Scool of Advanced Study : Events Brochure May - Sep 15

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MAY/JUNE/JULY/ AUGUST/SEPTEMBER 2015

city of light: Paris 1900–1950

EXAMINING INTERACTIONS between music, THE VISUAL ARTS, LITERATURE AND DANCE

school of advanced study humanities open day, 10 june


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

14

Exhibitions

18

Events calendar – Listings

21

Seminar series

66

Research training

71

Calls for papers

72

How to find us

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Key Subject area key

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

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 has unveiled its new Talking Humanities blog, 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 the things that interest the humanities researcher. 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 May

June

The Mausoleum of Hadrian rediscovered: a new architectural study Professor Paolo Vitti presents an architectural analysis of Hadrian’s Mausoleum, outlining new insights into the original layout.

Civil war and narrative conference This conference explores the role of testimonies and narratives in civil wars and considers a range of contexts in a comparative historical perspective, from the English Civil Wars to the current conflict in Syria.

Lepore & Stone: authors meet critic Stephen Neale is a British analytic philosopher and specialist in the philosophy of language. He will serve as a commentator at this event exploring philosophy of language with discussion of Ernest Lepore and Matthew Stone’s latest book: Imagination and convention: Distinguishing Grammar and Inference in Language.

Time: 17:00–20:00 Date: 6 May

Time: 09:00–20:30 Date: 15 May

Time: 09:30–18:30 Date: 19 May

See page 24 for event information

See page 30 for event information

Quaker contributions in the First World War Many Quakers refused to bear arms in the First World War and instead undertook relief work. David Blake examines the appalling and often dangerous conditions they faced across Europe. Time: 18:00–19:30 Date: 14 May See page 30 for event information

See page 32 for event information

SAS humanities open day This event will showcase the School’s vast array of resources including courses, research training, libraries, archives and digital tools. Tours of Senate House will also be offered. The day will culminate with a celebration of the 2015 Being Human festival winners of the UK-wide funding competition. Time: 13:00–20:00 Date: 10 June See page 45 for event information

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September

Warburg Library’s network: geography and history of an intellectual afterlife From the 1920s the Warburg Library owed its unique politics of publication to a network of collaborators in which Raymond Klibansky played a crucial role. The 10th anniversary of his death provides an occasion to reflect on his exceptional contribution to the library.

‘Sowing the whirlwind’: nuclear politics and the historical record Dr Akiko Mikamo was raised in Hiroshima City by atomic bomb survivors and is a featured speaker at this conference exploring nuclear politics and the impact of misinformation and secrecy from the start of the Second World War until the present day.

Time: 10:00–17:00 Date: 18–19 June

Time: 10.00–18:00 Date: 16 July

See page 50 for event information

See page 51 for event information

‘Fashion’: the 84th AngloAmerican conference of historians The Institute of Historical Research’s annual conference, in collaboration with the Victoria and Albert Museum, highlights how the history of fashion, and the role of fashion in history, encompasses the history of art and architecture, consumption, retailing and technology.

What ever happened to the working class? Rediscovering class consciousness in contemporary literature This interdisciplinary and international conference aims to bring together researchers and academics working in the fields of the literature and culture of the working class.

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Time: 10:00–17:30 Date: 22–23 June

See page 58 for event information

Time: 09:00–17:00 Date: 17 September See page 64 for event information

Time: 09:00–19:00 Date: 2–3 July See page 56 for event information

www.sas.ac.uk

Law and the ageing of humankind (WG Hart legal workshop 2015) Scholars and practitioners at the workshop will explore legal responses to the challenges posed by the ‘greying’ of the population and the demands of intergenerational equity.

Event highlights

July

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Event highlights

Beyond the digital humanities 5 May 2015

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Digital humanities as an academic subject is becoming increasingly popular and influential, but its relationship to orthodox academic disciplines and creative practice remains complex and unclear. And with commentators arguing that this is the ‘post-digital era’ – a coming to terms with the changes brought about by the widespread use of PCs and network technologies – this timely event will review, and aims to build on, the work of NeDiMAH (Network for Digital Methods in the Arts and Humanities) and the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC). These two organisations, with the AHRC working through its Digital Transformations theme, have been working to advance the

vision of a digitally transformed arts and humanities. Previously, digital methods were developed and deployed by a relatively small community, but now they are more mainstream and can no longer be treated as separate specialised activities. Presenters and panellists come from a range of international higher education institutions and research organisations who will also look at the relationship between policy, research and practice, examining the potential contribution to challenges such as creative cities, cultural heritage, big data and the relationship to new forms of science. See page 22 for event information


Event highlights

Quaker contributions in the First World War

Rome-London lecture 6 May 2015 This year’s lecture at the Institute of Classical Studies (in association with the British School at Rome), has Professor Paolo Vitti presenting an architectural analysis of Hadrian’s mausoleum. The detailed reconstruction, which was prepared for the exhibition

Apoteosi. Da uomini a Dei, held recently in Rome, is based on structures preserved within the present-day Castel Sant’Angelo. Professor Vitti estimates that nearly 80 per cent of the original masonry survives, but is mostly concealed beneath later additions. New insights have been gained into the original architectural layout, the construction methods and the route used to reach the top of the mausoleum.

See page 30 for event information

www.sas.ac.uk

The mausoleum of Hadrian rediscovered: a new architectural study

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

14 May 2015 A talk by David Blake, head of library and archives, Library of the Religious Society of Friends. In line with the Society’s peace witness, many Quakers refused to bear arms in the First World War and instead undertook relief work in regions ravaged by the war and its aftermath. They faced appalling and often dangerous conditions across Europe. In France they worked tirelessly to bring relief and offer assistance to civilians displaced by the fighting. In Britain they gave support to ‘enemy aliens’ interned in prison camps, to their families, and to prisoners of war transported from Europe.

See page 24 for event information

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Event highlights Civil war and narrative conference 15–16 May 2015 This conference explores the role of testimonies and narratives in civil wars. A range of contexts will be considered in a comparative historical perspective, from the English Civil Wars to the current conflict in Syria. It brings together researchers in a number of disciplines, journalists, peace practitioners and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) involved in recording, archiving and analysing survivors’ testimonies. It also provides an opportunity for discussion with peace practitioners Jo Dover, Claire Hackett and Katy Radford, and representatives from organisations working with NGOs such as the Foundation for Peace, Healing Through Remembering and Vivo – Victim’s Voice. See page 30 for event information

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Event highlights

22 May 2015 Historians, literary scholars and anthropologists will gather at this one-day workshop to discuss how Latin American societies studied, interpreted and represented their landscapes, environment, natural resources

See page 35 for event information

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www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Convenors: Sophie Brockmann and Michela Coletta

and natural disasters. Professor Ottmar Ette, a leading specialist on Alexander von Humboldt and his American travel diaries, will give the keynote speech and participants are expected to come from the UK, Europe, North and South America. The workshop is one of a series organised by the Institute of Latin American Studies to bring together emerging and established scholars to identify mutual research interests and lay the groundwork for future collaborations and conferences.

www.sas.ac.uk

Nature and knowledge in Latin America: new historical perspectives


Event highlights City of Light: Paris 1900–1950 international conference 27–29 May 2015 Organised in conjunction with City of Light: Paris 1900–1950, the Philharmonia Orchestra’s festival of French music, this conference is held in partnership with the Institut Français du Royaume-Uni and the Institute of Musical Research (IMR). It will explore the period’s Parisian musical and artistic milieu and its interactions with the visual arts, literature and dance, while considering the socio-political history that drew leading creative artists of the age to Paris from across Europe and North America. Myriam Chimènes (Director of Research, Centre national de la recherche scientifique) will be the keynote speaker. See page 36 for event information

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Event highlights See page 45 for event information

16–17 June 2015 This two-day conference brings together prominent researchers from several fields in which philosophical issues about the practices and conventions, involved in interpretation, have had a profound impact on subject matter — linguistics, law, cognitive science, archaeology, architecture, literature, and music. Speakers will include: Noël Carroll (CUNY Graduate Centre), Gregory Currie, Peter Lamarque (University of York), Peter Kivy (Rutgers University), Stephen Neale (CUNY Graduate Centre), Barry Smith (School of Advanced Study), Colin Renfrew (University of Cambridge), Kathleen Stock (University of Sussex), and Deirdre Wilson (University College London). See page 48 for event information

From Hamburg to London, and to Montreal: the contribution of Raymond Klibansky (1905–2005) 18–19 June 2015 From the 1920s the Warburg Library owed its unique politics of publication to a close-knit network around Fritz Saxl and Gertrud Bing – a network of collaborators in which Raymond Klibansky played a crucial role. The 10th anniversary of the death of Klibansky will be an occasion to reflect on his exceptional contribution to the great collective ventures of the library, which profoundly altered our perception of occidental intellectual history through publications like the Latin and Arabic Corpus Platonicum Medii Aevi (1940–62) or the belated but all the more famous Saturn and Melancholy (1964). See page 50 for event information

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

This event will showcase the School’s vast array of resources including information about courses, research training, libraries, archives and digital tools. Ideal for undergraduates as well as early career researchers, the day will include tours of Senate House and Senate House library as well as pop-up talks on some of the biggest issues facing the humanities today. The day will culminate with an announcement and celebration of the 2015 Being Human festival winners of the UK-wide funding competition. For more information and to register for this free event, please visit bitly.com/OpenDayJune.

Warburg Library’s network: geography and history of an intellectual afterlife

www.sas.ac.uk

SAS humanities open Interpretive practice: day language, law, science and the arts 10 June 2015

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Event highlights

Government secrecy Screen Studies Group: Law and the ageing of humankind in the era of openness: the political screen 19–20 June 2015 an ACARM WG Hart legal workshop 2015 This two-day international 22–23 June 2015 symposium Organised by the Association of Commonwealth Archivists and Records Managers (ACARM), in partnership with the Institute of Commonwealth Studies 19 June 2015 The 2011 Open Government Partnership was established to support and promote transparent and accountable government internationally. However, very little attention is paid to the laws, policies and practices still being used to restrict access to information, including Official Secrets legislation, the Lord Chancellor’s Security and Intelligence Instrument and the Defence Notice system. This one-day symposium will consider the tension between secrecy and openness in government information management. See page 50 for event information

conference co-organised by the Screen Studies Group, School of Advanced Study, the London School of Economics and University College London, brings together leading scholars to examine the complex intertwined histories of global political economy and screen media. Panels and papers address the politics of production, distribution, representation and exhibition of film, television and contemporary digital media. It is a forum for considering the practices of a broadly configured screen studies and its utility to the urgent necessity of political and economic transformation. Keynote speakers include Anna McCarthy (NYU), S V Srinivas (Azim Premji University) and Liesbet van Zoonen (Loughborough University). See page 50 for event information

Scholars and practitioners at the ‘Law and the ageing of humankind’ workshop will explore legal responses to the challenges posed by the ‘greying’ of the population and the demands of intergenerational equity. It will question whether we need a new category of ‘Elder Law’, and perhaps an older persons’ rights convention. Papers will examine developments in domestic laws in countries such as China, Israel and Germany, developments at European level, internationally and in human rights law. Themes include: human rights; relational issues; rights to, and within, institutional care; vulnerability; age discrimination; property, inheritance and taxation; and medical decision-making at the end of life. Keynote speakers include: Jonathan Herring (Oxford), Jean McHale (Birmingham), Jonathan Montgomery (UCL) and Richard Ashcroft (Queen Mary). See page 51 for event information

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Event highlights

Whatever happened to the working class? Rediscovering class consciousness in contemporary literature

2–3 July 2015 In collaboration with the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A), the Institute of Historical Research is taking fashion as the theme for its annual conference, highlighting the fact that the history of fashion, and the role of fashion in history, is not just confined to the study of dress and costume. It encompasses

design and innovation, taste and zeitgeist, treats as its subjects both people and objects, and crosses over into related disciplines such as the history of art and architecture, consumption, retailing and technology. With a wide range of papers, panels and V&A tours, the conference appeals to academics and the public. For more information, please visit anglo-american.history.ac.uk. See page 56 for event information

See page 64 for event information

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www.sas.ac.uk

‘Fashion’: the 84th Anglo-American conference of historians

Between Ed Miliband’s squeezed middle and tabloid diatribes against the underclass, the working class has seemingly disappeared from critical discourse in literary and cultural studies. Nevertheless issues of class, class consciousness, classlessness, and new configurations of class such as new affluent workers, the emergent service sector and the precariat, continue to form a rich source for novelists, poets and dramatists. This interdisciplinary and international conference aims to bring together researchers and academics working in the fields of the literature and culture of the working class. For more information, please visit www.ies.sas.ac.uk/ WorkingClassLiterature.

