School of Advanced Study events brochure Oct 11 - Jan 12

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Contents The School of Advanced Study 1 Institutes of the School 2 Events at the School 4 Highlights: 5 University of London Trust Fund events 5 Dean’s Seminars 6 Visiting Professorial Fellow lecture 7 Bloomsbury Festival 2011 7 Friends of Senate House Library events 10 Conferences and symposia 11 Events calendar 20 Research training 67 How to find us 72

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 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.

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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.events@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. 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. Senate House by Gary Alexander © University of London

The full list of forthcoming and past events held by the School can be found at www.sas.ac.uk/events.html

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 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.html, 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/podcasts.html or on iTunes U. 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 Study 4

SASNews

SAScasts www.sas.ac.uk


Highlights

Highlights University of London Trust Fund events

The School organises an annual University Trust Fund programme of prestigious public lectures, recitals and readings. Free to attend and all welcome. 21 October 2011 18:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies John Coffin Memorial Lecture in English Beveridge Hall

The emergence of the everyday: Kipling and Indian regional writing Professor Amit Chaudhuri (East Anglia) Amit Chaudhuri is the author of five novels (the most recent being The Immortals, 2009), a book of short stories, a book of poems, a critical study of DH Lawrence’s poetry, and is the editor of the Picador Book of Modern Indian Literature. Among the awards he has won for his fiction are the Commonwealth Writers Prize, the Betty Trask award, the Encore Prize, the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Fiction, and the Government of India’s Sahitya Akademi award. He was Creative Arts Fellow at Wolfson College, Oxford; Leverhulme Special Research Fellow at the Faculty of English, Cambridge; a Visiting Professor at the Writing School, Columbia University; and Samuel Fischer Guest Professor at Freie University, Berlin. In 2009 he was one of the judges of the Man Booker International Prize, and is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. He writes regularly for the London Review of Books. He is also a vocalist in the Indian classical tradition, with HMV recordings to his credit, and has conceptualised a project in crossover music, This Is Not Fusion, which has travelled all over the world. Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk

27 October 2011 18:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies John Coffin Memorial Lecture in English Beveridge Hall

Prometheus: the two Shelleys and romantic science Richard Holmes Comparing Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein with Percy Shelley’s Prometheus Unbound, including the scientific background to both, shared themes, possible collaboration, male and female perspectives on science, and the reception that both works received. Richard Holmes was Professor of Biographical Studies and Director of the Lifewriting MA between 2001 and 2006 and is now one of UEA’s Distinguished Writing Fellows. His first book, Shelley: The Pursuit (1974) won a Somerset Maugham Award, and he has subsequently been awarded the Whitbread Book of the Year for Coleridge: Early Visions (1989), the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for Dr Johnson and Mr Savage (1993), and the Duff Cooper Prize and the Heinemann Award for Coleridge: Darker Reflections (1998). Among his many other publications are Footsteps: Adventures of a Romantic Biographer (1985) and Sidetracks: Explorations of a Romantic Biographer (2000). Followed by a wine reception. Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk In association with the Wordsworth Trust

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Highlights 3 November 2011 18:20–20:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Coffin Trust lecture Room G22/26

The nightmare of Bram Stoker Christopher Frayling Drawing on his wide experience and research into popular culture, literature and film in particular, Sir Christopher Frayling will talk on both the meaning and manifestations of the figure of the vampire from the 19th century up to the present day. Whilst referencing his now seminal book on the subject, ‘Vampires: Lord Byron to Count Dracula’, he will also be utilizing material from a new, and as yet unpublished project, that explores the implications of the vampires’ continuing appeal in the 21st century. His lecture coincides with an international and inter-disciplinary conference on vampires which will attract scholars from across Europe, Asia, the Far East, and America. Contact: christopher.barenberg@sas.ac.uk

28 November 2011 18:00–20:00 Institute of Historical Research 2011 Creighton Lecture Beveridge Hall

Macaulay and son: an imperial story Catherine Hall (UCL) The Creighton Lecture, on a historical subject, was established in 1907 from funds donated to the University by Mrs Creighton and a committee set up to establish a memorial to Dr Creighton. Followed by a wine reception. Contact: manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

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. A sandwich lunch will be provided. 12 October 2011 12:30–14:00 Room 103

