School of Advanced Study events brochure Oct.10-Jan.11

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School of Advanced Study University of London Senate House Malet Street London WC1E 7HU Phone: +44 (0)20 7862 8654 Fax: +44 (0)20 7862 8657 Email: sas.events@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk

EVENTS OCTOBER 2010 – JANUARY 2011

www.sas.ac.uk


Cover design: Calverts Text design and layout: Emily Morrell, School of Advanced Study Publications Printed by Latimer Trend & Co. Ltd.

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Contents The School of Advanced Study Institutes of the School Events at the School Highlights: University of London Trust Fund events Visiting Professorial Fellow lectures Dean’s Seminars The Bloomsbury Festival Fratricide and FraternitÊ seminar series Conferences and symposia New seminar series Events calendar Research training Calls for papers How to find us

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The School of Advanced Study The School of Advanced Study at the University of London is the only institution of its kind in the UK nationally funded to promote and facilitate research in the humanities and social sciences. The School brings together the specialised scholarship and resources of ten prestigious postgraduate research institutes at the centre of the University of London to provide a unique environment for the support, evaluation and pursuit of research which is accessible to all Higher Education institutions in the UK and the rest of the world. Member Institutes of the School: Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Institute of Classical Studies Institute of Commonwealth Studies Institute of English Studies Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Institute of Historical Research Institute of Musical Research Institute of Philosophy Institute for the Study of the Americas Warburg Institute The School also hosts a cross-disciplinary centre. The Human Rights Consortium, founded in 2009, brings together the multidisciplinary expertise in human rights found in several Institutes of the School, as well as collaborating with individuals and organisations with an interest in the subject. The main aim of the Consortium is to facilitate, promote and disseminate academic and policy work on human rights by holding conferences and seminars, hosting visiting fellows, coordinating the publication of high quality work in the field, and establishing a network of human rights researchers, policy-makers and practitioners across the UK and internationally, with a view to collaborating on a range of activities. www.sas.ac.uk

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Institutes of the School

Institutes of the School INSTITUTE OF ADVANCED LEGAL STUDIES The Institute of Advanced Legal Studies (IALS) was founded in 1947 as a national academic institution serving all universities through its national legal research library. Its function is to promote, facilitate and disseminate the results of advanced study and research in the discipline of law, for the benefit of persons and institutions in the UK and abroad. Its areas of speciality include arbitration and dispute settlement, company law, comparative law, economic crime, financial services law and legislative studies and law reform, and the legal profession and delivery of legal services. W: www.ials.sas.ac.uk | E: ials@sas.ac.uk | T: +44 (0)20 7862 5800

INSTITUTE OF CLASSICAL STUDIES The Institute of Classical Studies (IClS) is a national and international research centre for the study of the languages, literature, history, art, archaeology and philosophy of the ancient Greek and Roman worlds. Founded in 1953, it provides an internationally renowned research library available to scholars from universities throughout the world, in association with the Hellenic and Roman Societies. IClS also serves as the meeting place of the main Classics organisations in the UK. W: www.icls.sas.ac.uk | E: admin.icls@sas.ac.uk | T: +44 (0)20 7862 8700

INSTITUTE OF COMMONWEALTH STUDIES The Institute of Commonwealth Studies (ICwS) is the only postgraduate academic institution in the UK devoted to the study of the Commonwealth. Founded in 1949, its purpose is to promote interdisciplinary and inter-regional research on the Commonwealth and its member nations in the fields of history, politics and other social sciences. Its areas of specialism include international development, governance, human rights, north-south relations and conflict and security. It is also home to the longest-running interdisciplinary and practice-oriented human rights MA programme in the UK. W: www.commonwealth.sas.ac.uk | E: ics@sas.ac.uk | T: +44 (0)20 7862 8844

INSTITUTE OF ENGLISH STUDIES The Institute of English Studies (IES), founded in 1999, exists to facilitate advanced study and research in English studies within the University of London and in the wider academic community, national and international. Its Centre for Manuscript and Print Studies covers such fields of study as palaeography, history of printing, manuscript and print relations, history of publishing and the book trade, textual criticism and theory and the electronic book. W: www.ies.sas.ac.uk | E: ies@sas.ac.uk | T: +44 (0)20 7862 8675

INSTITUTE OF GERMANIC & ROMANCE STUDIES The Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies (IGRS) was established in 2004 with the merger of the Institute of Germanic Studies and the Institute of Romance Studies, founded in 1950 and 1989 respectively. Its purpose is to promote and facilitate the study of the cultures of regions speaking the Germanic and Romance languages across a range of disciplines and interdisciplinary fields in the humanities. W: www.igrs.sas.ac.uk | E: igrs@sas.ac.uk | +44 (0)20 7862 8677

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Institutes of the School

INSTITUTE OF HISTORICAL RESEARCH Founded in 1921, the Institute of Historical Research (IHR) is at the centre of the study of academic history. It provides a stimulating research environment supported by the IHR’s two research centres: the Centre for Metropolitan History and the Victoria County History; is home to an outstanding open access library, hosts events and seminars and has a dedicated programme of research training. W: www.history.ac.uk | E: ihr@sas.ac.uk | T: +44 (0)20 7862 8740

INSTITUTE OF MUSICAL RESEARCH Established in 2006, the Institute of Musical Research (IMR) was set up as a university-wide and national resource with a commitment to foster musical research in all its diversity. The IMR offers a unique meeting point for researchers and postgraduate students across the UK and acts as a hub for collaborative work on a national and international scale. W: www.music.sas.ac.uk | E: music@sas.ac.uk | T: +44 (0)20 7664 4865

INSTITUTE OF PHILOSOPHY The Institute of Philosophy (IP) was founded in 2005, building upon and developing the work of the Philosophy Programme from 1995–2005. The Institute’s mission is to promote and support philosophy of the highest quality in all its forms, both inside and outside the University, and across the UK. Its activities divide into three kinds: events, fellowships and research facilitation. W: www.philosophy.sas.ac.uk | E: philosophy@sas.ac.uk | T: +44 (0)20 7862 8683

INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF THE AMERICAS The Institute for the Study of the Americas (ISA) was founded in 2004 through the merger of the Institute of Latin American Studies and the Institute of United States Studies, both of which were established in 1965. ISA promotes, coordinates and provides a focus for research and postgraduate teaching in history and the social sciences on the Americas – Canada, the US, Latin America and the Caribbean – and plays a national and international role as a coordinating and information centre for all parts of the hemisphere at the postgraduate level in the universities of the UK. W: www.americas.sas.ac.uk | E: americas@sas.ac.uk | T: +44 (0)20 7862 8870

WARBURG INSTITUTE The Warburg Institute (WI), incorporated in the University in 1944, exists principally to further the study of the classical tradition – those elements of European thought, literature, art and institutions which derive from the ancient world. The classical tradition is conceived as the theme which unifies the history of Western civilisation. The bias is not towards ‘classical’ values in art and literature: students and scholars will find represented all the strands that link medieval and modern civilisation with its origins in the ancient cultures of the Near East and the Mediterranean. W: www.warburg.sas.ac.uk | E: warburg@sas.ac.uk | T: +44 (0)20 7862 8949 www.sas.ac.uk

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Events at the School

Events at the School The Institutes of the School collectively offer a wide range of seminars, workshops, lectures, conferences and other academic events. The events programme of the School is unrivalled in its scale, focus and quality. Each year around 1,400 events are organised in the School on humanities and social science topics, attracting over 30,000 audience members drawn from around the UK and internationally as well as the London area. The School brings together scholars, representatives from academic, public, and private organisations, policy-makers, professional experts, and the interested public from the local community, the UK and beyond to participate in its varied programme of events. Over 3,000 speakers, around one-third of whom are from outside the UK, are welcomed annually to contribute to the intellectual culture of the School.

Senate House by Gary Alexander © University of London

The majority of our events are free and open to the public. All are welcome and encouraged to take advantage of the access to current research and interdisciplinary cross-fertilisation these events afford. The full list of forthcoming and past events held by the School can be found at www.sas.ac.uk/events/list/sas_events

How to use this guide Events are listed in date and time order. On the left we list the time, the Institute responsible for organising the event, the type of event or series and the venue. On the right we list the event title and speaker where appropriate. There is further information about the highlighted events at the start of the guide, and about the School’s Research training events at the end. Please check our website (www.sas.ac.uk) for full information. Subject area key C - classics

H - history

P - philosophy

Cu - culture, language & literature

Hu - human rights

Po - politics

D - development studies

L - law

S - sociology & anthropology

E - economics

M - music

Booking The majority of our events are free and open to the public, unless stated otherwise. The event information in this brochure was correct at the time of going to press, but may be subject to change. Please check our website for the latest information, www.sas.ac.uk/events, or email SAS.events@sas.ac.uk Event podcasts Selected School events are recorded and available to view, listen to, or download online at www.sas.ac.uk/video.html Mailing list Sign up to our mailing list to receive information on events of interest to you by emailing SAS.events@sas.ac.uk or via the School’s website at www.sas.ac.uk Follow us on University of London – School of Advanced Stud 4

SASNews www.sas.ac.uk


Highlights: University of London Trust Fund events

Highlights University of London Trust Fund events The School organises an annual University Trust Fund programme of prestigious public lectures, recitals and readings. All are welcome. 14 October 2010 18:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies John Coffin Memorial Palaeography Lecture Chancellor’s Hall

“In private men’s hands”: the library of Archbishop John Whitgift (d. 1604): sources, catalogue, and dispersal James P. Carley (York, Toronto) Chair: Michelle Brown (Institute of English Studies) Professor James P. Carley is a specialist in Old and Middle English; the history of manuscripts; bibliography and the early Tudor period. The lecture will be followed by a wine reception. Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk / tel. +44 (0)20 7664 4859

14 October 2010 19:00–20:15 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies John Coffin Memorial Reading Shakespeare’s Globe

Shakespeare - a German writer Acclaimed German actor Sebastian Koch (The Lives of Others, The Black Book) is joined by Globe actor Philip Cumbus (Romeo and Juliet, Love’s Labour’s Lost, Macbeth) in an evening celebrating Shakespeare’s impact on German culture. Contact: www.shakespeares-globe.org / tel. +44 (0)20 7401 9919 In collaboration with the Globe Theatre and the Friends of Germanic Studies (IGRS)

22 October 2010 18:30–20:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies John Coffin Memorial Reading Room ST274/275

Lucía Etxebarría Lucía Etxebarría (Valencia, Spain, 1966) is one of the most polemical and best known contemporary Spanish writers. The author will be reading from her latest work Lo verdadero es un momento de lo falso (2010). This reading will be followed by reception. Contact: igrs@sas.ac.uk This is a Centre for Contemporary Women’s Writing (IGRS) event.

18 November 2010 18:00–21:00 Institute of Historical Research Creighton Lecture in History Beveridge Hall

The Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation past and present

10 December 2010 09:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies John Coffin Memorial Reading Senate House

Mick Imlah: his life and work

Tim Blanning (Cambridge) Contact: ihr.events@sas.ac.uk

Speakers and readers include: Martin Amis, Nick Everett, James Fenton, Isabel Fonseca, John Fuller, Paul Hamilton, Alan Hollinghurst, Alan Jenkins, John Lyon, Peter McDonald, Andrew McNeillie, Glyn Maxwell, Andrew Motion, Bernard O’Donoghue, Helen Simpson, Clair Wills Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk / tel. +44 (0)20 7664 4859

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Highlights:Visiting Professorial Fellow lectures/Dean’s Seminars

Visiting Professorial Fellow lectures All welcome. Free to attend. 30 November 2010 17:30–19:00 Visiting Professorial Fellow Lecture Chancellor’s Hall

Between powers: the Amerindian confederations of Charcas (Bolivia) before and after the Spanish invasion

6 December 2010 17:30–19:00 NZ-UK Link Visiting Professorship Lecture Chancellor’s Hall

Mainstreaming human rights in public policy: the New Zealand experience

Tristan Platt (School Visiting Professorial Fellow; St Andrews) Professor Platt joined the Anthropology Department at the University of St Andrews in 1988 and formerly directed the Institute of Amerindian Studies. Professor Platt is the School Visiting Professorial Fellow, 2010/11.

Margaret Wilson (School NZ-UK Link Visiting Professor; Waikato) Chair: Paul Hunt (Essex; Waikato). Respondent: Roger Smith (Justice) Professor Wilson is Professor of Law and Public Policy at Waikato University. She has had a distinguished career as an academic and also in public life as an MP, Minister, and, from 2005-2008, Speaker of the New Zealand Parliament. Professor Wilson is the School’s NZ-UK Link Visiting Professor, 2010/11.

Dean’s Seminars The Dean’s Seminars, chaired by the Dean of the School, are a series of lunchtime research seminars, which aim to promote cross-disciplinary debate in a friendly and relaxed atmosphere. Seminars are free to attend and open to all - booking is not required. Participants may bring their lunch. 2 November 2010 12:30–14:00 Room G26

From imperial protection to ‘free trade’: quicksilver, the Rothschilds and 19th century Bolivia Tristan Platt (School Visiting Professorial Fellow; St Andrews) Chair: Maxine Molyneux (Director, Institute for the Study of the Americas) Professor Platt joined the Anthropology Department at the University of St Andrews in 1988 and formerly directed the Institute of Amerindian Studies. Professor Platt is the School Visiting Professorial Fellow, 2010/11.

18 November 2010 12:30–14:00 Room ST274

The political significance of epistemic injustice Miranda Fricker (School University of London Research Fellow; Birkbeck) Chair: Roger Kain (Dean, School of Advanced Study) Dr Fricker is Reader in Philosophy at Birkbeck, University of London. Her current work is on ethical relativism and also on how to model collective virtues and vices. Dr Fricker is the School’s University of London Research Fellow, Sep–Dec 2010.

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Highlights: Dean’s Seminars/The Bloomsbury Festival 15 December 2010 12:30–14:00 Room G34

Web-site of memory: the war of the Pacific (1879– 1884) in the global age of You Tube Paulo Drinot (Institute for the Study of the Americas) Chair: Roger Kain (Dean, School of Advanced Study) Dr Paulo Drinot is Senior Lecturer in History at the Institute for the Study of the Americas.

The Bloomsbury Festival The Bloomsbury Festival is a high-profile, multidisciplinary arts and cultural event taking place from 22– 24 October 2010 across the whole Bloomsbury area. The event will bring together many local businesses, communities and cultural and academic organisations to celebrate this fascinating area, through a programme packed with dance, music, performance, guided walks, art, workshops, talks, literary trails, a food programme and much, much more. www.bloomsburyfestival.org.uk The School is delighted to be a partner of the Bloomsbury Festival and will be holding a special programme of events as part of the festivities. All School events offered as part of the Bloomsbury Festival are free of charge. All welcome. Reservation of places: fifty percent of places are available to be reserved in advance, the other fifty percent will be available on a first-come first-served basis. Please note: as the events are free and tend to book up quickly, you must turn up 10 minutes in advance of the event to claim your reserved space or it will be reallocated to on-the-day audience members. Contact troy. rutt@sas.ac.uk for further information about the Festival and the School’s programme of events. Saturday 23 October 2010 10:30–12:00 Bloomsbury Festival 2010 School of Advanced Study Institute of Classical Studies Senate House, South Block

Secret tour of Charles Holden’s Senate House The School, in collaboration with the University of London, is proud to offer a unique opportunity to explore some of the secret spaces of Charles’s Holden’s Art Deco building, Senate House. This landmark building, London’s second highest when it was completed in 1937, is the home of the University of London and houses the Senate House Library as well as five of the School of Advanced Study’s ten institutes. During the Second World War it was used by the Ministry of Information and was the inspiration for George Orwell’s Ministry of Truth in his novel, Nineteen Eighty-Four. Senate House has been the location for numerous films and television programmes, including Nineteen Eighty-Four, Richard III, Batman Begins, Agatha Christie’s Poirot, and Jeeves and Wooster. This tour, led by Richard Simpson of the School’s Institute of Classical Studies, will provide insight into the aspirations and the formidable eye-to-detail of Charles Holden. Secrets lie waiting around each corner of this iconic Bloomsbury building, one of the masterpieces of English 20th-century architecture. Places are strictly limited for this event and you are advised to reserve your place early. In collaboration with the University of London

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Highlights: The Bloomsbury Festival

The Bloomsbury Festival cont. Saturday 23 October 2010 14:00-16:00 Bloomsbury Festival 2010 School of Advanced Study Human Rights Consortium Institute of Commonwealth Studies The Renoir Cinema

The Brunswick short film premiere Premiere of The Brunswick short film, a community initiative between the School of Advanced Study and Pan Intercultural Arts. Over the summer young Brunswick residents worked alongside a professional film artist and students of the Institute of Commonwealth Studies’ MA in Understanding and Securing Human Rights. Using film and drama the film celebrates the lives and experiences of the Brunswick residents, documenting this landmark building which is both commercial hub and home to a diverse community. The film will be followed by a short discussion with the project team, participants and local residents. In collaboration with Pan Intercultural Arts and The Renoir Cinema

Tango and identity Renowned Argentinean musician and producer, Ignacio Varchausky, will introduce his audience to the origins and development of tango, accompanied by dancers and musicians from the NEGRACHA Tango School. This event will address the political and social context in which tango was born, what the tango reveals about Argentinean identity, and how tango developed from a simple popular expression into a complex, elaborate and sophisticated art form. Afterwards, the audience will be invited to learn some basic tango steps.