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

17 September 2015


Speaker highlights

Otto von Bismarck: a bicentennial exhibition and lecture 6 May 2015 Jonathan Steinberg Walter H. Annenberg Professor of Modern European History, University of Pennsylvania and Emeritus Fellow, Trinity Hall, Cambridge Professor Steinberg appeared in the documentary film Bismarck: Härte und Empfindsamkeit which premiered on 21 February, 2015 and is the author of numerous books. They include The Deutsche Bank and its Gold Transactions during the Second World War, Yesterday’s Deterrent: Tirpitz and the Birth of the German Battle Fleet, Why Switzerland? and All or Nothing: The Axis and the Holocaust, 1941 to 1943. His biography, Bismarck: A Life, which has been translated into Russian, Japanese, Chinese, Portuguese, Turkish and Danish, was shortlisted for the BBC Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction in June 2011, and a year later, the Duff Cooper Prize. See page 24 for event information

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Education, cultural literacy and collective memory in Latin America 7 May 2015 André Piza Project manager, People’s Palace Projects André Piza is a producer and theatre director, with several years’ experience in the arts and education industries. Originally a graduate in journalism from University of São Paulo, he ran his film production company for four

years before joining Ágora Teatro. After graduating from RADA with an MA in Theatre Directing, he began working with People’s Palace Projects as a freelancer. Since then, André has supported many projects including Rio Occupation London, Points of Contact and Arte sem Limites. He now manages a range of projects such as The Agency and The Art of Cultural Exchange and coordinates research relationships with Brazilian indigenous peoples. See page 25 for event information


Speaker highlights

John Coffin Memorial Annual Palaeography Lecture

The cultural afterlife of criminal evidence

13 May 2015

13 May 2015

Nicholas Vincent FBA Professor of medieval history at the University of East Anglia

Katherine Biber Legal scholar, criminologist and historian, University of Technology, Sydney

To mark the 800th anniversary of the Magna Carta, this year’s lecture will be delivered by Professor Nicholas Vincent, a leading authority on the best known document in English history. The professor of medieval history at the University of East Anglia, has published a dozen books and numerous articles on kingship, charters and relics within the AngloFrench world of the 12th and 13th centuries. He is the author of A Very Short Introduction to Magna Carta, and leads a major project researching the background to Magna Carta. It is funded by the Arts & Humanities Research Council. See page 29 for event information

Katherine Biber’s work focuses on photography, visual culture, and adversarial litigation. She has worked in community legal centres, and studies the relationship between social disadvantage and transgression. She is author of Captive Images: Race, Crime, Photography and co-editor of The Lindy Chamberlain Case: Nation, Law, Memory. During her Visiting Fellowship at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies she is working on a book titled In Crime’s Archive: The Cultural Afterlife of Evidence. In this lecture she will examine the cultural afterlife of criminal evidence, exploring what happens to evidence outside the courtroom during and after a criminal trial.

Lepore & Stone: authors meet critic 19 May 2015 Stephen Neale Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and Linguistics Stephen Neale is a British analytic philosopher and specialist in the philosophy of language, and a leading authority on Bertrand Russell’s Theory of Descriptions, on the philosophies of Paul Grice and Donald Davidson, and on the intricacies of formal arguments in logic known as slingshots. He is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and Linguistics and holder of the John H. Kornblith Family Chair in the Philosophy of Science and Values at City University of New York. His best known books are Descriptions and Facing Facts. Noteworthy articles include: ‘Meaning, Grammar, and Indeterminacy’ and ‘Paul Grice and the Philosophy of Language’. See page 32 for event information

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Open justice and open secrets

www.sas.ac.uk

Who wrote Magna Carta?

See page 29 for event information

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Speaker highlights

Encounters: writers and translators in conversation 19 May 2015 Angela Krauß and Margret Vince Known for her crisp, laconic style and her political engagement with Germany’s recent past and present, Angela Krauß is a prizewinning German writer. Having worked in advertising before studying literature in Leipzig and becoming a freelance writer, her stories and novels display a detailed sceptical view of reality in the GDR before the fall of the Berlin wall. The author and her translator, Margret Vince, will read from her work, both in German and English, and will discuss issues of translation. See page 33 for event information

Fechtbücher: a neglected source for the histories of art and education 20 May 2015 Sydney Anglo Professor Emeritus, University of Wales Swansea For many years, Sydney Anglo was professor of the history of ideas and then research professor at the University of Wales Swansea. Although Fechtbücher usually indicates the German manuscript and printed book tradition from the 15th–17th centuries, the genre of the personal combat manual extends throughout Europe and endures to the present day. The combination of text and illustrations offers scope for enthusiasts seeking to reconstruct the history of personal combat and for scholars interested in: the depiction of movement; the ways humanist ideas about physical training were put into practice, how they were taught and by whom; the evolution of diagrammatic notation and its relationship to the history of dancing; the application of mathematics and engineering principles to analyse complex human activity; the history of mnemonics. See page 34 for event information

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Webs of knowledge: untangling the practices of textile production in ancient Greece Annual J. P. Barron Memorial Lecture 3 June 2015 Lin Foxhall Professor of Greek archaeology and history, University of Leicester Professor Lin Foxhall, head of the University of Leicester’s School of Archaeology and Ancient History, will deliver the Annual J. P. Barron Memorial Lecture on the theme: ‘Webs of knowledge: untangling the practices of textile production in ancient Greece’. She has published extensively on ancient agriculture, notably Olive Cultivation in Ancient Greece: Seeking the Ancient Economy and edited several volumes on gender in classical antiquity. Professor Foxhall also leads the Tracing Networks Project funded by the Leverhulme Trust, and is codirector of the Bova Marina project in southern Italy. She has also held posts at Oxford University and University College London. See page 41 for event information


Speaker highlights

‘Sowing the whirlwind’: nuclear politics and the historical record 16 July 2015 Akiko Mikamo Author, president of US-Japan Psychological Services, San Diego-Worldwide Initiative to Safeguard Humanity and 2014 World Peace and Prosperity Foundation Award Recipient

www.sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Dr Akiko Mikamo, who was born in Hiroshima, Japan, is a clinical, forensic, and sport psychologist as well as an executive coach and educator. Both her parents were about half a mile from the epicentre of the atomic bomb explosion and miraculously survived. Having been raised in Hiroshima City by the atomic bomb survivors and with a disabled older sister, she has been determined since childhood to contribute to world peace and humanity. She is also the author of the soon to be published Rising from the Ashes: A True Story of Survival and Forgiveness from Hiroshima. See page 58 for event information

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Plate from The Tower Bridge by J. E. Tuit (London: Engineer, 1894), image copyright Senate House Library, University of London.

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Exhibitions

Exhibitions

Duty and Dissent

London: Power, Progress and Pleasure

12 January–5 June 2015

22 June–18 September 2015

Senate House Library, Convocation Hall Senate House Library has extremely rich holdings of material produced by those who resisted the national war effort during the First World War, much of which was officially suppressed under the Defence of the Realm Act (1914). This exhibition presents a selection of these items alongside governmental recruiting posters and other printed propaganda. As well as offering evidence of differing opinions, this presentation seeks to draw out similarities between them, particularly how both groups made strident appeals to very similar fundamental principles, or human duties, in order to support their arguments. The exhibition is free and no registration is required. Please contact Richard Espley with enquiries at richard.espley@london.ac.uk

Senate House Library, Convocation Hall David Bailey, Britain’s most iconic photographer, once said: ‘If you’re curious, London is an amazing place’. This exhibition, which encourages visitors to question everything about the city will feed your curiosity for the capital. It is part of LIBER 2015, the Association of European Research Libraries conference being co-hosted by Senate House Library (SHL), and will include items on travel, the river, democracy, protest and pleasure from the library collections of SHL, London School of Economics and University College London. The exhibition is free and no registration is required. Please contact Richard Espley with enquiries at richard.espley@london.ac.uk

Chaucer: Science, Magic and Technology 1 April–30 May 2015 Senate House Library, Membership Hall This exhibition, organised by the Institute of Modern Languages Research in association with Senate House Library, focuses on the experiences of German-speaking refugees who came to the UK in the 1930s after the National Socialists took power in Central Europe. It draws on some of the most fascinating material deposited in the German Studies Archives by exile actors, writers, journalists, trade unionists and other political activists, to illustrate the cultural, social and political lives of the refugees in their new home country. Sponsored by the Miller Trust.