Theories of privacy

9 November 2011 12:30–14:00 Room 103

Big money and the threat of new music: issues in the historiography of new music in Britain

7 December 2011 12:30–14:00 Court Room

Mapping the religious mind: India and the medieval geography of religion

18 January 2012 12:30–14:00 Room 103

The Balkans in the Cold War and film

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Michael Birnhack (Tel Aviv; Institute of Advanced Legal Studies)

Roddy Hawkins (Institute of Musical Research)

Alessandro Scafi (Warburg Institute)

Katia Pizzi (Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies) Title tbc

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Highlights

Visiting Professorial Fellow lecture All welcome. Free to attend. 27 October 2011 17:30–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Room 349

Nigeria’s 2011 Elections: Postscript and Prognosis Kayode Samuel (Institute of Commonwealth Studies)

Bloomsbury Festival 2011 The Bloomsbury Festival is a high-profile, multidisciplinary arts and cultural event taking place from 21–23 October 2011 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: 50% of places are available to be reserved in advance, the other 50% 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. Contact sas.info@sas.ac.uk for further information about the Festival and the School’s programme of events. 22 October 2011 10:00–18:00 23 October 2011 11:00–17:00 School of Advanced Study Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Senate House

The Magical Library presents – the ghosts of Senate House Sarah Sparkes Celebrated psychical researcher, amateur conjurer and paper bag salesman Harry Price left his library of magical literature, to the University of London on his death in 1948. Artist Sarah Sparkes has been researching the Price bequest and is creating her own ‘Magical Library for the 21st Century’. Inspired by Price’s ghost-hunting activities Sparkes’ Magical Library will be showing a number of specially created writings, recordings, artwork, artefacts, and other contributions documenting ghosts and other apocryphal stories emanating from Senate House and immediate surrounds. These works have been created by Output Arts, Magick Concrète (English Heretic and Mark Pilkington), Peter Suchin, Chris Roberts (One Eye Grey), Sarah Sparkes and others. Members of the public can visit this Magical Library, and browse its contents, during the Bloomsbury Festival, when it will be displayed against the backdrop of Charles Holden’s impressive Crush Hall at the heart of iconic Senate House.

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Highlights 22 October 2011 11:00–18:00 23 October 2011 11:00–17:00 School of Advanced Study Institute of Historical Research Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Jessell Room

The Institute of Historical Research – 90 years on

22 October 2011 14:00–15:30 School of Advanced Study Institute of Historical Research Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Walking point, Russell Square

Garden squares of Bloomsbury

22 October 2011 14:30–16:00 School of Advanced Study Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Walking point, Russell Square

The ghosts of Senate House ghost walk

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The Institute of Historical Research will be holding a special exhibition in celebration of its 90th birthday. Founded in 1921 by A F Pollard, the IHR has established itself to be a leading national resource for historical research and has worked to provide an accessible and stimulating portal for the exchange of ideas and information and current developments in historical scholarship. Now one of 10 member institutes of the School of Advanced Study, the IHR supports two research centres: the Victoria County History (VCH) and the Centre for Metropolitan History (CMH) and also hosts a range of projects. Our exhibition will present the Institute’s story through a series of photographs and newspaper articles from its birth in 1921 to the present. From 1930s press cuttings from national newspapers charting the key moments of the IHR, to documents and photographs recording the Institute’s survival through wartime Britain, this exhibition promises to be an exciting insight into the IHR’s own history over the past 90 years.

The leafy London squares, their parks alight with colour in the autumn, present a historical sequence from the 17th century onwards. Many owe their design and planting to Humphry Repton (1725–1837), the most important landscape gardener of his time. Changes were made during Victorian times, and some squares were affected in World War II. More recently, English Heritage has worked hard to restore parks to their original designs and planting. Our tour, led by the IHR’s garden and architectural historians, will follow up the work of Repton, Cubitt and others, and will focus around Russell, Bedford, Gordon and Tavistock Squares. We will endeavour to follow the wartime story, and enjoy the restoration of the 18th-century ideas with some 20th and 21st century additions.

