Combat effectiveness and the Gurkha Brigade, 1935–45

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

Title TBC

Warburg Institute Seminar 17:30–19:00 Warburg Institute

Marsilio Ficino’s De amore

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 102

Communicating consent

Warburg Institute Lecture 17:30–19:30 Warburg Institute

The evidence of images: Max Beckmann

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:45–19:45 Room 304

The postcolonial problem of displaced archives

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–19:30 Room 243

Literary London reading group

U

Institute of Classical Studies Lecture 18:00–20:00 Room G22/26

Hellenic studies in Tudor England: presenting an online interactive edition of an unpublished Greek encomium on Henry VIII

C

Bruce Buchan (Griffith University, Australia) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

H

Alexander Wilson (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Tom Dougherty (Cambridge) | The practical, the political, the ethical aspects of philosophy seminar Free ip@sas.ac.uk Joseph Koerner (Harvard) | E H Gombrich Lecture Series on the Classical Tradition: lecture 2 | See 17 March for lecture 3 Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

James Lowry (Liverpool), Mandy Banton (ICWS), Vincent Hiribarren (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U

P,O

U,S

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Guido Giglioni (Warburg Institute), Dilwyn Knox (UCL) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

H

www.sas.ac.uk

Rhian Keyse (Exeter) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Chair: Elizabeth Jeffreys | Charalambos Dendrinos, Philip Taylor, Christopher Wright | Friends of the British School at Athens Lecture Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

61


Events calendar March Wednesday 16 Institute of Historical Research Seminar 12:45–14:00 TBC

London’s medical officers of health reports

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 15:30–18:00 Room G22/26

Kakovatos in Tryphilia (Peloponnese): rise and fall of an early Mycenaean site

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 16:00–18:00 Room 246

London aesthetics forum: knowledge and novel knowledge

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Scroungers and skivers? The agencies of London charity beneficiaries, c.1800–34

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

A ‘gentle civiliser’? Law in divided Germany in the age of the Helsinki Accords

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Bishops and law in 6th-century Gaul

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Past & Present Room, 202, North Block

Double helix history: the use of DNA in popular genealogy?

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 John S Cohen Room, 203, North Block

Material methodism, London 1851–1932

62

Jane Seymour (Centre for History in Public Health, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

C

Birgitta Eder (Vienna) | ICS Mycenaean series Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

P,U

Peter Kivy (Rutgers) | Open to all Free ip@sas.ac.uk

H

Megan Webber (Hertfordshire) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Sebastian Gehrig Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Patrick Griffith (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

H

Jerome de Groot (Manchester) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Ruth Slatter (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H


Human Rights Consortium Seminar 18:00–19:30 IALS

EU asylum law and disabled refugees: is the UK reservation to the CRPD in the context of asylum law redundant?

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 246

Andean studies seminar

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 243

The Commonwealth of learning: the University of Oxford and its Czechoslovak connections

Events calendar

Events calendar March R

Stephanie Motz (Lucerne) | International refugee law seminar | Registration required Free hrc@sas.ac.uk Round table discussion: andeanstudiesseminarilas.blogs.sas.ac.uk Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

O,H

U

Jana Buresova (London) Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 17 Institute of Historical Research 2-day conference 09:30–17:00 Wolfson Conference Suite, North Block

Anglo-French conference: ‘Is Britain a part of Europe? An Anglo-French historical perspective’

Institute of Latin American Studies | Institute of Commonwealth Studies Institute of Modern Languages Research | Centre for Postcolonial Studies 2-day conference 10:00–17:00 The Senate Room

Deep decolonisation: Latin America and the connected histories of the postcolonial world

School of Advanced Study Research training 14:00–16:00 IHR computer training room, North Block

EndNote II research training

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–19:00 Room 349

Herakles and the challenges of colonial environments in the Black Sea

H

Elisabeth Lorans (Tours), Helena Hamerow (Oxford), Gabor Thomas (Reading), Matthew Davies (IHR), Hannah Skoda, Florence Berland, François-Joseph Ruggiu (Paris IV), Naomi Tadmor (Lancaster), Helen Berry (Newcastle), Charles Walton (Warwick), Elodie Duché (Warwick), Michael Broers (Oxford), Stéphane Guy (Cergy-Pontoise), James Thompson (Bristol), Ben Jackson (University College Oxford), Pierre Purseigle (Warwick), William Philpott (King’s, London), Franziska Heimberger (Paris Sorbonne), Tess Little (Oxford), John Davies (Oxford) | Registration required £50 standard | £40 concessions ihr.events@sas.ac.uk

H,O S

SAS students only | Registration required Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

C,H

David Braund (Exeter) | ICS ancient history seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

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Ricardo Salvatore (Torcuato di Tella), Frederick Cooper (New York), Barbara Weinstein (New York) | Funded by John Coffin and Cassal Trust Fee applicable olga.jimenez@london.ac.uk


Events calendar March Institute of Modern Languages Research Lecture 17:15–19:00 Room 243

Goethe, Pückler-Muskau and England

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Room 104

Pietro Ursuleo’s Oliverii cardinalis Neapolitani itinerarium classis apostolice in Turcos and 15th-century papal naval expeditions against the Turks

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Past & Present Room, 202, North Block

Learning languages in early modern England

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 304

Restructuring the relationship between the philosophy of history and the philosophy of science

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 246

Title TBC

Warburg Institute Lecture 17:30–20:30 Warburg Institute

The evidence of images: William Kentridge

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 102

From the gardens of China: Joseph Banks and the Royal Gardens, Kew, 1780–1820

64

James Bowman (London) Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

U

H

Tim Demetris (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

John Gallagher (Emmanuel College, Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U