29 June–11 July 2015 Senate House Library Senate House Library is curating an exhibition of various items to support this summer’s Biennial London Chaucer conference: Science, Magic and Technology. The display will be in the Membership Hall of the Library between 29 June and 11 July, and will include early editions of Chaucer. The exhibition is free and no registration is required. Please contact Richard Espley with enquiries at richard.espley@london.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Exile Lives told through the Archives

www.sas.ac.uk

The exhibition is free and no registration is required. Please contact Clare George with enquiries at clare.george@sas.ac.uk

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Events calendar

Events calendar May 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 May Friday 1 Institute of Philosophy Seminar 09:00–18:00 TBC

Sensation of movement

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

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

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

ICS postgraduate work in progress seminar

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

Apartheid at the world court: the dispute between Sir Percy Spender and Sir Muhammed Zafrulla Khan in the South West Africa cases revisited

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G35

The Charles Peake Ulysses seminar

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Arabic philosophy seminar

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Matthew Longo (Birkbeck), Hong Yu Wong (Cin, Tbingen), Anne Kavounoudias (Aix-Marseille), Andreas Kalckert (Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm), Myrto Mylopoulos (Institut Jean Nicod, Paris), Thor Grünbaum, Mark Schram (Copenhagen) | CenSes seminar Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

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Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk Mariana Thoma (Athens) | Open to postgraduate students only | Registration required Free postgradwip@gmail.com

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Victor Kattan (National University of Singapore) | Organised with the London Legal History Seminar | Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

Monday 4 Warburg Institute Seminar 14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute

Basic reading knowledge of Arabic is recommended | Registration required Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Tuesday 5 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Workshop 09:00–17:30 IALS

Supervising the PhD in law

School of Advanced Study 1-day conference 09:30–17:30 Senate House

Beyond the digital humanities

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Alison Diduck (UCL), Linda Mulcahy (LSE), Chizu Nakajima (London Guildhall Faculty of Business), Avrom Sherr (IALS), Constantin Stefanou (IALS), Helen Xanthaki (IALS), Lisa Webley (Westminster) | Registration required Fee applicable belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk Milena Žic-Fuchs (Zagreb), Lucy Kimbell (Brighton), Patrick Svensson (Ume), Andrew Prescott (Glasgow), Lorna Hughes (SAS), Barry Smith (IP), Alessio Assonitis (Medici Archive, Florence), Teal Triggs (Royal College of Art), Helle Porsdam (Copenhagen), Jacqueline Hicks (Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies) | Registration required Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

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Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar 12:30–14:00 Room 234

Hate speech and behaviour in contemporary Cyprus

Institute of Modern Languages Research Workshop 14:00–17:30 Room 246

Portuguese studies in the UK

Warburg Institute Seminar 16:15–17:15 Warburg Institute

Latin paleography class

Institute of Historical Research | Warburg Institute Seminar 16:30–19:30 Warburg Institute

Bombs on books: Germany’s lost libraries of World War Two

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

‘Gourmet guides to lovemaking’: Alex Comfort’s The Joy of Sex and the sex manual in 1970s Britain

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

Subjectivities in the aftermath: children of disabled soldiers in Britain between the wars

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

The family that prays together, stays together: male martyrs and their families in Marian England

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

The significance of the 1989 revolutions for the revival of Jewish life in Europe

Events calendar

Events calendar May OU

Yiannos Katsourides (ICWS) | Lunchtime seminar Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

Hugo Cardoso (Lisbon), Susana Afonso (Exeter), João Paulo Silvestre (King’s, London), Rhian Atkin (Cardiff), Regina Duarte (King’s, London) | Registration required Free joao.silvestre@camoes.mne.pt Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

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Jan L. Alessandrini (St Andrews) | History of libraries research seminar Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

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By Ben Mechen (UCL), Sarah Jones (Exeter): ‘Reproduction, eugenics and the fight for free love at the fin de siècle’ Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

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Lisa Gardner (Essex) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

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www.sas.ac.uk

Antony Lerman (London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

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

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Events calendar May Institute of Classical Studies Accordia lecture 17:30–20:00 Institute of Archaeology

Interpreting the Etruscans: between republicanism and princely rule (12th–16th centuries)

Human Rights Consortium Seminar 18:00–19:30 Chancellor’s Hall

5th international refugee law seminar series: ‘The extraterritorial application of the nonrefoulement obligation in international human rights law’

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Corinna Riva (UCL) Free admin.icls@sas.ac.uk

RL

Ralph Wilde (UCL) | Registration required Free rli@sas.ac.uk

Wednesday 6 Warburg Institute Seminar 14:15–15:15 Warburg Institute

The paper museum of Cassiano del Pozzo

Institute of Modern Languages Research Meeting and exhibition 16:00–18:00 Court Room

Kafka’s ‘Betrachtung’ and the visual arts around 1912

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 16:00–18:30 Room G35

IP aesthetics forum

Institute of Latin American Studies Panel discussion | book launch 16:30–18:30 Room G34

Panel and book launch: ‘Democracy against neoliberalism in Argentina and Brazil: a move to the left’ (Palgrave)

Institute of Historical Research Lecture 17:00–20:00 Wolfson Conference Suite, North Block

Otto von Bismarck: a bicentennial exhibition and lecture

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

The mausoleum of Hadrian rediscovered: a new architectural study

24

Amanda Claridge (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

UH

U

Elizabeth Boa (Nottingham) | Annual meeting of the Friends of Germanic Studies | An exhibition will mark the publication of the 100th title in the Institute’s Germanic Studies publications series | Registration required Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk Alberto Voltolini (Turin): ‘The identity and the existence of fictional characters’, Anthony Everett (Bristol): ‘Non-existence’ Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

P

HO

Author: Juan Pablo Ferrer (Bath) | Speaker: Francisco Panizza (LSE) Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

HS

Jonathan Steinberg (Pennsylvania) | Exhibition launch and lecture | Registration required Free ihr.events@sas.ac.uk

Paolo Vitti (Rome) | Rome–London lecture Free admin.icls@sas.ac.uk

CUS


Warburg Institute Seminar 17:15–18:30 Warburg Institute

Early modern satire of learning

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

Nationality as a global problem in British political thought: 1914–22

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

‘Safe as houses’: surveillance, aesthetics and invisibility in the design of the burglar-proof home, London 1860–1939

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Past and Present Room, 202, North Block

Democratic neoliberalism and the end of the Cold War

Federica Signoriello (London), Sari Kivistö (Helsinki) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Events calendar

Events calendar May U

HO

Georgios Giannakopoulos (Queen Mary) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

HO

Eloise Moss (Manchester) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Jim Cronin (Boston College, USA) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 7

Institute of Latin American Studies Conference 10:00–18:00 Room 104

Education, cultural literacy and collective memory in Latin America

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

The Brontoscopic calendar: melding Etruscan wisdom with Mesopotamian tablet-texts

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

Creating ‘mothers of the nation’: girls’ education in Nazi Germany

Virginia Cox (New York University), Nina Dubin (CASVA, Washington), Katherine East (Royal Holloway London), Lynn Fotheringham (Nottingham), Matthew Fox (Glasgow), Luke Houghton (Reading), Catherine Keen (UCL), Andrew Laird (Warwick), Carole Mabboux (Savoie), David Marsh (Rutgers), Martin McLaughlin (Oxford), Laura Refe (Venice) | Registration required £40 standard | £25 concession warburg@sas.ac.uk

CH

US

Keynote speaker: Dan Baron Cohen (Brazil) £15 standard | £10 concession olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

CH

Jean Turfa (Pennsylvania) | ICS ancient history seminar Free admin.icls@sas.ac.uk

H

Lisa Pine (London South Bank) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

25

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

The afterlife of Cicero

www.sas.ac.uk

Institute of Classical Studies | Warburg Institute 2-day conference 09:00–17:30 Warburg Institute


Events calendar May Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 TBC

In the time between then and now: memory, social change and everyday life

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G34

Media history seminar

H

Institute of Historical Research 1-day symposium 09:30–17:30 Wolfson Room II, North Block

Gender in war captivity: interdisciplinary perspectives

H

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

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

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

ICS postgraduate work in progress seminar

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

The Match Girl and the Heiress

U

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G26

Ezra Pound Cantos reading group: Canto VIII

U

H

Fiona Cosson (Manchester Metropolitan) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

Friday 8 Organised in conjunction with the Prisoner of War Network and Warwick Institute of Advanced Study Free powstudiesnetwork@gmail.com

UP

Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk Flavia Licciardello (Humboldt) | Open to postgraduate students only | Registration required Free postgradwip@gmail.com Seth Koven (Rutgers) will introduce his new book | Panel discussion to follow | London 19th-century studies seminar Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk Alex Runchman (Trinity College Dublin) Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

C

Saturday 9 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Symposium 10:00–16:00 IALS

26

The Islamic marriage conundrum, conflicts of recognition Ian Edge (SOAS), Vishal Vora (SOAS), J-P Dequen (SOAS), David Hodson, Valentine Le Grice QC, Prakash Shah (Queen Mary), Justice Andrew Moylan | Registration required Fee applicable ials.events@sas.ac.uk

L


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

Modernism seminar Sue Currell (Sussex): ‘Common ground: New Masses’ magazine and the CPUSA in New York, 1926-48 | Eric White (Kent): ‘Avant-Garde periodicals and WWI’ Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

Events calendar

Events calendar May U

Monday 11 Warburg Institute Seminar 14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute

Arabic philosophy seminar

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 16:00–18:00 Room 246

On the West-Eastern couch: Empedocles and Lao-Tzu as vanishing mediators

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–19:00 Room 243

Logos and pathos in Aristotle

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

Counsel and poisons: exploring the nexus between Venetian medicine and Ottoman politics

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:15 Wolfson Room II, North Block

The French occupation of Germany after 1945

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 264

Charles Townley’s Etruscan collection

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

Patient organisations and health consumerism in Britain, 1960s–2010s

Basic reading knowledge of Arabic is recommended | Registration required Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U

UP

Registration required Free johan.siebers@sas.ac.uk

Anthony Price (Birkbeck) | ICLS ancient philosophy seminar Free admin.icls@sas.ac.uk

C

H

Valentina Pugliano (Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Dirk Booms (British Museum) | Roman art seminar Free will.wootton@kcl.ac.uk

H

CU

H

www.sas.ac.uk

Alex Mold (London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Karen Adler (Nottingham) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

27


Events calendar May Tuesday 12 Warburg Institute Seminar 16:15–17:15 Warburg Institute

Latin paleography class

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

A pilot historical thesaurus of Scots

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Seng T Lee Room, Senate House Library

Contextualising London, Lambeth Palace Library, MS. 1230: late Celtic script and its descendents

Institute of Historical Research Lecture 18:30–20:00 Beveridge Hall

Why are we obsessed with the Nazis? The Third Reich in history and memory: Sir Richard Evans and Sir Ian Kershaw in conversation with Professor Nikolaus Wachsmann

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

Susan Rennie (Glasgow) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U

H

UH

Medieval manuscripts seminar Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

H

Sir Richard J. Evans (Wolfson College, Cambridge/Gresham College, London), Sir Ian Kershaw (Sheffield), Nikolaus Wachsman (Birkbeck) | Registration required Free ihr.events@sas.ac.uk

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

Weaving Petrarch: Cardinal Wolsey’s collection of tapestries

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

Whose grave is this? The ownership of grave plots in Ancient Greece

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

The textual history of part III of Leviathan, of a Christian commonwealth

School of Advanced Study Lecture 17:30–19:00 Imperial War Museum, London

Pandemics: can we learn the lessons of history?

28

U

Isobella Woldt (Bilderfahrzeuge Project, Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

CU

Rachel Zelnick-Abramovitz (Tel Aviv) | ICS guest lecture Free admin.icls@sas.ac.uk

H

Deborah Baumgold (Oregon) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Michael Baker (Otago/2015 NZ-UK Link Foundation visiting professor) | NZ-UK Link Foundation lectures | Registration required Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

H


Events calendar

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

Sharing of ministries abroad and transnational Anglican charismatic renewal, 1978–98

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Freud Museum

Roundtable on Josh Cohen’s The Private Life: Why We Remain in the Dark (2013)

H

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

The ‘vision of home’: Anna Mitgutsch’s House of Childhood

U

H

John Maiden (Open) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Rachel Bowlby (UCL/Princeton), Howard Caygill (Kingston), Barbara Taylor (Queen Mary), Josh Cohen (Goldsmiths) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Andrea Reiter (IMLR/Southampton) | Research Centre for German and Austrian Exile Studies seminar Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Institute of English Studies Institute of Historical Research Lecture 18:00–20:00 Beveridge Hall

Who wrote Magna Carta?