Scott Wood Have you seen the Blue Lady of Senate House or witnessed the ghostly footprints in the Field of the Forty Footsteps? Join Scott Wood, London ghost and folklore expert on a ghost walk taking in sites of alleged hauntings and other un-explained phenomena emanating from Senate House and falling within its shadow. The tour will begin in Russell Square and meander the byways around Senate House before heading into the building itself. The tour is linked to artist Sarah Sparkes’ Magical Library project, which has been made in response to the Harry Price bequest at Senate House Library. Harry Price was, amongst other things, an infamous ghost-hunter and in tribute to this Sparkes and fellow researchers Chris Josiffe and Scott Wood have been uncovering ghostly, apocryphal tales in an exploration of the spirit of place.

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Highlights 22 October 2011 16:30–17:30 School of Advanced Study Institute of English Studies Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Beveridge Hall

“The Bloomsbury Flâneur”: reading the streets of WC1

22 October 2011 18:00–19:00 School of Advanced Study Institute of English Studies Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Chancellor’s Hall

A Bloomsbury foursome

Rosemary Ashton and authors Gillian Darley and Nicholas Murray Dr Rosemary Ashton and authors Gillian Darley and Nicholas Murray search the streets and squares of Bloomsbury (from the comfort of the Beveridge Hall, Senate House) to identify signs and pointers to the area’s past in its present forms and most recent developments.

Stephanie Gerra, Wendy Shutler, Andrew Cuthbert, Bob Goody, L. A. Salami Bloomsbury Voices and the Bloomsbury Bards come together for an hour of poetry, music and banter on the big stuff of life in their inimitable, deep and saucy way. Prepare to be romanced, to cry, to be turned-on, and to laugh out loud. Poetry by Stephanie Gerra and Wendy Shutler (the Voices) and Andrew Cuthbert and Bob Goody (the Bards). Music by L. A. Salami who has just debuted on Steve Lamacq’s BBC 6 Music’s programme www.bloomsburyvoices.co.uk In association with Bloomsbury Voices and Bloomsbury Bards

22 October 2011 19:15–21:00 School of Advanced Study Institute of Philosophy Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Senate House

Philosophy of taste Barry Smith (Institute of Philosophy) Tutored wine tasting. When you open a good bottle of wine, your senses are aroused: from the sound of the cork to the heavenly aromas, the silky texture in the mouth to the lingering taste on the tongue. Glass in hand, we ask whether we can know the real taste of a wine and whether we can ever share that experience with others. In association with Planet of the Grapes www.planetofthegrapes.co.uk

23 October 2011 11:00–12:00 School of Advanced Study Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Senate House

The ghosts of Senate House – artists’ talk

23 October 2011 14:00–15:00 School of Advanced Study Institute of English Studies Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Crush Hall

Faber contemporary poets

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Sarah Sparkes Meet in the historic Crush Hall of Senate House where Sarah Sparkes’ Magical Library artwork will be on display. Sarah Sparkes and other artists contributing to the project (Magick Concrète, Output Arts and Peter Suchin) will discuss how they have responded to the idea of ‘The ghosts of Senate House’.

Readings of new work by poets published by Faber and Faber.

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Highlights

Friends of Senate House Library events All welcome. Free to attend. Contact: shl.officeadmin@london.ac.uk or +44 (0)20 7862 8411 18 October 2011 18:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies Senate Room

Borges meets Orwell: the 21st century research library Christopher Pressler (Director of Senate House Libraries) Followed by a wine reception.

16 November 2011 18:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies Senate House Friends lecture Court Room

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From centre of culture to cultural centre: the public library in Britain since 1850 Alistair Black (Illinois)

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Highlights: Conferences and symposia

Conferences and symposia 30 September–1 October 2011 10:00–18:00 Institute of Philosophy Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

Was autonomy the wrong ideal? Autonomous judgement and its critics

3 October 2011 11:00–18:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Conference / Symposium Jessell Room

Diversity, identity and governance: Canada perspectives

Contact: philosophy@sas.ac.uk In conjunction with the AHRC Autonomy Project at Essex

Opening keynote: Patrick James (Southern California; Visiting Professor, Eccles Centre for American Studies). Speakers: Martin Ådahl (Forum for Reforms, Entrepreneurship and Sustainability), Anne Arnott (Canadian High Commission), Michelle Aguayo (Concordia), David Alexander Clark (independent researcher), Susan Hodgett (Ulster), Petter Hojem (Forum for Reforms, Entrepreneurship and Sustainability) This one-day event features speakers from a range of fields including international relations, sociology, media and communications, social policy and journalism. The event will close with a wine reception hosted by the Canadian High Commission and an address by Doug Saunders, award-winning Canadian journalist and author of Arrival City: The Final Migration and Our Next World. The event is free but spaces are limited. Contact: amy.hinterberger@sas.ac.uk