©NAGRACHA Tango School

Sunday 24 October 2010 11:00-12:30 Bloomsbury Festival 2010 School of Advanced Study Institute of Musical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Beveridge Hall

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Ignacio Varchausky is a double bass player and founder of Orquesta El Arranque, a tango orchestra with which he has recorded seven CD’s and toured more than 200 cities worldwide. He is the creator and artistic director of Orquesta Escuela de Tango Emilio Balcarce and the founder and artistic director of TangoVia Buenos Aires. As a music producer he has worked with many illustrious artists, including Leopoldo Federico, with whom he won the Latin Grammy in 2009. In collaboration with TangoVia Buenos Aires (Argentina), the NEGRACHA Tango School and the Argentine Embassy

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Highlights: Fratricide and Fraternité

Fratricide and Fraternité: Understanding and Repairing Neighbourly Atrocity John E. Sawyer Seminar Series Andrew W. Mellon Foundation This prestigious seminar series brings together the ten institutes of the School, with their formidable, international research networks, as well as a range of distinguished British and international scholars, to investigate neighbourly atrocities from an extensive range of thematic, disciplinary, methodological, geographic, and temporal perspectives. The series seeks to answer two overarching and inter-related questions: What turns neighbour against neighbour? How do neighbours live together again after atrocity? Please email kirrily.pells@sas.ac.uk to register. Emial HRC@sas.ac.uk if you would like to be added to the mailing list for information on this and other Human Rights Consortium events and news.

© Maurice Harron, ‘Reconciliation’ Carlisle Square, Derry (1991)

www.sas.ac.uk/human_rights.html 28–29 October 2010 09:30–17:30 Beveridge Hall

Closing conference: Fraternité

The closing conference of the Mellon Sawyer Seminar series “Fratricide and Fraternité: Understanding and Repairing Neighbourly Atrocity” will bring together scholars, practitioners and artists to discuss justice, memory, and reconciliation after mass atrocity. Speakers include: Suzanne Bardgett (Imperial War Museum), Ananda Breed (East London), Thomas Brudholm (Danish Institute for International Studies), Chris Coulter (Uppsala), Graham Dawson (Brighton), Paul Gready (York), Edith Hall (Royal Holloway), Jason Hart (Bath), Miles Hewstone (Oxford), Alex Hinton (Rutgers), Eva Hoffman, Madeleine Leonard (Queen’s University, Belfast), Jens Meierhenrich (Harvard), Ashis Nandy (Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, New Delhi), Geoffrey Robertson, QC,Victoria Sanford (Lehman College, CUNY), Andrew Schaap (Exeter), Kimberly Theidon (Harvard). The conference will also include a poetry reading by Michael Symmonds Roberts, a screening and Q and A with the award-winning Anne Aghion, director of My Neighbor My Killer, a performance by the Ice and Fire theatre company and an art exhibition of the work of Holocaust survivor Joseph Bau, organized in conjunction with the Wiener Library. This conference is free and open to all, however registration is required. For further information please see www.sas.ac.uk/fratricide.html or contact kirrily.pells@sas.ac.uk

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Highlights: Conferences and symposia

Conferences and symposia 2 October 2010 10:00–14:00 Institute of English Studies Senate House

Writing Equipment Society meeting Irving Finkel (British Museum), Michelle Brown (Institute of English Studies), Geoffrey Roe In recent years the Writing Equipment Society has established a pattern of holding a meeting in London on the day before the London Writing Equipment Show; this year is no exception. However, since this year is our 30th anniversary, the meeting will be exceptional and one not to be missed. As well as hearing outstanding speakers, there will be the opportunity to see an exhibition of items from the Museum of Writing. This is rare opportunity as the Museum does not yet have permanent exhibition space. Admission will be by ticket only. Non-members of WES are welcome to book for this event. £20 (includes refreshments and buffet lunch) Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk

4 October 2010 09:00–16:30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

International tax: latest developments Philip Baker QC and over 25 other speakers will provide updates of the latest developments in international tax, from Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Cyprus, Denmark, the European Commission, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Malta, Romania, Sweden, the UK, and the USA. Contact: belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk

8–9 October 2010 09:30–17:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Maison Française d’Oxford

Law, religion and education: religious freedom in the sphere of education The conference is free but those wishing to attend must register in advance with: Maria Keeley, Institute of Global Law, UCL Faculty of Law, Bentham House, Endsleigh Gardens, London WC1H 0EG. Tel: +44 (0)20 7679 1478. Fax: +44 (0)20 7679 1424. Contact: m.keeley@ucl.ac.uk In collaboration with the UCL Institute of Global Law and the Maison Française d’Oxford

9 October 2010 09:30–17:30 Institute of English Studies Senate House

Psychology/aesthetics in the 19th century David Amigoni (Keele), Caroline Arscott (Courtauld), Matthew Beaumont (UCL), Jenny Bourne Taylor (Sussex), Neil Vickers (King’s, London),Tiffany Watt-Smith (Queen Mary) This interdisciplinary one-day conference reassesses the complex and intimate relationship between the emerging discipline of psychology and the field of aesthetics in the nineteenth century. Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk

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Highlights: Conferences and symposia

9 October 2010 10:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Room ST274/275

Annual Conference of Society for Pirandello Studies

14–16 October 2010 13:00–18:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Room ST274/275

A decade of women’s writing in France: trends and horizons 2000-2010

16 October 2010 09:30–17:45 Institute of English Studies Senate House

“Mr Popular Sentiment”: Dickens and feeling

Speaker(s) tbc Contact: katia.pizzi@sas.ac.uk

Speaker(s) tbc Contact: igrs@sas.ac.uk

Speakers include: John Drew,Valerie Sanders, Catherine Waters, Tony Williams Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk

21 October 2010 09:30–18:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Beveridge Hall

Late justice in South America (human rights trials) Lorena Balardini (Centro de Estudios Legales y Sociales: CELS), Jo-Marie Burt (George Mason; Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú), Leigh Payne (Oxford), Pilar Domingo (Overseas Development Institute), Marny Requa (Queens’, Belfast), Elin Skaar (Transitional Justice Research Group, Chr. Michelsen Institute, Bergen), Louise Mallinder (Transitional Justice Institute, Ulster), Cath Collins (Universidad Diego Portales, Santiago), Colm Campbell (Transitional Justice Institute, Ulster), Phil Clark (SOAS and Convenor, Oxford Transitional Justice Research), Clara Sandoval (Essex), David Sugarman (Lancaster) Convenors: Par Engstrom (Human Rights Consortium) and Cath Collins (Universidad Diego Portales, Santiago) Over the past decade, Latin America has seen a resurgence of prosecution of individuals responsible for massive human rights violations during recent authoritarian regimes. The UK arrest of former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet in 1998 proved to be merely a first milestone: his Peruvian counterpart Alberto Fujimori recently became the first former head of state ever extradited to his home country to stand trial for human rights crimes. This largely unexpected shift towards accountability in a region that was once a byword for impunity calls into question the suppositions of existing ‘transitional justice’ models, which tend to assume that legal amnesties adopted or preserved at transition will last. It is important for both theorists and practitioners to understand what the present wave of ‘late justice’ involves and what it means. Contact: olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk Sponsored by the Transitional Justice Institute, University of Ulster

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Highlights: Conferences and symposia

22–23 October 2010 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Room G22/26

The personality cults of modern dictators Maria Wyke (UCL) on Julius Caesar and his legacies, Sudhir Hazareesingh (Oxford) on the legend of Napoleon, and Lucy Riall (Birkbeck) on Garibaldi. Almost all modern dictators are the subject of personality cults that are highly organised even if they often also rest on spontaneous contributions. By creating a narrative of exceptionality around an individual they harness support and help consolidate a regime. The forms cults take depend on national traditions and histories, patterns of gender relations, and the existence or otherwise of an articulated civil society. In this sense, they are cultural as much as political phenomena. The highly specific nature of each cult means that comparative work is rare. The aim of this conference is to compare different aspects of many cults of personality, and, by so doing, raise new hypotheses of research and lay the foundations for new potential interdisciplinary collaborations. Contact: igrs@sas.ac.uk

22–23 October 2010 09:30–17:30 Institute of Historical Research Imperial War Museum (22 October) LSHTM (23 October)

Winter Conference 2010: Going to war 1939-45 Speakers include: Mark Glancy, Sue Harper and John Chapman A film history seminar series conference hosted by the Institute of Historical Research and the Imperial War Musuem, 22-23 October 2010. The Second World War remains the most filmed historical phenomenon of modern times. Neither cinemagoers nor film producers seem to tire of epic battles at sea, on land and in the air, heroic POW adventures, and dramas set on the Home Front. The world at war at mid-century is a defining moment in our modernity, and film has become one of the main media through which we locate ourselves in relation to the recent past. But the Second World War was also the heyday of cinemagoing in societies throughout Europe and North America, and the war itself brought about major changes in the technologies and uses of film, from the amateur camera to the official government newsreel and short. So the role of film in war needs to sit alongside our understanding of the representation of war in film. With this aim in mind the latest IHR Winter Conference has assembled a distinguished cast of film directors and film historians to discuss, debate and view the war on screen. Contact: ihr.reception@sas.ac.uk In collaboration with the Imperial War Museum

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Highlights: Conferences and symposia

22 October 2010 09:00–17:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Stewart House

Corporate social responsibility & stakeholder engagement in the extractive sector Speakers include: Peter Frankental (Amnesty International), Diana Mutti (Buenos Aires), Max Munday (Cardiff), Gavin Hilson (Reading),Veronica Broomes (Commonwealth Policy Studies Unit), Elizabeth Bastida (Dundee) and representatives from Xstrata and International Council on Mining and Metals. Questions that the seminar aims to explore include: · How can CSR tools be adapted to local contexts? What are the strengths and limitations of such CSR tools, especially for the extractive sector? · What are the factors behind fruitful stakeholder engagement? Which partnership mechanisms can achieve successful stakeholder engagement, especially for extractive projects? · What role does binding legislation play in establishing governance models to equitably distribute the benefits and burdens of extractive projects, both during and after the life of extractive projects? For queries contact: Natalia Yakovleva: yakovlevan@cf.ac.uk / tel 02920 876562 Register at: www.miningcsrevent.eventbrite.com

22 October 2010 09:15–18:30 Human Rights Consortium Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

From school exclusion orders to anti terror laws: human rights & the use of law in the modern state Plenary:Vaughan Jones (CEO, Praxis), Carlos Panara (Liverpool JMU), Pam Vallance (The Judith Trust), Peter Ramsay (LSE), Stuart Macdonald (Swansea), Andrew Millie (Glasgow), Sarah Cemlyn (Bristol), Sam Burton (Sheffield Hallam), Iain Channing (Plymouth), Ronagh Mcquigg, Leigh Roberts (Liverpool JMU), Henry Yeomans (Plymouth) £50.00 (concessions: £30.00; £15.00) Contact: belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk This conference is an initiative between SOLON, the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies and the Human Rights Consortium.

28–29 October 2010 09:30–17:30 Human Rights Consortium Mellon Sawyer Seminar Series Beveridge Hall

Fraternité: understanding and repairing neighbourly atrocity

28–29 October 2010 09:30–18:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Room ST274/275

Giving people ideas.Text and concept: literary texts as thought experiments

www.sas.ac.uk

For more information see p.9 Cu, D, H, Hu, L, S, Po

Speaker(s) tbc A conference in honour of the 70th Birthday of Professor Martin W. Swales Contact: jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

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Highlights: Conferences and symposia

28 October 2010 14:30–17:30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

Reducing the risk of fraud and corruption in procurement

3 November 2010 09:30–17:00:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

Exploring the ‘socio’ of socio-legal studies

Speakers include: Monty Raphael (Special Counsel, Peters & Peters), Jean-Pierre Bueb (Paris Central Anti-Corruption Service), Duncan Smith (European Investment Bank) and others Organised in association with the European Criminal Law Association Contact: ials.events@sas.ac.uk

Keynote speaker: Susan S. Silbey (MIT; co-author of The Common Place of Law: Stories from Everyday Life with Patricia Ewick; former editor of Studies in Law, Politics and Society and the Law & Society Review) Confirmed speakers: Nicola Lacey (LSE), John Clarke (Open), Sally Munt (Sussex) The conference will provide an opportunity to explore the meanings and implications of the ‘socio’ aspect of socio-legal studies, and to lay out pathways for future study. While there has been some scholarship addressing the ‘socio’ of sociolegal studies, there remains considerable scope for further analysis - particularly through this pioneering, dedicated event. The conference offers an opportunity to consider a range of questions, including: Does the ‘socio’ connote the ‘social’ or ‘society’, and what are the implications of those connotations in an era of rapid change? Which social groups or societies have been privileged (and which subordinated) in the concern with the ‘socio’? How might social theory, sociology or other aspects of social sciences inform, or better inform, analysis of law, legal institutions and other objects of legal studies? Do developments in late modernity, such as consumerism, globalisation, or neoliberalism, pose fresh challenges that the ‘socio’ must address? How, if at all, do themes abounding the ‘socio’ in early twentyfirst-century scholarship, such as terrorism or security, create opportunities for new perspectives on the ‘legal’? Contact: belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk Organised in collaboration with the Society for Socio-Legal Studies

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www.sas.ac.uk


Highlights: Conferences and symposia

3 November 2010 10:00–18:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Room G34

Joaquim Nabuco conference Joaquim Nabuco (1849–1910), abolitionist, intellectual, statesman, on the centenary of his death. Convenor: Leslie Bethell (CPDOC/Fundação Getulio Vargas, Rio de Janeiro; Honorary Research Fellow, Institute for the Study of the Americas) Speakers: Angela Alonso (São Paulo), Jeffrey Needell (Florida), Celso Castilho (Vanderbilt), Humberto França (Fundação Joaquim Nabuco, Recife), Paulo José dos Reis Pereira (Pontifícia Universidade Católica, São Paulo), José Murilo de Carvalho and Sérgio Paulo Rouanet (Academia Brasileira de Letras), David Jackson (Yale) Contact: olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk Sponsored by the Embassy of Brazil in London

6 November 2010 09:30–17:30 Institute of English Studies Senate House

George Eliot: The Mill on the Floss

6 November 2010 10:30–17:30 Institute of Musical Research Room G22/26

Technology and craft of early stringed instruments, c.500–1500

10–12 November 2010 09:00–18:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Cumberland Lodge

2010 Commonwealth Conference: citizenship and the Commonwealth

Keynote papers will be given by George Levine, Kathryn Hughes (East Anglia), David Amigoni (Keele) This conference celebrates the 150th birthday of The Mill on the Floss, one of George Eliot’s most remarkable works of fiction. Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk

Participants to include: Peter Forrester, Lewis Jones, Dan Larson,Graeme Lawson, Marc Lewon, Alice Margerum, Kate McWilliams, Crawford Young, Dorata Poplawska and Jon Banks Contact: valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Speaker(s) tbc This, the first Commonwealth Conference, will explore what it means to be a citizen of the Commonwealth in the 21st century. The issue of citizenship received only passing mention in the Communiqué of the 2009 CHOGM.Yet the creation of effective forms of citizenship, which offer the maximum potential for the inhabitants of Commonwealth countries to play an active and informed role in shaping their lives and their countries, is an important precondition for the achievement of the Commonwealth’s stated goals in areas as diverse as democratisation, sustainable development, human rights, combating corruption and tackling climate change. Contact: troy.rutt@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk

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Highlights: Conferences and symposia

10 November 2010 10:00–18:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Room ST274/275

London French Postgraduate Conference 2010: The other’s others - othering and marginalisation in French feminism and beyond Speaker(s) tbc Contact: igrs@sas.ac.uk

11 November 2010 10:00–18:00 Institute of Philosophy Senate Room

Moral decision-making in the face of risk and uncertainty

John Broome (Oxford), Sven Ove Hansson (Stockholm Institute of Technology), Luc Bovens (LSE), Sabine Roeser (Delft University of Technology) Contact: philosophy@sas.ac.uk In conjunction with the AHRC UCL Ethics of Risk project

12 November 2010 10:00–18:00 Institute of Musical Research Chancellor’s Hall

The piano trio: history, technique, performance

12–13 November 2010 10:00 Warburg Institute Woburn Square

Epidemics in context: Hippocrates, Galen and Hunayn between east and west

Keynote Speaker: David Owen Norris (Southampton) To be followed at 6.30pm by a performance by the Marmara Piano Trio which is open to the public, free of charge. Contact: valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

Robert Alessi (Poitiers), Leigh Chipman (TelAviv/Negev), Philip J. van der Eijk (Berlin), Ahmed Etman (Cairo), Rebecca Flemming (Cambridge), Ivan Garofalo (Siena), Bink Hallum (Warwick), Brooke Holmes (Princeton), Peter Joosse (Warwick), Jacques Jouanna (Paris), Grigory Kessel (Marburg), Oliver Overwien (Berlin), Caroline Petit (Manchester), Peter E. Pormann (Warwick), Gotthard Strohmaier (Berlin), Uwe Vagelpohl (Warwick) The 7 books of the Hippocratic Epidemics are famous for their presentation of case histories of individual patients. The conference will focus on Galen’s commentaries on Hippocratic works in Arabic. These offer secondary evidence for the original Greek text and Galen’s commentaries shed light on the Hippocratic text from both medical and philological perspectives. £10 a day (£5 a day for concessions) Contact p.e.pormann@warwick.ac.uk Organised by Peter E. Pormann and Simon Swain (University of Warwick) in conjunction with the Warburg Institute

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www.sas.ac.uk


Highlights: Conferences and symposia

18–21 November 2010 16:15–18:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas British Museum