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

Open justice and open secrets: the cultural afterlife of criminal evidence

Nicholas Vincent (UEA) | John Coffin Memorial Lecture in Palaeography Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

UHS

LS

Katherine Biber (University of Technology Sydney/IALS Visiting Fellow) | IALS lunchtime seminar | Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

Digital text editing and knowledge transfer: sharing training and teaching methods

Warburg Institute 2-day colloquium 10:00–17:00 Warburg Institute

Pseudo-Galenic texts and the formation of the Galenic corpus

Institute of Philosophy Workshop 10:00–18:00 Room 246

BPPA masterclass: objectivity, space and mind

U

Amanda Gailey, Elena Pierazzo, Mats Dahlström, Franz Fischer, Toma Tasovac | Previous experience with text editing and/or teaching required | Registration required Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

U

Speakers include: Siam Bhayro (Exeter), Véronique Boudon-Millot (CNRS, Paris), Charles Burnett (Warburg), Marie Cronier (CNRS, Paris), Aileen Das (Manchester), Arsenio Ferraces Rodríguez (La Coruña), Klaus-Dietrich Fischer (Mainz), Stefania Fortuna (Ancona), Mareike Jas (Munich), Outi Merisalo (Jyväskylä), Brigitte Mondrain (EPHE, Paris) | Registration required Free warburg@sas.ac.uk Closed workshop (applicants only) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

P 29

www.sas.ac.uk

School of Advanced Study Workshop 09:30–17:00 Senate House

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Thursday 14


Events calendar May Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 12:30–13:30 IALS

Accountability or involvement? Open government and the participatory ideal

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

Cults and land use in ‘Punic’ Sardinia

Warburg Institute Lecture 17:00–18:30 Warburg Institute

Getting lost and finding the way: the use, misuse and non-use of maps in the Peninsular War (1807–14)

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

CenSes seminar

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

Studying Imperial Tommy and Republican Boer: armies, soldiers and the Anglo-Boer War (1899–1902)

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:00–19:30 North Block

‘Such expert play-acting’: Cary Grant and James Mason in North by Northwest

Senate House Library Lecture 18:00–19:30 Seng T Lee Room, Senate House Library

Quaker contributions in the First World War

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:30–20:00 Room 246

Postgraduate feminist reading group

L

Judith Bannister (Adelaide) | IALS lunchtime seminar | Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

Giuseppe Garbati (Rome) | ICS ancient history seminar Free admin.icls@sas.ac.uk

CH

U

Richard Smith (IMCoS) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk Daniel Senkowski (Charité, Universitätsmedizin Berlin) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

P

H

Charlie Hall (University of Kent) | Amelia Clegg (Birkbeck) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Adrian Garvey (Queen Mary), Mark Glancy (Queen Mary) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

David Blake (Head of Library and Archives, Library of the Religious Society of Friends) | Registration required Free shl.officeadmin@london.ac.uk

Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

HS

U

Friday 15 Institute of Modern Languages Research Workshop 09:00–20:30 Room G35

30

Civil war and narrative David Armitage (Harvard), Marie Breen-Smyth (Surrey), Lynne Cameron (Open), Brandon Hamber (Ulster), Fergal Keane (BBC News) Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

US


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

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

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

The performance of reading: literary studies as writing

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

ICS postgraduate work in progress seminar

Institute of English Studies Lecture 17:00–19:00 Court Room

Dorothy Richardon’s ‘Pointed Roofs’

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

Contested rights: the Dutch Catholic nobility and the jus patronatus, c. 1580–1720

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

Property, sovereignty and the history of a Canadian Indian reserve

Events calendar

Events calendar May UP

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

U

Chris Thurgar-Dawson (Teesside), Clare Connors (East Anglia), Stephen Benson (East Anglia) | Pedagogic criticism workshop Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk Open to postgraduate students only | Registration required Free postgradwip@gmail.com

Lecture, panel session and wine reception to follow | Registration required Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

C

U

H

Jaap Geraerts (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

LH

Saturday 16 Institute of Historical Research Colloquium 09:30–19:00 Senate House

The history of the body: approaches and direction

Institute of English Studies Seminar 14:00–16:00 Room 104

The art of variation: church bells and combinations in 17th-century England

H

Fay Bound Alberti (Queen Mary) Free ihr.development@sas.ac.uk

U

www.sas.ac.uk

Katherine Hunt (Queen’s College, Oxford) | Early modern philosophy and the scientific imagination seminar Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Douglas Harris (British Columbia) | Organised with the London Legal History Seminar | Registration required Free belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk

31


Events calendar May Monday 18 Warburg Institute Seminar 14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute

Arabic philosophy seminar

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 16:00–18:00 IALS

Cybercrime, policing and privacy

Institute of Classical Studies Lecture 17:00–19:00 Room G37

Pottery in context: who picks pursuit? Looking at subject choice in Athenian and Italian contexts

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 104

British manuscript cultures of the First World War

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

A novel by Sara Garcia Iglesias

Basic reading knowledge of Arabic is recommended | Registration required Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

UP

L

CU

Mark Stansbury O’Donnell (St Thomas, Minnesota) Free admin.icls@sas.ac.uk

UH

Edmund King (Open) | Open University book history and bibliography research seminar Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk Centre for the Study of Contemporary Women’s Writing Spanish Reading Group | Francesca Zunino (Modena) | Registration required Free maria-jose.blanco@kcl.ac.uk

U

Tuesday 19 Institute of Philosophy Conference 09:30–18:30 Court Room

Lepore & Stone: authors meet critic

Warburg Institute Seminar 16:15–17:15 Warburg Institute

Latin paleography class

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

Decline through survival: the lives of the younger sons of the English landed gentry 1700–1900

32

Stephen Neale (City University of New York) Free Kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

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

Mark Rothery (Northampton) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

PS

U

H


Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

The covenantal imaginary in 16th-century Protestant thought

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

The Jew in Dutch cinema

Institute of Modern Languages Research Panel discussion 17:30–19:30 Room 102

Encounters: writers and translators in conversation, Angela Krauß and Margret Vince

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

Relative necessity re-formulated

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Past and Present Room, 202, North Block

Australia and the Treaty of Versailles

Events calendar

Events calendar May H

Susan Felch (Calvin College) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Eyal Boers (Tel Aviv) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

US

Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Bob Hale (Sheffield) | Logic, epistemology and metaphysics seminar Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Carl Bridge (KCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

P

H

Wednesday 20 Chile and the inter-American system of human rights

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

The Chinese reception of Edward Said

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 16:00–18:00 Room 246

Intermedial dialogue in The Murmuring Coast/A Costa dos Murmúrios (Lídia Jorge, 1988/ Margarida Cardoso, 2004): photography, novel, film

RO

Jointly organised with the UCL Institute of the Americas and IALS £20 standard | £10 concession olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

UH

U

www.sas.ac.uk

Zhang Chunjuan (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Institute of Latin American Studies Conference 10:00–18:00 IALS

Sally Faulkner (IMLR/Exeter), Ana Martins (Bristol) | IMLR seminar series Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

33


Events calendar May Institute of Philosophy Seminar 16:00–18:00 Room 349

IP aesthetics forum

Warburg Institute Lecture 16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute

Fechtbücher: a neglected source for the histories of art and education

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

The Minoan palace at Galatas: a major civil and religious centre in central Crete

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:15–19:00 Room 243

A puzzle about partial belief

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

Empire, political economy and the British-Irish Union of 1801

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

Girls in Gower Street: commitment, confidence and carrying on in London’s ‘LCSS’ in the 1970s

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

London Old and Middle English research seminar (LOMERS)

Free zoe.holman@sas.ac.uk

P

UPS

Sydney Anglo (University of Wales, Swansea) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

CH

Giorgos Rethemiotakis (Herakleion) | ICS Ventris Memorial Lecture Free sarah.mayhew@sas.ac.uk Alan Hajek (ANU) | Propensities and statistics seminar Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

P

HO

James Stafford (Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Gaynor Humphreys, Jenny Harrow | Witness seminar Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U

Corinne Dale (Royal Holloway), Michael Warren (Royal Holloway) Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 21 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 12:30–13:30 IALS

Regulating and supervising capital markets in the European Union: facing the complexity trap

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

Assyria and the Greeks

34

L

Gudula Deipenbrock (Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft, University of Applied Sciences, Berlin) Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk Karen Radner (UCL) | ICS ancient history seminar Free admin.icls@sas.ac.uk

CH


Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G34

Media history seminar Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

Events calendar

Events calendar May UH

Friday 22 Institute of Musical Research Conference 09:45–19:00 City University

Middle East and Central Asia music forum

Warburg Institute Colloquium 10:00–17:30 Warburg Institute

New approaches to Erasmus

Institute of Latin American Studies Workshop 10:00–18:10 Room G37

Nature and knowledge in Latin America: new historical perspectives

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

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 14:00–18:00 Room G34

Reframing feminism? (Un)framings, limits and ethics in contemporary women’s writing

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

ICS postgraduate work in progress seminar

Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Simona Colini (La Sapienza Rome), Jorge Ledo (Basle), Letizia Panizza (Royal Holloway), Stephen Ryle (Leeds), Andrew Taylor (Cambridge), Lucy Wooding (King’s, London) £25 standard | £12.50 concession warburg@sas.ac.uk

M

UH

UHS

Keynote speaker: Ottmar Ette (Potsdam, Germany) £20 standard | £10 concession olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

UP

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

David Walsh (Kent) | Open to postgraduate students only | Registration required Free postgradwip@gmail.com

C

Saturday 23 Institute of Latin American Studies Workshop 10:15–17:00 Room G22/26

Latin American music seminar Convenor: Henry Stobart (Royal Holloway) £8 olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

U

35

www.sas.ac.uk

Ana Gabriela Macedo (IMLR/Minho, Braga), Noelia Diaz Vicedo (Queen Mary), Emily Jeremiah (Royal Holloway), Elsa Laflamme (IMLR/College Gerald-Godin) | Centre for the Study of Contemporary Women’s Writing cross-cultural seminar | Registration required Free gill.rye@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

U


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

Catching up with memory studies Centre for the Study of Cultural Memory seminar Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

U

Monday 25 Warburg Institute Seminar 14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute

Arabic philosophy seminar Basic reading knowledge of Arabic is recommended | Registration required Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

UP

Tuesday 26 Warburg Institute Seminar 16:15–17:15 Warburg Institute

Latin paleography class

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

SketchUp project

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

The de-naturalisation of sexuality in 21st-century psychology

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G35

Modernist magazines seminar

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

Matthew Nicholls (Reading) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U

H

H

Peter Hegarty (Surrey) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

U

Wednesday 27 Institute of Musical Research Conference 09:00–19:00 Royal Festival Hall and others

36

City of Light: Paris 1900–1950 international conference Keynote speaker: Myriam Chimnes (CNRS) | Organised in conjunction with City of Light: Paris 1900-1950, the Philharmonia Orchestra’s major festival of French music | Lecture-recital by Paul Roberts (Guildhall School of Music and Drama) on French piano music, Institut Francais, 27 May | Conference concert by the Philharmonia Orchestra, 28 May Free zoe.holman@sas.ac.uk