6 October 2011 14:00–20:00 Institute of Classical Studies Colloquium Room G22/26

Colloquium on ancient drama in honour of Eric Handley

15 October 2011 09:30–17:15 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Senate House

Dickens Day 2011: Republics of the imagination: Dickens and travel

Speakers and topics will include: Pat Easterling:’Tragic action: what the scholia can tell us’ Mike Edwards: ‘Hyperides and the Archimedes Palimpsest’ Richard Green: ‘Pictures of pictures of Comedy’ Nick Lowe: ‘Ecological Catastrophe in Menander’ Peter Parsons: ‘A few letters more: Misoumenos 132ff.?’ Michael Square: ‘Aspis achilleios Theodoreos kath’ Omeron: An early Imperial text of Il. 18.483-557’ Contact: sarah.mayhew@sas.ac.uk

Speakers include: Steve Connor, Barbara Hardy, Andrew Sanders, Michael Slater This one-day conference celebrates the 25th anniversary of Dickens Day. Jointly run by Birkbeck, University of Leicester and the Dickens Fellowship, it will explore Dickens’s travels and travels in Dickens. Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk In association with Birkbeck, Leicester and the Dickens Fellowship

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Highlights: Conferences and symposia 17 October 2011 10:00–18:00 Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

Study day on tuning and temperament Olmo Cornelis (IPEM, Ghent), Simon Dixon (Queen Mary), Frauke Jurgensen (Aberdeen), Francis Knights (Cambridge), Ian Knopke (BBC), Dan Tidhar (King’s, London), Mimi Waitzman (Horniman Museum) This interdisciplinary study day brings together musicologists,harpsichord specialists, and digital music specialists, with the aim of exploring the different angles these fields provide on the subject, and how these can be fruitfully interconnected. We offer an optional introduction to temperament for non-specialists, to equip all potential listeners with the basic concepts and terminology used throughout the day. Contact: music@sas.ac.uk

20 October 2011 12:00–15:20 School of Advanced Study Workshop Senate House

Open Access journal publishing Damien Short (Institute of Commonwealth Studies): ‘Where to start? Issues for the prospective new journal’ Steve Whittle & Julian Harris (Institute of Advanced Legal Studies): ‘Moving from print to web: the journal Amicus Curiae’ Peter Webster (School of Advanced Study): ‘Introducing SAS Open Journals’ Free. Lunch will be provided. Contact: peter.webster@sas.ac.uk

21–22 October 2011 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Senate House

Rudyard Kipling: an international writer Keynote Speakers: Amit Chaudhuri and Charles Allen This conference, sponsored by the Kipling Society, focuses on the figure of Kipling as an international writer. It seeks not only to re-assess Kipling’s involvement in imperial ideology, but also to examine his interests in wider international affairs and his connections with foreign locations both within and outside the British Empire. The conference thereby aims to re-examine his work and achievement by exploring his diverse roles as an internationalist, and by considering his relevance to our post-modern globalising world. Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk

21 October 2011 14:00–17:40 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Conference / Symposium Charles Clore House

EU defence rights Simone White (OLAF), Marianne Wade (Birmingham), Jodie Blackstock (Justice), Daniel Mansell (Fair Trials International), John Spencer (Cambridge) Registration required. Contact: IALS.Events@sas.ac.uk In collaboration with University of Birmingham, European Criminal Law Association (UK), Fair Trials International, and Justice

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Highlights: Conferences and symposia 28–29 October 2011 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Senate House

Love, sex, desire and the (post)colonial This interdisciplinary conference is the first of its kind to bring together into productive confrontation issues of love, sex, desire and the postcolonial. It aims to promote collaborative work between academics, activists, and the non-profit community. We invite panel proposals or single presentations from a range of disciplines (including but not restricted to anthropology, legal theory, history, sociology, geography, literary studies, cultural studies, media studies, drama, political science, development studies) on any topic pertaining to the above concerns. We particularly welcome participants from Africa, the Caribbean and Asia. Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk

31 October 2011 10:00–20:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Institute for the Study of the Americas Conference / Symposium Macmillan Hall

