Events Brochure: May-Sep 2016

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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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Contents

Event highlights – timeline

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Event highlights

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Speaker highlights

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Exhibitions

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Events calendar – listings

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Seminar series

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Calls for papers

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Research training

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How to find us

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Key Subject area

How to use this guide

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

Booking

Human rights

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

Politics

Mailing list

Classics History Philosophy culture, language & literature

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

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

Event podcasts

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

Blog

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


Event highlights timeline May

June

Living Literature: The Great Gatsby Travel back in time to 1922 and explore the sights, sounds, tastes and smells of Jay Gatsby’s lost world with guidance from experts in the history of F. Scott Fitzgerald and Prohibitionera New York. Within the sumptuous surroundings of Senate House, you’ll experience an immersive, stimulating and theatrical reimagining of Fitzgerald’s great American novel. Time: 19:30–22:00 Date: 5 May See page 6 for event information

Shakespeare: Metamorphosis To commemorate the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death, the University of London will mount its first major exhibition programme, ‘Shakespeare: Metamorphosis’. Shakespearean text and scholarship have undergone continuous reinvention. ‘Metamorphosis’ tracks this transformation. An extensive events programme accompanies the exhibition. Times: Open during Library hours; special hours for events Dates: 14 April–17 September See page 16 for event information

Times: 7 June: 10:00– 18:30; 8 June: 09:30–17:00 Dates: 7–8 June See page 10 for event information

Cityscapes: past, present and future Join us for a lively discussion of historical, contemporary and visionary urban environments chaired by Laleh Khalili (SOAS) featuring Paul Mason (broadcaster and author of PostCapitalism: A Guide to our Future), Karl Sharro (architect and co-author of Manifesto: Towards a New Humanism in Architecture), Irena Bauman (architect, Bauman Lyons; Sheffield), Darran Anderson (author of Imaginary Cities) and Tim Hitchcock (Sussex). Time: 17:00 Date: 1 June See page 8 for event information

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Gendering Roman imperialism Standard debates on Roman imperialism are conducted more or less entirely in terms of male agency, male competition, and male participation. This conference will explore whether or not the Roman experience, both of Republican expansion and imperial rule, might be rewritten to take account of gendered roles and gendered experience.

Sites of invention: Latin America and the global making of historical and anthropological knowledge This two-day conference explores what happens to standard Western genealogies of history and anthropology when the Latin American archive of knowledge production is duly considered. Time: 09:30–20:00 Dates: 9–10 June See page 10 for event information


Event highlights

July

Times: 13 June: 14:00–18:30 reception; 14 June: 09:00–17:45; 15 June: 09:00–18:00 Dates: 13–15 June See page 11 for event information

IHR Annual Fellows’ Lecture: Roger Knight Historian Roger Knight’s interests lie in the field of naval history. For most of his career he worked in the National Maritime Museum, starting in the manuscripts department in 1974 and leaving as deputy director in 2000. From then until 2014 he was visiting professor of naval history at the Greenwich Maritime Institute, University of Greenwich. His most recent book, published in 2013, is Britain against Napoleon: the organization of victory, 1793–1815. Time: 18:00–20:30 Date: 24 June

Literary London Society: London and the globe This conference will trace the city’s transnational connections across historical periods and expressive modes, including fiction, drama and poetry. The Society’s annual lecture will be given on 6 July by Zimbabwean writer and musician Brian Chikwava, author of Harare North, a story of displacement, dispossession and survival in an unfamiliar environment, the title being a Zimbabwean term for London. Time: 09:00–20:00 Date: 6–8 July See page 14 for event information

The future of refugee law This inaugural annual forum brings together decision-makers and practitioners, policymakers and influencers, and academics and students to share and debate the latest research and cutting-edge developments in refugee law. Time: 09:00–13:00 Dates: 29 June–1 July See page 11 for event information

The Spanish Civil War and world literatures July 2016 marks the 80th anniversary of the military revolt in Spain and the start of the Spanish Civil War (1936–39). This conference reviews the worldwide literary response to this conflict between 1936 and 2016.

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Aby Warburg 150: work, legacy and promise The Warburg Institute celebrates the 150th anniversary of the birth of Aby Warburg with a conference dedicated to his work, legacy and promise. Participants will discuss the implications of his innovative and interdisciplinary work for art, memory, cultural transmission and crosscultural tensions.

Time: 09:30–17:30 Date: 11–12 July See page 11 for event information

www.sas.ac.uk

See page 14 for event information

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Event highlights

Living Literature: The Great Gatsby 5 May 2016

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Travel back in time to 1922 and explore the sights, sounds, tastes and smells of Jay Gatsby’s lost world with guidance from experts in the history of F. Scott Fitzgerald and Prohibition-era New York. Within the sumptuous surroundings of Senate House you’ll experience an immersive, stimulating and theatrical reimagining of Fitzgerald’s great American novel. Taste historically accurate cocktails, sip bathtub gin, smell

classic perfumes and sample food from the era’s cookbooks. Learn about the ‘shimmy’, fall under the spell of silent film stars, and discover why what you think you know about flapper dresses is wrong while listening to early jazz standards. Dress code: black tie with a ‘20s feel. livingliterature.blogs.sas. ac.uk/the-great-gatsby See page 22 for event information


Event highlights

What happens in your mind when you read or see Shakespeare performed? How can recent research on the mind illuminate Shakespeare’s depictions of it? In what sense can literary and historical ideas contribute to our general understanding of the mind? In tackling these fundamental questions about literature and the mind and their relation to one another, Miranda

See page 30 for event information

History and the public: the legacy of David Cesarani 31 May 2016 David Cesarani’s death in 2015 deprived the historical profession of a noted and highly respected public historian. Focusing throughout his career on the history of modern Europe and of the Jewish experience within that history, Cesarani was not only a scholar in his own right but a notable interpreter of history for a broader audience. His career as a broadcaster and journalist linked past and present in ways that made history relevant and important to non-specialists. The programme for this evening will feature a discussion of his overall contribution to public debate and historical studies in Britain, as well as the launch of Cesarani’s last book on Anglo-Jewish history, Disraeli: The Novel Politician (Yale University Press). Panel participants include Sir Richard Evans (Cambridge), Jonathan Steinberg (Cambridge and Pennsylvania), Suzanne Bardgett (Imperial War Museum) and Bryan Cheyette (Reading). See page 38 for event information

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www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

18 May 2016

Anderson (Edinburgh) will draw on recent cognitive approaches to literature, illustrated with examples from Shakespeare and other Renaissance works. Her lecture will be followed by a conversation with Paul Matthews (Imperial), neuroscientist and author of The Bard on the Brain. Part of The Human Mind Project (THMP) Seminar Series. humanmind.ac.uk/events-2/ seminar-series/shakespeareand-the-mind/

www.sas.ac.uk

Shakespeare and the mind


Event highlights

Cities@SAS launch 1 June 2016 The first part of this event showcases the diversity of disciplinary approaches to all things urban within the School of Advanced Study. Scholars will discuss their research on urban spaces across the world and reflect on their different approaches to the city through cultural studies, classics, art history, modern history and modern languages. The second part of the event, ‘Cityscapes: Past, Present and Future’ is a debate chaired by Laleh Khalili (SOAS) featuring Paul Mason (broadcaster and author of PostCapitalism: A Guide to our Future), Karl Sharro (architect and co-author of Manifesto: Towards a New Humanism in Architecture), Irena Bauman (architect, Bauman Lyons; Sheffield), Darran Anderson (author of Imaginary Cities) and Tim Hitchcock (Sussex). See page 40 for event information

The changing sounds of Senate House: musique concrète of the building in the building 2 June 2016 Hannah Thompson, Leverhulme Trust artist in residence at Senate House Library and the School of Advanced Study,

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presents an immersive sound art installation and performance exploring the relationship between listener and location within the context of the Library as a sound source, followed by a collaborative event at The Horse Hospital, Bloomsbury, inspired by the residency. See page 41 for event information


Event highlights

Biological identity

6 June–25 August 2016 In conjunction with the exhibition ‘Shakespeare: Metamorphosis’, Senate House Library will offer visitors the opportunity to journey through the seven ages of Shakespeare by exploring the evolution of his texts from the

17th century onwards. Exhibition curators Richard Espley and Karen Attar will discuss these texts in the intimate setting of Senate House’s original Room 101. They will focus on Othello, showing, among other items, a rare First Folio and an early quarto. Visit shakespeare. senatehouselibrary.ac.uk for more information. See page 43 for event information

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www.sas.ac.uk

See page 40 for event information

‘Shakespeare: Metamorphosis’ – Curators’ Room

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

2–3 June 2016 Recent debates in metaphysics on personal identity and material constitution have given rise to theories that appeal to a biological understanding of identity. So-called animalists claim that the puzzles of standard psychological theories of personal identity can be avoided by understanding humans as animals or organisms rather than as persons, and that the necessary and sufficient conditions of our identities over time are purely biological in character. This two-day conference considers whether the concept of ‘biological identity’ can serve the functions that metaphysicians attribute to it. Participants will consider the metaphysical motives for proposing biological conceptions of identity as well as recent research conducted within the philosophy of biology community.


Event highlights

Gendering Roman imperialism 7–8 June 2016 Standard debates on Roman imperialism are conducted more or less entirely in terms of male agency, male competition and male participation. Not only have women been marginalised in these narratives as just so much collateral damage – victims, captives, abandoned wives and mothers – but also there has been little engagement with gender history more widely. This conference will explore whether or not the Roman experience, both of Republican expansion and imperial rule, might be rewritten to take account of gendered roles and gendered experience. Speakers include Emily Hemelrijk (Amsterdam) and Alison Keith (Toronto), with Rebecca Flemming (Cambridge) and Jonathan Prag (Oxford) as commentators. See page 43 for event information

Sites of invention: Latin America and the global making of historical and anthropological knowledge LAGLOBAL Seminar @ ILAS 9–10 June 2016 There is strong evidence to suggest that from the 16th century forward the region now known as Latin America has served not merely as an object of Western knowledge but as a locus or site of knowledge production. This is particularly true of historical and anthropological knowledge. This two-day conference explores what happens to standard ‘Western’ genealogies of history and anthropology when the Latin American archive of knowledge production is duly considered. Speakers include Serge Gruzinski (L’École des hautes études en sciences sociales), François Hartog (L’École des hautes études en sciences sociales), Elías Palti (Universidad Nacional de Quilmes) and Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra (Texas). See page 45 for event information

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Anniversary Joyce: XXV International James Joyce Symposium 13–18 June 2016 ‘Anniversary Joyce’ will examine anniversaries, celebrations and commemorations related to James Joyce, 1916 and the significant historical events that took place that year: the Easter Rising, the Battle of the Somme and the Battle of Verdun, the invention of the light switch, the founding of Dadaism, the 300th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death, the death of Henry James, Enrico Caruso’s recording of ‘O Sole Mio’, and the publications of Ferdinand de Saussure’s Cours de linguistique générale and (naturally) A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. Participants will explore a variety of historical, literary-historical, cultural, geographical and geopolitical topics that illuminate Joyce’s life and work. See page 46 for event information


Event highlights See page 46 for event information

29 June–1 July 2016 The inaugural annual conference of the Refugee Law Initiative will explore the future of refugee law. Recent years have seen refugee law doctrine moving in innovative new directions as the discipline reflects deeply on its relationship to the wider field of international law. At the same time, refugee protection faces renewed challenges on the ground in a number of regions, not least in the refugee and displacementrelated consequences of humanitarian crises such as Syria. This conference provides a dedicated annual forum for bringing together decisionmakers and practitioners, policymakers and influencers, academics and students to share and debate the latest research and cutting-edge developments in refugee law. See page 51 for event information

The Spanish Civil War and world literatures 11–12 July 2016 July 2016 marks the 80th anniversary of the military revolt in Spain and the start of the Spanish Civil War (1936–39). Few 20th-century conflicts were as ideologically and emotionally charged. The consequences of a military victory resulted in 40 years of repressive rule in Spain and thousands of Spaniards displaced across Europe and the Americas. Internationally, writers and artists criticised the attack on democracy by military and fascist forces: Auden, Dos Passos, Ehrenburg, Sartre, Hemingway, Koestler, Lee, Malraux, Neruda, Orwell, and Vallejo, to name only a few. This conference reviews the worldwide literary response to the Spanish Civil War between 1936 and 2016. Thirty-six papers will be delivered by specialists from eight countries, including China and Israel.