P,H

Paul Roth (California, Santa Cruz) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk Jake Norris (Sussex) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Joseph Koerner (Harvard) | E H Gombrich Lecture Series on the Classical Tradition: lecture 3 | See 15 March for lectures 1 and 2 Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Jordan Goodman Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

U,S

H


Events calendar

Events calendar March Friday 18 Warburg Institute Colloquium 10:30–17:30 Warburg Institute

Humanistic Latin: style and elegance in Latin usage 1450–1580

Warburg Institute Research training 13:00–14:15 Warburg Institute

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 14:00–18:00 Room G35

Gender and translation: contemporary women’s writing

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 14:30–16:00 Room 243

‘Is that a Hydra?!?’: classical monsters in ‘My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic’

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 16:00–18:00 Room 234

LAGLOBAL seminar @ ILAS

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 246

The myth of Heracles in Diodorus’ ‘Bibliotheke’: variety of sources and traditions

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:05–19:30 Room 349

Building subject to groundworks: youth working actions in New Belgrade

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 John S Cohen Room, 203, North Block

Lesbian mothers and practices of conception in post-war Britain and Australia

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Room 243

The crisis of the 1620s and its antecedents: trade rivalry and politics in England and the Netherlands, 1604–25

U

Giancarlo Abbamonte (Naples Federico II), Florence Bistagne (Avignon/ IUF), Jeroen De Keyser (KU Leuven), Guido Giglioni (Warburg Institute), Marc Laureys (Bonn), Anne Raffarin-Dupuis (Paris Sorbonne) | Registration required £25 standard | £12.50 concessions warburg@sas.ac.uk

U,P

Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U

Noelia Diaz-Vicedo (Queen Mary), Pauline Henry-Tierney (Manchester), Maria Cristina Seccia (CCWW/IMLR fellow), Dr Sebnem Susam-Saraeva (Edinburgh) | Centre for Contemporary Women’s Writing cross-cultural seminar | Registration required Fee applicable dominic.glynn@sas.ac.uk

C

Ellie Mackin | ICS early career seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

H,O

Victoria Rotar (Trinity St David) | ICS postgraduate work-in-progress seminar Free postgradwip@gmail.com

U

Tijana Stevanovic (Newcastle) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Rebecca Jennings (Macquarie, Sydney/King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

David Ormrod (Kent), Valentina Caldari (Balliol College, Oxford) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

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C

www.sas.ac.uk

Chair: Mark Thurner (ILAS) Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk


Events calendar March Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 104

Finnegans Wake research seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U

Monday 21 Warburg Institute Research training 15:00–15:30 Warburg Institute

Arabic philosophy reading class

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 349

Milgram and the disobedient hero

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:00–19:30 Room 246

Concentrationary art and the reading of everyday life

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Room 243

Hercules Ovidianus in Augustan Rome: between literature and figurative repertory

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–20:00 Room 234

Psychoanalytic thought, history and political life forum

U

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 349

The pottery catalogue anno 2016: theoretical implications of the visualization of ceramic material culture

C

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Wolfson Room II, North Block

A Catholic ‘mock-poem’ and its Protestant readers: the reception of an early 18th-century English Catholic book

Warburg Institute Seminar 17:30–19:00 Warburg Institute

Marsilio Ficino’s De amore

Participants should have a basic reading knowledge of Arabic | Registration required Free charles.burnett@sas.ac.uk Ineke Sluiter (Leiden) | ICS ancient literature seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

U,P

C

U

Max Silverman (Leeds) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

C,U

Isabella Colpo (Università degli Studi di Padova) | Roman art seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Tuesday 22

66

Mark van der Enden (Leicester) | ICS classical archaeology seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

H

Kendra Packham (Oxford) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk Guido Giglioni (Warburg Institute), Dilwyn Knox (UCL) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U


Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room G35

From the Horn of Africa and Swahili Coast: easterly migration of Africans

Events calendar

Events calendar March U,M

17:30, Marilyn Herman (Aethiopological Society): ‘Ethiopian Jews in Israel: how the untraditional becomes traditional’ | 18:30, Shihan De Silva: ‘Recovering the easterly movement of Africans’ and screening of ‘Indian Ocean Memories and African Migrants’ Free shihan.desilva@sas.ac.uk

Wednesday 23 Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 King’s College London, WC2B 6NR

The married woman’s right to earn in early-mid 20th-century Britain

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room G35

London Old and Middle English research seminar

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 234

The Centre for Integrated Caribbean Research (CICR) Caribbean regional seminar

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–21:00 Room 243

Contemporary innovative poetry research seminar

H

Helen Glew (Westminster) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U,O

All welcome Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

U

Nisha Ramayya Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 15:00–16:00 Room 304

Corruption and commonwealth in the early Muscovy Company

H

Felicity Stout (Sheffield) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Wednesday 30 Colour naming processes: a cross-linguistic approach

U

Alina Villalva (Lisbon), Esperana Cardeira (Lisbon) | Registration required Fee applicable kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 16:00–18:00 Room 243

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Tuesday 29

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Events calendar March Thursday 31 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–19:00 Room 349

Religion and identity in the Black Sea region: Jewish communities of the Bosporan Kingdom

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:30–20:00 Room 246

Postgraduate feminist reading group

68

C,H

Irina Levinskaya (St Petersburg) | ICS ancient history seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U


Events calendar

Events calendar April Subject area key Classics History Philosophy culture, language & literature Human rights Politics Law Music Highlights

www.sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Highlights

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Events calendar April Monday 04 Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

Hyperreal spaces and the mythical male in the West

H

Antonia Mackay (Oxford Brookes) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Tuesday 05 Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 246

Philippe Quesne and Vivarium Studio: the ecology of the image

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 The Library, Royal College of Physicians, 11 St Andrews Place, Regent’s Park, London NW1 4LE