Inca Ushnus: landscape, site and symbol in the Andes This conference focuses on the Inca Empire, c. AD 1400-1532, to examine the role of the sacred centre ushnu in statecraft. Archaeological, ethnographic and ethnohistoric approaches illustrate the role that ushnu platforms played in Andean political and sacred geography and their relevance today. Further information: www.britishmuseum.org/whats_on/ Organised by the British Museum and supported by the Institute for the Study of the Americas

19–20 November 2010 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Venue tbc

Association for the Study of Modern Italy (ASMI) Annual Conference 2010: Italy and its pasts: an interdisciplinary conference Convenors: Martin Brown (Staffordshire), Melisa Calaresu (Cambridge), Paola Filippucci (Cambridge) Contact: igrs@sas.ac.uk

23–24 November 2010 10:00–19:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Room G35 (Tuesday 23) Room ST273 (Wednesday 24)

Between the past and the future: challenging narratives of memory in Latin America Keynote speaker: Elizabeth Jelin (IDES). Confirmed Contributors:Vikki Bell (Goldsmiths), Susannah Radstone (East London), Jens Andermann (Birkbeck) Convenors: Alejandra Serpente (PhD student, Institute for the Study of the Americas) and Cecilia Sosa (PhD student, Queen Mary) In the context of novel theories of trauma and loss that have emerged in the field of memory studies, we propose to examine the current debates on memory in relation to traumatic pasts in Latin America. £20 (£10 concessionary rate) Contact: olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

24 November 2010 09:30–19:00 Institute of Musical Research Chancellor’s Hall

Middle East and Central Asia music forum Alexander Knapp (SOAS), Theresa Steward (Edinburgh), Hasan Hejairi (Exeter), Samir Mokrani (Paris/Yemen), Amir Eslami (Art University, Tehran) and Hooshyar Khayam (Art University, Tehran) Convenor: Laudan Nooshin (City) Contact: valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk

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Highlights: Conferences and symposia

25 November 2010 10:00–15:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Upper Hall

Order’s other histories: re-visiting South America Invited speakers include: Denise Y. Arnold (ILCA,Bolivia & CILAVS; Birkbeck), Dana Leibsohn (Smith), Tristan Platt (St Andrews), Gordon Brotherston (Manchester), Luciana Martins (Birkbeck), Colin McEwan (British Museum). Convenor: Luciana Martins (Birkbeck) Focusing on South America, this interdisciplinary symposium organized by the Centre for Iberian and Latin American Visual Studies (CILAVS) at Birkbeck aims to foster discussion on the multiple ways of ordering, representing and “othering” nature and society within different experiences of colonial encounters. In the first part of the symposium, invited speakers will address the following questions: to what extent did the context of an informal empire produce different frames for interpreting different colonial experiences? What were the literary, scientific or aesthetic discourses and practices of Hispanic and Portuguese colonial powers in their attempts to control the apparent ‘disorder’ of the different worlds under their rule? In what ways did South Americans borrow from, resist or reconfigure European classifications? In the second part, the collection of South American textiles held by the British Museum will provide the focus for a roundtable discussion on weaving practices as a particular way of organizing socio-cultural knowledge and histories. Contact: l.martins@sllc.bbk.ac.uk

25–26 November 2010 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Room ST274/275

German women’s writing in its European context, 1700–1900 Co-ordinators: Hilary Brown (Swansea) and Caroline Bland (Sheffield). Keynote speakers: Norbert Bachleitner (Vienna), Magdalene Heuser(Osnabrck/Berlin), Susanne Kord (London) Contact: jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

25–26 November 2010 09:30–18:30 Institute of Historical Research Wolfson and Pollard Rooms

Blocked arteries: circulation and congestion in history Speakers include: Colin Divall (York) and Maxwell Lay (ConnectEast, Melbourne) A two-day interdisciplinary conference examining the ways in which congestion has been, and continues to be, a problem as well as an inherent characteristic of the historical development of cities and regions worldwide, particularly in their relationship with commercial, financial, industrial, tourist and other networks. Papers range from classical Rome to Imperial Russian railways, and roads and the motor car in the USA, Australia and Europe. Contact: olwen.myhill@sas.ac.uk

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www.sas.ac.uk


Highlights: Conferences and symposia

26 November 2010 14:00–17:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Room G35

US responses to the Stagflation crisis of the 1970s and early 1980s Andrew Moran (London Metropolitan), Tim Stanley (Royal Holloway), James Cooper (Aberystwyth), Iwan Morgan (Institute for the Study of the Americas) Convenor: Iwan Morgan (Institute for the Study of the Americas) Contact: olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

27 November 2010 10:00–17:00 Institute of Musical Research Room G22/26

RMA AGM and Dent Medal Study Day in honour of Dean Sutcliffe Dean Sutcliffe (Auckland), William Drabkin (Southampton), Danuta Mirka (Southampton), Rohan Stewart-MacDonald and Clive Brown (Leeds) Contact: valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

2–4 December 2010 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Venue tbc

Women’s filmmaking in France 2000-2010s Plenary speakers include: Martine Beugnet, Ginette Vincendeau, Emma Wilson Although French women’s filmmaking of the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s has received significant critical attention, there has been little work to date on its development in the 2000s in relation to the shift from national to transnational and global contexts of production, distribution and reception. This international conference aims to re-visit and reevaluate the complex issues at stake in contemporary French women’s filmmaking from a variety of critical perspectives. Contact: igrs@sas.ac.uk

3 December 2010 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

Experiencing the Law 2010: Sex, sexualities and the law - changing attitudes or perpetuating stereotypes? Speaker(s) tbc Contact: belinda.crothers@sas.ac.uk The annual Experiencing the Law Conference is a joint initiative organised by SOLON, the Centre for Contemporary British History at King’s College, London, and the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies

www.sas.ac.uk

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Highlights: Conferences and symposia

3 December 2010 10:00–16:00 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Venue tbc

Palaeography and post-palaeography: manuscripts from the 1st to the 21st century Speaker(s) tbc This one-day conference organized by Michelle Brown and Wim Van Mierlo at the Institute of English Studies, with support from AMARC, will look at aspects of manuscript culture before and after the advent of print. The aim is to discuss practices, problems, theories and methods of analysis irrespective of place or period to see where methodologies overlap or complement each other. Topics will include: medieval manuscript studies in the digital age; integrating and migrating methodologies - quantitative and qualitative, early and modern; what is a modern manuscript?; the codicology of modern paper; handwriting in the twentieth century. Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk Supported by the Association for Manuscripts and Archives in Research Collections (AMARC)

4 December 2010 10:00–17:30 Institute of English Studies Venue tbc

Radical imagination: reflections on the work of Sally Ledger Isobel Armstrong, Carolyn Burdett, Regenia Gagnier, Bill Greenslade,Juliet John, Scott McCracken, Jo McDonagh, Kate Newey, Mike Saunders,Michael Slater, Paul Young This one-day symposium brings together a host of scholars to celebrate the life of Sally Ledger and reflect on her intellectual contribution to the fields of Victorian and Literary Studies. Sally’s ground-breaking and inspirational work critically engages with topics across a range of subject areas and this event will consider her work on Dickens, Ibsen, the Fin de Sicle and the New Woman, Melodrama, Sentimentality and Affect, Theatricality, Radicalism, and the theory and practice of historicism. The event is free but registration is required. Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk

4 December 2010 Institute of Musical Research Room G22/26

The impact of ethnomusicology Contact: valerie.james@sas.ac.uk In association with the British Forum for Ethnomusicology

6 December 2010 10:00–17:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Room STB9

The Americas and the Cold War Convenor: William Booth (Institute for the Study of the Americas) Speakers: Nicholas Grant (Leeds), Mark Seddon (Sheffield), Olivia Saunders, Geoff Goodwin, Steve Cushion and Elisa Rodriguez (Institute for the Study of the Americas), Nick Witham (Nottingham) £5 Contact: olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

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Highlights: Conferences and symposia

10–11 December 2010 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Room ST274/275

Carmen Martín Gaite 10 years on: revisiting her textual and visual legacy Speaker(s) tbc This conference focuses on the textual and visual output of Spanish writer Carmen Martn Gaite (1925-2000) on the 10th anniversary of her death. Contact: gaiteconference2010@googlemail.com A collaboration between the Centre for Iberian and Latin American Visual Studies and the Centre for the Study of Contemporary Women’s Writing (IGRS)

10 December 2010 09:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Senate House

Mick Imlah: his life and work

15–17 December 2010 Institute of Musical Research Chancellor’s Hall

Musical exchanges between Ancient Egypt and the Near East during, before and after the Hyksos Kings

For more information see p.5

Speaker(s) tbc ICONEA conference Contact: valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

28 January 2011 10:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Room ST274/275

www.sas.ac.uk

The impact of Caravaggio on contemporary culture Speaker(s) tbc Contact: katia.pizzi@sas.ac.uk

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Highlights: New seminar series

New seminar series International Refugee Law Convenor: David James Cantor (Institute of Commonwealth Studies) Organised by the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, Institute of Commonwealth Studies and UNHCR to mark the 60th anniversary of UNHCR and the Refugee Convention. Admission free. All welcome. To book your place contact: IALS.Events@sas.ac.uk

25 October 2010 17:30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Institute of Commonwealth Studies Charles Clore House

Opening speech Roland Schilling (UNHCR Representative to the United Kingdom)

Rethinking the detention of asylum-seekers and other migrants: exploring the alternatives – a comparative perspective Alice Edwards (Oxford)

18 November 2010 17:30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Institute of Commonwealth Studies Charles Clore House

The effect of legal status on Iraqi “refugees” in Jordan: a socio-legal study

9 December 2010 17:30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Institute of Commonwealth Studies Charles Clore House

A transnational legal order and European refugee law

18 January 2011 17:30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Institute of Commonwealth Studies Charles Clore House

Implications for refugee law of the HJ (Iran) judgment on homosexuality as a ground for international protection

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Dallal Stevens (Warwick)

Hélène Lambert (Westminster)

Satvinder Juss (King’s, London; barrister)

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

Events calendar Friday 1 October 2010 16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series Room G35

Institute of Classical Studies postgraduate work in progress (title tbc) Speaker(s) tbc C

Saturday 2 October 2010 09:30–19:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Other events Beveridge Hall

Elizabeth Fallaize: academic and personal tribute

10:00–14:00 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Senate House

Writing Equipment Society meeting

11:00–13:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Modernism research The Court Room

Modernism and impressionism

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

For more information see p.10 Cu

Laura Marcus: ‘Impressionism, modernism and “the cinema mind”’ David James: ‘The reluctant impressionist’ Cu

Monday 4 October 2010 09:00–16:30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Conference / Symposium Charles Clore House

International tax: latest developments

10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Introduction to Institute of Advanced Legal Studies electronic resources

13:15 Institute of Musical Research Other events Kingston Parish Church

Mozart Sonatas for fortepiano and clarinet

www.sas.ac.uk

For more information see p.10 L

L

Jane Booth (basset clarinet) and John Irving (fortepiano) M

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Events calendar

October 2010—January 2011

16:00–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Ancient philosophy Room G34

Pythagorean mathematics and the musical structure of Plato’s Dialogues

16:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Director’s seminar Room G37

Institute of Classical Studies Director’s seminar (title tbc)

Jay Kennedy (Manchester) C

Speaker(s) tbc C

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Postgraduate feminist reading group Room G32

Postgraduate feminist reading group Speaker(s) tbc Reading: Joan W. Scott: Fantasy Echo: History and the Construction of Identity (2001); Robyn Wiegman: On Being in Time with Feminism (2004); Alison Bechdel: Excerpt from Fun Home (2007) Cu

Tuesday 5 October 2010 10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Introduction to Lexis and Westlaw: hands-on session

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British maritime history Venue tbc

Of the blood of sea peoples: navalism and Greater Britain, 1897-1914

L

John C. Mitcham (Alabama) H

Wednesday 6 October 2010 14:30–16:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Introduction to Institute of Advanced Legal Studies electronic resources

16:00–18:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: Aesthetics forum Room ST273

Institute of Philosophy aesthetics forum (title tbc)

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L

Peter Lamarque P

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

17:00–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Latin America Room G32

Events calendar

¡Haga que pase!: ‘Mi Fink’ and the struggle for food sovereignty and Freedom in Villa Rica, Colombia Jota Ramos and Giuliana Cascella-Carb D, Hu

Thursday 7 October 2010 10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Introduction to Lexis and Westlaw: hands-on session

12:00–13:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Seminar series: Work in progress Room ST276

Richard von Krafft-Ebing’s Psychopathia Sexualis and Thomas Mann’s Buddenbrooks: Wandering Concepts in Scientific and ImaginaryAccounts of Sexual Deviance

L

Anna Schaffner (Kent and Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies) Cu, S

12:50 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Society, culture & belief, 1500-1805 Ecclesiastical History Room

The first Chinese in England? The visit of Shen Fuzong, 1687-88

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

Ancient history (title tbc)

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Open University book history and bibliography Room G35

Biographizing Montaigne

17:30–19:35 Institute of Historical Research Postgraduate and early career seminar Low Countries Room

Orality and literacy: understanding legislation in late-medieval England

www.sas.ac.uk

William Poole (Oxford) H

Speaker(s) tbc C

Sarah Bakewell (biographer and writer; City) Cu

Dean Rowland (Institute of Historical Research) H

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: American history Pollard Room

Staging strikes: labor, race and gender in Depression era theatre

18:00–19:30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Lecture Charles Clore House

Defence rights during EU investigations: criminal and administrative

Kate Dossett H

Julian M. Joshua (Howrey LLP, Brussels) on “The uneasy interface: criminal and administrative enforcement and evidential standards in cartel investigations in the UK” Tony Wilson and Keith McCarthy (Serious Fraud Office) on “The SFO and administrative investigations” Chair: Tricia Howse (CBE) L

18:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies Lecture Chancellor’s Hall

Launch of the Thomas Sturge Moore and Walter de la Mare Collections, Senate House Library Wim Van Mierlo (Institute of English Studies), Giles de la Mare Cu

Friday 8 October 2010 8–9 October 2010 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Conference / Symposium Maison Française d’Oxford

Law, religion and education: religious freedom in the sphere of education For more information see p.10 Hu, L

Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Other events Venue tbc

Libris celebration

16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room G35

Postgraduate work in progress (title tbc)

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Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Speaker(s) tbc C

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Economic and social history of the premodern world, 1500 - 1800 Pollard Room

Agricultural work, reward and labour discipline in late seventeenth century England

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Irish studies Room G32

Humps, bumps and paths; archaeology in the study of historic gardens

Steve Hindle (Warwick) D

Brian Dix H

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Irish studies Room G32

Irish studies (title tbc) Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Saturday 9 October 2010 09:30–17:30 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Senate House

Psychology/aesthetics in the 19th century

10:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Conference / Symposium Room ST274/275

Annual Conference of Society for Pirandello Studies

For more information see p.10 Cu, H

For more information see p.11 Cu

Monday 11 October 2010 10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Introduction to Institute of Advanced Legal Studies electronic resources L

15:00–17:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Linguistics Room G35

The bi-dialectal inscription from Sigeion (IG 1³ 1508): a linguistic and historical analysis Sophie Minon (Paris) C

www.sas.ac.uk

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series: History of art Woburn Square

History of art (title tbc)

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Music in Britain Wolfson Room

Searching for unity in diversity:Theosophy and finde-siecle British musical culture

Rembrandt Duits Cu, H

Christopher Scheer (Utah State and Liverpool Hope) M, H

17:30–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Decolonization Room G35

The joint intelligence committee and colonial counterinsurgency at the end of Empire’ Rory Cormac and Gregor Davey (King’s, London) H, Po

18:00–19:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Lecture Charles Clore House

Control orders, stealthy derogations and ‘legal grey holes’: the judicial response to UK antiterrorism laws and ‘due deference’ Gavin Phillipson (Durham) Hu, L

Tuesday 12 October 2010 10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Introduction to Lexis and Westlaw: hands-on session L

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: London group of historical geographers Wolfson Room

Disrupted cities: when infrastructure fails

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Military history Germany Room

Butcher and bolt or hearts and minds: Britain’s suppression of the Arab Revolt in Palestine, 19361939

Stephen Graham (Newcastle) H

Matthew Hughes (Brunel) H

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

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

History of libraries research

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Seminar Room G32

The non-traditional case for the authorship of The Federalist: a monument built on sand?