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

13–15 June 2016 The Warburg Institute celebrates the 150th anniversary of the birth of Aby Warburg with a conference dedicated to his work, legacy and promise. It will reclaim the centrality of Warburg’s thought and vision not only for the London Institute but for the world of international scholarship. A large group of distinguished scholars will discuss the implications of his innovative and interdisciplinary work for art, memory, cultural transmission and cross-cultural tensions. The aim will be not only to illuminate the past, but also to reveal the potential of his writings for the debate about contemporary cultural differences.

The future of refugee law

www.sas.ac.uk

Aby Warburg 150: work, legacy and promise

See page 55 for event information

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Speaker highlights

The presence of prehistoric pictoriality 11 May 2016 Whitney Davis George C and Helen Pardee Professor of History of Art, University of California, Berkeley Whitney Davis is professor of history and theory of ancient and modern art at the University of California at Berkeley, USA. Prior to joining UC Berkeley in 2001, he taught at Northwestern University where he was John Evans Professor of Art History and director of the Alice Berline Kaplan Center for the Humanities. He has written seven books and nearly 100 articles on aspects of prehistoric, ancient and modern arts, the history and theory of art history and visual culture, and the history and theory of sexuality. His most recent book, A General Theory of Visual Culture, won the 2012 monograph prize of the American Society for Aesthetics in 2012. See page 26 for event information

Leverhulme Trust Lecture: Creole books in the schools of Europe LAGLOBAL Seminar @ ILAS 12 May 2016 Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra University of Texas at Austin and Leverhulme Visiting Professor, ILAS Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra, Sheffield Professor of History at the University of Texas at Austin, has held numerous fellowships and visiting professorships including at universities in Brazil, Colombia, Chile and at the School of Advanced Study. He is a prize-winning writer and a prolific author whose, How to write the history of the new world, made it on to The Economist, the TLS and The Independent’s ‘best book of the year’ lists. He is currently finishing a collection of essays tentatively entitled On Prophets and Hybrid Empires and his ongoing book project is the Bible and Empire: The Old Testament in the Spanish Monarchy, from Columbus to the Wars of Independence. See page 28 for event information

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Jacobsen Lecture 16 May 2016 Hannah Ginsborg Professor of Philosophy, University of California, Berkeley Professor Hannah Ginsborg combines work in the history of philosophy, especially Kant, with an interest in contemporary philosophy. Much of her published work has focused on Kant’s Critique of Judgment, arguing for its importance both to Kant’s own theory of cognitive judgment and to our present-day understanding of cognition. Professor Ginsborg’s current research project seeks to articulate and develop the notion of ‘primitive normativity’ – a notion drawn from her reading of Kant’s aesthetic theory – and to show how it can be used to address problems about rule-following, knowledge of language and grasp of concepts. A collection of her articles on Kant’s Critique of Judgment was published in 2015. See page 29 for event information


Speaker highlights

JP Barron Memorial Lecture: whatever happened to the barbarian? 1 June 2016

See page 40 for event information

‘Linda Lê after the millennium’ workshop/study day Sponsored by the Cassal Trust 17 June 2016 Linda Lê Writer Vietnamese-born French writer Linda Lê has been publishing since 1987, producing a rich, varied and fascinating body of work, for which she has won prestigious literary prizes, including the Prix Renaudot Poche and the Prix Wepler. The

prolific Goncourt-nominated author will read from her work and participate in a unique exchange of ideas with international researchers. While Linda Lê’s earlier writing is often the subject of academic studies, this workshop will focus on her more recent work, particularly those novels published since Les Aubes (2000), with a view to producing a collected volume for publication. This event is organised with King’s College London and is sponsored by the Cassal Trust. See page 49 for event information

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www.sas.ac.uk

Tom Harrison’s research has focused on (among other themes) Greek religion, the Greek representation of foreign peoples and the history of the Achaemenid Persian Empire. The central concern of all his work to date, however, is with Herodotus, the father of history: how his Histories are to be understood, how best they can be used as a source for Greek or Near Eastern history, and the long history of scholarly and popular engagement with his work. He is currently engaged on two main projects: a book on Herodotus and his reception (especially in the 19th and early 20th centuries), and a study of the role of belief in ancient Greek religion.

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Thomas Harrison Professor of Ancient History, University of St Andrews


Speaker highlights

IHR Annual Fellows’ The Literary London Lecture 2016 Society Annual Conference: London 24 June 2016 Roger Knight and the Globe Historian and award-winning author

Dr Roger Knight’s interests for most of his museum and teaching career have been in the field of naval history. He read history at Trinity College Dublin and completed his PhD at University College, London, on the Royal Dockyards in England at the time of the American Revolutionary War. For most of his career he worked in the National Maritime Museum, starting in the manuscripts department in 1974 and leaving as deputy director in 2000. From then until 2014 he was visiting professor of naval history at the Greenwich Maritime Institute, University of Greenwich. His most recent book published in 2013, is Britain against Napoleon: the organization of victory, 1793–1815. See page 52 for event information

6–8 July 2016 Brian Chikwava Writer, musician and former Charles Pick Fellow at the University of East Anglia The conference theme, ‘London and the Globe’, will trace the city’s transnational connections across historical periods and through novelistic, dramatic, poetic and other modes of expressions. As part of this year’s event, the Annual Lecture on 6 July will be given by Zimbabwean writer and musician Brian Chikwava. He is a former Charles Pick Fellow at the University of East Anglia, and the first Zimbabwean author to receive the Caine Prize for African writing in English, for his 2004 short story Seventh Street Alchemy. His debut novel, Harare North, is a story of displacement, dispossession and survival in an unfamiliar environment, the title itself being a Zimbabwean term for London. See page 54 for event information

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A scene from As You Like It , 1853, Walter Deverell | public domain via Wikimedia Commons


Speaker highlights

The genius of Shakespeare 17 September 2016

www.sas.ac.uk

One of the world’s foremost Shakespearians, Stanley Wells has published many books and articles on the subject and has lectured all over the world. He gained his doctorate at the University of Birmingham’s Shakespeare Institute in 1962, teaching there until 1978, and then again from 1987 to 1997 as professor of Shakespeare studies. He is now the university’s emeritus professor of Shakespeare studies, a life trustee and former chairman of the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, and holds honorary doctorates from Furman University, South Carolina, and from the universities of Munich, Hull, Durham, Craiova and Warwick. In 2011, Professor Wells was elected the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust’s first honorary president.

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Stanley Wells, CBE Emeritus Professor of Shakespeare Studies, University of Birmingham

See page 60 for event information

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Exhibition Shakespeare: Metamorphosis 14 April–17 September 2016, Senate House

Shakespeare: Metamorphosis 14 April–17 September 2016 Senate House To commemorate the 400th anniversary of the death of William Shakespeare, the University of London will mount its first major exhibition programme, Shakespeare: Metamorphosis, in Senate House, Bloomsbury, this summer. Over the last four centuries, Shakespearean text and scholarship — as well as our perceptions of the man himself — have undergone continuous reinvention. Organised by Senate House Library and inspired by the famous ‘seven ages of man’ speech from As You Like It, Shakespeare: Metamorphosis traces this 400-year transformation by highlighting more than 30 rare texts that illustrate seven significant stages in that transformation. An extensive events and activities programme runs alongside the exhibition, featuring talks from some of the world’s most esteemed Shakespeare scholars, performances from acclaimed actors

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and a bespoke website offering a host of specially developed Shakespeare-based resources. Sir Jonathan Bate, Provost of Worcester College and professor of English, University of Oxford, will deliver the opening keynote address, ‘Shakespeare 1616–2116’, on 15 April. Stanley Wells, professor emeritus, Shakespeare Institute, University of Birmingham, will deliver the closing keynote address, ‘The Genius of Shakespeare’, on 17 September. In between, nearly 20 talks will address a wide range of subjects, from Shakespeare in translation to Shakespeare’s London and Stratford, from collecting and editing Shakespeare to Shakespearean performance and the playwright’s place in our digital age. During special ‘Curators’ Room’ sessions, exhibition curators Richard Espley and Karen Attar will discuss the texts on display in the intimate setting of Senate House’s original Room 101. The exhibition is free to enter on a library day pass. All events are free with the exception of the Curators’ Room sessions (£10, £8 concessions). For complete details and booking information, please visit the exhibition website at shakespeare.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk.

All the world’s a stage, And all the men and women merely players; They have their exits and their entrances, And one man in his time plays many parts, His acts being seven ages. — As You Like It, Act II, scene 7


Exhibitions

Lover

EXHIBITION : 14.04.16 — 17.09.16

EXHIBITION : 14.04.16 — 17.09.16

FREE ENTRY S H A K E S P E A R E . S E N A T E H O U S E L I B R A R Y. A C . U K

FREE ENTRY S H A K E S P E A R E . S E N A T E H O U S E L I B R A R Y. A C . U K

THE FIFTH AGE :

THE SEVENTH AGE :

Justice

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Infant

THE THIRD AGE :

Oblivion

EXHIBITION : 14.04.16 — 17.09.16

EXHIBITION : 14.04.16 — 17.09.16

FREE ENTRY S H A K E S P E A R E . S E N A T E H O U S E L I B R A R Y. A C . U K

FREE ENTRY S H A K E S P E A R E . S E N A T E H O U S E L I B R A R Y. A C . U K

www.sas.ac.uk

THE FIRST AGE :

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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 Tuesday 03 Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

Infertility and the law in the Roman world

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

Bibliotheca Abscondita: the Library of Sir Thomas Browne (1605–82)

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

Logic, epistemology and metaphysics seminar

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

Archives and society seminar

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

Roehampton Poetry Prize ceremony 2016

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Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

Shakespeare in 1916: the First World War and the origins of Global Shakespeare

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Rebecca Fleming (Cambridge) | Life-cycles seminar Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

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Lucy Gwynn (Queen Mary) | History of libraries seminar Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

Jack Woods (Bilkent, Ankara) Free corine.besson@sas.ac.uk

Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

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Gordon McMullan | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

Wednesday 04 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 13:00–14:00 Room 246

A digital edition of FGrHist 104 (Aristodemus)

Institute of Modern Languages Research Lecture 16:00–18:00 The Court Room

Friends of Germanic Studies at the IMLR annual meeting

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Pietro Luzzo (Heidelberg) | Director’s seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

‘Game plans and Brexits: exploring the power of metaphor’, Katrin Kohl (Oxford) By invitation only Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

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

London aesthetics forum

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

Two reliefs and what they tell us about Athenian comedy

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

‘I have had them in my hands often’: domestic servants and the material culture of the 18thcentury domestic space

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

‘Bottom-up’ harmonisation in the EU asylum policy: the case of EASO

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

Great Britain’s grand Colombia

Christopher Mole (British Columbia) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Events calendar

Events calendar May P

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Eric Csapo (Sydney) | T.B.L Webster Lecture Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

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Tessa Chynoweth (Queen Mary) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

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Lilian Tsourdi (Université Libre de Bruxelles/Institute for European Studies) | Registration required Free hrc@sas.ac.uk Lina del Castillo (Texas at Austin/Visiting Research Fellow, SAS/ILAS) | Andean studies seminar Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

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IALS lunchtime seminar

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

Greek culture and political power in the Hellenistic East

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

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

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

CenSes seminar

Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

Laurianne Martinez Sève (Lille) | ICS ancient history seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

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Reading group Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Angela Maravita (Milano) | Part of the Rethinking the Senses project funded by the AHRC (www.thesenses.ac.uk) Free ip@sas.ac.uk

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www.sas.ac.uk

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

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

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Events calendar May Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 TBC

North American history seminar

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

Political ethics and social movements: the virtues and vices of a ‘fishing scab’

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

History knocking-shop: sex, class and the politics of history

School of Advanced Study Special event 19:30–22:00 Senate House

Living Literature: The Great Gatsby

Margaret Jacobs (Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

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Luciana Lang (Manchester) | Latin American anthropology seminar Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

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Ian Winn (Liverpool) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Sarah Churchwell (SAS/IES) and other experts | Travel back in time with us to 1922 for an immersive experience. Explore the tastes, sights, smells and sounds of a lost world. With guidance from experts in the history of F. Scott Fitzgerald and Prohibition-era New York, you’ll sip bathtub gin and sample historically accurate cocktails, smell perfumes using historical ingredients, eat food from 1922 cookbooks, learn why you’re not dancing the Charleston, watch silent films from the era and much more. | Registration required | livingliterature.blogs.sas. ac.uk/the-great-gatsby Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

U,H,S

Friday 06 Institute of Modern Languages Research 2-day workshop 10:00–18:00 University of St Andrews (Medical and Biological Sciences Building, Seminar Room 1)

Research methodologies in modern languages

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 15:00–17:30 Room 243

Viennese suburbs

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

Middle comedy: not only mythology and food. The political and contemporary dimension