Human rights defenders, environmental degradation and land rights

1 November 2011 11:00–18:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Colloquium Macmillan Hall

The Day of the Dead

2–4 November 2011 09:15–17:55 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

Vampires: myths of the past and the future

Contact: olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk

Contact: olga.jimenez@sas.ac.uk In collaboration with the National Council for Palliative Care

Keynote speakers include: Stacey Abbott, Catherine Spooner, Milly Williamson An interdisciplinary conference organised by Simon Bacon (the London Consortium) in collaboration with the Centre for the Study of Cultural Memory, Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies. Contact: vampiremyths1@googlemail.com

4–5 November 2011 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Senate House

Ruins in 20th-century British art and fiction This conference proposes to analyse the hybrid function of ruins as they shift from sublime metonymies to broken hints of shattered times and troubled consciousness, focusing not only on the visual motif of ruins but on the function of citation as an attempt to include the ruined pieces of bygone art and cultural systems, whether the purpose be to “shore fragments” against ruin, as in the case of Modernism, or to challenge and deconstruct present exhaustion and past master discourses, as in the case of post-modernism. Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk

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Highlights: Conferences and symposia 5 November 2011 Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Room ST274/275

Listening for a change: environment, music, action

5 November 2011 10:00–18:00 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Court Room

Re-imagining the Brontës

Contact: music@sas.ac.uk In association with the British Forum for Ethnomusicology

Speakers include: Isobel Armstrong, Janis Caldwell, Barbara Hardy, Cora Kaplan, Sally Shuttleworth and Helen Small. Organised by Dr Alexandra Lewis with the support of the Institute of Advanced Study, University of Warwick The aim of the conference will be to reassess the Brontës’ perspectives on and uses of imagination (scientific; medical; childhood; romantic; poetic; visual; private; collective; auto/biographical; religious; political; theatrical; historical) together with the ways the Bronts’ works have been critically and creatively reimagined from the 19th to the 21st century. Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk

10–11 November 2011 10:00–17:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies WISPS XII annual conference Room ST274/275

Performance, interpretation, translation

14 November 2011 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies 2011 London postgraduate French studies conference Room ST274/275

How do you talk about books you haven’t read?

17–18 November 2011 Starts at 18:00 on 17 November Ends at 17:15 Institute of Historical Research Winter conference 2011 Chancellor’s Hall

Novel approaches – from academic history to historical fiction

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Keynote speakers: Pierre Bayard (Université Paris VIII), Tom Baldwin (Kent) Co-ordinators: Elise Aru (UCL), Cécile Bishop, Alex Robbins and Léa Vuong (King’s, London)

The conference will open with a discussion between Hilary Mantel and David Loades. Other speakers include Alison Weir, Ian Mortimer and Paul Lay, among many other renowned authors and academics. Contact: ihr.events@sas.ac.uk for programme and registration details, or visit www.history.ac.uk/historical-fiction

www.sas.ac.uk


Highlights: Conferences and symposia 17–19 November 2011 10:00–17:00 Warburg Institute Conference / Symposium King’s College London (17 November) Warburg Institute (18–19 November)

Palaeography, humanism and manuscript illumination in Renaissance Italy: a conference in memory of A. C. de la Mare Jonathan Alexander (Institute of Fine Art, New York), Giliola Barbero (Catholic, Milan), Concetta Bianca (Florence), Xavier van Binnebeke (Messina; Bodleian Library, Oxford), Lorenz Bninger (Lorenzo de’ Medici Letters), Irene Ceccherini (Florence), David Chambers (Warburg Institute), Martin Davies (I Tatti Renaissance Library), Teresa De Robertis (Florence), Angela Dillon Bussi (Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana), Vincenzo Fera (Messina), Mirella Ferrari (Catholic, Milan), Sebastiano Gentile (Cassino), James Hankins (Harvard), Giordana Mariani Canova (Padua), Laura Nuvoloni (Cambridge University Library), Stephen Oakley (Cambridge), Gabriella Pomaro (Societ Internazionale per lo Studio del Medioevo Latino), Silvia Rizzo (Rome ‘La Sapienza’), Stefano Zamponi (Florence). Organised by Robert Black, Jill Kraye and Laura Nuvoloni Fee (including morning coffee and afternoon tea): £5 per day (AMARC members: £2.50). Register: jill.kraye@sas.ac.uk Albinia de la Mare (1932–2001) OBE, FBA was one of the 20th century’s outstanding palaeographers and the world’s leading authority on Italian Renaissance manuscripts. Among her greatest achievements was tracing the careers of hundreds of scribes writing the new humanist script in Italy during the 15th century. The purpose of this conference is to honour her contribution to research and to illustrate how the main areas of her scholarly interests – the palaeography, humanism and manuscript illumination of the Italian Renaissance – have developed in the ten years since her death. Contact: jill.kraye@sas.ac.uk The conference has received generous financial support from AMARC (The Association for Manuscripts and Archives in Research Collections), APICES (Association Paléographique Internationale: Culture, Écriture, Société) and The Bibliographical Society