MS


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

The influence of Aquinas’ De unitate intellectus on Jewish philosophers in Italy during the middle ages and the Renaissance

Warburg Institute Lecture 16:30–17:30 Warburg Institute

Danger and disenchantment: Neue Sachlichkeit and images of crime

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

Home values: treasuring the domestic in the ancient Greek world

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

The Poem of Walter: epic heroism and 9thcentury political thought

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 246

Curing sexual deviance: psychotherapy and the pathological criminal

Institute of Modern Languages Research Evening event 18:00–20:00 Seng T Lee Room, Senate House Library

Exile archives speak

Events calendar

Events calendar May UH

Miki Engel (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U

Frederic Schwartz (UCL) | Lecture in conjunction with the Bilderfahrzeuge Project Free panchal@bilderfahrzeuge.org

CH

Lin Foxhall (Leicester) | ICS classical archaeology seminar Free admin.icls@sas.ac.uk

HO

Alice Rio (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Janet Weston (Birkbeck) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 28 Institute of Philosophy Lecture | Workshop 09:00–18:40 Senate Room

Pittsburgh exchange lecture and workshop

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

Foreigners in Hellenistic Greece

Warburg Institute Lecture 17:00–18:30 Warburg Institute

Putting Tibet on the map: a 19th-century cartographic depiction by a local artist

Sandra Mitchell Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Julietta Steinhauer (UCL) | ICS ancient history seminar Free admin.icls@sas.ac.uk

P

CH

U

Diana Lange (Leipzig) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

37

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

U

www.sas.ac.uk

Clare George (IMLR), Charmian Brinson (Imperial), Richard Dove (Greenwich), Norbert Meyn (Royal College of Music), Malcolm Miller (IMR/Open) | Talks, refreshments and exhibition tour | Organised in conjunction with the exhibition ‘Exile lives told through the archives’ | Registration required Free clare.george@sas.ac.uk


Events calendar May Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:00–19:00 Room 243

CenSes seminar

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

Catholic and Protestant networks in mid 17thcentury England: the cases of John Caryll and Sir Philip Constable

Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Chancellor’s Hall

Peter Lyon Memorial Lecture

Mara Nez (Glasgow Caledonian) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

P

H

Eilish Gregory (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk Registration required Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

H

Friday 29 Warburg Institute Colloquium 10:00–18:00 Warburg Institute

Studying God’s languages: scholars of Hebrew and Arabic in early modern Europe

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

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

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

ICS postgraduate work in progress seminar

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

The world of Cornelis Drebbel (1572–1633): transnational science and Dutch historiography

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

Legal history seminar

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G35

Finnegans Wake research seminar

38

U

Saverio Campanini (Paris), Theo Dunkelgrün (Cambridge), Alastair Hamilton (Warburg Institute), Avi Lifschitz (London/Göttingen), Jan Loop (Kent), Simon Mills (London), Bernd Roling (Berlin), Arnoud Vrolijk (Leiden), Joanna Weinberg (Oxford) | Registration required £25 standard | £12.50 concession warburg@sas.ac.uk

UP

Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk Cornelia Ritter-Schmalz (Zurich) | Open to postgraduate students only | Registration required Free postgradwip@gmail.com

C

H

Vera Keller (Oregon) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Organised with the London Legal History seminar | Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

L

U


Events calendar

Eventscalendar Event calendar May June Subject area key Classics History Philosophy culture, language & literature Human rights Politics Law Music Highlights

www.sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Highlights

39


Events calendar June Monday 1 Warburg Institute Seminar 14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute

Arabic philosophy seminar

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Room G34

Artefacts of the written word: antiquarian collections, manuscript circulation and print ephemera in the Bodleian’s Ballard archives

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 264

Roman sculpture from London and South East England

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

The voluntary organisation environment 1965–75 compared to 2005–15: a personal account

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

They ‘grow fat upon the bread of prostitution’: women of colour and the ‘profligacy’ of sexualeconomic exchange in Jamaican slave society

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

Contractarians in corporate law: having their cake and eating it

Basic reading knowledge of Arabic is recommended | Registration required Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

UP

U

Melanie Bigold (Cardiff) | Open University book history and bibliography research seminar Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

CU

Martin Henig (UCL and Wolfson College, Oxford), Kevin Hayward (Pre-Construct Archaeology) and Penny Coombes | Roman art seminar Free will.wootton@kcl.ac.uk

H

Ian Bruce, CBE | Witness seminar Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Meleisa Ono-George (Warwick) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

L

Daniel Attenborough (Durham) | Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

Tuesday 2 Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 16:00–18:00 Room 243

Bullfighters, celebrity culture and soft power in 1960s Spain

Warburg Institute Seminar 16:15–17:15 Warburg Institute

Latin paleography class

40

UH

Duncan Wheeler (Leeds) Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

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

U


Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

‘Naked Gospel’ or clothed Christianity: polemic of primitivism in late 17th-century England

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

The moral economy of the Victorian ‘folk’ funeral

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 246

Absolute generality and expressibility

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

Painters, limners, writers and bookbinders’: Matthew Parker’s printed books

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Past and Present Room, 202, North Block

Britain’s foreign policy and the occupation zone in Germany 1945–7

Events calendar

Events calendar June H

Paul Lim (Vanderbilt) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Helen Frisby (West of England) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Jonathan Payne (IP) | Logic, epistemology and metaphysics seminar Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

H

P

U

William Hale (Cambridge University Library) | History of Libraries Research seminar | Registration required Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

H

Elspeth O’Riordan (Dundee) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

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

Walter Odington’s ‘De etate mundi’ and the pursuit of a ‘scientific’ chronology in the later middle ages

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 16:00–18:00 Room G35

IP aesthetics forum

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

Webs of knowledge: untangling the practices of textile production in ancient Greece

UH

Philipp Nothaft (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk Free zoe.holman@sas.ac.uk

P

CS

www.sas.ac.uk

Lin Foxhall (Leicester) | JP Barron Memorial Lecture Free admin.icls@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Wednesday 3

41


Events calendar June Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

History of political ideas / early career seminar

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

Forced eviction and home unmaking in contemporary Cambodia

Tom Parry-Jones (Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

H

Katherine Brickell (Royal Holloway) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 4 School of Advanced Study Lecture 12:00–13:30 Wellcome Trust

Infectious diseases and pandemics: why are they linked to poverty?

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 12:30–13:30 IALS

Practicing family law in Libya: observations from the Tripoli courts

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

Egyptians at Naukratis

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

CenSes seminar

Institute of Modern Languages Research Lecture 17:15–19:00 Room G34

Goethe’s morphology in 20th-century thought

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 North Block

PhD student session

H

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

The British Association, science education and the training of character, 1870–1914

H

42

H

Michael Baker (Otago/2015 NZ-UK Link Foundation visiting professor) | NZ-UK Link Foundation lectures | Registration required Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

L

Jess Carlisle (Manchester/IALS) Free belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk

Aurelia Masson (British Museum) | ICS ancient history seminar Free admin.icls@sas.ac.uk

Christian Frings (Trier) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Eva Geulen (Frankfurt/Main) | English Goethe Society lecture Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Heather Ellis (Liverpool Hope) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

CH

P

U


Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 TBC

Male mental illness since the 1950s: oral histories from general practice

Events calendar

Events calendar June H

Alison Haggett (Exeter) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Friday 5 Institute of Modern Languages Research Conference 10:00–18:00 Room 243

12th Ingeborg Bachmann Centre postgraduate conference: ‘Current research in Austrian literature, culture and film’

U

Warburg Institute Colloquium 10:00–18:00 Warburg Institute

Classical heroines

U

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

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room G21a

From lost archives to digital databases

Institute of Philosophy Lecture 18:00–20:00 Chancellor’s Hall

Richard Moran lecture

P

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room G35

The Charles Peake Ulysses seminar

U

Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Emma Barker (Open), Elizabeth Dutton (Fribourg), Edith Hall (King’s, London), Isobel Hurst (Goldsmiths), Letizia Panizza (Royal Holloway) £25 standard | £12.50 concession warburg@sas.ac.uk

UP

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

Free Kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

C

Saturday 6 Early modern philosophy and the scientific imagination seminar

PU

Rocco di Dio (Warwick): ‘Silvae Platonicorum Locorum: Marsilio Ficino and humanist reading practices?’, Angus Vine (Stirling): ‘Francis Bacon’s notes: scribes, secretaries and storage’ Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk

Institute of English Studies Seminar 14:00–16:00 Room G35

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Jen Hicks (UCL) | ICS digital classicist seminar Free s.mahony@ucl.ac.uk

43


Events calendar June Institute of Historical Research Seminar 14:00–16:00 TBC

Foppish masculinity and generational identity in 18th-century Oxbridge

H

Heather Ellis (Liverpool Hope) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Monday 8 Institute of Classical Studies Colloquium 14:00–18:30 Room G22/26

Arcadia: real and ideal

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

Arabic philosophy seminar

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 16:30–18:00 IALS

The Future of AFSJ: the House of Lords proposals on the European area of Freedom, Security and Justice

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

The power of writing in the Ancien Régime

Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Room G34

Writing with scrapbooks: cutting, pasting and authorship

Institute of Modern Languages Research Lecture 17:30–19:00 Room G35

Convergence theory: cinema and television in Spain and Mexico

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

From Gaullism to anti-Gaullism: the Institut Français du Royaume Uni during the war

44

ICS annual Byzantine colloquium Free admin.icls@sas.ac.uk

Basic reading knowledge of Arabic is recommended | Registration required Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

C

UP

L

Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk Giora Sternberg (Oxford) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

U

Ellen Gruber Garvey (New Jersey City University)| Open University book history and bibliography research seminar Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

U

Paul Julian Smith (City University of New York) Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Charlotte Faucher (Queen Mary) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H


Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Lecture 18:00–19:00 IALS

Reform of planning law Charles Mynors | Organised by the Statute Law Society | Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

Events calendar

Events calendar June L

Tuesday 9 Warburg Institute Seminar 16:15–17:15 Warburg Institute

Latin paleography class

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

Writing a big data history of music project

School of Advanced Study Lecture 17:30–19:00 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Charting manifest destiny: 19th-century exploration of the Trans-Mississippi West

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 G35

Book collecting seminar: Yeats

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

Stephen Rose (RHUL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U

H

H

Imre Demhardt (University of Texas at Arlington, Seng Tee Lee visiting professorial fellow) | Registration required Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk Warwick Gould Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

U

SAS humanities open day

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

Humanism and classical rhetoric in Portuguese Asia during the Renaissance

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

The politics of historical economics: Wilhelm Roscher on Caesarism and democracy

A showcase of the School’s vast array of resources including courses, research training, libraries, archives and digital tools | Tours of Senate House will also be offered | The day will culminate with a celebration of the 2015 Being Human festival winners of the UK-wide funding competition Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