Scholar, courtier, magician: the lost library of John Dee will explore the life and work of one of Tudor England’s most enigmatic figures

U

Carl Lavery (Glasgow) | French theatre seminar | Registration required Fee applicable dominic.glynn@sas.ac.uk

H

Katie Birkwood (Royal College of Physicians Library) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 07 Institute of Modern Languages Research 2-day colloquium 10:00–18:00 Room 243

59th National Postgraduate Colloquium in German Studies

U

Institute of Commonwealth Studies Workshop 11:00–18:00 Bristol

What’s happening in black British history? IV

H

Institute of Modern Languages Research Lecture 17:30–19:00 Room 243

2016 Sylvia Naish Lecture

U

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 19:00–20:30 Institut Français

Le Roi des Aulnes (Michel Tournier)

U

70

Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

£20 standard | £10 concessions olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Dominic Glynn (IMLR) | Part of a new bilingual reading group focusing on testing translations Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk


Events calendar

Events calendar April Friday 08 Institute of Modern Languages Research 2-day conference 09:00–18:00 Room 246

VI annual symposium of the 19th-century Hispanists network

Warburg Institute 1-day colloquium 10:30–17:30 Warburg Institute

‘Inexcusabiles’: the debate on salvation and the virtues of the pagans in the early modern period (1595–1772)

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 102

The Charles Peake Ulysses seminar

U

Christ in Anne Conway’s Principia (1690): metaphysics, syncretism, and female imitatio Christi

U

U

Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

U,P

Chiara Franceschini (UCL), Alberto Frigo (Lumire, Lyon II), Guido Giglioni (Warburg Institute), Sarah Hutton (Aberystwyth), John Marenbon (Cambridge), Antony McKenna (Independent scholar), Michael Moriarty (Cambridge), François Trémolières (CHCSC, Versailles), Han van Ruler (Rotterdam) | Registration required £25 standard | £12.50 concessions warburg@sas.ac.uk Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Saturday 09 Institute of English Studies Seminar 14:00–16:00 Room 243

Sandrine Parageau (Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense) | EMPHASIS (early modern philosophy and the scientific imagination) seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Monday 11

Institute of Classical Studies Launch event 09:30–17:00 Room 349

Women in classics: past, present and future

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 10:00–12:00 Room 246

Thinking being

Institute of Classical Studies 5-day workshop 10:00–18:00 Room 234

Epidoc workshop

O,U

Hugh Goddard (HRH Prince Alwaleed bin Talal Centre for the Study of Islam in the Contemporary World, Edinburgh/British Association for Islamic Studies) Fee applicable conference2016@brais.ac.uk Launch of Women’s Classical Committee Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Registration required Fee applicable johan.siebers@sas.ac.uk

A 5-day training workshop on digital editing of epigraphic and papyrological texts | Registration required Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

C

U,P

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www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

British Association for Islamic Studies (BRAIS) conference

www.sas.ac.uk

Institute of Commonwealth Studies 2-day conference 09:00–18:00 TBC


Events calendar April Institute of Modern Languages Research Research training 10:00–18:30 University of London Institute Paris

IMLR–ULIP doctoral training (Paris residency)

U

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Room 246

North American connexions

U

Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Isabel Rivers (Queen Mary) | Open University book history and bibliography research seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Tuesday 12 Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 243

Logic, epistemology and metaphysics seminar

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–19:30 Room 103

Literary London reading group

U

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 349

Collecting cricket

U

Thomas Kroedel (Humbolt, Berlin) Free corine.besson@sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Christopher Saunders | Book collecting seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

P

Wednesday 13 Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 243

‘Nothing short of a scandal’: Harry Peter Smolka and the Ministry of Information

U

Charmian Brinson (London) Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 14 Warburg Institute Seminar 17:00–18:30 Warburg Institute

Cultural landscape in early modern Jewish and Christian maps of the Holy Land

Institute of Latin American Studies Lecture 17:30–20:00 The Senate Room

Legal pluralities and fragmented sovereignties: reflections on law, illegality and the state in Latin America

72

U

Pnina Arad (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Rachel Sieder (Centro de Investigación y Estudios Superiores en Antropología Social) | 2016 Thyra Alleyne Memorial Lecture | Registration required Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

R,L S


Institute of Modern Languages Research Research training 18:00–19:30 Room 246

IMLR graduate forum

Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Events calendar

Events calendar April U

Friday 15 Institute of Modern Languages Research 2-day conference 10:00–18:00 Room G34

Work stories: documenting, narrating and representing the French workplace

Institute of Latin American Studies Workshop 14:00–17:00 Room 246

Masterclass with Dr Rachel Sieder

US

Christophe Dejours (Conservatoire national des arts et métiers), Thierry Beinstingel (Novelist) Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk Rachel Sieder (Centro de Investigación y Estudios Superiores en Antropología Social) | For postgraduates and early career scholars who conduct research on the relationship between politics and the law in Latin America | Registration required Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

O,L

Saturday 16 Institute of Modern Languages Research 1-day conference 09:00–18:30 Room 104

Muse of modernity? Remembering, mediating and modernising popular dance

U

Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Monday 18 Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 10:00–12:00 Room 246

Thinking being

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Olga Crisp Room, 102, North Block

Music and politics in London’s East End

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Room 246

Open University book history and bibliography research seminar

U

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

The bishop on the barricades: revolution, religion and commemorating the death of Denis Affre (1848–71)

H

H

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Laura O’Brien (Northumbria) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

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Vivi Lachs (Royal Hollway) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U,P

www.sas.ac.uk

Registration required Fee applicable johan.siebers@sas.ac.uk


Events calendar April Tuesday 19 Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