Cu

Joseph Rudman (Carnegie Mellon) London Forum for Authorship Studies Cu

18:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies Lecture Beveridge Hall

2010 Wordsworth Lecture: “One human heart”: Elizabeth Gaskell’s Wordsworthianvein Jenny Uglow (Wordsworth Trust; Royal Society of Literature) Cu

18:00–19:45 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Lecture Charles Clore House

Essays in Dispute Resolution - prize award ceremony and lectures Jessica Carlisle, Farrah Ahmed, Senwung Luk, I A Morcowitz, Leonie Fleischmann L

18:00–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Black Britain Room G34

History and contributions of African churches in Britain Israel Olofinyana Cu, H, Hu

18:00–21:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Workshop Court Room

GHosting Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Wednesday 13 October 2010 09:00–18:00 Institute of Historical Research Research training Wolfson Room

Institute of Historical Research research training day Speaker(s) tbc H

www.sas.ac.uk

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Introduction to Lexis and Westlaw: hands-on session L

12:30–14:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar Charles Clore House

Proposed changes to the rules for corporate chargeable gains Pete Miller, Partner (Powrie Appleby LLP) L

12:30–14:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Latin America Room 102

Agriculture with a future: Cuba’s agroecological alternative

14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute Seminar series: Director’s work in progress Woburn Square

The collection of the Passerotti family and other artists’ collections in Renaissance Bologna

15:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Mycenaean Series Lecture Room G22/26

Step by step: approaching the throne of the ‘wanax’

Fernando Funez Monzote (Universidad de Matanzas, Cuba) D

Lisa Hillier C, Cu

Ulrich Thaler (Munich) C

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

The replica of the House of Serenos: recreating a Roman environment in Egypt Nicholas Warner Cu, P, S

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Seminar Room G34

How do we know anything about Babylonian music theory? Richard Dumbrill M

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October 2010—January 2011

17:00–19:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Latin America Room G37

Events calendar

Madness, meaning and kinship in the Andes: mental illness among Quechua-speaking peasants in rural Peru David Orr (UCL) S

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British history in the long 18th century Room G35

Mercantilism and the British Empire: in search of a new paradigm

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Seminar series Room ST273

London Old and Middle English research (title tbc)

Steve Pincus (Yale) H

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Thursday 14 October 2010 14–16 October 2010 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Work in progress Conference / Symposium Room ST274/275

A decade of women’s writing in France: trends and horizons 2000-2010

10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Advanced use of databases at Institute of Advanced Legal Studies for postgraduate students

For more information see p.11 Cu

L

15:00 Institute of Musical Research Other events Morden College Chapel

Mozart Sonatas for fortepiano and clarinet

16:30–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Ancient history Venue tbc

Ancient history seminar (title tbc)

www.sas.ac.uk

Jane Booth (basset clarinet) and John Irving (fortepiano) M

Speaker(s) tbc C

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British history in the 17th century Germany Room

High Church anti-popery

17:30–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Language policy/ practice in the Commonwealth Room G22

Linguistic human rights: Portuguese linguistic legacies in the Indian Ocean Commonwealth: Mozambique,Tanzania, Kenya, India, Sri Lanka, Maldives and Malaysia

Andrew Starkie (independent scholar) H

Shihan de Silva (Institute of Commonwealth Studies) Cu, H, Po

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Film history Low Countries Room

Man and boy: Montgomery Clift as a queer star

18:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies John Coffin Memorial Palaeography Lecture Chancellor’s Hall

“In private men’s hands”: the library of Archbishop John Whitgift (d. 1604): sources, catalogue, and dispersal

Elisabetta Girelli (St Andrews) Cu, H

For more information see p.5. Cu

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

London theatre

19:00–20:15 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies John Coffin Memorial Reading Shakespeare’s Globe

Shakespeare - a German writer

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

For more information see p.5 Cu

Friday 15 October 2010 16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room G35

32

Postgraduate work in progress (title tbc) Speaker(s) tbc C

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

17:00–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Latin America Room G37

Events calendar

Intersecting inequalities: women and social policy in Peru, 1990-2000 Jelke Boesten (Leeds) Seminar and book launch S

17:30–19:30 Capitalism 2.0: peer production, intellectual Institute of Historical Research property & juridification processes online Seminar series: Marxism in culture Anne Barron (LSE) Venue tbc Cu, H, P

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Ezra Pound Cantos reading group Room G34

Canto 41 Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Saturday 16 October 2010 09:30–17:45 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Senate House

“Mr Popular Sentiment”: Dickens and feeling

14:00–16:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Early modern philosophy and the scientific imagination (EMPHASIS) Room 104

Renaissance natural history

For more information see p.11 Cu

Fabian Kraemer (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitt Munich & Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin), Angela Fischel (Humboldt Universitt, Berlin) Cu

Monday 18 October 2010 10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Introduction to Lexis and Westlaw: hands-on session

15:00–18:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Seminar series: German philosophy reading group Room G32

Translation as comment, critique and utopia - the 125th birthday of Ernst Bloch

www.sas.ac.uk

L

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

33


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

15:00–17:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Linguistics Room G35

Greek relative clauses: Homer and his speakers

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series Woburn Square

History of art (title tbc)

16:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Director’s seminar Room G37

Institute of Classical Studies Director’s seminar (title tbc)

Philomen Probert (Oxford) C

Paul Hills Cu, H

Speaker(s) tbc C

17:15–19:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series Room G22/26

London Shakespeare

18:00–20:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Collecting & display (100BC to AD1700) Room G35

Travel, acquisition, display: Don Fadrique Enríquez de Ribera and the Casa de Pilatos, Seville, c.15181540

Jeff Dolven (Princeton) and Ewan Ferrie (Royal Holloway) Cu

Philippa Joseph C, H

Tuesday 19 October 2010 10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Introduction to Lexis and Westlaw: hands-on session

17:00–19:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: Logic and metaphysics forum Room ST273

What’s the point of absolute rigour?

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British maritime history Venue tbc

The democratization of the Royal Navy officer corps c. 1919-39

34

L

Alex Paseau (Oxford) P

Elinor Romans (Exeter) H www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

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

Accordia lecture (title tbc)

17:30–17:30 Institute of Musical Research Other events Haldane Room, UCL

Mozart Sonatas for fortepiano and clarinet

18:00–19:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Lecture Charles Clore House

David Hughes Parry – a jurist in society

18:30–20:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Other events Chancellor’s Hall

“De Silbos Cebollas y Yunteros”: concert in homage of Miguel Hernández

Speaker(s) tbc C

Jane Booth (basset clarinet) and John Irving (fortepiano) M

R Gwynedd Parry (Swansea) L

Maria-Jos Blanco (Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies), Contemporary Flamenco Company La Tpica: Jorge Bravo (guitarist), Natalia Garcia (dancer), Ulises Diaz (singer), Demi Garcia (drums), Meg Hamilton (violin) Cu

Wednesday 20 October 2010 13:00–14:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Commonwealth research Room 103

Domestic migration in India: a Gujarat-Southern Rajasthan remittance corridor study

14:00–19:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Workshop Venue tbc

Legal education and scholarship – past, present and future

Howard Jones (Institute of Commonwealth Studies) Cu, H, Po

Speakers will include: Anthony Bradney, Raymond Cocks, Fiona Cownie,Paul Maharg, Wes Pue, Hilary Sommerlad and David Sugarman Workshop Directors: Avrom Sherr (Institute of Advanced Legal Studies) and David Sugarman (Lancaster) L

14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute Seminar series: Director’s work in progress Woburn Square

www.sas.ac.uk

The reception of Petrarch’s Africa in the Crown of Aragon: the Escipió e Aníbal byAntoni Canals Montserrat Ferrer H, S 35


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar 17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Seminar Room G37

The ancient science of harmonics

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Contemporary British history Wolfson Room

Gap years? National Service, 1945-1963

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Inter-University Seminar: Romanticism and postcolonialism Room ST275

Imagination and “Hybridity”: racial politics and poetics of anti-slavery discourse from More to Barrett Browning

Leon Crickmore M

Richard Vinen (King’s, London) H

Cora Kaplan (Queen Mary) Cu

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Contemporary innovative poetry research Room G35

Innovation in Modernist poetry

18:00–20:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Seminar Venue tbc

Research Centre for German and Austrian Exile Studies seminar

18:00–20:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Caribbean studies Chapters, King’s, London

Policing the Caribbean: transnational security cooperation in practice

Robert Hampson (Royal Holloway)

Florentina Freise (London) Cu, H

Ben Bowling (King’s, London), Robert Reiner (LSE), Amanda Sives (Liverpool) Chair: Philip Murphy (Institute of Commonwealth Studies) Seminar and book launch Cu, Po, H

Thursday 21 October 2010 09:30–18:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Conference / Symposium Beveridge Hall

36

Late justice in South America (human rights trials) For more information see p.11 Hu

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

12:30–14:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: IP lunchtime seminar Room G35

Conditions on embodied agency

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

Ancient history (title tbc)

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Directions in musical research Room G35

Biguine amoureuse: Caribbean music in Paris between the two World Wars

17:15–19:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Lecture Room ST273

Hegel’s view of modern society

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: London seminar in digital text and scholarship Room G27

In, around, and beyond the electronic book: INKE designs and prototypes to make working with digital text more enjoyable and rewarding

Hong Yu Wong (Institute of Philosophy) P

Speaker(s) tbc C

John Cowley (Institute of Commonwealth Studies) Chair: Shihan De Silva (Institute of Commonwealth Studies) M

Henk de Berg (Sheffield) Cu, P

Stan Ruecker (Alberta) Cu

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Postgraduate and early career seminar Low Countries Room

“To my good comrade”: Marxist libraries and the materiality of memory

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: American history Pollard Room

Crossing and dwelling: religion in the postrevolutionary city

www.sas.ac.uk

Catherine Feely (Manchester), Celia Hughes (Warwick) H

Kyle Roberts H

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Society, culture & belief, 1500-1804 Ecclesiastical History Room

The culture of Renaissance piracy: the case of captain Mainwaring

18:00–19:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Lecture Charles Clore House

Risk and responsibility in financial markets: regulation after the crises (title tbc)

Claire Jowitt (Nottingham Trent) H

Harry McVea (Bristol) L

18:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies 2010 Charles Holden Lecture Room G22/26

Something stirring in the stack? Why filmmakers enter the library Ian Christie (Birkbeck) Libraries have often provided an incongruous setting for unacademic pursuits on screen, from manhunts to hauntings, and of course seductions. But they also represent knowledge, which is often dangerous as well as enlightening. And in a select group of films ,culminating in Amenabar’s recent “Agora”, the defence of the library becomes a powerful symbol of civilisation itself. Little wonder that filmmakers are heavy borrowers. The lecture will be followed by a wine reception. Contact: shl.officeadmin@london.ac.uk Organised by the Senate House Library Friends Cu

Friday 22 October 2010 22–23 October 2010 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

The personality cults of modern dictatros

22–23 October 2010 09:30–17:30 Institute of Historical Research Conference / Symposium Imperial War Museum (22 October) LSHTM (23 October)

Winter Conference 2010: Going to war 1939–45

38

For more information see p.12 Cu, H

For more information see p.12 Cu, H

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Workshop Room ST274/275

Lucia Etxebarria study day

09:00–17:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Conference / Symposium Charles Clore House

Corporate social responsibility & stakeholder engagement in the extractive sector

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

For more information see p.13 D, Hu, L

09:15–18:30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Conference / Symposium Charles Clore House

From school exclusion orders to anti terror laws: human rights & the use of law in the modern state For more informaton see p.13 Hu, L

16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room G35

Postgraduate work in progress (title tbc)

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Economic and social history of the premodern world, 1500–1801 Pollard Room

An Englishman in Venice: useful knowledge in the eighteenth century maritime world

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

Finnegans Wake research (title tbc)

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

CenSes seminar: blind tasting

22 October 2010 18:30–20:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies John Coffin Memorial Reading Room ST274/275

Lucía Etxebarría

www.sas.ac.uk

Speaker(s) tbc C

Tim McEnvoy (Warwick) H

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Speaker(s) tbc P

For more information see p.5 Cu

39


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar Saturday 23 October 2010 10:30–12:00 School of Advanced Study Institute of Classical Studies Bloomsbury Festival 2010 Senate House, South Block

Bloomsbury Festival 2010: Secret tour of Charles Holden’s Senate House

10:30–16:15 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Research training Room ST273

Saturday research training workshop: introductions

11:00–13:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar STB3/6

London 19th century studies: cities, mobilities

14:00–14:00 School of Advanced Study Human Rights Consortium Institute of Commonwealth Studies Bloomsbury Festival 2010 The Renoir Cinema

Bloomsbury Festival 2010: The Brunswick short film premiere

For more information see p.7 Cu, H

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Andrew Thacker and Josephine McDonagh Cu, H

For more information see p.8 Cu, Hu, Po, S

Sunday 24 October 2010 11:00–12:30 School of Advanced Study Institute of Musical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Bloomsbury Festival 2010 Beveridge Hall

Bloomsbury Festival 2010:Tango & identity For more information see p.8 Cu, H, M, S

Monday 25 October 2010 10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Introduction to Lexis and Westlaw: hands-on session

10:30–17:30 Institute of Musical Research Research training Room ST273

Music and social meanings

40

L

Ann van Allen Russell, Sophie Fuller (Trinity College of Music), Jennifer Doctor (York), Leanne Langley M www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

15:00–17:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Linguistics Room G35

Linguistics seminar (title tbc)

16:00–18:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Seminar Room ST275

Spanish reading group (title tbc)

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series Woburn Square

History of art (title tbc)

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Music in Britain Wolfson Room

One up and two down:Thomas Beecham, Albert Coates and Henry Wood and the politics of recording during the inter-war years in England

Judith Prais (London) C

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Joanne Allen

David Patmore (Sheffield) M, H

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series:Voluntary action history Low Countries Room

The geography of the matter: space and the language of location in interwar British female philanthropy Eve Colpus (Oxford) H

17:30–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Decolonization Room G35

Rethinking the detention of asylum-seekers and other migrants: exploring the alternatives – a comparative perspective Discussants: Joanna Lewis (LSE), David Anderson (Oxford). Response by Daniel Branch. Hu, P

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Djuna Barnes research seminar Room G32

www.sas.ac.uk

Djuna Barnes research seminar (title tbc) Speaker(s) tbc Cu

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar Tuesday 26 October 2010 10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Introduction to Lexis and Westlaw: hands-on session

14:00–17:00 Institute of Musical Research Seminar Room G22/26

Legacy and legend: historic(al) performance in the 1980s

L

Colin Lawson (Royal College of Music),Trevor Herbert (Open) and John Irving (Institute of Musical Research) M

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: London group of historical geographers Wolfson Room

Materialising the secret state: infrastructures of Cold War Britain

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Military history Germany Room

Navies, internal order and state-building in the nineteenth century

Jeff Hughes (Manchester) H

Carlos Alfaro Zaforteza (King’s, London) H

Wednesday 27 October 2010 10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Introduction to Lexis and Westlaw: hands-on session L

10:30–17:00 Institute of Musical Research Research training British Library

Twentieth century British music

14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute Seminar series: Director’s work in progress Woburn Square

Glass slides from the Warburg Institute photographic collection (1920-30): “Did you see his lecture?”

Tutors: Sandra Tuppen and Nicolas Bell M

Katia Mazzucco Cu, H

42

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

16:00–18:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: Aesthetics forum Room STB3

The significance of the artworld

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

From Marco Polo to King Manuel I of Portugal: the image of the East African coast in the 16th century

Andrew McGonigal P

Jean Michel Massing Cu, H

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Seminar Room ST273

Musical iconography in the Ancient Near and Middle East Dominique Collon (British Museum) M

17:00–19:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Latin America Room G35

Continuities and discontinuities in US–Latin American relations: smart power, the Obama administration and US–Latin American relations John Saxe-Fernandez (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México) Po, H

17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Classical archaeology Room G22/26

Classical archaeology seminar (title tbc)

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British history in the long 18th century Wolfson Room

To the block with Newcastle and the yardarm with Byng: riots and popular imperialism in the Seven Years War

Speaker(s) tbc C

Sarah Kinkel (Yale) H

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Rethinking modern Europe Germany Room

www.sas.ac.uk

Displacing empire: mobility, immobility, and the repatriation of Italian settlers from Libya Pamela Ballinger (Michigan) H

43


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar Thursday 28 October 2010 28–29 October 2010 Human Rights Consortium Conference Mellon Sawyer Seminar Series Beveridge Hall

Fraternité: understanding and repairing neighbourly atrocity

28–29 October 2010 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Conference / Symposium Room ST274/275

Giving people ideas.Text and concept: literary texts as thought experiments

10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Advanced use of databases at Institute of Advanced Legal Studies for postgraduate students

14:00–17:00 School of Advanced Study Research training Room G26

Applying for research funding

14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Research training Venue tbc

EndNote seminar

14:30–17:30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Conference / Symposium Charles Clore House

Reducing the risk of fraud and corruption in procurement

For more information see p.9 Cu, D, H, Hu, L, S, Po

For more information see p.13 Cu

L

For more information see p.14 L

16:30–18:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: IP lunchtime seminar Room G35

Indexicality and the puzzle of the answering machine

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

Ancient history (title tbc)

44

Jonathan Cohen (UCSD) P

Speaker(s) tbc C

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Seminar series: Directions in musical research Room G35

The politics of French Plainchant, 1882-1905

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British history in the 17th century Germany Room

Hobbes and the Bible

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

Talk on the new discovery of fragments of a late fifth/early sixth century legal codex at UCL (title tbc)

Katharine Ellis (Royal Holloway) Chair: Delphine Mordey (Cambridge) M

Justin Champion (Royal Holloway) H

Simon Corcoran, Benet Salway (UCL) Cu

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

London theatre (title tbc)

19:00–21:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Book presentation Austrian Cultural Forum

Stefan Zweig - Journeys

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Rdiger Grner (Queen Mary) Cu

Friday 29 October 2010 14:00–17:00 Institute of Musical Research Research training STB3

‘The work of art in the age of mechanical reproduction’ by Walter Benjamin Discussion of reading led by Anahid Kassabian (Liverpool) M

16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room G35

www.sas.ac.uk

Postgraduate work in progress (title tbc) Speaker(s) tbc C

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: History of gardens and landscapes Wolfson Room

Painted gardens: what do these representations tell us about real gardens?