UHS

UH

Stuart McManus (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

HO

Iain McDaniel (Sussex) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

45

www.sas.ac.uk

School of Advanced Study Open day 13:00–20:00 Senate House

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Wednesday 10


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

‘Born of fire’ or ‘Uneasiness in culture and body: aesthetics, ethics and communication of animals in the work of women artists’. Case studies of the 20th-century: Mechtilde Lichnowsky and Renée Sintenis

U

Anne Martina Emonts (Funchal/IMLR) | Research Centre for German and Austrian Exile Studies seminar Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 11 Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 102

‘A strike now would complete the catastrophe’: contesting memories of strike action in 1930s South Wales

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 North Block

The films we forgot to remember: forgotten propaganda films of the Second World War

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:30–20:00 Room 246

Postgraduate feminist reading group (title TBC)

U

Institute of Philosophy Workshop 09:30–18:30 Room G22/26

Propensities, chances and statistics

P

Warburg Institute Symposium 10:00–18:00 Warburg Institute

Sharing the Holy Land: perceptions of shared sacred space in the medieval and early modern eastern mediterranean

Institute of Philosophy 2-day conference 10:00–18:30 Room 246

Scientific fictionalism

H

David Selway (Sussex), Diarmaid Kelliher (Glasgow) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Jeffrey Richards (Lancaster) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

Friday 12

46

Free Kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

UH

Bernard Hamilton (Nottingham), Benjamin Kedar (Hebrew University Jerusalem), Ora Limor (Open University of Israel) | Registration required £40 standard | £25 concession sharingtheholyland2015@gmail.com Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

P


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

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 349

Pelagios and Recogito: an annotation platform for joining a linked data world

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

Oscar Wilde, ‘Everything is going on brilliantly’

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

Ezra Pound Cantos reading group

Events calendar

Events calendar June UP

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

C

Leif Isaksen, Pau de Soto (Southampton), Elton Barker (Open), Rainer Simon (Vienna) | ICS digital classicist seminar Free s.mahony@ucl.ac.uk Margaret Stetz (Delaware), Mark Samuel Lasner (Delaware) | London 19thcentury studies seminar Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk Speaker TBC Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

U

U

Monday 15 Institute of English Studies Summer school 09:00–17:00 Senate House

London international palaeography summer school

Institute of Modern Languages Research Workshop 10:00–18:00 Room 246

Women’s memories and the politics of belonging: challenging historical narratives of labour, welfare and citizenship

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

Arabic philosophy seminar

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 15:00–17:45 IALS

Directors’ civil liability: an effective instrument of ‘discipline’? – a comparative legal approach

UH

Registration required Fee applicable christopher.adams@sas.ac.uk

Izabelle Agardi (Institute for Social and European Studies/Pannonia), Eloisa Betti (Bologna/IMLR),Maria-Jos Blanco (King’s, London), Waaldijk Berteke (Utrecht), Ruth Bush (Bristol), Yige Dong (Johns Hopkins), Anna Frisone (European University Institute), Sofia Mason (Royal Holloway), Barbara Spadaro (Bristol/IMLR) | Organised by the Centre for the Study of Cultural Memory and the Centre for the Study of Women’s Writing (IMLR) Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk Basic reading knowledge of Arabic is recommended | Registration required Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

UP

L

www.sas.ac.uk

Iris Chiu (UCL), Gudula Deipenbrock (HTW, Berlin/IALS), Rolf Dotevall (Gothenburg), Maren Heidemann (Glasgow), Junko Ueda (Kyushu) | Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

U

47


Events calendar June Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–17:30 Room 304, North Block

Volunteer tourism: development, altruism or narcissism?

H

Jim Butcher (Canterbury Christ Church University) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Tuesday 16 Institute of Philosophy 3-day conference 09:30–18:30 Senate Room

Interpretive practice: language, law, science and the arts

Warburg Institute Seminar 16:15–17:15 Warburg Institute

Latin paleography class

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

‘Abandoned’, ‘impudent’, ‘poor’: female offending and desistance from crime in the early 19th century

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

‘Fractures well cur’d’: repentance and medical discourse in Herbert’s Temple and in 17thcentury preaching

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

Stopes v. Ellis: a critically queer take on normal sex

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

Jewish history seminar

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

Logic, epistemology and metaphysics seminar

48

PUS

Noël Carroll (City University of New York), Gregory Currie (York), Peter Kivy (Rutgers), Peter Lamarque (York), Stephen Neale (City University of New York), Barry Smith (IP), Colin Renfrew, Kathleen Stock (Sussex), Deirdre Wilson (UCL) | Registration required Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U

H

Helen Rogers (Liverpool John Moores) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Clarissa Chenovick (Fordham) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Laura Doan (Manchester) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Naomi Tadmor (Lancaster), Mike Beckerman (New York) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Eliot Michaelson (King’s, London) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

H

P


Events calendar

Events calendar June Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–19:30 Room G37

Literary London reading group

U

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Past and Present Room, 202, North Block

‘Children of the grave’: détente, nuclear weapons and Britain’s search for power in a globalising world

H

Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

James Clifton (Boston College, USA) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Wednesday 17 Institute of Classical Studies Colloquium 09:30–17:30 TBC

The poetics of war: remembering conflict from Ancient Greece to the Great War

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 12:30–13:30 IALS

Thinking spaces: the exclusion of deliberative matter from FOI disclosure

Institute of English Studies Conference 14:00–17:30 St Anselm Pontifical University, Aventine, Rome

The power of the word international conference IV: ‘Thresholds of wonder: poetry, philosophy and theology in conversation’

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

Mechanical bells and the music of time in late medieval France and the Low Countries

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 16:00–18:00 Room 349

Decisive moments: causation and the aesthetic admiration of photographs

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

History of political ideas / early career seminar

CH

Keynotes: Edith Hall (KCL), Jay Winter (Yale) | Other speakers: Tim Armstrong (Royal Holloway), Silvia Barbantani (Universit Cattolica del Sacro Cuore di Milano), Felicitas Becker (Cambridge), Holly Furneaux ( Leicester), Lara Kriegel (Indiana), Margaret Miller (Sydney), David Scourfield (Maynooth), Randall Stevenson (Edinburgh), Elizabeth Vandiver (Whitman College), Kathryn Welch (Sydney) | Registration required Free ww1@ucl.ac.uk

L

Judith Bannister (Adelaide) | IALS lunchtime seminar | Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

UH

Matthew Champion (Warburg Institute) | Work in progress seminar Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

P

Dan Cavedon-Taylor (Antwerp) | IP aesthetics forum Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk Adam Mowl (UCLA) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

HO

49

www.sas.ac.uk

Piero Boitani (Sapienza, Rome), Massimo Don (Universit San Raffaele, Milan), Richard Kearney (Boston College), Sara Maitland (Lancaster), Paul Murray (Angelicum, Rome), Ben Quash (King’s, London), Dilwyn Knox (UCL) Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

U


Events calendar June Thursday 18 Warburg Institute Colloquium 10:00–17:00 Warburg Institute

Warburg Library’s network: ‘Geography and history of an intellectual afterlife: From Hamburg to London, and to Montreal’ – the contribution of Raymond Klibansky (1905–2005)

UHS

Morgan Gaulin (Montreal), Ethel Groffier (McGill), Yves Hersant (Paris), Georges Leroux (Université du Québec à Montréal), Raphaële Mouren (Warburg Institute), Maria Osuna Alarcón (Salamanca), Elisabeth Otto (Montreal), Davide Stimilli (Colorado Boulder), Ulrich Raulff (Deutsches Literaturarchiv Marbach), Elizabeth Sears (Michigan), Martin Treml (Berlin), Jean-Philippe Uzel (Université du Québec à Montréal), Regina Weber (Stuttgart), Claudia Wedepohl (Warburg Institute), James Willoughby (Oxford) £40 standard | £25 concession warburg@sas.ac.uk

Friday 19 School of Advanced Study 2-day conference 09:30–17:00 UCL

Screen Studies Group: ‘The political screen’

Institute of Commonwealth Studies 1-day conference 10:00–19:00 Room G22/26

Government secrecy in the era of openness

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

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room G21a

Digital comparison of 19th-century plaster casts and original classical sculptures

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

Creating Kreol childhoods in Mauritius

Anna McCarthy (New York University), S V Srinivas (Azim Premji), Liesbet van Zoonen (Loughborough) | Registration required £50 standard | £35 speakers, students, unwaged sas.events@sas.ac.uk Convenor: James Lowry (Deputy director, International Records Management Trust) Fee applicable olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

US

ROS

UP

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

C

Emma Payne (UCL) | ICS digital classicist seminar Free s.mahony@ucl.ac.uk Natalia Bremner | Minor translingualisms seminar series launch Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

U

Saturday 20 Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 09:30–17:00 Room 104

50

Dancing with memory Diana Taylor (New York), Theresa Buckland (Roehampton), Danielle Robinson (York University, Toronto) Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

U


Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Birkbeck College cinema

Events calendar

Events calendar June Workshop on missionary films

H

Aegina summer school: ‘The social self: how social interactions shape body and selfrepresentations’

P

Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Sunday 21 Institute of Philosophy Summer school 10:00–17:30 Hotel Apollo, Aegina, Greece

Manos Tsakiris (RHUL), Ophelia Deroy (IP), Barry Smith (IP) | Registration required Fee applicable philosophy@sas.ac.uk

Monday 22 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies WG Hart Legal Workshop 2015 10:00–17:30 IALS

Law and the ageing of humankind

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

Arabic philosophy seminar

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

Imperial Games: the playing card money of Canada, 1685–1720

School of Advanced Study Lecture 17:30–19:00 Room 243

Seng Tee Lee visiting professorial fellow’s lecture

Academic directors: Jonathan Montgomery (UCL), Richard Ashcroft (Queen Mary) Fee applicable ials.events@sas.ac.uk

Basic reading knowledge of Arabic is recommended | Registration required Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

LS

UP

H

Philip Pettit (L.S. Rockefeller University/Princeton/Seng Tee Lee visiting professorial fellow, SAS) | Registration required Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

Tuesday 23 Warburg Institute Seminar 16:15–17:15 Warburg Institute

Latin paleography class

Institute of Philosophy Seminar 17:15–19:00 Room 243

Propensities and statistics seminar

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

Free zoe.holman@sas.ac.uk

U

P 51

www.sas.ac.uk

PO

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Catherine Desbarats (McGill) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk


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

ChartEX traces through time Sarah Rees-Jones (York), Sonja Ranade (The National Archives) | Joint session with the archives and society seminar Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Wednesday 24 Warburg Institute Seminar 14:15–15:15 Warburg Institute

The view from behind: Veronese, Giulio Romano and ‘The Rape of Europa’

Warburg Institute Lecture 16:30–17:30 Warburg Institute

‘In the custom of this country’: the transmigration of decorative design in manuscript borders c. 1180–1250

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

Lawyering for the poor: provisions and plans for legal aid services in North Africa

UH

Beverly Brown (London) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U

Cynthia Johnston (IES) | Lecture in conjunction with the Bilderfahrzeuge Project Free panchal@bilderfahrzeuge.org

RL

Jess Carlisle (Manchester/IALS) | Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

Friday 26 Warburg Institute Seminar 13:00–14:15 Warburg Institute

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

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

The transnational circulation of women’s writing (1780–2014): archives, libraries, translation