22

Chris Pountain (Queen Mary/Cambridge), Christine Lorre-Johnston (Sorbonne Nouvelle), Catherine Davies (IMLR), Derek Duncan (St Andrews), David Eldridge (Hull), Will Fowler (St Andrews), Michael Graetzke (Hull), James Hadley (IMLR), Hephzibah Israel (Edinburgh), Carol O’Sullivan (Bristol), Julia Prest (St Andrews), Margaret Tejerizo (Glasgow) Free jl213@st-andrews.ac.uk

Vienna tales on page and screen seminar Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Virginia Mastellari (Freiburg) | ICS postgraduate work-in-progress seminar Free postgradwip@gmail.com

U

U

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Events calendar

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

The Dutch contexts of William Courten’s (1642– 1702) collections

Institute of English Studies Lecture 17:30–19:30 Room G34 (Gordon Room)

Medieval and modern manuscript studies in the digital age lecture

U

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

The Charles Peake Ulysses seminar

U

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

Irish studies seminar

U

H

Sachiko Kusakawa (Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Peter Shirlow (Liverpool) Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Saturday 07 Shakespeare in London: a Wikipedia workshop

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

Modernism and Ireland

Institute of Modern Languages Research Research training 11:00–18:30 Room 243

IMLR research training: before, during and after the PhD

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 14:00–16:00 John S Cohen Room, 203, North Block

Natural graces, natural genius: gender and ‘accomplishments’ in the long 18th century

The event will focus on editing Wikipedia pages about places that appear in the works of William Shakespeare | Wikipedia and Jordan Landes (Senate House Library) | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

‘Edwardian poetry and Irish poetic modernism’, Alex Davis (University College Cork), ‘The Irish revolution and European theatrical modernism 1918–25’, Ben Levitas (Goldsmiths) | London modernism seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U

U

U

Jane Everson (Royal Holloway), Catherine Davies (IMLR), Natalie Moss, Lucila Granada (Coalition of Latin Americans in the UK), Susannah Poulton (UKTI), Laurel Plapp (Peter Lang), Benedict Schofield (King’s, London) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

H

www.sas.ac.uk

Michle Cohen (UCL Institute of Education) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Senate House Library Talk 10:30–16:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

23


Events calendar May Monday 09 Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 10:00–12:00 Room 246

Thinking being seminar

Institute of English Studies 1-day colloquium 12:30–17:30 Room 246 and G35 (adjacent)

English and European comparative studies colloquium: views from the future

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

Astraea in the tropics: studying diplomacy and Empire in the global Renaissance

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

Roman bronze statuettes at the Ashmolean Museum: ancient and modern receptions

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Pollard Room, N301, North Block

Decolonisation and the end of Europe’s religious wars

Convenor: Johan Siebers (IMLR/Central Lancashire) Free johan.siebers@sas.ac.uk

U

U

Comparative modernisms seminar | Registration required £28 angeliki.spiropoulou@sas.ac.uk

H

Zoltan Biedermann (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

C,U

Nick West (Wolfson College, Oxford) | Roman art seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

H

Joseph Snyder (West Virginia), Udi Greenberg (Dartmouth College) | Colonial/ postcolonial new researchers workshop Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Tuesday 10 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 14:00–15:00 IALS

IALS PhD masterclass

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

We request that Your Honor assist the Company with your labours: Hugo Grotius and the Dutch East India Company, 1604–45

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

French postgraduate seminar

24

‘Getting published and getting a job in academia’, Avrom Sherr (IALS), David Sugarman (Lancaster Law School) | An opportunity for current PhD students to discuss research with colleagues, with expert input from senior academics experienced in PhD research | Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

L

H

Martine Van Ittersum (Dundee) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

‘The body in the text: exploring sensations in Lorette Nobécourt’s and Marie Darrieussecq’s fictions’, Dominique Carlini-Versini (Kent/ Université Paris Diderot) | ‘ “L’image, survivant l’il, se trouvait hors de l’il”: visuality and image in the poetry of André du Bouchet’, Julian Koch (Queen Mary) Free dominic.glynn@sas.ac.uk

U


Events calendar

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

Italic Dionysos in 4th-century BC Apulia

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

The Royal Naval Reserve in rural Scotland and Wales, c.1900–39

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

Locality and region seminar

H

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

Against the taking condition on reasoning

P

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

The photography market: early travel and exploration

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

Nehru’s emissary: V K Krishna Menon and the long 1950s

Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

Editing Shakespeare

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

Niklas Luhmann and the medieval church

Thomas Carpenter (Ohio) | A.D. Trendall lecture Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

C

H

Ben Thomas (IHR) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Jonathan Way (Southampton) | Practical, the political, the ethical aspects of philosophy seminar Free ip@sas.ac.uk

U

Roland Belgrave | Book collecting seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

H

Rudra Chaudhuri (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Wednesday 11 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 13:00–14:00 Room 246

Exempla of adulatio in Seneca’s De Ira Martina Russo (La Sapienza, Rome) | Director’s seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

C

25

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

David d’Avray (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U

www.sas.ac.uk

Sonia Massai (King’s, London) Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk


Events calendar May School of Advanced Study Seminar 13:00–14:00 Room 246

Between old and new media: TV, Twitter and history on the hashtag

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:00–19:00 King’s College London

The politics of poverty: the campaigns of CPAG, 1965–2015

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

Barons’ Wars, under other names: Magna Carta, Royalism and the American Founding

Warburg Institute Seminar 17:15–19:00 Warburg Institute

Words and things: naming the limits of reason in early modern culture

Institute of English Studies Lecture 17:30–19:00 Chancellor’s Hall

‘Let me slip into something less comfortable’: gothic textualis by accident and by design

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

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

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

Settler colonialism and the Protestant Bible: Ben-Gurion reads the Book of Joshua

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

The presence of prehistoric pictoriality

Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

Shakespeare’s Common Prayers

26

U

Catherine Fletcher (Swansea) | Social scholar seminar Free matt.phillpott@sas.ac.uk

H

Ruth Davidson (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Eric Nelson (Harvard) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U

Alberto Frigo (Reims), Richard Scholar (Oxford) | Literature, ideas and society seminar Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U

Daniel Wakelin (Oxford) | Medieval manuscripts seminar | John Coffin Memorial Lecture in Palaeography 2016 Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

H

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

H

Gabriel Piterberg (UCLA / EUI) | Rethinking modern Europe seminar Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Whitney Davis (Berkeley) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Daniel Swift (New College of the Humanities) Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

U,H,S

U


Events calendar

Events calendar May Thursday 12 Institute of Modern Languages Research 2-day conference 10:00–18:00 Room 349

Women and ‘Heimat’ in German literature and visual culture, 1871–1933

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

IALS lunchtime seminar

L

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

Hellenism in Parthian Mesopotamia

C

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

Paid to do a hobby: a map dealer’s reflections on the last 45 years

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

Ready, steady, go! Finding the starting line of the British pop promo

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

Joint panel: reading between the lines: researching secret and unofficial networks

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

Media history seminar

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

IMLR graduate forum

U

Caroline Bland (Sheffield), Godela Weiss-Sussex (IMLR) | Registration required jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

Lucinda Dirven (Amsterdam) | ICS ancient history seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

U

Jonathan Potter (Jonathan Potter Ltd) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

H

Justin Smith (Portsmouth) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

‘Patronage and performance in 16th-century French comedy’, Lucy Rayfield (Oxford) | ‘Following the leader? The role of ecclesiastical and civic authorities in shaping the Bianchi processions of 1399 in Tuscany’, Alexandra Lee (UCL) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

H

U

www.sas.ac.uk

Clare Pettitt (King’s, London) and associates Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Catherine Beck (University College London) | The NKVD and the peculiar case of the Soviet archives, Polly Corrigan (King’s, London) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

27


Events calendar May Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 The Court Room

Alice in Cableland

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

Leverhulme Trust Lecture: Creole books in the schools of Europe

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

Lumières de Pointe-Noire (Alain Mabanckou)

U

Institute of English Studies Seminar 14:00–17:00 The Senate Room

Writing as pedagogic knowledge

U

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Symposium 14:00–19:00 IALS

Judicial Committee of the Privy Council: case papers symposium

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

Gesture and movement in Roman cursing rituals

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

Ezra Pound Cantos reading group

2016 sees the 150th anniversaries of the successful laying of the Atlantic cable and the publication of Lewis Carroll’s ‘Alice in Wonderland’. The team on the AHRC-funded project ‘Scrambled messages: the telegraphic imaginary 1857–1900’ will be thinking about the issues involved in coding, cabling and communications technologies through the medium of John Tenniel’s illustrations of Carroll’s classic. | Anne Chapman (King’s, London), Caroline Arscott (Courtauld Institute of Art), Clare Pettitt (King’s, London), Natalie Hume (Courtauld Institute of Art), Cassie Newland (King’s, London) | Media history and 19th-century studies joint seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U

H,U,S

Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra (Texas at Austin/Leverhulme Visiting Professor, ILAS) | LABLOBAL Seminar @ ILAS Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk Join us to share thoughts about the book or to find out more about contemporary French literature in general over a glass of wine | Testing translations reading group Free dominic.glynn@sas.ac.uk

Friday 13

28

Ben Knights | Pedagogic criticism workshop Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

L

Robert Carnwath, Lord Carnwath of Notting Hill (Judicial Committee of the Privy Council/IALS), Catharine MacMillan (Reading), Paul Mitchell (UCL), Charlotte Smith (Reading), John Strawson (East London), Carol Tan (SOAS), Jonathan Blaney (IHR), Joe Ury (British and Irish Legal Information Institute), Steven Whittle (IALS) | Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk Stuart McKie (Open University) | ICS postgraduate work-in-progress seminar Free postgradwip@gmail.com

Peter Howarth (Queen Mary) | Canto CI Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

C

U


Events calendar

Events calendar May Saturday 14 Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 11:00–16:00 Room 243

Transcultural memory and the intersection of migration and colonialism

Institute of Classical Studies Lecture 11:30–17:00 Room G22/26

ICS Virgil Society Lecture

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

Early modern scientific revolution, representationalism and pragmatism

U

Francesco Ricatti (Sunshine Coast/CCM Visiting Fellow), Barbara Spadaro (Bristol/CM Visiting Fellow), Emma Bond (St Andrews/CCM Visiting Fellow), SA Smythe (Santa Cruz/Cambridge/CCM Visiting Fellow), Maria Cristina Seccia (CCM Visiting Fellow) | Registration required Free katia.pizzi@sas.ac.uk 11.30am: ‘Reading the poet: Aeneid II’, Virgil Society members led by John Hazel | 2pm: Annual general meeting | 3pm: ‘Ahuvia Kahane: ‘Vitae’ and ‘Mortes’: Virgil’s biography and the parity of life and words’ Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

C

U

Piotr Szalek (Cambridge) | EMPHASIS (early modern philosophy and the scientific imagination) seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

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

‘Where are you going and where have you come from?’ Beginnings and endings in Plato

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

Bombs over Saida: nationalism, humanism and the legacy of the 1982 Israel war in Lebanon

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

The bluestockings in France: Hester Thrale Piozzi, Elizabeth Montagu and Helen Maria Williams

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

Globalising French history in the age of revolutions: essential step or step too far?