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

Charles Peake Ulysses

Christine Lalumia (Geffrye Museum) H

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Saturday 30 October 2010 00:00–00:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Colloquium Swansea University

48th National Postgraduate Colloquium in German Studies

14:00–16:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Education in the long 18th century Germany Room

Anna Jameson and women’s public moralism in 19th-century England

Speaker(s) tbc Cu, H

Ben Dabby (Cambridge) H

Monday 1 November 2010 10:30–17:30 Institute of Musical Research Research training Room ST273

Crossing borders

14:00–18:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Colloquium Chancellor’s Hall

Celebrate the Day of the Dead - learning from our different communities

Rachel Beckles Willson (Royal Holloway), with David R M Irving (Cambridge) and Katherine Schofield (King’s, London) M

Convenors: Sam Turner (The National Council for Palliative Care) and Rose Parker (Dying Matters Coalition) Attendance at this event is by personal invitation only. For further information and registration process please visit www.americas.sas. ac.uk/events.php Organised in collaboration with The Dying Matters Coalition, led by the National Council for Palliative Care D, Cu

46

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

15:00–17:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Linguistics Room G35

Linguistics seminar (title tbc)

16:00–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Ancient philosophy Room G34

Plotinus on number

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series: History of art Woburn Square

History of art (title tbc)

16:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Director’s seminar Room G37

Institute of Classical Studies Director’s seminar (title tbc)

James Clackson (Cambridge) C

Christoph Horn (Bonn) C

Michelle O’Malley Cu, H

Speaker(s) tbc C

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

Friends of the British School at Athens lecture

18:00–19:30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Introduction to Lexis and Westlaw: hands-on session

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Djuna Barnes research Room G35

Djuna Barnes’ short stories

www.sas.ac.uk

Speaker(s) tbc C

L

Elizabeth Pender (Cambridge) Cu

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Postgraduate feminist reading group Room G32

Postgraduate feminist reading group (title tbc) Speaker(s) tba Cu

Tuesday 2 November 2010 12:30–14:00 School of Advanced Study Seminar series: Dean’s seminar Room G26

From imperial protection to ‘free trade’: quicksilver, the Rothschilds and 19th century Bolivia For more information see p.6 H

14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Research training Room STB3/6

Research methodologies

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British maritime history Venue tbc

Organization and manning the Danish navy in the 18th century Jakob Seerup (The Royal Danish Naval Museum, Danish National Museum of Military History) H

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: History of libraries research Room G37

History of libraries research (title tbc) Cu

Wednesday 3 November 2010 09:30–17:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Conference / Symposium Charles Clore House

Exploring the ‘socio’ of socio-legal studies

10:00–18:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Conference / Symposium Room G34

Joaquim Nabuco Conference

48

For more information see p.14 L, S

For more information see p.15 Cu, H

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute Seminar series: Director’s work in progress Woburn Square

Martin Meurisse and the visual representation of Natural Philosophy

17:00–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Caribbean studies Room G32

Trans-national associative practices: the case of Haitians in France

17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Classical archaeology Room G22/26

Classical archaeology (title tbc)

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Contemporary British history Wolfson Room

Saint Gandhi: English responses to the Rebel, 1940-2010

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Open University book history and bibliography Room G35

Biographizing Kathleen Raine

18:00–19:30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Introduction to Lexis and Westlaw: hands-on session

Susanna Berger Cu, H, P

Clara Rachel Eybalin Casseus (Université de Poitiers) Cu, H, Po, L

Speaker(s) tbc C

Jad Adams (School of Advanced Study Visiting Research Fellow) H

Philippa Bernard (biographer) Cu

L

Thursday 4 November 2010 10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

www.sas.ac.uk

Advanced use of databases at Institute of Advanced Legal Studies for postgraduate students L

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

12:30–14:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: IP lunchtime seminar Room G35

Cognitively meaningful colour categories

14:00–17:00 School of Advanced Study Research training Room ST273

Project organisation and management

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

Ancient history (title tbc)

17:00–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series: Maps and society Woburn Square

Cartographic race games in Europe: entertainment, education – or influence?

Yasmina Jraissati (Institute of Philosophy) P

Speaker(s) tbc C

Adrian Seville Cu, H

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Seminar series: Directions in musical research Room G35

Did Medieval audiences cry when they heard Machaut’s music? Elizabeth Eva Leach (Oxford) Chair: Helen Swift (Oxford) M

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: History of education Room G34

Social service, social study and social action: models of volunteering by university students in 20th century England Georgina Brewis (Institute for Volunteering Research; Institute of Education, London) H

17:30–20:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Work in progress Lecture Room ST273

50

Working group for the reception of German/ Austrian/Swiss literature lecture Maximiliaan van Woudenberg (Oakville, Ontario): “Coleridge’s German Quest: His Projected Life of Lessing” Cu, H

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:30–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Lecture Chancellor’s Hall

The US midterm elections and the future of the American era

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Postgraduate and early career seminar Low Countries Room

The persecution of the Christians and the form of legal process in the Roman Empire

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: American history Pollard Room

Warm beer and cold canons: US army chaplains and alcohol consumption in World War II

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Society, culture & belief, 1500-1801 Ecclesiastical History Room

Beggars, charlatans, and informants: eastern Christians in Europe and the Americas in the 17th century

Robert Lieber (Georgetown) Po

Stephen Royston-Davies (UCL) H

Jenel Virden H

John-Paul Ghobrial (Cambridge) H

18:00–20:00 Institute of Philosophy Lecture Beveridge Hall

Why humanities?

18:00–20:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Collecting & display (100BC to AD1700) Florence, Italy

Collecting feathers: a journey from Mexico into Italian collections (16th-17th century)

Onora O’Neill P

Corinna T. Gallori (Kunsthistorisches Institute, Florence) C, H

Friday 5 November 2010 13:00–18:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Rising Brazil trends, directions, and challenges The Court Room

www.sas.ac.uk

Historical perspectives and global economy Speaker(s) tba H

51


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room G35

Postgraduate work in progress (title tbc)

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Economic and social history of the premodern world, 1500–1802 Pollard Room

Economic and social history of the premodern world, 1500–1800 (title tbc)

Speaker(s) tbc C

Alejanra Irigoin (LSE) H

17:30–17:30 Amongst the ruins of Trier: Marx’s Institute of Historical Research the shadow of the Roman Empire Seminar series: Marxism in culture Edith Hall (Royal Holloway) Venue tbc Cu, H, P

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series Room G32

materialism in

Irish studies (title tbc) Cu

Saturday 6 November 2010 09:30–17:30 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Senate House

George Eliot: The Mill on the Floss

10:30–16:15 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Research training STB3/6

Saturday research training workshop: libraries and archives

10:30–17:30 Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

Technology and craft of early stringed instruments, c.500–1500

For more information see p.15 Cu

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

For more information see p.15 M

52

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October 2010—January 2011

11:00–13:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Modernism The Court Room

Events calendar

Late modernism Daniel Katz: title tbc Rod Rosenquist: “Rewriting the modern: literary memoirs and late modernism” Cu

14:00–16:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Early modern philosophy and the scientific imagination (EMPHASIS) Room 104

“Vain Philosophy”: a 17th century theme Catherine Wilson (Aberdeen) Cu

Monday 8 November 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Research training Venue tbc

Research methodologies

17:15–19:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: London Shakespeare: Room G35

London Shakespeare

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Music in Britain Wolfson Room

Music in Britain (title tbc)

18:00–19:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar Charles Clore House

Modern alternatives to the traditional family: international perspectives on third party reproduction

Roslyn Knutson (Arkansas) and Evelyn Tribble (Otago) Cu

Julie Brown (Royal Holloway) M, H

Robert T. Terenzio (Law Offices of Robert T. Terenzio, Orlando, Florida), Souad Dreyfus (Open Arms Consultants. Inc, Bradenton,Florida) L

Tuesday 9 November 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Research training Room G32

www.sas.ac.uk

Research methodologies

53


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: London group of historical geographers Wolfson Room

‘Startling as the subject may at first sight appear’: Maritime infrastructure and the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company Anyaa Anim-Addo (Royal Holloway) H

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Military history Germany Room

SOE, the French resistance and the Battle for the Indre, June–September 1944 Declan O’Reilly (East Anglia) H

18:00–19:30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Introduction to Lexis and Westlaw: hands-on session L

Wednesday 10 November 2010 10–12 November 2010 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Conference / Symposium Cumberland Lodge

2010 Commonwealth Conference: citizenship and the Commonwealth For more information see p.15 Cu, D, H, Hu, Po

10:00–18:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Conference / Symposium Room ST274/275

London French Postgraduate Conference 2010: The other’s others - othering and marginalisation in French feminism and beyond For more information see p.16 Cu, H

10:00–13:00 School of Advanced Study Research training Venue tbc

Managing information for research

15:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Mycenaean Series Lecture Room G22/26

Late Mycenaean Thebes: textile industry and other activities in the Kadmeia at the end of the LHIIIB Maria Emmanuela Alberti (Udine) C

54

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

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

Palla Strozzi orator

17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Classical archaeology Room G37

Classical archaeology (title tbc)

17:00–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Latin America Room G32

Aztec gold: facts not fiction

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British history in the long 18th century Wolfson Room

Eighteenth-century Britain 3 minute seminars: a PechaKucha session

17:30–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Rethinking modern Europe Germany Room

The ‘Eastern Question’ and France: nationalism, revolution and exile after 1848-49

Stephen Milner C, Cu, H, P, S

Speaker(s) tbc C

Elizabeth Baquedano (UCL) H, S

Speaker(s) tbc H

Antonio D’Alessandri (Roma III) Chair: Mary Vincent (tbc) H

Thursday 11 November 2010 10:00–18:00 Institute of Philosophy Conference / Symposium Senate Room

Moral decision-making in the face of risk and uncertainty For more information see p.16 P

10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Advanced use of databases at Institute of Advanced Legal Studies for postgraduate students L

www.sas.ac.uk

55


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Research training Room ST275

Basic skills for thesis preparation

16:00–18:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: Aesthetics forum Room 104

Art, ethics and critical pluralism

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

Ancient history (title tbc)

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Seminar series: Directions in musical research Room G35

Electrophysiological correlates of music skill learning

Katherine Thomson-Jones P

Speaker(s) tbc C

David Wright (Manchester Metropolitan) Chair: Dave Smith (Manchester Metropolitan) M

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British history in the 17th century Germany Room

William Perkins, ‘Atheisme’ and the crises of England’s Long Reformation

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: London seminar in digital text and scholarship Room G27

Software programs, authorship attribution, and the nature of language

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Textual scholarship Venu tbc

Reflections on editing early modern texts

18:00–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Lecture Room G27

Free trade and revolutionary American diplomacy

56

Leif Dixon (Cambridge) H

Brian Vickers (Institute of English Studies) Cu

Michael Hunter (Birkbeck) Cu

Paul Gilje (Oklahoma) E, Po

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

18:00–20:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Lecture Chancellor’s Hall

2010 Bithell Memorial Lecture: Berlin. A clash of histories.

18:30–20:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Seminar Venue tbc

‘Carmen Martín Gaite in Foyles’

Matt Frei (journalist and broadcaster) Cu, H

Speaker(s) tbc Cu In collaboration with the Spanish Embassy in London

Friday 12 November 2010 12–13 November Warburg Institute Colloquium Woburn Square

Epidemics in context Hippocrates, Galen and Hunayn between east and west For more information see p.16 Cu, H, P

10:00–18:00 Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Chancellor’s Hall

The piano trio: history, technique, performance

16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Venue tbc

Postgraduate work in progress (title tbc)

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: History of gardens and landscapes Wolfson Room

Photographing my hobby: sources for an everyday history of garden space

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Finnegans Wake research Room G32

Finnegans Wake research (title tbc)

www.sas.ac.uk

For more information see p.16 M

Speaker(s) tbc C

Rebecca Preston (Royal Holloway) H

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

57


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar Saturday 13 November 2010 14:00–17:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar Room G37

Victorian Popular Fiction Association Forum Cu

Monday 15 November 2010 10:30–17:30 Institute of Musical Research Research training Room ST273

Music, narrative, image

14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Research training Venue tbc

Research methodologies

15:00–17:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Linguistics Room G35

Linguistics seminar (title tbc)

16:00–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Ancient philosophy Room G34

Explorations in Aristotle (via Porphyry): are pitchrelations quantifiable?

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series Woburn Square

History of art (title tbc)

16:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Director’s seminar Room G37

Institute of Classical Studies Director’s seminar (title tbc)

Julie Brown (Royal Holloway), with Robert Samuels (Open) and Holly Rogers (Liverpool) M

David Langslow (Manchester) C

Andrew Barker (Birmingham) C

Susa Berger

Speaker(s) tbc C

58

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

Tuesday 16 November 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Research training Room G34

Research methodologies

17:00–19:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: Logic and metaphysics forum Room ST273

When is a theory a spacetime theory?

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British maritime history Venue tbc

Mending the sick and wounded: the development of naval hospitals in the West Indies, 1740-1800

18:00–21:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Workshop Court Room

GHosting

Eleanor Knox (Institute of Philosophy) P

Cori Convertito-Farrar (Exeter) H

Ricarda Vidal (Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies), Sarah Sparkes (artist-curator)

Wednesday 17 November 2010 10:00–13:00 School of Advanced Study Research training Venue tbc

Managing information for research

13:00–14:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Commonwealth research Room 104

Bombs, burdens, and book reviews: Africans at war 1939-47

14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute Seminar series: Director’s work in progress Warburg Institute

Director’s work in progress (title tbc)

www.sas.ac.uk

David Killingray, (Goldsmiiths & Institute of Commonwealth Studies) H, Cu, Po

Anna Pegoretti Cu, H

59


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:00–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Caribbean studies Room G27

Settler Society in the English Leeward Islands, 1670-1776

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Contemporary British history Wolfson Room

Church and state, 1921-2010: the future of church establishment in Britain

17:15–19:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series: Literature, ideas and society Woburn Square

The rhetoric of death

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Open University book history and bibliography Room ST273

Biographising George Mackay Brown

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Inter-University seminar: Romanticism and postcolonialism Room G37

Representing the revolutionary: the afterlives of Toussaint Louverture

18:00–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Black Britain Room G34

Mother country

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

Contemporary innovative poetry research

60

Natalie Zacek (author of Settler Society in the English Leeward Islands, 1670-1776; University of Manchester) Cu, H, Po, S

Bob Morris (UCL) H

Helen Watanabe-O’Kelly (Oxford), Neil Kenny (Cambridge) Cu, H, P, S

Maggie Fergusson (biographer) Cu

Charles Forsdick (Liverpool) Cu

Stephen Bourne Cu, H, Hu

Andrea Brady (Queen Mary) Cu,

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

Thursday 18 November 2010 18–19 November Institute of Musical Research Research training University of Huddersfield

Composition masterclasses

18–21 November 2010 16:15–18:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Conference / Symposium British Museum

Inca Ushnus: landscape, site and symbol in the Andes

Time tba Institute of Historical Research Workshop Wolfson Room

Digital editing

09:00–18:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Workshop Chancellor’s Hall

Minority and indigenous rights: emerging themes and challenges

Led by: Jennifer Walshe (Brunel), Howard Skempton and Rebecca Saunders M

For more information see p.17 Cu, H

Speaker(s) tbc H

Alexandra Xanthaki (Brunel), Corinne Lennox (Institute of Commonwealth Studies), Anna-Maria Biro (CEU), Nazila Ghanea (Oxford), Paul Havemann (Institute of Commonwealth Studies) D, E, L, H, Hu, Po, S

10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

Advanced use of databases at Institute of Advanced Legal Studies for postgraduate students

12:00–13:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Seminar series: Work in progress Room ST275

The time for poetry, or what composers learn from Baudelaire

12:30–14:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: IP lunchtime seminar Room G35

Measurement theory, gradability, and the semantics of modals

www.sas.ac.uk

L

Helen Abbott (Bangor and Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies) Cu, H

Dan Lassiter (Institute of Philosophy) P

61


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

12:30–14:00 School of Advanced Study Seminar series: Dean’s seminars Room ST274

The political significance of epistemic injustice

14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Research training Venue tbc

EndNote seminar

14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Research training Room ST275

Conducting interviews; oral history

16:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Senate House Friends AGM and lecture The Senate Room

Maintaining excellence under pressure: redefining Cambridge University Library’s role in a rapidly changing informationenvironment

For more information see p.6 P

Ann Jarvis (Cambridge) 4.30pm Senate House Friends AGM followed by a lecture at 6.00pm Cu

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

Ancient history (title tbc)

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Seminar series: Directions in musical research Room G35

Object, objectivity, objection: music in the age of ‘Post-Disciplinarity’

Speaker(s) tbc C

Giles Hooper (Liverpool) Chair: David I Clarke (Newcastle) M

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

62

Cataloguing the additional manuscripts of Cambridge University Library Speaker(s) tbc Cu

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

17:30–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Language policy/ practice in the Commonwealth Room ST275

Events calendar

Linguistic human rights: balancing monolingual and multilingual imperatives: a policy/practice challenge for the Commonwealth Balasubramanyam Chandramohan (Council for Education in the Commonwealth; Kingston; Institute of Commonwealth Studies) Hu

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: American history Pollard Room

The imperialist conspiracy and the political culture of reconstruction America

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Society, culture & belief, 1500-1806 Ecclesiastical History Room

The knowledge of manufactures: industrial surveys in India during the 18th century

18:00–21:00 Institute of Historical Research Creighton Lecture in History Beveridge Hall

The Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation past and present

Andrew Heath H

Maxine Berg (Warwick) H

For more information see p.5 H

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

London theatre Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Friday 19 November 2010 19–20 November Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Conference / Symposium Venue tbc

Association for the Study of Modern Italy (ASMI) Annual Conference 2010: Italy and its pasts: an interdisciplinary conference For more information see p.17 Cu

16:00–19:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Seminar Room ST276

www.sas.ac.uk

From textual to visual Maria-José Blanco (Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies) Cu