Love and fratricide: siblings, half-siblings and family dynamics in early modern England

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 John S Cohen Room, 203, North Block

Mapping Paris: artists and their neighbourhoods in the 18th century

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:45–19:45 Room 304

Legal records at risk project

H

Bernard Capp (Warwick) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Hannah Williams Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Clare Cowling (IALS) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Wednesday 20 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 13:00–14:00 Room 246

Director’s seminar

C

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 16:00–18:00 Room 243

London aesthetics forum

P

Institute of Modern Languages Research Lecture 17:15–19:00 Room 243

Perser gegen Inder. Das Ringen um den kulturellen Ursprung bei Goethe und Friedrich Schlegel

U

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 246

Latin American anthropology seminar series

Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 21

74

Andrea Polaschegg (Berlin) | English Goethe Society meeting Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Agustin Diz (LSE), Clate Korsant (Goldsmiths), Angus McNelly (Queen Mary), Agathe Faure, Ainhoa Montoya (SAS) Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

O,H


Events calendar

Events calendar April Friday 22 Institute of Classical Studies 2-day conference 09:30–18:00 Room 349

From Thucydides to Twitter: towards a history of the soundbite

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 246

Finnegans Wake research seminar

U

‘Passionate, dedicated and loyal’: characteristics of the leaders of early Mechanics’ Institutes in south-east England, 1825–40

H

C,S

The conference aims to explore the nature and history of the ‘soundbite’ as a feature of political rhetoric and other forms of communication in the classical and modern worlds. Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Saturday 23 Institute of Historical Research Seminar 14:00–16:00 John S Cohen Room, 203, North Block

Jana Sims (independent scholar) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Monday 25

Warburg Institute Research training 15:00–15:30 Warburg Institute

Arabic philosophy reading class

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Past & Present Room, 202, North Block

Catholics and Calvinists in a Savoyard village towards a social history of religious pluralism

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Room 243

‘Revixit ars’: art’s rebirth and archaising practices in Greco-Roman antiquity, late imperial China and early modern Europe

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Lecture 18:00–19:00 IALS

‘Legislating proportionately’, taking Section 19 of the Immigration Act 2014 as a starting point

Registration required Fee applicable johan.siebers@sas.ac.uk

Participants should have a basic reading knowledge of Arabic | Registration required Free charles.burnett@sas.ac.uk

U,P

U,P

H

Graeme Murdoch (TCD) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U

Jeremy Tanner (UCL) | Roman art seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

L

Adam Tomkins (John Millar Professor of Public Law, Glasgow) | Registration required Free belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk

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Thinking being

www.sas.ac.uk

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 10:00–12:00 Room 246


Events calendar April Tuesday 26 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 14:30–18:30 IALS

‘Domestic victims’: the European Protection Order and domestic violence

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 349

Tombs and vases in Etruria: the drawings of architects in the 19th century

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 University of Oxford

Questions of duration and ethics in net extreme cinema

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:00 Wolfson Room I, North Block

The great Mars Boom of 1892: international telegraphy and the making of the Martian canals

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Room 304

Forms of democracy in rural England, 1550– 1800, and their enemies

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 North Block

The politics of nation-building in the Balkans

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 19:00–20:30 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Title TBC

L

Adam Tomkins (John Millar Professor of Public Law, Glasgow) | Registration required Free belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk

C

Laurent Haumesser (Louvre) | ICS classical archaeology seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

U

Oliver Kenny (Queen Mary) | French postgraduate seminar Free dominic.glynn@sas.ac.uk

H

Josh Nall (Whipple Museum of the History of Science, University of Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Richard Hoyle (Victoria County History) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Harris Mylonas (George Washington) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Will Eves (St Andrews/IHR) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

H

Wednesday 27 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 13:00–14:00 Room 246

Director’s seminar

C

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:00 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Political authority in post-revolutionary France

H

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Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Thomas Hopkins (Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk


Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 243

The correspondence of Michael Balint and Donald Winnicott in the 1950s

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 234

The Centre for Integrated Caribbean Research (CICR) Caribbean regional seminar

Human Rights Consortium Human rights film festival 17:30–21:00 Room 349

Justice in action: a series of human rights films: Burden of Peace

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–21:00 Room G35

Contemporary innovative poetry research seminar

Events calendar

Events calendar April H

Shaul Bar-Haim (Birkbeck) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U,O

All welcome Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

R,L

Showing of ‘Burden of Peace’ with Q&A panel | See also 17 February Free hrc@sas.ac.uk

U

Prudence Chamberlain Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 28 Warburg Institute Seminar 17:00–18:30 Warburg Institute

Cartography and captivity during the Napoleonic conflicts, 1803–15

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 234

The German enlightenment in philosophy and literature: ideas, aporias, legacy

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 304

Music and party politics in independent Ireland, 1923–68

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Past & Present Room, 202, North Block

Relative autonomies: patterns in film and cultural history

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:30–20:00 Room 246

Postgraduate feminist reading group

U

Elodie Duché (IHR) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U,P

Richard Parfitt (Linacre College, Oxford) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Sue Harper (Portsmouth) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U

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www.sas.ac.uk

H

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk


Events calendar April Friday 29 Institute of Historical Research Lecture 10:00–17:00 Wolfson Conference Suite, North Block

Gerald Aylmer Seminar 2016: the experience of the archive

H,S

Carolyn Steedman (Warwick), Paul Carter (The National Archives), Maryanne Dever (University of Technology, Sydney), Jenny Haynes (Wellcome Library), Michael Hughes (Bodleian Library, Oxford), Filippo de Vivo (Birkbeck), Claudia Salmini (Belluno State Archives, Italy) | Registration required ac.uk Free ihr.even

ts@sas.