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

Going on as one ought: the normativity of meaning revisited

C,P

Stephen Halliwell (St Andrews) | ICS ancient philosophy seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

H

Caroline Franklin (Swansea) | Open University book history and bibliography research seminar Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

H

David Andress (Portsmouth) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

P,S

Hannah Ginsborg (Berkeley) | The Jacobsen Lecture 2016 Free ip@sas.ac.uk

29

www.sas.ac.uk

U

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Seth Anziska (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk


Events calendar May Tuesday 17 Institute of Philosophy 2-day conference 09:00–18:00 The Senate Room

The 13th annual London–Berkeley philosophy conference

P

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

‘Rencontres recherche et création’ at the Avignon Festival

U

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

Grandma always clears up after us: the family experiences of better-off children in post-1870 Britain

Institute of Classical Studies Workshop 17:30–19:30 Room 349

Workshop with Professor Gregory Crane

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

Logic, epistemology and metaphysics seminar

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

Handwritten text recognition in archives: the READ Project

Free ip@sas.ac.uk

Alain Viala (Oxford) | French theatre seminar Free dominic.glynn@sas.ac.uk

H

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

Gregory Crane (Tufts/Leipzig/ST Lee Fellow, SAS) Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Gil Sagi (Ludwig Maximilians, Munich) Free corine.besson@sas.ac.uk

C

P

H

Louise Seaward (UCL) | Archives and society seminar Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Wednesday 18 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 13:00–14:00 Room 246

The philosopher’s ‘mania’: Socrates, Plato and alteration of consciousness

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

Digging up the past: the Minoan site of Apesokari in the Mesara

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

London aesthetics forum

30

C

Yulia Ustinova (Ben Gurion) | Director’s seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

C

Georgia Flouda (Herakleion) | ICS Mycenaean series Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk Hans Maes (Kent) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

P


Events calendar

Events calendar May School of Advanced Study Seminar 17:00–19:00 Senate House

Shakespeare and the mind

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

London Old and Middle English Research seminar (LOMERS)

U

Warburg Institute Lecture 17:30–19:30 Chancellor’s Hall

Per Monstra ad Sphaeram: Aby Warburg and the future of the humanities

U

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

Decolonising the history of Andean historical writing, part II

Lecture by Miranda Anderson (Edinburgh) followed by conversation with Paul Matthews (Imperial) | The Human Mind Project seminar Free anna.hopkins@sas.ac.uk

U,P,S

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

David Freedberg (Warburg Institute) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

H,O

Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra (Texas at Austin/Leverhulme Visiting Professor, ILAS), Mark Thurner (ILAS) | Part of the Andean studies seminar series Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 19 Institute of Latin American Studies 1-day conference 10:00–18:00 Room G37

Creative spaces: urban culture and marginality in Latin America

Warburg Institute 2-day colloquium 12:30–18:15 Warburg Institute

Classical traditions in Latin American history

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

IALS lunchtime seminar

L

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 14:00–19:00 Room 243

The haunted house in French culture

U

R,U

Justin McGuirk, Geoffrey Kantaris (Cambridge) £20 standard | £10 concessions olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

The event will consist of two speakers and a roundtable discussion, followed by a reception | The event forms part of a series of four to be held at the IMLR and the University of Stirling, Scotland Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

U,P

www.sas.ac.uk

Rosa Andjar (UCL), Desiree Arbo (Warwick), Jorge Caizares-Esguerra (Texas Austin), Robert Conn (Wesleyan), Eric Cullhed (Uppsala), Rebecca Earle (Warwick), Felipe Fernandez Armesto (Notre Dame), Byron Hamann (Ohio State), Andrew Laird (Warwick/Brown University), Stuart McManus (Harvard), Natalia Maillard Alvarez (Pablo De Olavide), Elina Miranda Cancela (Havana), Nicola Miller (UCL), Alejandra Rojas (Ohio State), Antonella Romano (EHESS Paris) | Registration required £40 standard | £25 concessions warburg@sas.ac.uk

31


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

Pottery, tax and the Chreophylax: reconsidering Hellenism at Seleucid Uruk

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

CenSes seminar

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

Odd inscriptions: some artisanal interpretations of the Roman alphabet

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

Latin American anthropology seminar: screening of Entre Memorias

U

Institute of Modern Languages Research Lecture 18:00–20:00 Wiener Library, 29 Russell Square, WC1B 5DP

The Nazi concentration camps: their course and connections

U

School of Advanced Study Lecture 18:00–19:30 The Court Room

Race for entitlement and social welfare in the Anglo-Antipodean world

Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

The paradox of Shakespeare’s London

C

Cameron Petrie (Cambridge) | ICS ancient history seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Kia Nobre (Oxford) | Part of the Rethinking the Senses project funded by the AHRC (www.thesenses.ac.uk) Free ip@sas.ac.uk

P

U

Marc Smith (Ecole Nationale des Chartes, Paris) | Medieval manuscripts seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Screening of the ethnographic documentary ‘Entre Memorias’ (Between Memories), Peru, UK, 2015 (34 min) by Martha-Cecilia Dietrich | Martha-Cecilia Dietrich (Bern), Natalia Sobrevilla (Peru Support Group/Kent) Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

Nikolaus Wachsmann (Birkbeck) | Registration required Free info@wienerlibrary.co.uk

H

Melanie Nolan (ST Lee Visiting Fellow), followed by a reception | Registration required Free gemma.dormer@sas.ac.uk David Thomas (Northumbria) | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

U

Friday 20 Institute of Modern Languages Research 1-day conference 09:00–18:00 Room 243

32

A modernist in exile: the international reception of H.G. Adler Co-organised with the Wiener Library, London | Registration required by 11 May | There will be an associated lecture at the Wiener Library on Thursday 19 May: ‘The Nazi concentration camps: their course and connections’ by Nikolaus Wachsmann (London). Separate registration required: info@wienerlibrary.co.uk jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

U


Institute of Philosophy 2-day conference 09:30–18:00 Room 349

Mental representation: naturalistic approaches

Institute of Latin American Studies 1-day workshop 09:30–19:00 Room G22/26

Resource entanglements: disparate narratives on natural resource extraction in Latin America

Institute of Modern Languages Research 1-day workshop 11:00–17:30 Room G35

Trauma in the text: forms and formulations of trauma in women’s life-writing in French

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

Entering the new Hellenistic world: Sparta in the third century BC

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

The UUterste Wille of Lowys Porquin (1563): Catholic schoolbook or subversive Calvinist educational manual?

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

The role of domains in transferring and building manufacturing systems in the Tokugawa Era (1603–1868)

Marc Artiga, Rosa Cao, Peter Godfrey-Smith, Kate Jeffrey, Nikolaus Kriegskorte, Manolo Martinez, Jesse Prinz, Michael Rescorla | Part of the ‘Meaning for the brain and meaning for the person’ project £40 standard | £20 students/unwaged ip@sas.ac.uk

Events calendar

Events calendar May P

U,R

Evan Killick (Sussex), Janet Stewart (Durham), Gavin Hilson (Surrey), Robin Wilson (Oxford), Dinah Rajak (Sussex) | Visit resourceentanglements. wordpress.com for more information £30 standard | £15 concessions olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

U

‘Beyond compassion? Infanticide, neonaticide and the limits of empathy’ (Kathryn Robson, Newcastle), ‘The trauma of child death: the discourse of mourning in Laure Adler’s and Camille Laurens’ autobiographical writings’, Barbara Havercroft (Toronto) Free s.a.jordan@qmul.ac.uk

C

Andrea Scarpato (Leicester) | ICS postgraduate work-in-progress seminar Free postgradwip@gmail.com

H

Myriam Greilsammer (Bar Ilan) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Saturday 21 Institute of Latin American Studies 1-day workshop 10:00–17:00 Institute of Archaeology, WC1H 0PY

South American archaeology seminar

Institute of Latin American Studies 1-day workshop 10:15–17:00 Room G22/26

Latin American music seminar

Magdalena Setlak (Madrid), Dianne Scullin (Columbia), Andre Carlo Colonese (York), Trinidad Rico (Texas A&M at Qatar), Rodney Harrison (UCL), Inge Schjellerup (National Museum of Denmark), David Beresford-Jones (Cambridge), Kevin Lane (Cambridge) | Registration required £9.63 standard | £5.41 students olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk British forum for Latin American music research that meets twice yearly £8 standard olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

H,O

U,M

33

www.sas.ac.uk

Masa Tanimoto (Tokyo) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

H


Events calendar May Institute of Modern Languages Research Symposium 14:00–19:00 Room 246

Updating Gramsci: recent publications in English, 2012–15

U

Registration required Free katia.pizzi@sas.ac.uk

Monday 23 Institute of Modern Languages Research Annual meeting 10:00–17:00 The Court Room

Annual meeting of Heads of German at Universities in the UK

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

The missionary Counter-Reformation: mobility, witnessing and records in early modern Catholicism

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

Wild beasts in context: the great mosaic from the Vicus Augustanus at Castelporziano

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Pollard Room, N301, North Block

Aviation and cinema in mandate Syria and Lebanon

U

Invite only Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

H

Liesbeth Corens (Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

C,U

Amanda Claridge (Royal Holloway) | Roman art seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

H

Idir Ouahes (Exeter) | Colonial/postcolonial new researchers workshop Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Tuesday 24 Institute of Historical Research Seminar 15:00–16:30 Room 304

Governing others in 17th-century company settlements: comparing Madras and Colombo

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

Iconology of an animal combat: on the lion attacking a horse in the Musei Capitolini

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

A global history of penal colonies

34

H

Guido Van Meersbergen (European University Institute) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

C

Claire Lyons (Getty Villa) | ICS classical archaeology seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk Clare Anderson (Leicester) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H


Events calendar

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

Locality and region seminar

H

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

The stuff of the practical

P

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

London Society for Medieval Studies seminar

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 20:00–20:00 Institute of Historical Research (IHR)

Margaret Thatcher’s world

Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

David Wiggins (Oxford) | Practical, the political, the ethical aspects of philosophy seminar Free ip@sas.ac.uk Natalie Jones (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Martin Farr (Newcastle) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

H

Wednesday 25

Warburg Institute Open day 10:00–18:00 Room 246

Moving walls | opening doors

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 13:00–14:00 Room 246

Ethnography and empire: the Tower of Babel narrative in Philo De Confusione Linguarum, Origen Contra Celsum and Julian Contra Galilaeos

Susanna Avery-Quash (National Gallery), Carmen Bambach (The Metropolitan Museum, New York,) Juliana Barone (Birkbeck), Caroline Campbell (National Gallery), Hugo Chapman (British Museum), Martin Clayton (Royal Collection, Windsor), Margaret Dalivalle (Oxford), Claire Farago (Colorado at Boulder), J.V. Field (Birkbeck), Francesca Fiorani (Virginia), Francesco Galluzzi (Accademia Belle Arti, Carrara), Larry Keith (National Gallery), Martin Kemp (Oxford), Domenico Laurenza (bgC3, Seattle-Kirkland/Museo Galileo, Florence), Pietro Marani (Universit Cattolica, Politecnico, Milan), Harry Mount (Oxford Brookes), Alessandro Nova (Kunsthistorisches Institut, Florence), Charles Saumarez Smith (Royal Academy, London), Jacqueline Thalmann (Christ Church Picture Gallery, Oxford), Sarah Vowles (British Museum) | 25 May: evening lecture at Birkbeck, 26 May: day 1 of conference at the National Gallery, 27 May: day 2 of conference at The Warburg Institute | Registration required £15 for day 2 of conference warburg@sas.ac.uk

Joanne Anderson (Warburg Institute), Guido Giglioni (Warburg Institute) Registration required Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U,P

U

C

John Hilton (KwaZulu-Natal) | Director’s seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

35

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Leonardo in Britain: collections and reception

www.sas.ac.uk

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


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

The correspondence of Michael Balint and Donald Winnicott in the 1950s

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

Eric J. Hobsbawm Memorial Lecture 2016

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–21:00 Room G37

Contemporary innovative poetry research seminar

U

Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

Researching, revering and selling Shakespeare

U

H

Shaul Bar-Haim (Birkbeck) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

‘European history in the age of Hobsbawm’, Richard J. Evans (Cambridge) | Lecture: 18:00–19:30, reception: 19:30–20:30 Free ihr.events@sas.ac.uk

H

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Richard Espley (Senate House Library) | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

Thursday 26 Institute of English Studies 3-day symposium 09:00–18:00 Senate House

Samuel Beckett: performance/art/writing

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

IALS lunchtime seminar

L

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

China and the Hellenistic world in the third century BC – an archaeological assessment

C

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

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

36

‘Performing Beckett’s intermedial bodies: experimentation, mediatisation, indigence’, Anna McMullan (Reading), ‘ “An intellectual justification of unhappiness”: Beckett’s aesthetic war on the theodicies’, Andrew Gibson (Royal Holloway) | AHRC Chase doctoral masterclass: ‘The archive and the edition: digital humanities and literary study’, Dirk Van Hulle (Antwerp), Mark Nixon (Reading) | Registration required Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

U

Lukas Nickel (SOAS) | ICS ancient history seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Reading group Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

U


Events calendar

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

Joint panel: international economics and global banking

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

Postgraduate feminist reading group

U

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 16:00–19:30 Room 234

Admit all: accessing the arts through multisemiotic translation

U

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

An interdisciplinary experiment. Pindar and Parmenides: poetics of competition and ontological enquiry

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

Finnegans Wake research seminar

U

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

Penning their personal narratives: the letters, diaries, logbooks and memoirs of British prisoners of war held in Europe in the Second World War

H

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

Logic, epistemology and metaphysics seminar

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

Archives and society seminar

H

A crisis foreshadowed; history replaying. The Bank of England, the National Bank of Greece and the external loan of 1924, Maria Rizou, (King’s, London) Causes of bank distress during the Austro-Hungarian Grunderkrach, Kilian Rieder (University College, Oxford) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Friday 27 Sarah Eardley-Weaver (Queen’s University, Belfast) | Advances in translation research seminar Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

C

Chiara Ciampa (King’s, London) | ICS postgraduate work-in-progress seminar Free postgradwip@gmail.com Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

John Divers (Leeds) Free corine.besson@sas.ac.uk

Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

P

H

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Clare Makepeace (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Tuesday 31


Events calendar May Institute of Classical Studies Panel discussion 18:00–20:00 Room G22/26

Greek homosexuality: an event to mark the publication of a new edition of Kenneth Dover’s book

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

History and the public: the legacy of David Cesarani

38

C

Stephen Halliwell (St Andrews), Mark Masterson (Wellington), James Robson (Open University), Caroline Vout (Cambridge) | Panel discussion of Kenneth Dover’s book and its influence chaired by Paul Cartledge (Cambridge) | Doors open at 17:45 Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Richard Evans (Cambridge), Jonathan Steinberg (Pennsylvania), Suzanne Bargette (Imperial War Museums), Bryan Cheyette (Reading) | Registration required Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

H,S


Events calendar

Events 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 Wednesday 01 School of Advanced Study Launch event 15:00–19:00 Wolfson Conference Suite (15:00–17:00), MacMillan Hall (17:00–19:00)

Cities@SAS launch event

HS

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

London aesthetics forum

P

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

J.P. Barron Memorial Lecture: What ever happened to the barbarian?