63


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room G35

Postgraduate work in progress (title tbc)

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Economic and social history of the premodern world, 1500–1804 Pollard Room

Incidence analysis of the Restoration and Hanoverian excise: a case study of the brewing industry

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: History of gardens and landscapes Wolfson Room

Maps and landscapes

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Ezra Pound Cantos reading group Room G34

Ezra Pound Cantos Reading Group (title tbc)

Speaker(s) tbc C

D’Maris Coffman (Cambridge) H

Rachel Hewitt (Queen Mary) H

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Saturday 20 November 2010 11:00–13:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series Room STB3/6

London 19th century studies (title tbc) Speaker(s) tbc Cu, H

Monday 22 November 2010 15:00–17:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Linguistics Room G35

Linguistics seminar (title tbc)

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series Woburn Square

History of art (title tbc)

64

Victor Bers (Yale) C

Beverly Brown

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Music in Britain Wolfson Room

Music in Britain (title tbc)

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series:Voluntary action history Low Countries Room

Following the absent-minded beggar: a casehistory of a fund-raising campaign of the South African War

Simon Frith (Edinburgh) M, H

John Lee (Bristol) H

17:30–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Decolonization Room G35

Oil and order: repressive violence in Trinidad’s oilfields before 1939 Martin Thomas (Essex) Hu

Tuesday 23 November 2010 10:00–19:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Conference / Symposium Room G35 (Tuesday 23) Room ST273 (Wednesday 24)

Between the past and the future: challenging narratives of memory in Latin America

14:00–17:00 Institute of Musical Research Research training Room G35

‘The sexual politics of Victorian musical aesthetics’ by Derek Scott

For more information see p.17 S, H

Discussion of reading led by Anahid Kassabian (Liverpool) M

14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Research training Room G34

Research methodologies

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: London group of historical geographers Wolfson Room

Infrastructural affectivity: mobility, security, and the history of preparedness

www.sas.ac.uk

Peter Adey (Keele University) H

65


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Military history Germany Room

The British and allied aerial anti-shipping campaign in the Mediterranean, 1940-44 Richard Hammond (Exeter) H

Wednesday 24 November 2010 09:30–19:00 Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Chancellor’s Hall

Middle East and Central Asia music forum

10:00–16:45 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Research training Charles Clore House

How to get a PhD in Law – a national training day for Law PhDs

For more information see p.17 M

Avrom Sherr and Jules Winterton (Institute of Advanced Legal Studies), Lisa Webley (Westminster) and staff of the Institute of Advanced Study Library. L

10:00–13:00 School of Advanced Study Research training Venue tbc

Managing information for research

14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute Seminar series: Director’s work in progress Woburn Square

The “Querelle” on Plato’s text: Trapezuntius vs. Bessarion

16:00–18:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: Aesthetics forum Room STB3

From narrative to fiction: a cognitive philosophy perspective

Fabio Pagani Cu, H, P

Jerome Pelletier P

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

Historiographies of the art and architecture of colonial Latin America Valerie Fraser Cu, H, S

66

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:00–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Latin America Room G32

South America’s regional options: too many and too diverse?

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British history in the long 18th century Room G37

Assessing Mary Prince (c1788– ?): female traveller or anti-slavery campaigner?

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Seminar series Room ST273

London Old and Middle English research (title tbc)

Gian Luca Gardini (Bath; the Bath Latin American Network) D

Beverley Duguid (Royal Holloway) H

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Rethinking modern Europe Germany Room

The uses of displacement: perspectives from modern European history

18:00–21:00 Institute of Historical Research Lecture Wolfson and Pollard Rooms

Douglas Johnson Memorial Lecture

Peter Gatrell (Manchester) H

Speaker(s) tbc H

Thursday 25 November 2010 25–26 November Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Conference / Symposium Room ST274/275

German women’s writing in its European context, 1700–1900

25–26 November 09:30–18:30 Institute of Historical Research Conference / Symposium Wolfson and Pollard Rooms

Blocked arteries: circulation and congestion in history

www.sas.ac.uk

For more information see p.18 Cu, H

For more information see p.18 D, H, S

67


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

10:00–15:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Conference / Symposium Upper Hall, University of London Union

Order’s other histories: re-visiting South America

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

Ethics in research

16:30–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Ancient history Venue tbc

Ancient history (title tbc)

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Seminar series: Directions in musical research Venue tba

Paul Bekker’s ambivalent modernism

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British history in the 17th century Germany Room

John Harwood and the Quaker foreign missions of the 1650s

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Film history Low Countries Room

Hollywood’s historical genre and the ‘Long Road of Women’s Memory’

For more information see p.18 Cu, S

Speaker(s) tbc C

Nanette Nielsen (Nottingham) Chair: Axel Körner (UCL) M

Andy Hopper (Leicester) H

Jennifer Smyth (Warwick) Cu, H

Friday 26 November 2010 14:00–17:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Conference / Symposium Room G35

68

US responses to the stagflation crisis of the 1970s and early 1980s For more information see p.19 H, E

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

14:00–18:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Rising Brazil trends, directions, and challenges The Court Room

International security and energy politics and climate change

16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room G35

Postgraduate work in progress (title tbc)

17:30–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar Series: Singapore Room G32

School languages in Singapore: multiracialism and perfectionism

Speaker(s) tbc E

Speaker(s) tbc C

Anthea F. Gupta (Leeds) Cu, H, Po

17:30–17:30 Marketing Institute of Historical Research Cu, H, P Seminar series: Marxism in culture Venue tbc 18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series Room G35

theory, critical reflexivity & ideology

Charles Peake Ulysses Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Saturday 27 November 2010 10:00–17:00 Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

RMA AGM and Dent Medal Study Day in honour of Dean Sutcliffe For more information see p.19 M

Monday 29 November 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Research training Venue tbc

www.sas.ac.uk

Research methodologies

69


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

14:00–17:00 Institute of Musical Research Seminar Room ST273

The urtext revisited Barry Cooper (Manchester), Roy Mowatt (Orchestra of the Age of the Enlightenment / Founteyne Editions) and Rupert Ridgewell (British Library) M

15:00–17:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Linguistics Room G35

Linguistics seminar (title tbc)

16:00–18:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Seminar Room ST275

Claudia Pineiro’s Las viudas de los jueves

16:00–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Ancient philosophy Room G34

Aristotle on mathematics as useful fiction

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series Woburn Square

History of art (title tbc)

16:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Director’s seminar Room G37

Institute of Classical Studies Director’s seminar (title tbc)

Anna Morpurgo Davies (Oxford) C

Claire Lindsay (UCL) Cu

Edward Hussey (Oxford) C

Maddalena Spagnolo Cu, H

Speaker(s) tbc C

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

Mandela: the man and his legacy

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Djuna Barnes research Room G35

The illustrations of Djuna Barnes

70

Peter Hain (MP for Neath) H, Po, L, Hu

Joanne Winning (Birkbeck) Cu

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

Tuesday 30 November 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Research training Room G34 17:00–19:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: Logic and metaphysics forum Room ST273

Research methodologies

Explanation and fundamentality Carrie Jenkins (Nottingham) P

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British maritime history Venue tbc

From protection to policing: the changing role of the Royal Navy in the 1760s

17:30–19:00 School of Advanced Study Visiting Professorial Fellow Lecture Chancellor’s Hall

Between powers: the Amerindian confederations of Charcas (Bolivia) before and after the Spanish invasion

Sarah Kinkel (Yale) H

For more information see p.6 CU, D, E, H, L, Po, S

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

History of libraries research

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Djuna Barnes research seminar Room G32

Djuna Barnes research seminar (title tbc)

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Wednesday 1 December 2010 10:00–13:00 School of Advanced Study Research training Venue tbc

www.sas.ac.uk

Managing information for research

71


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute Seminar series: Director’s work in progress Woburn Square

The Red Monastery church in Egypt: reconstructing a late-antique environment

17:00–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Caribbean studies Room G27

Crime and democracy in contemporary Jamaica

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Contemporary British history Wolfson Room

Managing the body. Beauty, health and fitness in Britain, 1880s–1939.

17:00–19:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Panel Room G27

Crime and democracy in contemporary Jamaica

Nicholas Warner Cu, H

Amanda Sives (Liverpool) and Rivke Jaffe (Leiden) Followed by book launch of Elections,Violence and the Democratic Process in Jamaica, 1944-2007 by Amanda Sives (Ian Randle Publications, 2010) Cu, H, Po, L

Ina Zweiniger-Bargielowska (Illinois, Chicago) H

Amanda Sives (Liverpool) and Rivke Jaffe (Leiden) Followed by book launch of Elections,Violence and the Democratic Process in Jamaica, 1944-2007 by Amanda Sives (Ian Randle Publications, 2010) S

Thursday 2 December 2010 2–4 December 2010 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Conference / Symposium Venue tbc

Women’s filmmaking in France 2000-2010

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: History of education Room G35

Primary education and the construction of citizenship in Brazil, 1870–1930

For more information see p.19 Cu, H

Maria Cristina Soares de Gouvea (Federal University of Minos Gerais, Brazil) H

72

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

12:30–14:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: IP lunchtime seminars Room G37

IP lunchtime seminar (title tbc)

14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Research training Venue tbc

EndNote seminar

14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Research training Room G26

Working in archives

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

Ancient history (title tbc)

17:00–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series: Maps and society Woburn Square

The Compost of Ptolemy and the Gosson Map (1600/1623?): English geographic thought and the Early Modern print Almanac

Will Bynoe (Institute of Philosophy)

Speaker(s) tbc C

Meg Roland Cu, H

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Seminar series: Directions in musical research Room G37

New music in silent film - or vice versa?

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series Room G32

Medieval manuscripts

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Postgraduate and early career seminar Low Countries Room

Spiritual engines:the politics of mechanical physiology and medicine in Restoration England

www.sas.ac.uk

Yati Durant (Edinburgh) Chair: Julie Brown (Royal Holloway) M

Rebecca Rushforth. Cu

Steve Ridge (UCL) H

73


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: American history Pollard Room

Cross-cultural encounters in Hispano Art, 19301950

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Society, culture & belief, 1500-1802 Ecclesiastical History Room

Globalization, conquest and the making of European medical knowledge in the 18th century

18:00–19:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Lecture Charles Clore House

Taking stock of Union citizenship: empty rhetoric or a meaningful status for member state nationals?

Stephanie Lewthwaite H, Cu

Pratik Chakrabarti (Kent) H

Alina Tryfonidou (Centre for European Law and Integration, Leicester) L

18:30–20:30 Institute of English Studies Seminar series Room G357

London theatre (title tbc) Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Friday 3 December 2010 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Conference / Symposium Charles Clore House

Experiencing the Law 2010: Sex, sexualities and the law - changing attitudes or perpetuating stereotypes? For more information see p.19 L

10:00–16:00 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Venue tbc

Palaeography and post-palaeography: manuscripts from the 1st to the 21st century For more information see p.20 Cu

16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room G35

74

Postgraduate work in progress (title tbc) Speaker(s) tbc C

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Economic and social history of the premodern world, 1500 - 1803 Pollard Room

Events calendar

‘If you were hier you could gaine what you please, for theris many English and several Scots that you might deall with’: the British commercial dynamic on the French Atlantic coast, c. 1603–1707 Siobhan Talbott (St Andrews; Institute of Historical Research) H

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: History of gardens and landscapes Wolfson Room

Gardens to please, to cure, and to instruct: documents and reality in Venice, 1550–1630

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Irish studies Room G32

Irish studies (title tbc)

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Finnegans Wake research Room ST273

Finnegans Wake research (title tbc)

Valentina Pugliano (Oxford; Institute of Historical Research) H

Speaker(s) tba Cu

Speaker(s) tba Cu

Saturday 4 December 2010 Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

The impact of ethnomusicology

10:00–17:30 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Venue tbc

Radical imagination: reflections on the work of Sally Ledger

For more information see p.20 M

For more information see p.20 Cu

10:00–17:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Workshop Institute of Archaeology, UCL

www.sas.ac.uk

South American archaeology seminar Convenors: Bill Sillar (UCL) and Gill Hey (Oxford Archaeological Unit) S

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

10:30–16:15 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Research training Venue tbc

Saturday research training workshop: computing in the humanities

14:00–16:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Early modern philosophy and the scientific imagination (EMPHASIS) Room STB9

Rethinking representation in early modern natural philosophy

14:00–16:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Education in the long 18th century Germany Room

Continuing education: social and political instruction for adults in 18th-century conversational fiction

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Alexander Wragge-Morley (HPS, Cambridge), Florence Grant (King’s, London) Cu

Caroline Rozell (Oxford) H

14:30–18:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Modernism The Court Room

Future work in modernism studies Douglas Mao Cu

Monday 6 December 2010 10:00–17:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Conference / Symposium Room STB9

The Americas and the Cold War

14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Research training Venue tbc

Research methodologies

15:00–18:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Seminar series: German philosophy reading group Room G32

Translation as comment, critique and utopia - the 125th birthday of Ernst Bloch

76

For more information see p.20 H, Po

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

15:00–17:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Linguistics Room G35

Linguistics seminar (title tbc)

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series Woburn Square

History of art (title tbc)

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series:Voluntary action history Low Countries Room

The myth of the 1950s housewife: voluntary women’s organisations and the challenge to idealised domesticity in post war Britain

Michael Crawford (London) C

Paul Taylor Cu, H

Caitriona Beaumont (London South Bank) H

17:30–17:30 School of Advanced Study Lecture Chancellor’s Hall

The NZ/UK Link Foundation visiting professorship lectures programme 2010–11: Mainstreaming human rights in public policy: the New Zealand experience For more information see p.6 L, Hu, Po

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series Room G32

Postgraduate feminist reading group Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Tuesday 7 December 2010 12:00–14:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar Room STB8

No place like home: mapping the boundaries of home, art and belonging in Afro-Brazilian and Nippo-Brazilian aesthetics (street art) Aino Rinhaug (Postdoctoral research fellow (UiO) and Visiting Fellow, London) Cu

14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Research training STB7

www.sas.ac.uk

Research methodologies

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: London group of historical geographers Wolfson Room

The Bombay case: colonial space and astronomical infrastructure

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Military history Germany Room

The fourth Battle of Colenso and the genesis of operational art

Simon Schaffer (Cambridge) H

Simon House (King’s, London) H

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

Accordia lecture (title tbc)

18:00–19:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Lecture Charles Clore House

The challenge of climate adaptation

Speaker(s) tbc C

Daniel A Farber (Berkeley Law School, California) L

Wednesday 8 December 2010 15:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Mycenaean Series Lecture Room G22/26

Textile towns 3500 years ago? New evidence for domestic textile production in east Crete Tom Brogan (INSTAP East Crete) C

16:00–18:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: Aesthetics forum Room ST273

Art or porn: clear division or false dilemma?

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

Petrarch on fama: the Trionfi and the Africa

78

Hans Maes P

Philip Hardie C, Cu, H, P

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

17:00–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Latin America Room G32

Events calendar

Chacaracual Community Conservation Area, Margarita Island: integration of biodiversity conservation with community development Bibiana Sucre (Asociación Civil Provita) D

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British history in the long 18th century Wolfson Room

A double anniversary?: remembering and forgetting the Glorious Revolution in 18th- and 19th-century England James McConnel (Northumbria) H

18:00–19:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Lecture Charles Clore House

On transparency and privacy (title tbc) James Michael (Institute of Advanced Legal Studies; editor, Privacy Laws & Business International) L

Thursday 9 December 2010 12:00–13:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Seminar series: Work in progress Room ST276

The Dionysian spirit in the deveopment of German expressionism,1890–1917

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

Research Skills Workshop: surveys and questionnaires

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Seminar series: Directions in musical research Room G26

Making music with Alfred Cortot

www.sas.ac.uk

Sharon Jordan (Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies) Cu

Daniel Leech-Wilkinson (King’s, London) Chair: Jonathan Summers (British Library) M

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:15–19:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Lecture Room ST273

Compromise and commitment in Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British history in the 17th century Germany Room

The diary of Ralph Josselin as a weather record, c. 1644–83: a comparative study

17:30–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Language policy/ practice in the Commonwealth Room G34

Linguistic human rights: language and globalization of higher education: a practitioner’s viewpoint

Ernest Schonfield (London) Cu, H

Joyce Macadam (Independent scholar) H

Elizabeth Thussu (Heythrop, London) Hu

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: London seminar in digital text and scholarship Room G35

The catalogue of English literary manuscripts 1450-1700

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Film history Low Countries Room

Warwickshire County Council, John Profumo and British film censorship: Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1960)

H. R. Woudhuysen (UCL) Cu

Tony Aldgate (Open) Cu, H

Friday 10 December 2010 00:00–00:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Conference / Symposium Room ST274/275

Carmen Martín Gaite 10 years on: revisiting her textual and visual legacy

09:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies John Coffin Memorial Reading Senate House

Mick Imlah: his life and work

80

For more information see p.21 Cu

For more information see p.5 Cu

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

13:00–18:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Workshop Room ST274/275

Events calendar

Latin American independence movements: causes, course and consequences Confirmed participants include David Brading (Cambridge),Victor Bulmer-Thomas (Emeritus Professor, London), Nicola Miller (UCL), Eduardo Posada-Carb (Oxford) and Dr Natalia Sobrevilla (Kent) Convenor: Kevin Middlebrook (Institute for the Study of the Americas) H, Po

14:00–18:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Rising Brazil trends, directions, and challenges The Court Room

Democracy, human rights and Brazil in the world: visions and future directions

16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room STB9

Postgraduate work in progress (title tbc)

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Ezra Pound Cantos reading group Room G34