Warburg Institute Research training 13:00–14:15 Warburg Institute

78

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U,P


OPEN

DAY

10 March 2016 | 16:00 – 20:00 Senate House

Connect with our vibrant humanities teaching and research institutes • Application and funding advice • Talks, workshops and panel discussions • Special tours of Senate House • A sneak peek of our exhibition ‘Shakespeare: Metamorphosis’ • Spoken word performance by ‘Bards Without Borders’ and more For further information and to book a place, visit: bit.ly/SASopenday

Senate House, Malet Street, London, WC1E 7HU

@SASNews #SASOpenDay www.sas.ac.uk


Seminar series A broad range of seminar series are organised in the School and Senate House Library. Many of our series are supported by and organised in collaboration with other institutions and organisations. All collaborators and supporters are listed on our website. All are welcome to attend unless otherwise stated. Dates and times are given below where known and were correct at the time of going to print. These seminars are listed in the calendar where further details are known. Due to the nature of series events, these may be subject to change. Please check our websites for further information.

Mycenaean Wednesdays at 15:30–18:00 Dates: 17 Feb, 16 Mar Postgraduate work-in-progress Fridays at 16:30–18:30 Dates: 5, 12, 19, 26 Feb, 4, 11, 18 Mar (Open to postgraduate students only) Roman art Mondays at 17:00–19:00

Institute of Classical Studies Contact: valerie.james@sas.ac.uk Ancient history

Dates: 8, 22 Feb, 7, 21 Mar, 25 Apr

Institute of English Studies Contact: ies@sas.ac.uk

Thursdays at 16:30–18:30

Book collecting

Dates: 4, 11 Feb, 3, 10, 17, 31 Mar

Tuesdays at 18:00–20:00

Ancient literature

Dates: 9 Feb, 8 Mar, 12 Apr

Mondays at 17:00–19:00

Contemporary innovative poetry research

Dates: 1, 8, 22, 29 Feb, 7, 14, 21 Mar

Wednesdays at 18:00–21:00

Ancient philosophy Mondays at 16:30 –18:30 Date: 1, 15, 29 Feb, 14 Mar

Dates: 24 Feb, 23 Mar, 27 Apr Early modern philosophy and the scientific imagination (EMPHASIS) Saturdays at 14:00–16:00

Classical archaeology

Date: 6 Feb, 5 Mar, 9 Apr

Tuesdays at 17:00–19:00 Dates: 9 Feb, 8, 22 Mar, 26 Apr

Ezra Pound Cantos reading group Fridays at 18:00–20:00

Director’s seminar

Dates: 12 Feb, 11 Mar

Wednesdays at 13:00–14:00 Dates: 20, 27 Apr

Finnegans Wake research Fridays at 18:00–20:00

Early career Fridays at 14:15–16:15 Dates: 5, 26 Feb, 18 Mar

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Dates: 26 Feb, 18 Mar, 22 Apr


Seminar series

History of libraries research

Medieval manuscripts

Fridays at 18:00–20:00

Tuesdays at 17:30–19:00

Dates: 2 Feb, 1 Mar

Date: 2 Feb, 1, 8 Mar

Irish studies Tuesdays at 18:00–20:00

Open University book history and bibliography research seminar

Dates: 12 Feb, 11 Mar

Mondays at 17:30–19:00 Dates: 15, 22 Feb, 7 Mar, 11, 18 Apr

Literary London reading group Tuesdays at 18:00–19:30

Pedagogic criticism workshop

Dates: 15 Mar, 12 Apr

Fridays at 14:00–17:00 Dates: 26 Feb

London Modernism seminar Saturdays at 11:00–13:00

Postgraduate feminist reading group

Date: 6 Feb, 5 Mar

Thursdays at 18:30–20:00 Dates: 25 Feb, 31 March, 28 Apr

London nineteenth-century studies seminar Fridays at 17:30–19:30 Dates: 26 Feb London Old and Middle English research seminar (LOMERS)

Psychoanalytic thought, history and political life forum Mondays at 17:30–19:30 Date: 29 Feb, 21 Mar

Wednesdays at 17:30–19:30

The Charles Peake Ulysses seminar

Dates: 3 Feb, 23 Mar

Fridays at 18:00–20:00 Dates: 5 Feb, 4 Mar, 8 Apr

Mondays at 17:15–19:00

The London Beckett seminar

Dates: 8 Feb, 7 Mar

Fridays at 18:00–20:00

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

London Shakespeare seminar

Dates: 12 Feb, 11 Mar London theatre seminar Thursdays at 18:30–20:30 Dates: 4, 18 Feb, 10 Mar Media history

www.sas.ac.uk

Thursdays at 18:00–20:00 Dates: 18 Feb, 3 Mar

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Seminar series Institute of Historical Research Contact: ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk American history

Comparative histories of Asia Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:30 Dates: 4, 18 Feb, 3, 17 Mar

Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:30

Conversations and disputations

Dates: 4, 18 Feb, 3 Mar

Once a month on Fridays at 17:30

Archives and society

Dates: 12 Feb, 11 Mar

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:45

Crusades and the Latin East

Dates: 2 Feb, 1, 15 Mar, 19 Apr

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:15

British history in the 17th century

Dates: 18, 22 Feb, 7 Mar, 25 Apr

Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:30

Digital history

Dates: 11, 25 Feb, 10 Mar, 28 Apr

Usually Tuesdays at 17:15

British history in the long 18th century

Dates: 2, 19 Feb, 19 Apr

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:15

Disability history

Dates: 3, 17 Feb, 2, 16 Mar

1st Monday of every month at 17:15

British maritime history

Dates: 1 Feb, 1 Mar

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:15

Earlier middle ages

Dates: 2, 16 Feb, 1, 15 Mar, 26 Apr

Wednesdays at 17:30

Christian missions in global history Usually Tuesdays at 17:30 Dates: 9 Feb, 8 Mar