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

From country house to Empire home: material cultures of the East India Company

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

The role of Erasmus in the career of Gilbert Cousin of Nozeroy (1506–72)

Part 1: Showcasing Cities@SAS, 15:00–17:00: Godela Weiss-Sussex (IMLR): Berlin, Matthew Davies (IHR): London, Claire Launchbury (IMLR/ IHR): Beirut, Greg Woolf (ICS): Urban apes, Joanne Anderson (Warburg): Innsbruck, Tom Hulme (IHR): Chicago | Part 2: Cityscapes: past, present and future, 17:00–19:00: Chair: Laleh Khalili, Darran Anderson (author, ‘Imaginary Cities’), Irena Bauman (Sheffield/architect, Bauman-Lyons), Tim Hitchcock (Sussex), Paul Mason (journalist/author, ‘PostCapitalism: A Guide to our Future’), Karl Sharro (architect/co-author of ‘Manifesto: Towards a New Humanism in Architecture’) | Wine reception to follow | Registration required Free claire.launchbury@sas.ac.uk Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

C,S

Thomas Harrison (St Andrews) Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

H

Margot Finn (UCL) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U

Anne Blair (Harvard) Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 02 Institute of Philosophy 2-day conference 09:30–17:30 Room G35

Biological identity

Institute of Modern Languages Research 2-day conference 10:00–18:00 University of Westminster

‘Times are a changin’: temporality, memory and social movements in the digital age

40

Ellen Clarke (Oxford, John Dupré (Exeter), Arantza Exteberria (San Sebastián), Philippe Huneman (Paris), Anne Sophie Meincke (Exeter), Alvaro Moreno (San Sebastián), Matteo Mossio (Paris), David S. Oderberg (Reading), Eric T. Olson (Sheffield), Thomas Pradeu (Bordeaux), Paul Snowdon (London), Denis Walsh (Toronto) Free a.s.meincke@exeter.ac.uk

Part of the STINT-funded project ‘Advancing Social Media Studies’ Free katia.pizzi@sas.ac.uk

PS

U


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

IALS lunchtime seminar

Senate House Library Sound art performance 16:00–19:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library / The Horse Hospital, The Colonnade, Bloomsbury, London WC1N 1JD from 19:30 onwards

The changing sounds of Senate House: musique concrète of the building in the building

Institute of Classical Studies 2-day colloquium 16:30–19:00 The Court Room

Byzantine colloquium – Arcadia: real and ideal

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

Taking the robe of Nebuchadnezzar? Babylonian scholars and the Seleucids

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

CenSes seminar

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

Ulrike Ulrich and Marielle Sutherland

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

The evacuation of children during the Second World War: the experiences of Francophone refugee children in Britain

Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

Events calendar

Events calendar June L

U,M,S

Hannah Thompson (Leverhulme Trust artist in residence, Senate House Library/ School of Advanced Study) | Immersive sound art installation/presentation. This solo sound art installation, with live performance, marks the mid-point in the first residency of this kind at Senate House Library. The event begins with an immersive sound installation drop-in from 16:00 designed to implant and displace the listener, juxtaposing location and sound origination within the context of the Library as the sound source. A presentation of the work carried out so far takes place from 18:15 to 19:15 followed by questions/answers until 19:30. Afterwards, a collaborative event inspired by the residency will take place at The Horse Hospital, The Colonnade, Bloomsbury, London WC1N 1JD (www. thehorsehospital.com) from 19:30. Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

Pedro Olalla (Athens) | Day 1: 16:30–19:00, day 2: 09:00–18:30 ch.dendrinos@rhul.ac.uk

C

C

Kathryn Stevens (Durham) | ICS ancient history seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Encounters: writers and translators in conversation Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

P

U

H

www.sas.ac.uk

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

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Amir Amedi | Part of the Rethinking the Senses project funded by the AHRC (www.thesenses.ac.uk) Free ip@sas.ac.uk

41


Events calendar June Friday 03 Senate House Library 1-day symposium 09:30–17:00 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

More than just a game: the legacy of the 1966 football world cup

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

No land for historians: Boeotia and a tale of forgotten histories

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 234

Digital classics seminar

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

Through the powerful intercession of the maritime powers: religious networks, transnational lobbying and Anglo-Dutch interventions on behalf of foreign Protestants and Jews, 1690–1748

H

Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

C

Salvatore Tufano (Rome) | ICS postgraduate work-in-progress seminar Free postgradwip@gmail.com Gregory Crane (Tufts; Leipzig) Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

C

H

Catherine Arnold (Yale) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 102

The Charles Peake Ulysses seminar

U

History of libraries seminar: summer visit

U

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Saturday 04 Institute of English Studies Seminar 15:00–17:00 Shardeloes House, Amersham

Summer visit to Shardeloes House, Amersham, Buckinghamshire (by kind permission of Edward Copisarow) | Registration required Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

Monday 06 Institute of Philosophy Seminar 16:00–18:00 Room 243

London aesthetics forum

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

Axel Oxenstierna, archives, and political prudence, 1610–54

42

Stephen Davies (Auckland) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Erik Thomson (Manitoba) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

P

H


Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Room G37

Reading history on the move: Enlightenment historiography and the management of Empire

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

Race, gender and celebrity in the Civil Rights Movement: the (re)presentation of Fannie Lou Hamer

Senate House Library Talk Multiple start times–Multiple end times Room 101

‘Shakespeare: Metamorphosis’ – Curators’ Room (Othello)

Events calendar

Events calendar June U

Mark Towsey (Liverpool) | Open University book history and bibliography research seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

H

Stephen Robinson (York St. John University) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U,S

Journey through the seven ages of Shakespeare and the evolution of his texts from the 17th century to the 21st. Curators of the exhibition Shakespeare Metamorphosis will discuss these rare texts in the intimate setting of the original room 101. | Registration required £10 standard | £8 concessions shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

Tuesday 07 HistoryLab annual postgraduate conference

Institute of Classical Studies 2-day conference 10:00–18:30 Room 349

Gendering Roman imperialism

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

Commerce, Catholicism and the Irish interest in the Restoration Empire

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

Scurvy and the Irish in early Australia

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

Locality and region seminar

950th anniversary of 1066: a millennium(ish) of immigration, integration and invasion’ | Registration required Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

Emily Hemelrijk (Amsterdam) | Day 1: 10:00–18:30, day 2: 09:30–17:00 Fee applicable valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

H

C,S

H

Gabriel Glickman (Cambridge) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

H

www.sas.ac.uk

Jonathan Lamb (Vanderbilt) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Institute of Historical Research Lecture 09:00–17:00 Wolfson Conference Suite

43


Events calendar June Institute of English Studies | Warburg Institute Seminar 17:30–19:30 Warburg Institute

Samuel Pepys and the remains of Restoration collecting

Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 17:30–19:30 Room 246

Futurist women: Florence, feminism and the new sciences

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

Thick reasoning

Institute of Classical Studies Lecture 18:00–20:00 Room G22/26

ICS and Friends of the British School at Athens lecture

C

Institute of Historical Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Institute of Historical Research (IHR)

Britain, the United Nations and the creation of an International Civil Service

H

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

The miraculous in central medieval Irish saints’ lives: reuse and reinterpretation

U

Kate Loveman (Leicester) | History of libraries seminar Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U

Paola Sica (Connecticut College) | Centre for the Study of Cultural Memory book launch Free katia.pizzi@sas.ac.uk Debbie Roberts (Edinburgh) | Practical, the political, the ethical aspects of philosophy seminar Free ip@sas.ac.uk

P

Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Amy Limoncelli (Boston College, USA) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Sarah Waidler (Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Wednesday 08 Institute of Modern Languages Research | Senate House Library 1-day symposium 10:00–18:00 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

Shakespeare in French

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Symposium 13:00–18:30 IALS

Critical legal perspectives and corporate social responsibility

44

Florence March, Nathalie Guérin (Université Paul Valéry) Free dominic.glynn@sas.ac.uk

Charlotte Villiers (Bristol), Andreas Rhumkorf, (Sheffield), Renginee Pillay (Essex), Lilian Moncrieff (Glasgow), Andrew Keay (Barrister/Leeds), Olufemi Amao (Sussex), Maya Groves (Solicitor), Adaeze Okoye (Canterbury Christ Church University/Inner Temple Academic Fellow) | Registration required £35 standard | £25 students ials.events@sas.ac.uk

U

L


Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 14:00–18:00 Room 246

Historical fiction by contemporary women writers

Institute of Latin American Studies Seminar 18:00–19:30 Room 234

The new political and conceptual history of the republic

Events calendar

Events calendar June U

Suzan Bozkurt (Manchester), Catherine Davies (IMLR), Alex Lloyd (Oxford), Alessia Risi (Cork), Tegan Zimmerman (MacEwan/IMLR-CCWW) | Centre for the Study of Contemporary Women’s Writing seminar Free gill.rye@sas.ac.uk

O

Elías Palti (Buenos Aires) | Andean studies seminar Free olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 09 Institute of Modern Languages Research 2-day conference 09:00–20:00 Room G35

Celebrations: ‘Festkultur’ in Austria

Institute of Latin American Studies 1-day conference 09:30–20:00 Room G22/26

Sites of invention: Latin America and the global making of historical and anthropological knowledge

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

IALS lunchtime seminar

L

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

The encounter between Chandragupta and Seleucus: British and Indian interpretations during the 19th and mid-20th centuries

C

Institute of Modern Languages Research Lecture 17:15–19:00 Room 243

‘Das Entremets war eine Himbeercrème’: Zur Bedeutung der Farbe Rosa in ‘Lotte in Weimar’

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

Queen Victoria on film

Andrew Barker (Edinburgh), Alys George (NYU), Robert Knight (Loughborough), Heide Kunzelmann (Kent/IMLR), Fatima Naqvi (Rutgers), Caitríona Ní Dhúill (Surham), Ritchie Robertson (Oxford), Sigurd Paul Scheichl (Innsbruck), Nicole Streitler-Kastberger (Graz), Gar Yates (Exeter) Free heide.kunzelmann@sas.ac.uk

U

U,S

Sushma Jansari (UCL) | ICS ancient history seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

U

Eckhart Goebel (Tübingen) | Ida Herz Lecture, English Goethe Society Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

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

H

45

www.sas.ac.uk

Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Serge Gruzinski, François Hartog, Elías Palti, Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra £40 standard | £20 concessions olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk


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

Westminster-on-Sea: the political and cultural significance of Osborne House, Isle of Wight, 1845–1901

H

Lee Butcher Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Friday 10 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 234

Digital classics seminar

C

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

Ezra Pound Cantos reading group

U

Natural law, custom and history from Hooker to Locke

U

Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Saturday 11 Institute of English Studies Seminar 14:00–16:00 Room 243

Tim Stuart Buttle (CRASSH) | EMPHASIS (early modern philosophy and the scientific imagination) seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Monday 13 Institute of English Studies 6-day symposium 09:00–16:00 Senate House

Anniversary Joyce: XXV International James Joyce Symposium

Warburg Institute 3-day colloquium 14:00–18:00 UCL Institute of Education, Jeffery Hall, 20 Bedford Way, London WC1H 0AL

Aby Warburg 150: work, legacy and promise

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

A frog under the tongue: folk medicine of the Eastern Ashkenaz

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

Continued continuations of complete histories: Tobias Smollett and David Hume

46

U,S

Visit anniversaryjoyce.com for further information | Registration required Free anniversaryjoyce@outlook.com Major conference to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the birth of Aby Warburg Registration required: bit.ly/1WkgvCs Free warburg@sas.ac.uk