UP

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

U

Gillian Dow (Chawton House Library), Marina Cano López (St Andrews), Henriette Partzsch (Glasgow) | Organised by the Centre for the Study of Cultural Memory and the Centre for the Study of Women’s Writing (IMLR) | Registration required Free gill.rye@sas.ac.uk

Monday 29 Institute of English Studies Summer school 09:00–17:00 Senate House

52

London rare books school A series of five-day intensive courses on a variety of book-related subjects to be taught in and around Senate House | Week 1: 29 June–3 July, week 2: 6–10 June Fee applicable christopher.adams@sas.ac.uk

U


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

Arabic philosophy seminar

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

Lawyering for the poor: provisions and plans for legal aid services in North Africa

Basic reading knowledge of Arabic is recommended | Registration required Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Events calendar

Events calendar June UP

L

Jess Carlisle (Manchester) | Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

Tuesday 30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 10:00–17:30 IALS

Legislative drafting and language: legal language in context

Warburg Institute Seminar 16:15–17:15 Warburg Institute

Latin paleography class

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 North Block

Stranger than fiction in the archives: the trial and execution of William Cowbridge in 1538

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

‘Where were you when we were getting high?’: Britpop nostalgia and technological, social, cultural and generational change in 21st-century Britain

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

On process and persistence

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Past and Present Room, 202, North Block

International history seminar

L

Third annual confererence on the theme of ‘Legislative drafting and language’ organised in association with the University of Palermo, Sicily | Registration required Fee applicable ials.events@sas.ac.uk Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U

H

Susan Royal (York) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

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

Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

P

H

www.sas.ac.uk

Thomas Crowther (Warwick) | Logic, epistemology and metaphysics seminar Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

H

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Events calendar

Events calendar July 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 July Wednesday 1 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Conference 09:15–16:45 IALS

Compassion and law

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

‘Etiam Sarraceni ad eam causa peregrinationis veniunt’: receiving shared sacred space in the medieval Levant, c. 1150–1250

Susan Bandes (DePaul, USA), Maks Del Mar (Queen Mary), Iain Wilkinson (Kent), Marinos Diamantides (Birkbeck), Victoria Butler-Cole, Heather Keating (Sussex), Anselm Eldergill, Jonathan Herring (Oxford), Jonathan Montgomery (UCL), Bettina Lange (Oxford) | Registration required Fee applicable belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk

L

UH

Jan Vandeburie (Warburg Institute) | Work in progress seminar Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 2 Institute of Historical Research 2-day conference 09:00–19:00 Senate House / Victoria and Albert Museum

84th Anglo-American conference: ‘Fashion’

School of Advanced Study Lecture 18:00–19:30 London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

Early detection of emerging infectious diseases: can we do better?

Chris Breward (Edinburgh), Beverly Lemire (Alberta), Ulinka Rublack (Cambridge), Maria Hayward (Southampton), Valerie Steele (The Museum, Fashion Institute of Technology, New York), Lucy Worsley (Historic Royal Palaces) | In association with the Victoria and Albert Museum | Registration required Fee applicable ihr.events@sas.ac.uk

HS

O

Michael Baker (Otago/2015 NZ-UK Link Foundation visiting professor) | NZ-UK Link Foundation lectures | Registration required Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

Friday 3 Institute of English Studies 2-day conference 09:00–17:00 Senate House

Dissemination and production: the progress of information

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

Esoteric traditions and occult thought reading group

UP

Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute) Fee applicable manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

UP

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

Monday 6 Institute of Modern Languages Research Workshop 11:00–18:00 Room G37

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Memories of future cities Claudio Celis-Bueno (Cardiff), Lawrence Goldman (IHR), Gabriel Koureas (Birkbeck) | A Centre for the Study of Cultural Memory workshop Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

U


Events calendar

Events calendar July Tuesday 7 Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 243

Book collecting seminar: collecting private press books

U

Sophie Schneideman Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

Wednesday 8 School of Advanced Study Conference 13:00–17:00 Senate House

56th annual meeting: Society for the History of Discoveries

U

Registration required Fee applicable sas.events@sas.ac.uk

Friday 10 Institute of English Studies 2-day conference 09:30–17:30 Senate House

Biennial London Chaucer conference: ‘Science, magic and technology’

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room G21a

Sunoikisis DC: An international consortium of digital classics programs

U

Registration required Fee applicable manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

C

Monica Berti, Gregory R. Crane (Leipzig), Kenny Morrell (Center for Hellenic Studies) | ICS digital classicist seminar Free s.mahony@ucl.ac.uk

Saturday 11 Registration required Fee applicable christopher.adams@sas.ac.uk

U

Monday 13 Institute of English Studies 3-day conference 09:00–17:00 Senate House

7th annual Victorian Popular Fiction Association conference: Victorian authenticity and artifice

U

Linda Dryden (Edinburgh Napier), David Glover (Cambridge), Vanessa Toulmin (National Fairground Archive) Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

Wednesday 15 School of Advanced Study Lecture 18:00–19:30 City of London Guildhall

Stopping pandemic diseases at the border: can it be done?

O

Michael Baker (Otago/2015 NZ-UK Link Foundation visiting professor) | NZ-UK Link Foundation lectures | Registration required Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

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www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

T.S. Eliot international summer school

www.sas.ac.uk

Institute of English Studies Summer School 09:00–17:00 Senate House


Events calendar July Thursday 16 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Conference 10:00–18:00 Chancellor’s Hall

‘Sowing the whirlwind’: nuclear politics and the historical record

OHS

In collaboration with the United Nations Association Westminster Branch £20 standard | £10 concession olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

Friday 17 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room G21a

Integrating digital epigraphies (IDEs) Hugh Cayless (Duke) | ICS digital classicist seminar Free s.mahony@ucl.ac.uk

C

Monday 20 Institute of Classical Studies 3-day conference 14:00–18:00 Room G22/26

ICS summer conference: ‘Negotiating, communicating, relating: approaches to ancient divination’

C

Start and end times change with each day | 20 July, 14:00–18:00 | 21 July, 10:00–18:00 | 22 July, 09:00–13:00 | Registration required Free esther.eidinow@nottingham.ac.uk

Tuesday 21 Institute of Historical Research 3-day summer school 10:00–17:00 Wolfson Conference Suite, North Block

Summer school in local history 2015: ‘The local history of the 20th century: possibilities and pitfalls’

H

Registration required Fee applicable ihr.training@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 23 Institute of Philosophy 3-day conference 10:00–18:30 Room G22/26

Idealism and pragmatism conference

P

Literary London Society annual conference: ‘London in Love’

U

Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Friday 24 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium 09:00–17:00 Senate House

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Gregory Dart (UCL), Imtiaz Dharker (poet, artist and documentary film-maker), Kate Flint (Southern California) Fee applicable manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk


Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room G21a

A Collection of Greek Ritual Norms project (CGRN)

Events calendar

Events calendar July C

Saskia Peels (Liège) | ICS digital classicist seminar Free s.mahony@ucl.ac.uk

Monday 27 Institute of English Studies 2-day conference 09:30–17:00 Institute of English Studies

6th conference: ‘Language, culture and society in Russian/English studies’

UH

Free manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

Wednesday 29 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 14:30–18:00 IALS

Defence rights in Europe: roadmap update Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

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Friday 31 Federico Aurora | ICS digital classicist seminar Free s.mahony@ucl.ac.uk

C

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

DAMOS: Database of Mycenaean at Oslo

www.sas.ac.uk

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room G21a

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Events calendar

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

www.sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Highlights

61


Events calendar August Friday 7 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room G21a

Graecum-Arabicum-Latinum Encoded Corpus (GALEN©)

C

Usama Gad (Heidelberg) | ICS digital classicist seminar Free s.mahony@ucl.ac.uk

Friday 14 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room G21a

62

Digital technologies and the Herculaneum Papyri Sarah Hendriks | ICS digital classicist seminar Free s.mahony@ucl.ac.uk

C


Events calendar

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

www.sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Highlights

63


Events calendar September Tuesday 8 Institute of Historical Research 2-day conference 09:30–18:00 Wolfson Conference Suite, North Block

Teaching history in higher education Keynote: Mike Maddison (OFSTED National Lead for History) | Postgraduate and early career bursaries are available | Registration required Fee applicable ihr.events@sas.ac.uk

H

Thursday 10 Institute of English Studies 3-day conference 09:00–17:00 Senate House

8th Screenwriting Research Network (SRN) international conference: ‘Screenwriting: text and performance’

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies 2-day conference 10:00–17:30 IALS

Anti-democratic ideology and criminal law under fascist, National Socialist and authoritarian regimes

U

Registration required Fee applicable manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

LH

Registration required Fee applicable belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk

Tuesday 15 Senate House Library Workshop 10:00–16:00 Seng T Lee Room, Senate House Library

SHL postgraduate and early career researchers networking and resource discovery day

U

For all research postgraduates and early career researchers working on London | Share your research, build collaborations and hear from librarians and archivists on London-specific collections you might have overlooked Free shl.officeadmin@london.ac.uk

Wednesday 16 Institute of Philosophy 2-day conference 09:30–18:30 Room 349

Perception and the arts Ophelia Deroy (IP), Anya Farennikova (Bristol), Heather Logue (Leeds), Mohan Matthen (Toronto), Matthew Nudds (Warwick), Elisabeth Schellekens (Durham/ Uppsala), Barry Smith (IP), Lambert Wiesing (Halle) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

P

Thursday 17 Institute of English Studies 1-day conference 09:00–17:00 Court Room

64

What ever happened to the working class? Rediscovering class consciousness in contemporary literature Fee applicable manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

US


Events calendar

Events calendar September Friday 18 Institute of English Studies 2-day conference 09:00–18:00 Court Room

English literary heritage Keynote speaker: Jeff Cowton (The Wordsworth Trust, Grasmere) | Interdisciplinary conference considering the interpretation of literary heritage objects in archives, museums and literary houses | Registration required Fee applicable manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

U

Thursday 24 10th Association of Adaptation Studies annual conference: ‘Adaptations and the metropolis’

U

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Registration required Fee applicable jon.millington@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk

Institute of English Studies 2-day conference 09:00–17:00 Senate House

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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.