Dates: 3, 10, 17, 24 Feb, 2, 9, 10, 16 Mar Economic and social history of the early modern world Fortnightly on Fridays at 17:15

Collecting and display (100BC to AD1700)

Dates: 12, 26 Feb, 11, 18 Mar

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:30 Dates: 15 Feb, 7 Mar

Education in the long 18th century Once a month on a Saturday 14:00–16:00

Colonial/postcolonial new researchers’ workshop

Date: 5 Mar, 23 Apr

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:15

European history 1150–1550

Dates: 8, 22 Feb, 7 Mar, 25 Apr

Fortnightly on Thursdays 17:30

Contemporary British history Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:00 Dates: 10, 24 Feb, 9, 23 Mar 82

Dates: 11, 25 Feb, 10 Mar


Seminar series

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:15

Once a month on Tuesdays at 17:15

Dates: 22 Feb, 7 Mar, 25 Apr

Dates: 9, 19 Feb, 1 Mar

Film history

Imperial and world history

Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:30

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:15

Dates: 11 Feb, 10 Mar, 28 Apr

Dates: 15, 29 Feb, 14 Mar, 18 Apr

Gender and history in the Americas

International history

1st Monday of the month at 17:30

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 18:00

Dates: 1 Feb, 7 Mar, 4 Apr

Dates: 2, 16 Feb, 1, 15 Mar, 26 Apr

History and public health

Jewish history

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 12:45

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:15

Dates: 3 Feb

Dates: 1, 29 Feb, 14 Mar, 18 Apr

History lab

Late medieval and early modern Italy

Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:30

Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:15

Dates: 11, 25 Feb, 10 Mar, 28 Apr

Dates: 4, 18 Feb, 3, 17, 18 Mar

History of education

Late medieval

1st Thursday of every month at 17:30

Fridays at 17:30

Dates: 4 Feb, 3 Mar

Dates: 5, 12, 19, 26 Feb, 4, 11, 18 Mar

History of gardens and landscapes

Latin American history

Fortnightly on Thursdays 18:00

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:30

Dates: 4, 18 Feb, 3, 17 Mar

Dates: 9, 23 Feb, 8 Mar

History of libraries

Life–cycles

Once a month on a Tuesday at 17:30

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:15

Dates: 2 Feb, 1 Mar, 5 Apr

Dates: 2, 16 Feb, 1, 15 Mar, 19 Apr

History of political ideas

Locality and region

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:15

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:15

Dates: 10, 24 Feb, 27 Apr

Dates: 9, 23 Feb, 8 Mar, 26 Apr

History of political ideas / early career

London Group of Historical Geographers

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:15

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:15

Dates: 3, 17 Feb, 2, 16 Mar, 20 Apr

Dates: 9, 23 Feb, 8 Mar

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

History of sexuality

www.sas.ac.uk

European history 1500–1800

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Seminar series

London Society for Medieval Studies

Modern Italian history

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 19:00

Fortnightly on Wednesdays 17:30

Dates: 9, 23 Feb, 8 Mar, 26 Apr

Dates: 10, 24 Feb, 9 Mar

Low countries history

Modern religious history

Fortnightly on Fridays at 17:15

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:15

Dates: 12 Feb, 11, 18 Mar

Dates: 10, 24 Feb, 9 Mar

Marxism in culture

Oral history

Fortnightly on Fridays at 17:30

First Thursday of every month at 18:00

Dates: 5, 19 Feb, 4, 18 Mar

Date: 3 Mar

Media history

Parliaments, politics and people

Once a month on a Thursday at 18:00

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:15

Dates: 18 Feb, 3 Mar

Dates: 2, 16 Feb, 1, 15 Mar, 19 Apr

Medieval and Tudor London

Philosophy of history

Thursdays at 17:30

Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:30

Dates: 28 Apr

Dates: 4, 18 Feb, 3, 17 Mar

Metropolitan history

Psychoanalysis and history

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:30

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:30

Dates: 3, 17 Feb, 2, 16 Mar

Dates: 24 Feb, 9 Mar, 27 Apr

Military history

Public history

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:15

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:30

Dates: 2, 16 Feb, 1, 15 Mar

Dates: 19 Feb, 16 Mar

Modern British history Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:15

Reconfiguring the British: nation, empire, world 1600–1900

Dates: 4, 18 Feb, 3, 17 Mar, 28 Apr

Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:30 Dates: 11, 25 Feb, 10 Mar

Modern French history Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:30

Religious history of Britain 1500–1800

Dates: 1, 15, 29 Feb, 14 Mar, 18 Apr

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:15 Dates: 9, 23 Feb, 8, 22 Mar

Modern German history Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:30 Dates: 3, 17 Feb, 16 Mar 84


Seminar series

Dates: 24 Feb, 27 Apr Socialist history Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:30

Institute of Modern Languages Research Contact: modernlanguages@sas.ac.uk Thinking being Mondays at 10:00–12:00

Dates: 8, 22 Feb, 7 Mar, 25 Apr

Dates: 29 Feb, 7, 14 Mar, 11, 18, 25 Apr

Society, culture and belief, 1500–1800

French postgraduate seminar

Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:30

Once a month on Tuesdays at 17:00

Dates: 18 Feb, 17 Mar

Dates: 9 Feb, 8 Mar, 26 Apr

Sport and leisure history

French theatre

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:15

Once a month on Tuesdays at 17:00

Dates: 1, 15, 29 Feb, 14 Mar, 18 Apr

Dates: 23 Feb, 15 Mar, 5 Apr

Studies of home

IMLR graduate forum

First Wednesday of every month at 17:30 Dates: 3 Feb, 2 Mar

Once a month on Thursdays at 18:00 Dates: 18 Feb, 10 Mar, 14 Apr

Tudor and Stuart history

Institute of Philosophy

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:15

Contact: philosophy@sas.ac.uk

Dates: 8, 22 Feb, 7 Mar, 25 Apr Voluntary action history Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:30 Dates: 1, 15, 29 Feb, 14 Mar, 18 Apr War, society and culture Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:15 Dates: 10, 24 Feb, 9 Mar Women’s history Fortnightly on Fridays at 17:15 Dates: 5, 19 Feb, 4, 18 Mar