U,P,S

H

Marek Tuszewicki (Jagiellonian University, Krakow) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Richard Jones (Open University) | Open University book history and bibliography research seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U


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

Violence and empathy: Anglo-American aircrews and civilian assistance in France, 1940–5

Institute of Philosophy Lecture 18:30–20:00 The Senate Room

The Chandaria Lectures 2016

Events calendar

Events calendar June H

Valerie Deacon (NYU) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Andy Clark (Edinburgh) | Lecture 1 of 3; see 16 and 22 June Free ip@sas.ac.uk

P

Tuesday 14 Institute of Historical Research Seminar 17:15–19:15 Peter Marshall Room, 204, North Block

Imagining the uprooted child: pain, evacuation and the Second World War

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

Logic, epistemology and metaphysics seminar

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

Archives and society seminar

H

Institute of English Studies Seminar 18:00–19:30 Room 102

Literary London reading group

U

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

Collecting for a large institution

U

H

Leticia Fontecha (Greenwich) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Peter Barber | Book collecting seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

P

Wednesday 15 London aesthetics forum Kathleen Stock (Sussex) Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

P

www.sas.ac.uk

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

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Paniel Osberto Reyes Crdenas (Autonomous University of Puebla State, Mexico) Free corine.besson@sas.ac.uk

47


Events calendar June Thursday 16 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 12:30–13:30 IALS

IALS lunchtime seminar

L

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 15:00–16:00 IALS

IALS PhD masterclass

L

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

CenSes seminar

Institute of English Studies Lecture 17:30–19:00 Beveridge Hall

The influence of Joyce’s writing on Iain Sinclair’s own style of urban narrative

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

Murder in St. Paul’s Churchyard: crime, sanctuary and politics in 1539

Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

Macbeth on the Victorian stage

U

Institute of Philosophy Lecture 18:30–20:00 The Court Room

The Chandaria Lectures 2016

P

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

‘Nous sommes les oiseaux de la tempête qui s’annonce’ (Lola Lafon)

48

Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

An opportunity for current PhD students to discuss research with colleagues, with expert input from senior academics experienced in PhD research | Registration required (by invitation only) Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk Marcus Naumer (Frankfurt) | Part of the Rethinking the Senses project funded by the AHRC (www.thesenses.ac.uk) Free ip@sas.ac.uk

P

U

Iain Sinclair | John Coffin memorial reading in association with the conference Anniversary Joyce: XXV international James Joyce symposium | Registration required Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

H

Shannon McSheffrey (Concordia) | Postgraduate seminar Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Sandra Clark (Birkbeck/IES) | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

Andy Clark (Edinburgh) | Lecture 2 of 3; see 13 and 22 June Free ip@sas.ac.uk

Join us to share thoughts about the book or to find out more about contemporary French literature in general over a glass of wine | Testing translations reading group Free dominic.glynn@sas.ac.uk

U


Events calendar

Events calendar June Friday 17 Institute of Modern Languages Research 1-day workshop 10:00–18:00 Room 102

Linda Lê after the millennium

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 234

Digital classics seminar

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

Spinning and the industrial revolution

Co-organised with French Department at King’s, London and sponsored by the Cassal Trust of the University of London | Registration required Free gillian.1.ni_cheallaigh@kcl.ac.uk

Title TBC Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

John Styles (Hertfordshire) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

U,S

C

H

Monday 20 Institute of Philosophy 2-day conference 09:30–18:00 The Court Room

Investigating conscious acquaintance

Institute of Commonwealth Studies 1-day workshop 10:00–17:00 Room 246

‘Mid-term blues or India at a crossroad?’ The Modi goverment and state elections, 2015–16

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

Religion and identity in the Black Sea region: Jewish communities of the Bosporan Kingdom

Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

Shakespeare’s First Folio: the biography of a book

Katalin Balog (Rutgers), Bill Brewer (King’s, London), Imogen Dickie (Toronto), Alex Grzankowski (Texas Tech/Cambridge), Joseph Levine (Amherst), M.G.F. Martin (UCL/Berkeley) Free ip@sas.ac.uk

P

O

Co-sponsored by the South Asia Specialists Group, Political Studies Association Free james.chiriyan@sas.ac.uk

Irina Levinskaya (St Petersburg) | Registration required Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk Emma Smith (Hertford College, Oxford) | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

U

Tuesday 21 Shakespeare’s text down the ages Brian Vickers, guest speakers | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

U

www.sas.ac.uk

Senate House Library 1-day symposium 10:00–16:00 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

C

49


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

Curating an ocean of things: the challenge of public object-centred histories of the Indian Ocean

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

Locality and region seminar

H

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

‘Curing’ the queer body: sex reassignment, citizenship and Mexican identity in a global context, 1953–60

H

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

Impunity, peacekeepers, gender and sexual violence in post-conflict landscapes

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

Title TBC

H

J.D. Hill, Sarah Longair (British Museum) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Ryan Jones (SUNY Geneseo) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Fiona Tate (Queen Mary) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Paul Wordsworth (Oxford) Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

H

Wednesday 22 Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 18:00–20:00 Room 243

Exile government film-making in wartime London

Institute of Philosophy Lecture 18:30–20:00 The Senate Room

The Chandaria Lectures 2016

U

Alice Lovejoy (Minneapolis/London) | Research Centre for German and Austrian Exile Studies seminar Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk Andy Clark (Edinburgh) | Lecture 3 of 3; see 13 and 16 June Free ip@sas.ac.uk

P

Thursday 23 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 12:30–13:30 IALS

50

IALS lunchtime seminar Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

L


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

History Lab seminar

Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Beveridge Hall

Exploring the sonnets

Title TBC Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Brian Vickers, Edward Fox, Joanna David, Freddie Fox | An intimate and unique evening of study and performance as Professor Sir Brian Vickers leads an exploration of Shakespeare’s sonnets | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

Events calendar

Events calendar June H

U

Friday 24 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 234

Digital classics seminar

C

Annual meeting of postgraduates in ancient philosophy (AMPAPhil)

C

Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Saturday 25 Institute of Classical Studies 1-day conference 09:00–18:00 Room 243 and 246

Anne Sheppard (Royal Holloway), John Dillon (Trinity College Dublin) | Conference theme: ‘Society’ Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Tuesday 28 Metamorphosis of ‘New Place’ Paul Edmondson (Shakespeare Birthplace Trust) | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

U

Wednesday 29 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Symposium TBC IALS

Why is legal language so complicated? Legislative drafters and linguists compare notes

L

Institute of Commonwealth Studies | Human Rights Consortium 3-day conference 09:30–16:00 Chancellor’s Hall

The future of refugee law? First annual conference, Refugee Law Initiative, University of London

R,S

www.sas.ac.uk

Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

Organised by The Refugee Law Initiative | Registration required: www.sas.ac.uk/AnnualConf16 £150 standard | £125 concessions | £95 RLI affiliates (DAs, SRAs, MA Refugee Protection students) rli@sas.ac.uk

51


Events calendar June Institute of Historical Research Lecture 18:00–20:30 Wolfson Conference Suite

IHR Annual Fellows’ Lecture 2016 ‘The Hundred Days and Waterloo: “the nearest run thing you ever saw in your life” ’, Roger Knight | Registration required Free ihr.events@sas.ac.uk

H,S

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

IALS lunchtime seminar

L

Institute of Modern Languages Research 4-day conference 15:00–13:00 Aberystwyth University

Jahrestagung der Gesellschaft für Exilforschung 2016

U

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

Postgraduate feminist reading group

52

Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk

Organised with Aberystwyth University | Sponsored by the Martin Miller and Hannah Norbert-Miller Trust (University of London), the Helen Reinfrank Bequest (Gesellschaft für Exilforschung) and Aberystwyth University | Registration required Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U


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

53


Events calendar July Friday 01 Institute of Modern Languages Research 1-day workshop 09:30–18:00 Room 243 and 246

Popular culture and nostalgia in postauthoritarian states

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 13:00–17:05 IALS

Credit rating agencies and credit rating agency ratings in the European Union: contemporary regulatory and supervisory challenges

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 234

Digital classics seminar

C

Ageing in contemporary women’s writing and film

U

U

Organiser: Duncan Wheeler (Leeds/Oxford) Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

L

Gudula Deipenbrock (HTW Berlin, University of Applied Sciences, Germany), Kern Alexander (Zurich), Christos V. Gortsos (Panteion, Athens), Emil Nästegård (Gothenburg), Andreas Horsch (Universität Freiberg), Francesco De Pascalis (Zurich) | Registration required Free sas.events@sas.ac.uk

Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Saturday 02 Institute of Modern Languages Research Seminar 14:30–16:30 Room 243

Centre for the Study of Contemporary Women’s Writing seminar (French) Free gill.rye@sas.ac.uk

Monday 04 Institute of Historical Research 1-day conference 09:00–18:00 Wolfson Conference Suite

Cities@SAS: new researchers in modern urban history

H,S

Richard Rodger (Edinburgh) | Registration required £10 ihr.events@sas.ac.uk

Tuesday 05 Institute of English Studies Seminar 17:30–19:00 Stationers’ Hall, located in Ave Maria Lane, London EC4M 7DD, opposite the front of St Paul’s Cathedral

London 1708: a walk into library history Alice Ford-Smith (Bernard Quaritch Ltd.) | Spend a summer evening exploring some of London’s early 18th-century libraries | History of libraries seminar | Registration required (numbers limited) £10 sas.events@sas.ac.uk

U

Wednesday 06 Institute of English Studies 3-day conference 09:00–20:00 Senate House

54

The Literary London Society Annual Conference: London and the Globe Hannah Crawford (King’s, London), Sarah Dustagheer (Kent), Jennifer Young (Leeds), Rachael Gilmour (Queen Mary), Brian Chikwava (author of ‘Harare North’) Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

U,S


Institute of Modern Languages Research | Senate House Library Evening talk 18:30–19:30 Goldsmiths’ Room, Senate House Library

Shakespeare: a German writer An evening dedicated to exploring and celebrating the impact Shakespeare’s works have had on German culture | Martin Swales, Godela Weiss-Sussex | Registration required £5 standard | £3 concessions sas.events@sas.ac.uk

Events calendar

Events calendar July U

Thursday 07 School of Advanced Study 2-day workshop 14:00–18:00 Sussex

Emotion, memory and the mind Nicola Clayton (Cambridge), Clive Wilkins (Cambridge), Giovanna Colombetti (Exeter), Thomas Dixon (Queen Mary), Claire Langhamer (Sussex), Catherine Loveday (Westminster) | Day 1: 14:00–18:00, day 2: 9:00–14:00 | Workshop of The Human Mind Project | Registration required Free anna.hopkins@sas.ac.uk

P

Friday 08 Institute of Modern Languages Research 2-day conference 10:00–18:00 Room 243

‘Urbs’ in Québec and Francophone Canada

Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 234

Digital classics seminar

Centre for Quebec and French-Canadian Studies conference | Interdisciplinary and bilingual conference looking at a variety of francophone Qubcois and Canadian ‘suburban’ spaces | Registration required Fee applicable kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

U

C

Monday 11 The Spanish Civil War and world literatures Andrew Hussey (SAS), Martin Hurcombe (Bristol), Cary Nelson (Illinois), Paul Preston (LSE), Patricia Rae (Kingston, Ontario), James Whiston (Trinity College, Dublin) | Registration required jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

U,S

Tuesday 12 Books, cracks and squeezing a rainbow

Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

Shakespeare goes to Cambridge

Roger Treglown | Book collecting seminar Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

David McKitterick (Trinity College, Cambridge) | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

U

U

www.sas.ac.uk

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

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Institute of Modern Languages Research 2-day conference 09:30–19:30 Room G22/26

55


Events calendar July Wednesday 13 School of Advanced Study Seminar 13:00–14:00 Room 243

Social Scholar: transforming scholarship in the digital environment

U

Caroline Edwards (Open Library of Humanities) | Social Scholar seminar Free matt.phillpott@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 14 Institute of English Studies 2-day conference 09:00–18:00 Senate House

Victorian popular genres

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar 15:00–16:00 IALS

IALS PhD masterclass

Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

Shakespeare burlesqued

Joanne Knowles (Liverpool John Moores), Andrew Maunder (Hertfordshire) | Exhibition: ‘Popular Victorian and Edwardian fiction: from cheaper, to cheap, and then to cheapest’, curated by John Spiers Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk An opportunity for current PhD students to discuss research with colleagues, with expert input from senior academics experienced in PhD research | Registration required Free ials.events@sas.ac.uk Michael Slater (Birkbeck/IES) | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