Canto 120

Speaker(s) tbc Po, D

Speaker(s) tbc C

Richard Parker (Sussex) Cu

Saturday 11 December 2010 11:00–13:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series Room STB3/6

London 19th century studies (title tbc) Speaker(s) tbc Cu, H

Monday 13 December 2010 13–15 December 2010 Cont 19–21 January 2011 Institute of Musical Research Short course Stewart House

www.sas.ac.uk

German for musicologists Tutor: Monika Hennemann (Birmingham) M

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Research training Venue tbc

Research methodologies

16:00–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Ancient philosophy Room G34

The philosophy of accounting in classical athens

16:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Director’s seminar Room ST273

Institute of Classsical Studies Director’s seminar (title tbc)

Serafina Cuomo (Birkbeck) C

Speaker(s) tbc C

17:15–19:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: London Shakespeare Room 22/26

London Shakespeare Gail Marshall (Leicester) and Stuart Sillars (Bergen) Ciu

Tuesday 14 December 2010 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Lecture Beveridge Hall

Lawyers and the public good: judges

17:00–19:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: Logic and metaphysics forum Room ST273

Counterparts, actuality

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British maritime history Venue tbc

Fighting on the periphery: the Crimean War in the Arctic, 1854–55

82

Alan Paterson (Strathyclyde) L

Joseph Melia (Oxford) P

Andrew Lambert (King’s, London) H

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

18:00–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Black Britain Room G34

Events calendar

Black Britain (title tbc) Speaker(s) tbc Cu, H, Hu

Wednesday 15 December 2010 15-17 December Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Chancellor’s Hall

Musical exchanges between Ancient Egypt and the Near East during, before and after the Hyksos Kings For more information see p.21 M

12:30–14:00 School of Advanced Study Seminar series: Dean’s seminars Room G34

Web-site of memory: the war of the Pacific (18791884) in the global age of YouTube

13:00–14:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Commonwealth research Room 104

Nkrumah and Pan-Africanism

17:00–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: Caribbean studies Venue tbc

The rise, decline and fall of the Belize economy before independence

17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Classical archaeology Room G22/26

Classical archaeology (title tbc)

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Contemporary innovative poetry research seminar Room G35

Poetry and migration

www.sas.ac.uk

For more information see p.7 H

Marika Sherwood (Institute of Commonwealth Studies) Cu, H, Po, L

Victor Bulmer-Thomas (London) Cu, L, Po, H, E

Speaker(s) tbc C

David Herd (Kent) Cu

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar Thursday 16 December 2010 17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Postgraduate and early career seminar Low Countries Room

The rocks become drunk: changing conceptions of drunkenness in Mexico, c. 1400–1900

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar series: American history Pollard Room

The African period of slavery in America

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

Wyndham Lewis reading group

Deborah Toner (Warwick) H

Trevor Burnard H

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Friday 17 December 2010 17:30–17:30 The Marxism of Institute of Historical Research Peter Thomas (Brunel) Seminar series: Marxism in culture Cu, H, P Venue tbc

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

Raymond Williams

Charles Peake Ulysses Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Saturday 8 January 2011 14:00–16:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Early modern philosophy and the scientific imagination (EMPHASIS) Room 104

84

History and natural philosophy in the 16th and 17th centuries Per Landgren (Gothenburg; visiting scholar, Oxford), Dmitri Levitin (Cambridge) Cu

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

Tuesday 11 January 2011 17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British maritime history Venue tbc

Guerrillas at sea: Maratha challenges to Bombay’s regional supremacy, c. 1690-1756

17:30–20:30 Institute of Classical Studies ICLS Accordia lecture Room G22/26

Accordia lecture (title tbc)

Derek Elliott (Cambridge) H

Speaker(s) tbc C

Wednesday 12 January 2011 16:00–18:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: Aesthetics forum Room ST273

Institute of Philosophy aesthetics forum (title tbc)

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Contemporary British history Wolfson Room

Contemporary British history (title tbc)

Gary Hagberg P

Anthony Seldon (Wellington School) H

Thursday 13 January 2011 12:00–13:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Seminar series: Work in progress Room ST276

Faces and masks: reconstructions of the human body on early modern stage and in modern painting Adriana Bontea (Sussex; Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies) Cu

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

Ancient history seminar (title tbc)

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: London seminar in digital text and scholarship Room G32

Comic book markup language: challenges and opportunities

www.sas.ac.uk

Speaker(s) tbc C

Ernesto Priego Cu

85


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Society, culture & belief, 1500-1803 Ecclesiastical History Room

Making French coffee, 1670-1730: networks, trade routes and knowledge Emma Spary (Cambridge) H

Friday 14 January 2011 16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room G35

Postgraduate work in progress (title tbc)

17:00–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series: History of scholarship Woburn Square

History of scholarship (title tbc)

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

Ezra Pound Cantos reading group (title tbc)

Speaker(s) tbc C

Speaker(s) tbc C

Cu

Saturday 15 January 2011 10:30–16:15 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Research training Room ST275

Theoretical applications

11:00–13:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series Room G22/26

London 19th century studies (title tbc)

Cu

Speaker(s) tbc Cu, H

Monday 17 January 2011 16:00–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Ancient philosophy Room G34

86

Geometrical and physical astronomy in Aristotle and Ptolemy Ian Mueller (Chicago) C

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

16:00–18:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Seminar series: German philosophy reading group Room G32

German philosophy reading group (title tbc)

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series Woburn Square

History of art (title tbc)

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Speaker(s) tbc

Tuesday 18 January 2011 18:00–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Black Britain Room G34

Black Britain (title tbc) Speaker(s) tbc Cu, H, Hu

Wednesday 19 January 2011 13:00–14:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Commonwealth research Room 104

Militant philosopher of the third world revolution: Frantz Fanon 50 years on Leo Zeilig (Commonwealth Policy Studies Unit, Institute of Commonwealth Studies) H, Hu, L, Po, Cu

14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute Seminar series Woburn Square

Director’s work in progress (title tbc)

15:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Mycenaean series lecture Room G22/26

Prehistoric Ionia reconsidered: new excavations at the Heraion, Samos, and on the western littoral of Asia Minor

Speaker(s) tbc

Ourania Kouka (Nicosia) C

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Seminar series Room ST273

London Old and Middle English research (title tbc) Speaker(s) tbc Cu

www.sas.ac.uk

87


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Contemporary innovative poetry research seminar Room G35

Barry MacSweeney William Rowe (Birkbeck)

Thursday 20 January 2011 12:30–14:00 Institute of Philosophy Seminar series: IP lunchtime seminar Room G35

On the idea that being is easy

14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Research training Venue tbc

EndNote seminar

14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Research training Room ST275

Surveys and questionnaires

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

Ancient history (title tbc)

17:00–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series: Maps and society Woburn Square

The first two centuries of Mercator Projection Sea Charts: positioning the practitioners, leaving the ships at sea?

Matti Eklund P

Speaker(s) tbc C

Gillian Hutchinson Cu, H

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Seminar series: Directors in musical research Room G35

88

Directions in musical research (title tbc) Speaker(s) tbc M

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:30–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Language policy/ practice in the Commonwealth Room ST275

Linguistic human rights (title tbc)

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

A short art-history of the Liber Extra (Gregory IX’s Decretals)

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: American history Pollard Room

The politics of deference in the Antebellum South

18:30–20:30 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: London theatre Room G357

London theatre (title tbc)

Speaker(s) tbc Hu

Robert Gibbs (Glasgow) Cu

Erik Mathisen H

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Friday 21 January 2011 16:00–19:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Seminar Room ST276

From textual to visual

16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Postgraduate work in progress Room G35

Postgraduate work in progress (title tbc)

17:00–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series: History of scholarship Woburn Square

History of scholarship (title tbc)

www.sas.ac.uk

Katia Pizzi (Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies) Cu

Speaker(s) tbc C

Speaker(s) tbc C

89


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Finnegans Wake research Room G35

Finnegans Wake research (title tbc) Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Monday 24 January 2011 16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series: History of art Woburn Square

History of art (title tbc)

17:30–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Decolonization Room G35

Decolonization (title tbc)

Speaker(s) tbc

Speaker(s) tbc Hu

Tuesday 25 January 2011 14:00–16:00 Institute of Musical Research Research training Room G35

Publishing

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: British maritime history Venue tbc

Medical authority afloat: Royal Naval surgeons on convict ships, c. 1815-68

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

FBSA Lectures

Suzanne Ryan (OUP) M

Dr Kirsty Reid (Bristol) H

Speaker(s) tbc C

Wednesday 26 January 2011 14:15–15:30 Warburg Institute Seminar series: Director’s work in progress Woburn Square

90

Director’s work in progress (title tbc) Speaker(s) tbc

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Seminar series: Classical archaeology Room G22/26

Classical archaeology (title tbc)

17:00–17:00 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Contemporary British history Wolfson Room

Letting women serve at sea: equality debates in the Royal Navy, 1974-1990

18:30–20:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Seminar Room ST274/275

Seminar in visual culture 2011: outer space

Speaker(s) tbc C

Kath Sherit (CCBH, King’s, London) H

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Thursday 27 January 2011 14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Research training Room ST275

Giving a seminar or conference paper

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

Ancient history (title tbc)

17:15–19:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Lecture Room ST273

Werther’s love: notes on voluntary self-divestiture

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Film history Low Countries Room

The London filmmakers’ cooperative, 1966-96

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar series: Society, culture & belief, 1500-1800 Ecclesiastical History Room

A world in balance? Geographical thought in the 16th century

www.sas.ac.uk

Speaker(s) tbc C

Michael Gratzke (St Andrews) Cu, H

Joy Payne (Open) Cu, H

Margaret Small (Birmingham) H

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October 2010—January 2011

Events calendar

18:30–21:30 Institute of Historical Research Other events Chancellor’s Hall

IHR film evening Terry Jones H

Friday 28 January 2011 Institute of Musical Research Study day Chancellor’s Hall

Dutilleux

10:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Conference / Symposium Room ST274/275

The impact of caravaggio on contemporary culture

10:30–10:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Workshop Venue tbc

Creating the child’s voice

16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room G35

Postgraduate work in progress (title tbc)

17:00–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series: History of scholarship Woburn Square

History of scholarship (title tbc)

17:30–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar series: Singapore Room 104

Penal Code 377A (tbc)

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Seminar series: Charles Peake Ulysses Room G35

Charles Peake Ulysses

92

Keynote speaker: Julian Anderson (Guildhall School of Music & Drama) M

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

Speaker(s) tbc C

Speaker(s) tbc C

Simon Obendorf (Lincoln) HR, H, L, Po

Speaker(s) tbc Cu

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2010—January 2011

18:30–21:00 Institute of Historical Research Lecture Venue tbc

Events calendar

The history PhD: past, present, future Speaker(s) tbc H

Monday 31 January 10:30–17:30 Institute of Musical Research Research training Room ST273

Performance Studies

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute Seminar series: History of art Woburn Square

History of art (title tbc)

www.sas.ac.uk

Elaine King (Hull), Julian Hellaby (Coventry) and John Irving (Institute of Musical Research) M

Speaker(s) tbc

93


Research training

Research training The School draws on the research and teaching expertise of the Institutes to provide a programme of discipline-specific and generic Research training to support scholarly development. The following Research training events are also listed in the events calendar. For further information visit www.sas.ac.uk/ researchtraining.html or contact rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

4, 11 October 2010 10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

Introduction to Institute of Advanced Legal Studies electronic resources A demonstration of different databases available on the IALS Electronic Law Library for postgraduate law students: how to login, how to search and browse for legislation, case law and journalarticles, and how to find help with databases when you need it. Contact: gerard.power@sas.ac.uk or phone 020 7862 5821

5, 7, 12, 13, 18, 19, 25, 26, 27 October 2010 10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

Introduction to Lexis and Westlaw: hands-on session Electronic information training session for postgraduate law students. How to login and find different databases, and how to search and browse effectively. Contact: gerard.power@sas.ac.uk or phone 020 7862 5821

6 October 2010 14:30–16:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

Introduction to Institute of Advanced Legal Studies electronic resources

14, 28 October 2010 10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

Advanced use of databases at Institute of Advanced Legal Studies for postgraduate students

A demonstration of different databases available on the IALS Electronic Law Library for postgraduate law students: how to login, how to search and browse for legislation, case law and journalarticles, and how to find help with databases when you need it.. Contact: gerard.power@sas.ac.uk or phone 020 78625821

This workshop aims to identify and use some of the advanced search and browse techniques which are possible when using databases on the IALS Electronic Law Library. Basic skills in Lexis and West law are required of those students who wish to participate. Contact: gerard.power@sas.ac.uk or phone 020 78625821.

94

www.sas.ac.uk


Research training

25 October 2010 10:30–17:30 Institute of Musical Research Room ST273

Music and social meanings Ann van Allen Russell (Trinity College of Music), Sophie Fuller (Trinity College of Music), Jennifer Doctor (York) and Leanne Langley Socio-historical and interdisciplinary approaches to newspapers,letters, broadcast media, BBC and national archives. Contact: valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

27 October 2010 10:30–17:00 Institute of Musical Research British Library

Twentieth century British music Tutors: Sandra Tuppen and Nicolas Bell Study day at the British Library. Maximum of 8 places available for postgraduate students. For details of selection procedure please see www.music.sas.ac.uk Contact: valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

28 October 2010 14:00–17:00 School of Advanced Study Room G26

Applying for research funding Applying for research funding. research skills workshops provide transferable Research training for all MPhil and PhD students in the humanities and social sciences. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

28 October 2010 14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Venue tbc

EndNote seminar

29 October 2010 14:00–17:00 Institute of Musical Research STB3

‘The work of art in the age of mechanical reproduction’ by Walter Benjamin

Basic training in electronic bibliographic techniques, primarily for School research students. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

Research training reading group: classic texts in music and culture. Discussion of readings (available in advance). Further details available from a.kassabian@liv.ac.uk Contact: valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

1 November 2010 10:30–17:30 Institute of Musical Research Room ST273

Crossing borders Rachel Beckles Willson (Royal Holloway), with David R M Irving (Cambridge) andKatherine Schofield (King’s, London) Cultural identity, anthropologies of music, socio-political perspectives Contact: valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk

95


Research training

1, 3, 9 November 2010 18:00–19:30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

Introduction to Lexis and Westlaw: hands-on session Electronic information training session for postgraduate lawstudents. How to login and find different databases, and how to search and browse effectively. Contact: gerard.power@sas.ac.uk or phone 020 78625821.

2 November 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Room STB3/6

Research methodologies: Introduction to research methods An introduction to the key research methodologies in social sciences, covering both theoretical and empirical research methods. These seminars are primarily aimed at the School’s own research students working in the social sciences, but external students are able to attend for a fee. Session 1: Introduction to research methods. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

4, 11, 18 November 2010 10:30–12:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

Advanced use of databases at Institute of Advanced Legal Studies for postgraduate students

4 November 2010 14:00–17:00 School of Advanced Study Room ST273

Project organisation and management

6 November 2010 10:30–16:15 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Room STB3/6

Saturday research training workshop: libraries and archives

96

This workshop aims to identify and use some of the advanced search and browse techniques which are possible when using databases on the IALS Electronic Law Library. Basic skills in Lexis and Westlaw are required of those students who wish to participate. Contact: gerard.power@sas.ac.uk or phone 020 78625821.