Digital classicist Fridays at 16:30–18:30 Dates: 5, 12, 19 June, 10, 17, 24, 31 July, 7, 14 Aug Postgraduate work-in-progress Fridays at 16:30–18:30 Dates: 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 May (Open to postgraduate students only) Roman art Alternate Mondays at 17:00–19:00

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Contact: ials.events@sas.ac.uk European criminal law

Date: 11 May

Institute of English Studies Contact: ies@sas.ac.uk

Usually Mondays at 14:00–17:30

Book collecting

Dates: 18 May, 8 June, 29 July

Tuesdays at 18:00–20:00 Dates: 9 June, 7 July

Legal history Usually Fridays at 18:00–19:30 Dates: 1, 15, 29 May

Institute of Classical Studies Contact: admin.icls@sas.ac.uk

Open University book history and bibliography research Mondays at 17:30–19:00 Dates: 18 May, 1, 8 June Charles Peake Ulysses

Ancient history

Fridays at 18:00–20:00

Thursdays at 16:30–18:30

Dates: 1 May, 5 June

Dates: 7, 14, 21, 28 May, 4 June Ancient philosophy Alternate Mondays at 16:30–19:00 Date: 11 May Classical archaeology Wednesdays monthly at 17:00–19:00 Date: 27 May 66

Early modern philosophy and the scientific imagination (EMPHASIS) Saturdays at 14:00–16:00 Dates: 16 May, 6 June Ezra Pound Cantos reading group Fridays at 18:00–20:00 Dates: 8 May, 12 June


Seminar series

Finnegans Wake research seminar

Pedagogic criticism workshop

Fridays at 18:00–20:00

Fridays at 14:00–17:00

Date: 29 May

Date: 15 May

History of libraries research seminar

Postgraduate feminist reading group

Tuesdays at 17:30–19:30

Thursdays at 18:30–20:00

Dates: 5 May, 2 June

Dates: 14 May, 11 June

Literary London reading group Usually Tuesdays at 18:00–19:30 Date: 16 June London Old and Middle English research seminar (LOMERS)

Institute of Historical Research Contact: ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk American history Usually Thursdays at 17:30 Date: 4 June

Wednesdays at 17:30–19:30 Date: 20 May

Christian missions in global history Usually Wednesdays at 17:30

London nineteenth-century studies

Dates: 13 May, 20 June

Fridays at 10:00–17:00 Dates: 8 May, 12 June

Digital history Usually Tuesdays at 17:15

Media history

Dates: 26 May, 9, 23 June

Thursdays at 18:00–20.00 Dates: 7, 21 May

Disability history

Medieval manuscripts

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Usually Thursdays at 17:15 Dates: TBC

Tuesday at 17:30–19:00 Date: 12 May

Early modern material cultures Usually Wednesdays at 17:15

Modernism

Dates: 6, 13 May, 1, 10 June

Saturdays at 11.00–13:00 Date: 9 May

Education in the long 18th century

Modernist magazines research

www.sas.ac.uk

Usually Saturdays at 14:00–16:00 Date: 6 June

Tuesdays at 18:00–20:00 Date: 26 May 67


Seminar series

European history 1500–1800

Jewish history

Usually Mondays at 17:15

Usually Tuesdays at 17:15

Dates: 11 May, 8, 22 June

Dates: 5, 19 May, 16 June

Film history

Life-cycles

Usually Thursdays at 17:30

Usually Tuesdays at 17:15

Dates: 14 May, 11 June

Dates: 5, 19 May, 2, 16, 30 June

Gender and history in the Americas

Low Countries history

Usually Mondays at 17:30

Usually Fridays at 17:15

Date: 1 June

Dates: 15, 29 May

History lab

Medieval and Tudor London

Usually Thursdays at 17:30

Usually Thursdays at 17:15

Dates: 14, 28 May, 11 June

Dates: 7, 14, 21, 28 May, 4, 11, 18, 25 June

History of education

Modern British history

Usually Thursdays at 17:30

Usually Thursdays at 17:15

Dates: 7 May, 4 June

Dates: 14, 28 May, 11, 25 June

History of libraries

Modern French history

Usually Tuesdays at 17:30

Usually Mondays at 17:30

Dates: 5 May, 2 June

Dates: 11 May, 8 June

History of political Ideas / early career

Oral history

Usually Wednesdays at 17:15

Usually Thursdays at 18:00

Dates: 6, 20 May, 3, 17 June

Dates: 28 May, 4 June

History of sexuality

Psychoanalysis and history

Usually Tuesdays at 17:15

Usually Wednesdays at 17:30

Dates: 5, 26 May, 16 June

Dates: 13, 27 May

International history

Religious history of Britain 1500–1800

Usually Tuesdays at 18:00

Usually Tuesdays at 17:15

Dates: 5, 19 May, 2, 16, 30 June

Dates: 5, 19 May, 2, 16, 30 June

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Seminar series

Studies of home Usually Wednesdays at 17:30 Dates: 6 May, 3 June Voluntary action history Usually Mondays at 17:30 Dates: 11, 20 May, 1, 15 June

Institute of Modern Languages Research Contact: modernlanguages@sas.ac.uk

The Warburg Institute Contact: warburg@sas.ac.uk Arabic philosophy Mondays at 14.15–15.15 Dates: 4, 11, 18, 25 May, 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 June Basic knowledge of Arabic required Director’s work-in-progress Wednesdays at 14.15–15.15 Dates: 6, 13, 20, 27 May, 3, 10, 17, 24 June, 1 July Esoteric traditions and occult thought

On the West-Eastern couch

Fridays at 13.00–14.15

Usually Mondays at 16:00

Dates: 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 May, 5, 12, 19, 26 June, 3 July

Date: 11 May History of art

Institute of Philosophy

Occasional Mondays, 16:30–17:30 Dates: TBC Latin palaeography

Usually Wednesdays at 16:00–18:00

Tuesdays at 16.15–17.15

Dates: 6, 20 May, 3, 17 June

Dates: 5, 12, 19, 26 May, 2, 9, 16, 23, 30 June

Logic, epistemology and metaphysics forum

Literature, ideas and society

Usually Tuesdays at 17:30–19:30

One meeting per term, 17.15–19.15

Dates: 19 May, 2, 16, 30 June

Date: 6 May

Propensities and statistics

Maps and society

Usually Tuesdays at 17:15–19:00

Thursdays at 17.00–18.00

Date: 20 May

Dates: 14, 28 May

Rethinking the senses: multisensory perception and action

Senate House Library

Usually Thursdays at 17:00–19:00

Contact: senatehouselibrary@london.ac.uk

Dates: 14, 28 May, 4 June Senate House Library Friends events www.thesenses.ac.uk

For details and membership visit www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk/about-us/friends 69

www.sas.ac.uk

Aesthetics forum

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Contact: philosophy@sas.ac.uk


POSTGR ADUATE STUDY in the humanities at the University of London Open day on Wednesday 10 June, 1pm–5pm bit.ly/OpenDayJune

The School of Advanced Study at the University of London brings together 10 internationally-renowned research institutes to form the UK’s national centre for the support of researchers and the promotion of research in the humanities. The School offers full- and part-time Master’s and research degrees in its specialist areas, including: LLM in Advanced Legislative Studies LLM in Advanced Legislative Studies via distance learning LLM in International Corporate Governance, Financial Regulation and Economic Law MA in Art History, Curatorship and Renaissance Culture MA in Cultural and Intellectual History 1300–1650 MA in Garden and Landscape History MA/MRes in Historical Research MA/MRes in the History of the Book MA in Understanding and Securing Human Rights MA in The Making of the Modern World MA in Refugee Protection and Forced Migration Studies via distance learning

For further information email sas.registry@sas.ac.uk www.sas.ac.uk/graduate-study


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 Stickland, 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

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Research training Further details of all calls for papers are available from our websites at www.sas.ac.uk/events and senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

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CFP deadline: 1 May 2015 Austria’s contribution to modern Germanlanguage literature has been both rich and varied, embracing major novelists (Kafka, Musil), dramatists (Schnitzler, Bernhard), as well as poets (Rilke, Celan) of international repute. This annual international conference offers postgraduate students working in the field of Austrian literature the opportunity to present their work and discuss aspects of it with colleagues and other specialists. The meeting will take place at the Institute of Modern Languages Research (IMLR), and the organisers would welcome papers on any aspect of modern Austrian literature, culture and film. Conference participants will also be invited to contribute to the Austrianresearchuk community academic blog (https://austrianresearchuk.wordpress. com/), a space where members of the global academic Austrian studies community meet to communicate and share information about the latest research. In addition, the Ingeborg Bachmann Centre for Austria Literature will award a travel grant of £100 each to two selected participants. Please send abstracts of no more than 400 words to: heide.kunzelmann@sas.ac.uk.

24–25 September 2015 CFP deadline: 31 May 2015 In the past century the expansion of industrialised cities has seen a significant increase in urbanisation and non-rural lifestyles. While literature sought to document these changes, substantial technological advancements in cinema also enabled the metropolis to be presented through a range of visual spectacles. Visions of urban sprawl are present in a variety of media. However, it is through their adaptations and remediation that we can trace society’s ongoing relationship with the city, modernisation and globalisation, and understand aspects of our changing lifestyles, the effects of urbanisation on literary and visual art, national identity, social inequalities, territorial displacement, environmental destruction, utopias and dystopias, and our social and psychological relationship with architecture and city development. Confirmed speakers at this 10th annual Association of Adaptation Studies conference are: Andrew Davies, screenwriter and patron of the Association of Adaptation Studies, Jonathan Powell, former head of BBC drama and controller of BBC1, now professor of media arts, Royal Holloway University, and Professor Graham Holderness, critic, novelist, poet and dramatist. This conference in London is organised with the Institute of English Studies. Papers are welcome on themes related to the metropolis and the city in all forms of remediated adaptation, including literature, theatre, film, television, digital media and other visual and literary arts. Please send 200-word abstracts of suggested papers to both: Professor Deborah Cartmell, djc@dmu.ac.uk and Professor Jeremy Strong, jeremy.strong@uwl.ac.uk.

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

5 June 2015

Adaptations and the metropolis

www.sas.ac.uk

12th IBC International PG Conference on current research in Austrian literature, culture and film

Calls for papers

Calls for papers

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How to find us Venue 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.

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Produced by SAS and Senate House Library Marketing and Communications Designed by www.emosaic.co.uk Printed by Circle Services Group

Robert Delaunay, Eiffel Tower (1926), Rythmes sans fin exhibition, 15 October 2014 – 12 January 2015, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris | Public domain via Wikimedia Commons Page 6 mistery / Shutterstock.com Page 7 1) The Mausoleum of Hadrian, or Castel Sant’Angelo | S-F / Shutterstock.com 2) Public domain via Religious Society of Friends Page 8 Mural, Bogside (Derry/Londonderry, Northern Ireland) | © K. Deslandes (2004) Page 10 See cover image Page 11 1) © Lloyd Sturdy, University of London 2) clivewa / Shutterstock.com Page 12 2) Voices of Malaya, Ministry of Information, 1948 | Image courtesy of the BFI 3) Lemony / Shutterstock.com Page 13 1) Everett Collection / Shutterstock.com Page 15 1) Obverse (front) of the Great Seal of King John | Image from Francis Sandford, A Genealogical History of the Kings and Queens of England (London, 1707) Page 16 1) Angela Krauß | © Brigitte Friedrich Page 17 2) Hiroshima Peace Memorial (or Atomic Bomb Dome), Hiroshima, Japan | Luciano Mortula / Shutterstock.com Page 18 Plate from The Tower Bridge by J. E. Tuit (London: Engineer, 1894) | © Senate House Library, University of London Pages 20, 54, 60 © Lloyd Sturdy | University of London Page 72 ‘How a British woman dresses in wartime: utility clothing in Britain, 1943’ | Ministry of Information Official Collection (Imperial War Museum)

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School of Advanced Study Senate House Malet Street London WC1E 7HU United Kingdom

Senate House Library Senate House Malet Street London WC1E 7HU United Kingdom

Email sas.info@sas.ac.uk Telephone +44 (0)20 7862 8833

Email senatehouselibrary@london.ac.uk Telephone +44 (0)20 7862 8500

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