U

L

U

Friday 15 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 234

Digital classics seminar

C

Digital classics seminar

C

International Association of University Professors of English: triennial conference 2016

U

Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Friday 22 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 234

Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Sunday 24 Institute of English Studies 6-day conference 09:00–20:00 Senate House

By invitation only Free iesevents@sas.ac.uk

Friday 29 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar 16:30–18:30 Room 234

56

Digital classics seminar Free valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

C


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

57


Events calendar August Thursday 11 Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

Dickens and Shakespeare Michael Slater (Birkbeck/Senior Fellow, IES) | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

U

Thursday 18 Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

Reinterpreting Shakespeare’s will Amanda Bevan (The National Archives) | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

U

Thursday 25 Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

58

From 1899 to digital: The Arden Shakespeare, Shakespearean critical scholarship and the evolution of English as a discipline Mary Ann Kernan (Director, Centre of Creative Writing, Translation and Publishing) | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

U


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

59


Events calendar September Thursday 01 Institute of Classical Studies 2-day conference 09:30–17:30 Room G22/26

Law and writing habit in the ancient world valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

C

Thursday 15 Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Seng T Lee Centre for Manuscript and Book Studies, Senate House Library

Shakespeare and the digital world: when scholarship meets global capitalism

U

Christie Carson (Royal Holloway) | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

Friday 16 Institute of Historical Research Colloquium 09:30–17:00 Wolfson Room I, North Block

Wage formation in early modern labour markets

H

Institute of Modern Languages Research 2-day conference 10:00–18:00 Room G22/26

Oulipo and the Second World War

U

Free ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Free kremena.velinova@sas.ac.uk

Saturday 17 Senate House Library Talk 18:30–19:30 Chancellor’s Hall

The genius of Shakespeare Stanley Wells (honorary president, Shakespeare Birthplace Trust/honorary governor emeritus, Royal Shakespeare Company/member of the board of directors, Globe Theatre) | Registration required Free shl.whatson@london.ac.uk

U,S

Tuesday 20 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies 2-day workshop TBC IALS

Valuing expertise: legal, normative and social dimensions

L

Richard Ashcroft (Queen Mary), Nicolette Priaulx (Cardiff), Matthew Weait (Portsmouth) | W G Hart Legal Workshop | Registration required £120 two days, £75 one day standard rate | £70 two days, £50 one day concessionary rate belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk

Wednesday 21 Institute of Philosophy 2-day conference 09:30–17:00 Room 349

60

Owning our emotions Organised by the Open University, supported by the Mind Association and the Institute of Philosophy, SAS Free ip@sas.ac.uk

P


Institute of Modern Languages Research 1-day workshop 10:00–18:00 Room G35

Modern languages, global English and the future of the EU

Events calendar

Events calendar September U

Topics for discussion will include the political economy of languages; language and transnational mobility; perceptions and representations of multilingualism; the sociology of foreign language teaching and learning; the role of language education in creating a multilingual Europe; EU language policies; language policies of individual states (within and outside the EU); language use in university teaching and research; the spread of English and the future of national, regional and minority languages; Anglicisms in European languages Free katia.pizzi@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 22 Institute of Modern Languages Research 2-day conference 10:00–18:00 Room G22/26

Pacifist and anti-militarist writing in German, 1889–1929: from Bertha von Suttner to Erich Maria Remarque

U

Organisers: Ritchie Robertson (Oxford), Andreas Kramer (Goldsmiths) Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

Thursday 29 Translators and printers in Renaissance Europe: framing identity and agency

U

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Guyda Armstrong (Manchester), Douglas Biow (Texas at Austin), AEB Coldiron (Florida State) Free jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk

Institute of Modern Languages Research 2-day conference 09:00–17:00 Room G22/26

61


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.

Postgraduate work-in-progress Fridays at 16:30–18:30 Dates: 6, 13, 20, 27 May, 3 June (Open to postgraduate students only) Roman art Mondays at 17:30–19:00 Dates: 9, 23 May

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

Institute of Classical Studies Contact: valerie.james@sas.ac.uk Ancient history

Book collecting Tuesdays at 18:00–20:00 Dates: 10 May, 14 June, 12 July

Thursdays at 16:30–18:30

Comparative modernisms

Dates: 5, 12, 19, 26 May, 2, 9 June

18:00–20:00

Ancient philosophy

Date: 10 May, 20 June

Mondays at 16:30–18:30

Contemporary innovative poetry research

Date: 16 May

Wednesdays at 18:00–21:00

Classical archaeology Tuesdays at 17:00–19:00 Date: 24 May

Date: 25 May Early modern philosophy and the scientific imagination (EMPHASIS) Saturdays at 14:00–16:00

Digital classics

Dates: 14 May, 11 June

Fridays at 16:30–18:30 Dates: 3, 10, 17, 24 June, 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 July

Ezra Pound Cantos reading group Fridays at 18:00–20:00

Director’s seminar

Dates: 13 May, 11 June

Wednesdays at 13:00–14:00 Dates: 4, 11, 18, 25 May

Finnegans Wake research Fridays at 18:00–20:00

Mycenaean Wednesdays at 15:30–18:00 Date: 18 May

62

Date: 27 May


Seminar series

History of libraries research

Nineteenth-century studies

Usually Fridays at 17:30–19:30

Saturdays at 11:00–13:00

Dates: 3 May, 7 June, 5 July

Date: 18 June

Irish studies Tuesdays at 18:00–20:00

Open University book history and bibliography research seminar

Date: 6 May

Mondays at 17:30–19:00 Dates: 16 May, 6, 13 June

Literary London reading group Tuesdays at 18:00–19:30

Pedagogic criticism workshop

Date: 14 June

Fridays at 14:00–17:00 Date: 13 May

London Modernism seminar Saturdays at 11:00–13:00

Postgraduate feminist reading group

Date: 7 May

Thursdays at 18:30–20:00 Dates: 26 May, 30 June

London nineteenth-century studies seminar Thursdays at 18:00–20:00

The Charles Peake Ulysses seminar

Dates: 12 May (joint seminar with media history), June (TBC)

Fridays at 18:00–20:00 Dates: 6 May, 3 June

London Old and Middle English research seminar (LOMERS)

Institute of Historical Research

Wednesdays at 17:30–19:30

Contact: ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk

Date: 18 May

American history www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:30 Media history

Dates: 5, 19 May 2, 16 June

Thursdays at 18:00–20:00

Medieval manuscripts

Archives and society Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:45 Dates: 3, 17, 31 May 14 June

Tuesdays or Wednesdays at 17:30–19:00

British history in the 17th century

Dates: 11, 19 May

Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:30

Narratives of globalisation: from core to periphery

Dates: 12, 26 May, 9, 23 June

Tuesdays or Fridays at 16:00–19:00

British history in the long 18th century

Dates: 3, 6 May

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:15

www.sas.ac.uk

Date: 2 May (joint seminar with London nineteenth-century studies)

Dates: 4, 18 May, 1, 15 June 63


Seminar series

British maritime history

Disability history

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:15

1st Monday of every month at 17:15

Dates: 10, 24 May, 7, 21 June

Dates: 9 May, 6 June

Christian missions in global history

Earlier middle ages

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:30

Wednesdays at 17:30

Dates: 10, 24 May, 7, 21 June

Dates: 4, 11, 18, 25 May, 1 June

Collecting and display (100BC to AD1700) Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:30

Economic and social history of the early modern world

Dates: 9, 23 May, 6 June

Fortnightly on Fridays at 17:15 Dates: 6, 20 May, 3, 17 June

Colonial/postcolonial new researchers’ workshop

Education in the long 18th century

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:15

Once a month on a Saturday 14:00–16:00

Dates: 9, 23 May, 6, 20 June

Date: 7 May

Contemporary British history

European history 1500–1800

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:00

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:15

Dates: 11, 25 May, 8, 15 June

Dates: 9, 23 May 6, 20 June

Comparative histories of Asia

Film history

Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:30

Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:30

Dates: 12, 26 May, 9, 23 June

Dates: 12, 26 May, 9, 23 June

Conversations and disputations

Gender and history in the Americas

Once a month on Fridays at 17:30

1st Monday of the month at 17:30

Dates: 6 May, 3 June

Date: 6 June

Crusades and the Latin East

History lab

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:15

Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:30

Dates: 9, 23 May, 6, 20 June

Dates: 12, 26 May, 9, 23 June

Digital history

History of education

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:15

1st Thursday of every month at 17:30

Dates: 3, 17, 31 May, 14 June

Dates: 5 May, 2 June

64


Seminar series

Fortnightly on Thursdays 18:00

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:15

Dates: 5, 19 May, 2, 16 June

Dates: 3, 17, 24 May

History of libraries

London Society for Medieval Studies

Once a month on a Tuesday at 17:30

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 19:00

Dates: 3 May 4, 7 June, 5 July

Dates: 10, 24 May 7, 21 June

History of political ideas

Low countries history

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:15

Fortnightly on Fridays at 17:15

Dates: 11, 25 May, 8, 22 June

Dates: 6, 20 May 3, 17 June

History of political ideas / early career

Marxism in culture

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:15

Fortnightly on Fridays at 17:30

Dates: 4, 18 May, 1, 15 June

Dates: 13, 27 May, 10, 24 June

History of sexuality

Media history

Once a month on Tuesdays at 17:15

Once a month on a Thursday at 18:00

Dates: 3, 24 May, 14, 21 June

Dates: 12 May

Imperial and world history

Medieval and Tudor London

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:15

Thursdays at 17:30

Dates: 16 May, 13, 27 June

Dates: 5, 21, 19, 26 May, 2, 9, 16, 23, 30 June

International history

Military history

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 18:00

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:15

Dates: 10, 24 May, 7, 21 June

Dates: 3, 17, 31 May, 14 June

Jewish history

Modern British history

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:15

Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:15

Dates: 16 May, 13, 27 June

Dates: 12, 26 May, 9, 23 June

Life窶田ycles

Modern French history

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:15

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:30

Dates: 3, 17, 31 May 14 June

Dates: 16 May, 13, 27 June

Locality and region

Modern religious history

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:15

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:15

Dates: 10, 24 May, 7, 21 June

Dates: 11, 25 May, 8, 22 June

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

London Group of Historical Geographers

www.sas.ac.uk

History of gardens and landscapes

65


Seminar series

Oral history

Voluntary action history

First Thursday of every month at 18:00

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:30

Dates: 5 May, 2 June

Dates: 16 May, 13, 27 June

Parliaments, politics and people

Women’s history

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:15

Fortnightly on Fridays at 17:15

Dates: 3, 17, 31 May, 14 June

Dates: 13, 27 May, 10, 24 June

Psychoanalysis and history Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:30 Dates: 11, 25 May, 8, 22 June

Institute of Latin American Studies Contact: ilas@sas.ac.uk

Public history

Andean studies

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:30

Usually Wednesdays at 18:00–20:00

Dates: 4, 18 May, 1, 15 June

Dates: 4, 18 May, 8 June

Religious history of Britain 1500–1800

LAGLOBAL seminar

Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:15

Various days at 18:00–20:00

Dates: 10, 24 May, 7, 21 June

Date: 12 May

Rethinking modern Europe

Latin American anthropology

Fortnightly on Wednesdays at 17:30

Various days at 17:30–19:30

Dates: 11, 25 May, 8, 22 June

Dates: 5, 19 May

Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:30

Institute of Modern Languages Research

Dates: 9, 23 May, 6, 20 June

Contact: modernlanguages@sas.ac.uk

Socialist history

Sport and leisure history Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:15 Dates: 16 May, 13, 27 June Studies of home First Wednesday of every month at 17:30 Dates: 4 May, 1 June Tudor and Stuart history Fortnightly on Mondays at 17:15 Dates: 9, 23 May, 6, 20 June 66

Thinking being Mondays at 10:00–12:00 Date: 9 May French postgraduate seminar Once a month on Tuesdays at 17:00 Date: 10 May French theatre Once a month on Tuesdays at 17:00 Date: 11 May


Seminar series

IMLR graduate forum

Hebrew/Classical Greek

Once a month on Thursdays at 18:00

Wednesdays at 12:00–13:30

Date: 12 May

Dates: 4, 11, 18, 25 May, 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 June

Institute of Philosophy Contact: philosophy@sas.ac.uk Body talk Monthly Dates: available on request from seminar conveners (f.fardo@ucl.ac.uk or p.haggard@ucl.ac.uk) CenSes

Neoplatonism study group Occasional Wednesdays at 17:30–19:30 Dates: 4, 11, 18, 25 May, 1, 8 June

Senate House Library Contact: senatehouselibrary@london.ac.uk Senate House Library Friends events For details and membership visit www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk/about-us/friends