Project organisation and management. Research skills workshops provide transferable Research training for all MPhil and PhD students in the humanities and social sciences. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

Speaker(s) tbc Contact: igrs@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk


Research training

8 November 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Venue tbc

Research methodologies: conducting and analysing surveys An introduction to the key research methodologies in social sciences, covering both theoretical and empirical research methods. These seminars are primarily aimed at the School’s own research students working in the social sciences, but external students are able to attend for a fee. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

9 November 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Room G32

Research methodologies: research design and strategy An introduction to the key research methodologies in social sciences, covering both theoretical and empirical research methods. These seminars are primarily aimed at the School’s own research students working in the social sciences, but external students areable to attend for a fee. Session 2: Research design and strategy.l Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

10 November 2010 10:00–13:00 School of Advanced Study Venue tbc

Managing information for research: literature searching and review Designed and run by specialist Senate House Library staff, this is a library and research skills training course for School students, focusing on providing them with the information retrieval and informaton management skills required. Session 1: Literature searching and review. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

11 November 2010 14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Room ST275

Basic skills for thesis preparation Basic skills for thesis preparation. Research skills workshops provide transferable Research training for all MPhil and PhD students in the humanities and social sciences. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

15 November 2010 10:30–17:30 Institute of Musical Research Room ST273

Music, narrative, image Julie Brown (Royal Holloway), with Robert Samuels (Open) and Holly Rogers (Liverpool) Narrative, imagery, representation and meaning Contact: valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

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Research training 15 November 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Venue tbc

Research methodologies: descriptive statistics An introduction to the key research methodologies in social sciences, covering both theoretical and empirical research methods. These seminars are primarily aimed at the School’s own research students working in the social sciences, but external students are able to attend for a fee. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

16 November 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Room G34

Research methodologies: qualitative research 1 An introduction to the key research methodologies in social sciences, covering both theoretical and empirical research methods. These seminars are primarily aimed at the School’s own research students working in the social sciences, but external students are able to attend for a fee. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

17 November 2010 10:00–13:00 School of Advanced Study Venue tbc

Managing information for research: utilising online information

18 November 2010 14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Venue tbc

EndNote seminar

18 November 2010 14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Room ST275

Conducting interviews; oral history

Designed and run by specialist Senate House Library staff, this is a library and research skills training course for School students, focusing on providing them with the information retrieval and informaton management skills required. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

Basic training in electronic bibliographic techniques, primarily for School research students. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

Conducting interviews; oral history. Research skills workshops provide transferable Research training forall MPhil and PhD students in the humanities and social sciences. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

18–19 November 2010 Institute of Musical Research University of Huddersfield

Composition masterclasses Led by Jennifer Walshe (Brunel), Howard Skempton and Rebecca Saunders Maximum of 9 places available for postgraduate student composers. For details of selection procedure please see www.music.sas.ac.uk Contact: valerie.james@sas.ac.uk In association with CeReNeM, the Centre for Research in New Music and the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival

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Research training

23 November 2010 14:00–17:00 Institute of Musical Research Room G35

The sexual politics of Victorian musical aesthetics Derek Scott Discussion of reading led by Anahid Kassabian (Liverpool) Research training reading group: classic texts in music and culture. Discussion of readings (available in advance). Contact: valerie.james@sas.ac.uk

23 November 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Room G34

Research methodologies: inferential statistics An introduction to the key research methodologies in social sciences, covering both theoretical and empirical research methods. These seminars are primarily aimed at the School’s own researchstudents working in the social sciences, but external students are able to attend for a fee. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

23 November 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Venue tbc

Research methodologies: qualitative research 2 An introduction to the key research methodologies in social sciences, covering both theoretical and empirical research methods. These seminars are primarily aimed at the School’s own research students working in the social sciences, but external students are able to attend for a fee. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

24 November 2010 10:00–16:45 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

How to get a PhD in Law – a national training day for Law PhDs Avrom Sherr and Jules Winterton (Instittue of Advanced Legal Studies), Lisa Webley (University of Westminster) and staff of the IALS Library. Students enrolled for an M.Phil/PhD in Law from across the UK are warmly invited to attend a specially tailored day of presentations, library tours and networking opportunities at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Library. There is no course fee, but places are limited so all attendees must register in advance. Contact: david.gee@sas.ac.uk

24 November 2010 10:00–13:00 School of Advanced Study Venue tbc

Managing information for research: copyright, referencing and plagiarism Designed and run by specialist Senate House Library staff, this is a library and research skills training course for School students, focusing on providing them with the information retrieval and informaton management skills required. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk

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Research training

25 November 2010 14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Room G34

Ethics in research Ethics in research. Research skills workshops provide transferable research training for all MPhil and PhD students in the humanities and social sciences. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

29 November 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Venue tbc

Research methodologies: correlation An introduction to the key research methodologies in social sciences, covering both theoretical and empirical research methods. These seminars are primarily aimed at the School’s own research students working in the social sciences, but external students are able to attend for a fee. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

30 November 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Room G34

Research methodologies: qualitative research 3 An introduction to the key research methodologies in social sciences, covering both theoretical and empirical research methods. These seminars are primarily aimed at the School’s own research students working in the social sciences, but external students are able to attend for a fee. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

1 December 2010 10:00–13:00 School of Advanced Study Venue tbc

Managing information for research: keeping up to date in your subject Designed and run by specialist Senate House Library staff, this is a library and research skills training course for School students, focusing on providing them with the information retrieval and informaton management skills required. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

2 December 2010 14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Venue tbc

EndNote seminar

2 December 2010 14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Room G26

Working in archives

Basic training in electronic bibliographic techniques, primarily for School research students. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

Working in archives. Research skills workshops provide transferable Research training for all MPhil and PhD students in the humanities and social sciences. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

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Research training

4 December 2010 10:30–16:15 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Venue tbc

Saturday research training workshop: computing in the humanities Speaker(s) tbc Space is very limited, so it is essential that you register in advance. Contact: igrs@sas.ac.uk

6 December 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Venue tbc

Research methodologies: introduction to regression analysis An introduction to the key research methodologies in social sciences, covering both theoretical and empirical research methods. These seminars are primarily aimed at the School’s own research students working in the social sciences, but external students are able to attend for a fee. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

7 December 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Room STB7

Research methodologies: interviewing and focus groups An introduction to the key research methodologies in social sciences, covering both theoretical and empirical research methods. These seminars are primarily aimed at the School’s own research students working in the social sciences, but external students areable to attend for a fee. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

9 December 2010 14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Room G34

Research Skills Workshop: surveys and questionnaires Research skills workshops provide transferable research training for all MPhil and PhD students in the humanities and social sciences. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

13 December 2010 14:00–16:30 School of Advanced Study Venue tbc

Research methodologies: introduction to logistic regression An introduction to the key research methodologies in social sciences, covering both theoretical and empirical research methods. These seminars are primarily aimed at the School’s own research students working in the social sciences, but external students are able to attend for a fee. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk

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Research training

15 January 2011 10:30–16:15 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Room ST275

Research Training Programme: theoretical applications

20 January 2011 14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Venue tbc

EndNote seminar

20 January 2011 14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Room ST275

Surveys and questionnaires

Contact: igrs@sas.ac.uk

Basic training in electronic bibliographic techniques, primarily for School research students. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

The PhD Viva. Research skills workshops provide transferable research training for all MPhil and PhD students in the humanities and social sciences. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

25 January 2011 14:00–16:00 Institute of Musical Research Room G35

Publishing

27 January 2011 14:00–16:00 School of Advanced Study Room ST275

Giving a seminar or conference paper

Suzanne Ryan (OUP)

Giving a seminar or conference paper. Research skills workshops provide transferable research training for all MPhil and PhD students in the humanities and social sciences. Contact: rosemary.lambeth@sas.ac.uk

31 January 2011 10:30–17:30 Institute of Musical Research Room ST273

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Performance studies Elaine King (Hull), Julian Hellaby (Coventry) and John Irving (IMR) Psychology of performance, analysis through and in performance, historically informed performance.

www.sas.ac.uk


Calls for papers

Calls for papers 2nd Biennial War Crimes Conference: Justice? Whose justice? Punishment, mediation or reconciliation 3–5 March 2011 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies CFP deadline: 31 October 2010 Proposals are invited for papers examining a range of related issues (practical, theoretical and experiencebased), of around 350 words. This conference is an initiative between SOLON, the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies and the Centre for Contemporary British History at King’s College London, to explore themes surrounding judicial roles and responses to war crimes (broadly construed)– past, present and future – and also responses to such initiatives, from victims/victors, interested agencies and commentators, including the UN, NATO and various local, regional and international NGOs. Does the history of such prosecutions indicate that they should simply expose/reveal or must they always punish? What is the role of mediation in the interests of revelations of ‘truth’, and what impact can strategies for reconciliation have? As well as papers, there will be workshop sessions, aimed at developing strategies to heighten awareness for practitioners and media professionals, or engaging with them. Suggestions for round tables which address the ways in which a fruitful dialogue between academics, practitioners and professionals including those working within the media in these fields are particularly welcome Website: www.sas.ac.uk/events/view/8045 Contact: Belinda Crothers (Belinda.Crothers@sas.ac.uk)

University College London English graduate conference 2011 4 March 2011 Institute of English Studies CFP deadline: 10 January 2011 False or misleading statements, tall tales and gossip are all paradoxically predicated on some particular ‘truth’ that the speaker or writer is trying to convey. Fiction is essentially a lie (though perhaps not intended to deceive) and its presentation of itself as ‘truth’ and the incorporation of historical fact makes it difficult to distinguish the fact from the fib. Lies and deception amass in non-fiction too: the lies inherent in political rhetoric, the bias of biographies and historical chronicles, the representations of fact in arguments for and against an ideology. We welcome proposals from postgraduate students and early-career researchers in all disciplines for 15-20 minute papers related to this theme. Website: www.ies.sas.ac.uk/events/conferences/2011/UCL/index.htm Contact: Jon Millington (jon.millington@sas.ac.uk)

The sounds of early cinema in Britain: performance, realisation and reception 7–8 April 2011 Institute of Musical Research and the Barbican Centre, London AHRC-Funded Beyond Text Network “The Sounds of Early Cinema in Britain” CFP deadline: 30 November 2010 We invite papers from all relevant disciplines for the last in a series of events designed to establish and develop a research network concerned with the sonic dimensions of “silent” film exhibition in Britain, interpreted in the broadest possible sense. Papers concerning the performance, presentation and/or reception of these sonic practices are particularly welcome, as are presentations by composers and performers. We are especially interested in papers on British practices, but welcome proposals facilitating comparisons. www.sas.ac.uk

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Calls for papers Research questions might focus on: - Film accompaniment manuals and photoplay collections - Key British cinema performers - Sonic and musical practices in Britain compared to elsewhere, variations in practices according to county or region, rural versus urban setting, and exhibition context. - Aspects of cine-variety - How differing sonic practices shape our understanding of silent films - Relationships between sonic practices and developments in the narrative structure and purpose of early films (e.g. educational, ‘stories’, newsreel, etc.) - The practice and/or reception of live accompaniment of early cinema in Britain today (avant garde/pop/ historically conscious...) Individual Papers: Abstracts of 250 words for individual papers of up to 20 minutes should be e-mailed, as a Word attachment, to music@sas.ac.uk with the subject line: The Sounds of Early Cinema in Britain. We will also consider shorter presentations of around 10 minutes on specific issues relating to the conference themes. These may be grouped into a panel, or sent individually. Please include your name and title, institutional affiliation (if any), email address, and postal address. 14th British Silent Film Festival 2011 (7th–10th April, 2011) The conference with be sharing its second day (8th April) with the British Silent Film Festival at the Barbican. Papers that include a practice element (composition, performance) are particularly welcome for that day. Postgraduate scholarships: Postgraduate students working in this, and/or related areas may apply for one of two scholarships (to include basic travel and accommodation, and conference fee and refreshments). Applicants should send the following information to music@sas.ac.uk, marking the subject line “PG Scholarships, The Sounds of Early Cinema in Britain”: name, institution where studying, and an outline of their (related) research project. Website: http://projects.beyondtext.ac.uk/soundsearlycinema/index.php Contact: either Dr Julie Brown (julie.brown@rhul.ac.uk) or Dr Annette Davison (a.c.davison@ed.ac.uk)

The power of the word: poetry, theology and life 17–18 June 2011 Institute of English Studies CFP deadline: 15 October 2010 The 24th Ezra Pound International Conference will be held in London, the city where Pound spent the pivotal years of 1908 to 1920 and a place that figures prominently in his work. Proposals for papers are invited on any aspect of Pound’s interaction with London, and/or the English cultural tradition in general. Proposals may interpret the conference theme in specific or broad terms, relating to Pound’s work and life: poetry, prose, translations, textual analysis, biography, comparative studies, literary or political influence, and/or historical matters. Proposals from postgraduate and younger scholars are encouraged. If you are interested in giving a paper, send a short proposal (approximately 250 words). Website: www.ies.sas.ac.uk/events/conferences/2011/Pound/index.htm Contact: jgery@uno.edu

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Calls for papers Music and Philosophy 1–2 July 2011 Institute of Musical Research and Institute of Philosophy CFP deadline: 10 January 2011 1st Annual Conference of the Royal Musical Association Music and Philosophy Study Group Generously supported by the British Society of Aesthetics and the Centre for Music on Stage and Screen (University of Nottingham) The RMA Music and Philosophy Study Group warmly invites paper submissions for their inaugural two-day international conference, to be held in London on 1-2 July 2011. The event, the first of an annual series of conferences run by the Study Group, will offer an opportunity for musicologists and philosophers to share and discuss work in the hope of furthering dialogue between the two disciplines. Paper submissions on all topics related to the area of music and philosophy are welcome, but in particular those relating to this year’s theme of ‘Opera and Philosophy’. Collaboration between persons from different disciplines would be especially welcomed. In addition to papers relating to the conference theme, topics of interest might include (but are not limited to): - music, meaning, and language - perception and expression - music and ethics - music and ontology - performance, authenticity, and interpretation Conference theme 2011: ‘Opera and Philosophy’ For centuries, from Rousseau, through Kierkegaard and Nietzsche, to Adorno, Williams, Zizek, Dolar and beyond, opera has captured the imaginations of philosophers. At the same time, musicology has engaged enthusiastically with connections between philosophical thought and operatic themes, such as, for example, the relationship between music and words, the limits and possibilities of opera as social and political expression, and the rich potential of voice as bearer of meaning and subjectivity. This year’s theme of ‘Opera and Philosophy’ seeks to encourage further discussion of opera as a medium which straddles ontological, metaphysical, and hermeneutic spheres, inviting exploration of issues related to areas such as representation, expression, language, narrative, meaning, and ethics. Proposals of up to 500 words are invited for individual papers (20 minutes) and collaborative papers (up to 30 minutes). Contact: nanette.nielsen@nottingham.ac.uk

The popular imagination and the dawn of modernism: middlebrow writing 1890–1930 15–16 September 2011 Institute of English Studies CFP deadline: 31 January 2011 This conference seeks to examine the emergence of modernism outside elitist, avant-garde notions, particularly focussing on middlebrow literature. Based on the assumption that such works reached a far wider audience than those of the avant-garde, this conference aims to advance research on the production, dissemination and reception of middlebrow and popular fiction between 1890-1930. Papers are invited which address these themes, and those linked to them, with the common factors being the study of textual works produced during the period 1890-1930, in the “British” world. Website: www.ies.sas.ac.uk/events/conferences/2011/Middlebrow2010/index.htm Contact: kate.macdonald@ugent.be and cornelia.waechter@uni-paderborn.de

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How to find us

How to find us Venue Unless otherwise stated, all events are held at the School of Advanced Study which is located within the central University of London precinct in Bloomsbury, central London. Most events take place in Senate House or Stewart House which are adjacent. Rooms listed in the events brochure are located as follows: Room STB2

Stewart House, basement

Room STB3

Stewart House, basement

Room STB6,

Stewart House, basement

Room G22/24

Senate House, ground floor

Room G34

Senate House, ground floor

Room G35,

Senate House, ground floor

Room G37,

Senate House, ground floor

The Beveridge Hall

Senate House, ground floor

Macmillan Hall

Senate House, ground floor

Room 102

Senate House, first floor

Room 103

Senate House, first floor

The Chancellor’s Hall

Senate House, first floor

The Court Room

Senate House, first floor

Room 254, Library Training Suite Senate House Library Room ST273

Stewart House, second floor

Room ST274

Stewart House, second floor

Room ST275

Stewart House, second floor

Room ST276

Stewart House, second floor

Common Room

Senate House, third floor

Ecclesiastical History Room

Institute of Historical Research, Senate House, North Block

Germany Room

Institute of Historical Research, Senate House, North Block

Low Countries Room

Institute of Historical Research, Senate House, North Block

Wolfson Room

Institute of Historical Research, Senate House, North Block

Charles Clore House

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, 17 Russell Square

Woburn Square

Warburg Institute, Woburn Square

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

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How to find us

www.sas.ac.uk

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How to find us By tube Nearest underground stations: Russell Square (Piccadilly line) Goodge Street (Northern line) Tottenham Court Road (Central and Northern lines) Euston Square (Circle and Metropolitan lines) Euston Station (Victoria and Northern lines) By rail Euston, King’s Cross and St Pancras International mainline stations are within walking distance. The other London mainline stations are a short tube or taxi journey away. By air From Heathrow, the Piccadilly tube line provides a service to Russell Square (approximately 45 minutes). From Gatwick, there is a mainline train service to Victoria station (30 minutes) where tube trains and taxis are available. Car parking facilities Public car parking is not available at Senate House. NCP at Woburn Place & Bloomsbury Place. Contacts Please check the website for the contact details relating to each event or email SAS.events@sas.ac.uk. If you would like to find out more about the Institutes of the School contact the following: Institute of Advanced Legal Studies (IALS) Website: www.ials.sas.ac.uk Email: ials@sas.ac.uk Telephone: +44 (0)20 7862 5800 Institute of Classical Studies (ICS) Website: www.icls.sas.ac.uk Email: admin.icls@sas.ac.uk Telephone: +44 (0)20 7862 8700 Institute of Commonwealth Studies (ICWS) Website: www.commonwealth.sas.ac.uk Email: ics@sas.ac.uk Telephone: +44 (0)20 7862 8844 Institute of English Studies (IES) Website: www.ies.sas.ac.uk Email: ies@sas.ac.uk Telephone: +44 (0)20 7862 8675 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies (IGRS) Website: www.igrs.sas.ac.uk Email: igrs@sas.ac.uk Telephone: +44 (0)20 7862 8677 Institute of Historical Research (IHR) Website: www.history.ac.uk Email: ihr@sas.ac.uk Telephone: +44 (0)20 7862 8740 Institute of Musical Research (IMR) Website: www.music.sas.ac.uk Email: music@sas.ac.uk Telephone: +44 (0)20 7664 4865 Institute of Philosophy (IP) Website: www.philosophy.sas.ac.uk Email: philosophy@sas.ac.uk Telephone: +44 (0)20 7862 8683 Institute for the Study of the Americas (ISA) Website: www.americas.sas.ac.uk Email: americas@sas.ac.uk Telephone: +44 (0)20 7862 8870 Warburg Institute (WI) Website: www.warburg.sas.ac.uk Email: warburg@sas.ac.uk Telephone: +44 (0)20 7862 8949

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Cover design: Calverts Text design and layout: Emily Morrell, School of Advanced Study Publications Printed by Latimer Trend & Co. Ltd.

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School of Advanced Study University of London Senate House Malet Street London WC1E 7HU Phone: +44 (0)20 7862 8654 Fax: +44 (0)20 7862 8657 Email: sas.events@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk

EVENTS OCTOBER 2010 – JANUARY 2011

www.sas.ac.uk


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