CenSes Usually Thursdays at 17:00–19:00 Dates: 11, 25 Feb, 10 Mar

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:30

Logic, epistemology and metaphysics forum Usually Tuesdays at 17:30–19:30 Dates: 2, 16 Feb, 1 Mar, 12 Apr London aesthetics forum Usually Wednesdays at 16:00–18:00 Dates: 10, 24 Feb, 9 Mar IP lunchtime seminar Wednesday 9 Mar at 17:00–19:00, Tuesday 15 Mar at 12:00–13:30 Dates: 9, 15 Mar 85

www.sas.ac.uk

Rethinking modern Europe


Seminar series

The practical, the political, the ethical Usually Tuesdays at 17:30–19:30 Dates: 9, 23 Feb, 8, 15 Mar

The Warburg Institute Contact: warburg@sas.ac.uk Arabic philosophy Mondays at 14.15–15.15 Dates: 1, 8, 22, 19 Feb, 7, 14, 21 Mar, 25 Apr Basic knowledge of Arabic required Esoteric traditions and occult thought Fridays at 13.00–14.15 Dates: 5, 12, 26 Feb, 4, 11, 18 Mar, 29 Apr From devilry to divinity: readings in the Divina Commedia Tuesdays at 13.00–14.15 Dates: 2, 9, 23 Feb, 1, 8 Mar Marsilio Ficino’s De amore Tuesdays at 17.30–19.00 Dates: 2, 9, 23 Feb, 1, 8, 15, 22 Mar Maps and society Occasional Thursdays at 17.00–18.00 Dates: 4, 25 Feb, 10 Mar, 14, 28 Apr Plotinus study group Wednesdays at 17.30–19.30 Dates: 3, 10, 17 Feb

Senate House Library Contact: senatehouselibrary@london.ac.uk Senate House Library Friends events For details and membership visit www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk/about-us/friends 86


This general training is complemented by a set of research methodologies courses for students in social science disciplines, and in the software and management information tools required to enable students to complete their research effectively.

‘The School’s extensive and varied range of training programmes are designed to meet the needs of 21st-century researchers, offering programmes which enable scholars in the humanities to develop their skills and pursue their studies to maximum effect.’ Rachel Sutton, Registrar

Training in aspects of history, for instance, is extensive, notably in the Institute of Historical Research (IHR), which offers a comprehensive programme of short courses in research skills for historians. Taking advantage of the unparalleled availability of historical expertise in the University of London, and the wealth of archival materials in and around the capital, the Institute’s long-established and highly successful courses are widely recognised as the best means of developing and extending both essential and more specialised research skills. The IHR training programme is primarily aimed at postgraduate historians, but also welcomes established historians and independent researchers and writers of all sorts. Further historical skills courses run by The Warburg Institute include classes in medieval and Renaissance Latin for historians, and a programme of training in resources and techniques (jointly with the University of Warwick), which provides specialist research training for doctoral students working on Renaissance and early modern subjects in a range of disciplines. The London Palaeography Summer School run by the Institute of English Studies provides training in that key skill. Extensive training for students of cultures and literatures is offered by the Institute of Modern Languages Research, whose

well-established and popular programme, comprising a series of Saturday workshops, is offered to any postgraduate student working in modern languages or a related discipline (for instance, film, or art history). Most of the School’s training is available to postgraduate students across the UK, much of it free of charge. Details of all the research training courses provided are available from our website: www.sas.ac.uk/supportresearch/research-training

Online research training

In addition to the face-to-face training we offer, the School’s Postgraduate Online Research Training (PORT) website provides free online resources including tutorials, handbooks, and multimedia. PORT complements postgraduate study, providing training packages that can be accessed anywhere, at any time, and be undertaken at any pace. It provides the building blocks for humanities research generally, as well as in particular humanities disciplines and specific topics. Designed to meet the needs of 21st-century researchers, PORT offers specific skills-based programmes as well as more general guidance. For further information, please visit port.sas.ac.uk. If you would like to receive a printed copy of our research training and skills handbook, or would like any guidance, please contact us:

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

The School’s programme of personal development and transferable skills training is available in the form of weekly workshops, commencing in the autumn.

Making the most of the expertise available in the School and the University of London, the institutes between them also provide well-established disciplinespecific research training in core humanities disciplines.

www.sas.ac.uk

The School of Advanced Study draws on its research and teaching expertise to provide a programme of discipline-specific, generic and online research training to support the development of the scholars of tomorrow.