18 November 2011 14:30–17:00 Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Royal Academy of Music, Piano Gallery, York Gate

Study day on technology in creative research

19 November 2011 09:00–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Colloquium Room G22/26

British Epigraphy Society colloquium

www.sas.ac.uk

Christopher Redgate (Royal Academy of Music), Paul Archbold (Institute of Musical Research), David Sharp (Open University) Contact: music@sas.ac.uk

Contact: sarah.mayhew@sas.ac.uk

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Highlights: Conferences and symposia 19 November 2011 09:30–17:30 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Senate House

George Eliot conference: The Lifted Veil and Silas Marner This conference will discuss two of George Eliot’s most intriguing and contrasting works of shorter fiction: The Lifted Veil published in 1859, and Silas Marner (1861). Narrated through the jejune and alienated central presence of Latimer, who has foreseen the date of his own death, The Lifted Veil draws on both supernatural and Gothic tropes in a tale that prefigures the complex psychological portraits of Eliot’s later novels. Written while Eliot was in mourning for her sister Christiana, it is often cited as her most uncharacteristic work, with the author herself remarking that it was ‘not a jeu d’esprit, but a jeu de melancolie.’ A more redemptive kind of sadness dominates Silas Marner, however, with its themes of exile, community and history, and marks a return to recognisable Eliot. Published in April 1861, it was praised by Henry James as being ‘more nearly a masterpiece’ than any other of Eliot’s oeuvre, having ‘that simple, rounded, consummate aspect . . . which marks a classical work.’ Yet beneath this fairytale simplicity exists a complex Comtean system of values that considers the nature of the individual and society; and of inheritance, both personal and parental. Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk

25 November 2011 Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Room ST274/275

Middle East and Central Asia music forum Rachel Beckles Willson (Royal Holloway), Felicity Lawrence (Newcastle), Jacob Olley (SOAS), Carolyn Landau (King’s, London), Peyman Yazdanian (Iran), Khyam Allani (SOAS) Convenor: Laudan Nooshin (City) Contact: music@sas.ac.uk

25 November 2011 09:30–18:00 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

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Book history research network Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk


Highlights: Conferences and symposia 1–3 December 2011 09:45–17:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

First person writing, four-way reading Organisers: Naomi Segal (Birkbeck), François-Joseph Ruggiu (FR), Petter Aaslestad (NO), Kristin Kuutma (EE) Keynote speakers include: Arianne Baggerman (NL), Rita Charon (USA), Marie Darrieussecq, Brian Hurwitz (UK), Alexander Kiossev (BG), Giorgio Pressburger (IT), Nigel Rapport (UK); Philip Rieder (CH), Michael Sheringham (UK), Amy Shuman (USA), Claudia Ulbrich (DE), Yuri Zaretsky (RU) This conference brings together scholars from four academic fields – literature, history, medical humanities and ethnography – and from 23 countries – to discuss a common object of research: first-person writing. Four keynote speakers, 16 invited panellists and 45 break-out panellists will present papers and there will be four workshops. The term ‘writing’ is meant literally: the firstperson material on which the project focuses is textual rather than oral, whether published or unpublished. The time-period covered is from the early modern period to the present day. Though the language of the conference will be English, material in any language may be referred to (using originals, translations and/ or parallel texts). The term ‘reading’ is meant primarily in a metaphorical sense: how do scholars from these four fields investigate, interpret or, more broadly, ‘use’ first-person texts, what differences can be found in their methods and applications, and how can they debate these commonalities and differences in fruitful ways? It is hoped that, after the conference, further international and interdisciplinary research collaboration will be developed. Contact: Jane.Lewin@sas.ac.uk In collaboration with the European Science Foundation, and Birkbeck