Usually Thursdays at 17:00–19:00 Dates: 5, 19 May, 2, 16 June Logic, epistemology and metaphysics forum Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:30 Dates: 3, 17, 31 May, 14 June London aesthetics forum Fortnightly on Thursdays at 17:30 Dates: 18 May, 6, 15 June

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

The practical, the political, the ethical Fortnightly on Tuesdays at 17:30 Dates: 10, 24 May, 7 June

The Warburg Institute Contact: warburg@sas.ac.uk Arabic philosophy Mondays at 14.15–15.15 Dates: 9, 16, 23 May, 6, 13, 20, 27 June

www.sas.ac.uk

Basic knowledge of Arabic required Esoteric traditions and occult thought Fridays at 13.00–14.15 Dates: 6, 13, 20, 27 May, 3, 10, 17, 24 June 67


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 2016 The Centre for Metropolitan History at the School of Advanced Study’s Institute of Historical Research is a leading hub for the study of urban history and key to Cities@SAS, a new initiative which aims to bring together researchers who work on cities. The first postgraduate conference on 4 July at Senate House, features leading scholars and a keynote from Professor Richard Rodger (University of Edinburgh) on the state of the discipline – its obstacles, opportunities and future. We welcome proposals for individual 15-minute papers, or panels of four papers. Themes or topics of modern urban studies, defined loosely as 1750–present, from any geographic region, and from any discipline, are encouraged. Subjects could include: urban government and governance; civil society and civic culture; space, place and urban identity; writing and representing the city; the history of emotions and sensing the city; processes of urbanisation; urban sociology, ethnology, and anthropology; migration and migrant communities; race, ethnicity, and belonging; sex and sexuality in the city. There will be a £10 registration fee, which includes lunch and an evening reception. Non-postgraduates are welcome and encouraged to attend. A limited number of bursaries are available for travel and registration for unfunded postgraduate researchers. Please submit all abstracts of no more than 250 words to Dr Tom Hulme, tom.hulme@sas.ac.uk, by 1 May 2016. For bursaries, speakers whose proposals have been accepted should also contact Dr Tom Hulme.

Oulipo and the Second World War 16–17 September 2016 CFP deadline: 5 May 2016 How is it possible to return to fiction and literature after the Second World War? This question is commonly addressed through testimonial literature, and in a roundabout way via the ‘theatre of the absurd’ or Samuel Beckett’s work, for example. It is more rarely addressed

Please send 300 word proposals along with short 50–100 word bio-bibliographies to philippe.roussin@mod-langs.ox.ac.uk or dominic.glynn@sas.ac.uk. Papers may be given in French or English.

Cities and disasters: urban adaptability and resilience in history 3–4 November 2016 CFP deadline: 27 May 2016 The Centre for Metropolitan History and the National Institutes for the Humanities in Japan (NIHJ), will use this conference to explore how cities across time and geographical regions have experienced, and been shaped by, natural disasters and other ‘shocks’. The scope of the conference is intended to be broad in terms of period and place. Proposals for 20-minute papers are invited. Cross-cutting questions that might be explored include: What have been the responses of cities and their inhabitants to natural disasters? How have individuals used different cultural forms to explain and understand the effects of disasters? How adaptable have cities and their populations been, and what does this mean for our understanding of ‘recovery’ as a phase in urban and wider economic development and for 69

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

4 July 2016

through the literary output of Oulipo. Georges Perec’s work certainly appeared early on to be marked by the camps and the Shoah, but this trait was considered specific to Perec, and in no way characteristic of the Oulipo. However, more recently, in Roubaud’s work for instance, texts (La Dernière Balle perdue, Parc Sauvage) or passages of the memory undertaking in prose beginning with the ‘great fire of London’, have brought into focus how, coming from a family with strong ties to the Resistance, he may have been marked by the war, and in particular by the episode of the Liberation during which the camp survivors returned – including François Le Lionnais. And Jean Lescure and Noël Arnaud’s fight against the occupier, in the press and literally, is well-known. We invite reflections on the connections between the literary production of the Oulipo and the Second World War, and analyses of singular texts that engage with this issue.

www.sas.ac.uk

Cities@SAS: new researchers in modern urban history

Calls for papers

Calls for papers


Calls for papers the sustainability of cities as a mode of social, political and economic organisation? To what extent have survival or preventative strategies been implemented as part of coherent visions of how cities should function, and how has this affected civic and communal values? How do we characterise the cultural and intellectual dimensions of urban resilience historically and today? How have these been affected by major changes, such as those brought by the Reformation, the Enlightenment and the industrial revolution/modern urbanisation? Please submit abstracts of 200 words maximum and a short (half page) CV to ihr.cmh@sas.ac.uk, by 27 May 2016.

Emigration from Nazi-occupied Europe to British dominions, colonies and overseas territories after 1933 Research Centre for German and Austrian Exile Studies triennial conference 13–15 September 2017 CFP deadline: 15 September 2016 The forced emigration westward from Germany, the Saarland, Austria and Czechoslovakia caused by the Nazi seizure of power in central Europe, has been extensively analysed. But alternative routes and destinations have now been identified. For example, in Going East – Going South, Margit Franz and Heimo Halbrainer propose a ‘new map of emigration’ from Austria to Asia or Africa. The conference will develop this ‘new map’ further by focusing on the emigration to territories controlled by the then British Empire. We welcome contributions that address these key areas: networks, relief and bureaucracy; cultural and intellectual transfer; emigrants in the commercial, industrial and entrepreneurial fields; emigrants in the arts, sciences and universities; emigrants in the press, politics and public life; emigrants in the performing arts, music and the theatre; the development of a refugee social and religious culture overseas; the everyday life of refugees in overseas exile; the status of refugees between colonisers and colonised, including the postcolonial perspective of exchanges/ communication between the centre and the periphery; strategies of integration and 70

re-migration. Methodological or theoretical papers relating to recent approaches in exile studies, such as hybridity, acculturation or identity, are also welcome. 300-word abstracts and a short CV should be sent to abgrenville@blueyonder.co.uk or swen.steinberg@ tu-dresden.de.

Urban belonging: history and the power of place 13–14 January 2017 CFP deadline: 30 September 2016 There is a paradox at the heart of the city. On one hand, the ‘urban’ has been conceived as a space where strangers and the rootless can interact and congregate, freed from the bounded constraints of rural communities. But historically cities have also generated new forms of belonging, community and identity – from the city-states of Ancient Greece or Rome to medieval and early modern guilds and parishes, to ethnic ‘ghettoes’ or ‘gaybourhoods’. This international conference seeks to connect these multiple histories, and invite 20-minute papers on the following: What forms of belonging have cities made possible, and how have these changed across time and place? How has belonging been articulated in political discourse, cultural ritual and spatial practice? In what ways do ‘modern’ manifestations of urban belonging and identity differ from ‘pre’ and ‘early modern’ forms? To what extent do forms of urban belonging reflect the workings of categories such as gender, class, nationality, race and sexuality? How have ideologues or organisations negotiated or rejected the challenges of integrating new communities or ‘outsiders’? How have those deemed ‘foreigners’ or ‘outsiders’ responded to attempts to keep them out of the city? As bounded cities of the past give way to globalised urban agglomerations in the present, have old forms of urban belonging disappeared? Please submit abstracts of no more than 250 words to Dr Tom Hulme, tom.hulme@sas.ac.uk, by 30 September 2016. A limited number of bursaries are available for postgraduate and ECR travel and registration (within 3 years of PhD and not-in-post). Following abstract-acceptance, speakers should contact Dr Tom Hulme.


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POSTGR ADUATE STUDY in the humanities at the University of London

The School of Advanced Study at the University of London brings together 9 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 Refugee Protection and Forced Migration Studies via distance learning MA in The Making of the Modern World Master’s by Research in Modern Languages

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 Sutton, Registrar

Training in aspects of history, for instance, is extensive, notably in the Institute of Historical Research (IHR), which offers a comprehensive programme of short courses in research skills for historians. Taking advantage of the unparalleled availability of historical expertise in the University of London, and the wealth of archival materials in and around the capital, the Institute’s long-established and highly successful courses are widely recognised as the best means of developing and extending both essential and more specialised research skills. The IHR training programme is primarily aimed at postgraduate historians, but also welcomes established historians and independent researchers and writers of all sorts. Further historical skills courses run by The Warburg Institute include classes in medieval and Renaissance Latin for historians, and a programme of training in resources and techniques (jointly with the University of Warwick), which provides specialist research training for doctoral students working on Renaissance and early modern subjects in a range of disciplines. The London Palaeography Summer School run by the Institute of English Studies provides training in that key skill. Extensive training for students of cultures and literatures is offered by the Institute of Modern Languages Research, whose

well-established and popular programme, comprising a series of Saturday workshops, is offered to any postgraduate student working in modern languages or a related discipline (for instance, film, or art history). Most of the School’s training is available to postgraduate students across the UK, much of it free of charge. Details of all the research training courses provided are available from our website: www.sas.ac.uk/supportresearch/research-training

Online research training

In addition to the face-to-face training we offer, the School’s Postgraduate Online Research Training (PORT) website provides free online resources including tutorials, handbooks, and multimedia. PORT complements postgraduate study, providing training packages that can be accessed anywhere, at any time, and be undertaken at any pace. It provides the building blocks for humanities research generally, as well as in particular humanities disciplines and specific topics. Designed to meet the needs of 21st-century researchers, PORT offers specific skills-based programmes as well as more general guidance. For further information, please visit port.sas.ac.uk. If you would like to receive a printed copy of our research training and skills handbook, or would like any guidance, please contact us:

www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk

The School’s programme of personal development and transferable skills training is available in the form of weekly workshops, commencing in the autumn.

Making the most of the expertise available in the School and the University of London, the institutes between them also provide well-established disciplinespecific research training in core humanities disciplines.

www.sas.ac.uk

The School of Advanced Study draws on its research and teaching expertise to provide a programme of discipline-specific, generic and online research training to support the development of the scholars of tomorrow.

Research training

Research training

Email sas.info@sas.ac.uk Phone +44 (0)20 7862 8823/8695

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How to find us Unless otherwise stated, all events are held within the central University of London precinct in Bloomsbury, central London. Most events take place in or around Senate House South and North Blocks (North Block rooms are named accordingly) or Stewart House (Stewart House room numbers are preceded with ST) which are adjacent. The University of London takes its responsibility to visitors with special needs very seriously and will endeavour to make reasonable adjustments to facilities to accommodate such needs. If you have a particular requirement, please discuss it confidentially with the event organiser ahead of the event taking place. Rooms listed in the events brochure are located as follows: Senate House University of London Malet Street London WC1E 7HU Stewart House University of London 32 Russell Square London WC1B 5DN Charles Clore House Institute of Advanced Legal Studies 17 Russell Square London WC1B 5DR The Warburg Institute Woburn Square London WC1H 0AB

A number of events will be held at external venues. Please see www.sas.ac.uk/events and senatehouselibrary.ac.uk for details.

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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

Cover 1) Shakespeare design courtesy of Mickey & Mallory Page 6 ‘Where there’s smoke there’s fire’, Russell Patterson, public domain via Chronicling America Library of Congress Page 8 1) © Vincent St. Thomas / Shutterstock 2) Courtesy of Hannah Thompson Page 9 1) By Johann Georg Gichtel (1638–1710), public domain via Wikimedia Commons 2) Shakespeare design courtesy of Mickey & Mallory Page 10 1) Athena bowl from the Hildesheim Silver Treasure, 1st century BC, Antikensammlung Berlin collection, photo by Andreas Praefcke 2) © Ivan F. Barreto / Shutterstock 3) Illustration by Stephen Crowe Page 11 1) Melencolia I, 1514, Albrecht Dürer, public domain via Wikimedia Commons 2) © tonympix / shutterstock 3) From ‘Al pie de cañón’ sobre la batalla de Belchite by Augusto Ferrer-Dalmau, own work/Wikimedia Commons [CC-BY-SA 3.0] Page 12 1) Drawings from the Chauvet Cave, public domain via Wikimedia Commons Page 13 2) © Mathieu Bourgois Page 14 1) The Battle of Waterloo, 18 June 1815, Denis Dighton (1792–1827) Page 15 2) By Shakespeare Birthplace Trust [CC BY 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons Pages 16–17 Background image: © 100ker / Shutterstock. Other images courtesy of Mickey & Mallory Page 18 © Lloyd Sturdy, University of London Page 68 By H. T. Alken, public domain via Wikimedia Commons Page 71 © Sean Pavone / Shutterstock Page 72 © Andy Day, School of Advanced Study


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