Research training

Research training

Email sas.info@sas.ac.uk Phone +44 (0)20 7862 8823/8695

87


Research training Further details of all calls for papers are available from our websites at www.sas.ac.uk/events and senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

88


20 May 2016

2016 W G Hart legal workshop: ‘Valuing expertise: legal, normative and social dimensions’

CFP deadline: 1 March 2016

20–21 September 2016

What are the multifaceted perspectives and contrasting motivations that emerge around resource extraction? How do encounters with natural and extractive resources shape local imaginaries of citizenship and ethics, but equally notions of opportunity, sociality and autonomy? How do nuanced accounts of local experiences reconfigure our understanding of extraction, environmentalism and power? How do customary knowledge practices and historical encounters with extractive economies feed into ideas of resource extraction in the present? How do people adapt to extractive activities while negotiating with and mitigating the negative effects? How does participation in extractive activities, and encounters with the materials themselves, influence transforming notions of value and the relationship between nature and society? How are ideas of development localised to take into consideration kinship and cosmology rather than merely notions of environmentalism and injustice? Please submit abstracts of approximately 300 words to the conference organisers: Amy Penfield, amy.penfield@sas. ac.uk and Ainhoa Montoya, ainhoa.montoya@sas.ac.uk).

CFP deadline: 24 February 2016 From expert evidence in the courtroom, to the use of scientific knowledge in the justification for, and framing of, legislation, law and science are inextricably intertwined. Yet the extent to which science is well represented in law has long been doubted. The issue has become more pressing in recent years due to increased scientific and technological innovation, which draws into the adjudicative, legislative and policy realms areas of great scientific complexity for which legal expertise, in and of itself, proves insufficient. Such work also highlights the significant barriers and obstacles for regulators understanding other disciplines and the problems that can result. This workshop seeks to bring together a range of scholars, policy actors and others, whose diverse and innovative work addresses the complex meeting point of law and science, regulation and politics, evidence and epistemology. We welcome contributions that help to facilitate a conversation that can more broadly investigate the barriers to the kind of interdisciplinary understanding necessary for evidence-based legal and policy practice, and to map in concrete contexts how a commitment to evidence-based approaches would impact upon legal and public policy. Early career scholars are especially welcome, and key contributors will be invited to speak to the following core themes: the relationship of expert knowledge to governance; law’s knowledge; identifying expertise – demarcating the boundary between science and policy; using expertise; measuring expertise; the politics of expertise; judging expertise. The key aim of the event is to draw together a range of scholarship and work around the manner by which science, regulation and politics meet for which ‘expertise’ constitutes an organising concept. We will seek to publish a selection of the works and findings from the workshop in a special issue of a leading UK journal.

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

The exploitation of Latin America’s rich and varied resources has made the region a target for scholarly debates around fossil fuel economies, corporate exploitation, environmental impact and the development of accompanying infrastructure. This workshop, which is hosted by the Institute of Latin American Studies and includes a keynote address, aims to tease out: the nuances of local level conflict; the competing motivations of extractive enterprises; the absence of any discernable conflict. It will highlight the complex interplay between local imaginaries, moral ambiguities, cultural exigencies and the economic and political factors relating to both large- and small-scale resource exploitation, thereby providing an holistic account of natural resources and extractive activities, from so-called ‘artisanal’ mining and jobs in the oil industry, to agrobusiness and cocaine production. We encourage papers that wish to uncover alternative narratives on resource, and welcome submissions that address one or more of the following questions:

Please submit abstracts of no more than 1,000 words to ials.wghart@sas.ac.uk. Abstracts should highlight engagement with one of the core themes and must not include embedded footnotes or endnotes. Academic enquiries may be addressed to: r.ashcroft@qmul.ac.uk, priaulxn@cardiff.ac.uk or matthew.weait@port.ac.uk.

www.sas.ac.uk

Resource entanglements: disparate narratives on natural resource extraction in Latin America

Calls for papers

Calls for papers

89


How to find us Unless otherwise stated, all events are held within the central University of London precinct in Bloomsbury, central London. Most events take place in or around Senate House South and North Blocks (North Block rooms are named accordingly) or Stewart House (Stewart House room numbers are preceded with ST) which are adjacent. The University of London takes its responsibility to visitors with special needs very seriously and will endeavour to make reasonable adjustments to facilities to accommodate such needs. If you have a particular requirement, please discuss it confidentially with the event organiser ahead of the event taking place. Rooms listed in the events brochure are located as follows: Senate House University of London Malet Street London WC1E 7HU Stewart House University of London 32 Russell Square London WC1B 5DN Charles Clore House Institute of Advanced Legal Studies 17 Russell Square London WC1B 5DR The Warburg Institute Woburn Square London WC1H 0AB

A number of events will be held at external venues. Please see www.sas.ac.uk/events and senatehouselibrary.ac.uk for details.

90


Produced by SAS and Senate House Library Marketing and Communications Designed by www.emosaic.co.uk Printed by Circle Services Group

Cover 1) Abstract image, MoinMoin / Shutterstock 2) Statue of the greek philosopher Thukydides, Vienna, Austria, © alessandro0770 / Shutterstock (also on page 12) Page 6 3) One of John Bell’s 1774 editions of Shakespeare’s plays, described by John Wolfson as ‘the most corrupt edition ever published’, © University of London Page 8 Friedrich Justin Bertuch, Bilderbuch für Kinder, 1806, public domain via Wikimedia Commons Page 9 1) Apuleius advises the use of demons as mediators between mankind and the gods, French column miniature, 1475–80. Maître François, public domain via Wikimedia Commons 2) © Tropinina Olga / Shutterstock Page 10 1) Acervo da Fundação Biblioteca Nacional – Brasil 2) Miniature de Cnut le Grand dans une généalogie royale du XIVe siècle, public domain via Wikimedia Commons Page 11 2) © Monkey Business Images / Shutterstock Page 12 2) By mooncow (own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/bysa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons Page 13 1) Abby Brack / Library of Congress Photos 2) © PHOTOCREO Michal Bednarek / Shutterstock Page 14 3) Alice Lejeune – Grotte Scalina 19.07.2012 Pages 18, 86 © Lloyd Sturdy, University of London Page 79 © Andy Day, School of Advanced Study Page 88 © Christian Vinces / Shutterstock


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