1–3 December 2011 Institute of Musical Research ICONEA conference Chancellor’s Hall

The oud from its Sumerian origins to modern times

2 December 2011 10:15–18:00 Warburg Institute Colloquium Warburg Institute

Demons and devils in early modern Europe

Contact: music@sas.ac.uk

Anna Corrias, Sietske Fransen, Michael Gordian, Nicholas Holland, James A. T. Lancaster, Anthony Ossa-Richardson Organized by Guido Giglioni In the course of his illustrious career at the Warburg Institute, D.P. Walker (1914–85) published seminal works that contributed to redefining our view of early modern magic and demonology, such as Spiritual and Demonic Magic from Ficino to Campanella (1958), Decline of Hell (1964) and Unclean Spirits: Possession and Exorcism in France and England in the Late 16th and Early 17th Centuries (1981). This conference intends to celebrate his legacy by presenting the most recent results by young researchers working at the Warburg Institute. Contact: catherine.charlton@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk

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Highlights: Conferences and symposia 8 December 2011 09:00–18:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Conference / Symposium Court Room

Crisis, response and recovery: a decade on from the Argentinazo 2001–11 Keynote: Maristella Vampa (National Center for Scientific and Technical Research (CONICET), Argentina; Universidad Nacional de la Plata) As the 10th anniversary of the 2001 economic crash approaches, this one-day conference co-organised by the Argentine Students Research Network and the Institute for the Study of the Americas will bring together scholars and professionals working on Argentina from a range of disciplines to debate and discuss short and long-term response to crisis and subsequent trajectories of recovery. The term ‘response’ is not limited to the sphere of economic/ political economy, but also encompasses the societal, cultural and literary fields In view of the current financial crisis in the West, this country-focused and timely conference proposes to analyse the effects of crisis and how it can be addressed, with a view to examining and reflecting on the ways in which recovery is undertaken in societal, cultural, economic and political spheres. Contact: argentinaconference2011@gmail.com Jointly organised with the Argentina Research Students Network (ARSN) and the Crises of Capitalism in the Americas Research Network (COCARN)

10 December 2011 09:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Chancellor’s Hall

The Singing Detective The 25th anniversary of the six-part series The Singing Detective, written by Dennis Potter and directed by Jon Amiel, occurs Nov-Dec 2011. As result of its narrative complexity, generic hybridity and formal experimentation, this is commonly regarded as a piece of landmark television set to inspire and influence a range of subsequent television drama. The purpose of this one-day symposium is to explore the context in which the production occurred, assess the significance of the series and examine its subsequent influence upon new kinds of ‘anti-naturalist’ television drama. To this end, the event will bring together a mixture of practitioners and scholars to debate these issues. It is planned that these should include the co-producer of the series, Ken Trodd, the then Head of BBC Television Drama (and current Head of the Department of Media Arts at Royal Holloway), Jonathan Powell, and, subject to availability, the director, Jon Amiel, and actor, Michael Gambon. We would also wish to involve those who have written about the programme, such as John Cook and Glen Creeber, and television more generally, such as John Ellis, along with creators who have clearly been influenced by the series (such as the writer Peter Bowker). It is also planned that papers and interviews from the conference will form the basis of a special issue of the Journal of Screenwriting to be co-edited by Adam Ganz, John Ellis and John Hill. Contact: jon.millington@sas.ac.uk In association with the University of London Screenwriting Research Seminar and the new Media Arts Research Centre for Television in the Digital World

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www.sas.ac.uk


Highlights: Conferences and symposia 13 December 2011 Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

Technology and musical thought Convenor: John Dack Part of the DREAM project (Digital Re-appropriation of ElectroAcoustic Music) Craig Ayrey (Golsmiths), Clarence Barlow (California, Santa Barbara), Marc Battier (Sorbonne), Pascal Decroupet (Nice), Elena Ungeheuer (Würzburg), John Young (De Montfort) Contact: music@sas.ac.uk

15–16 December 2011 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies ASMI 2011 conference Room G22/26

The Italian ‘character’: virtues and vices

15–16 December 2011 12:30–18:00 Institute of Classical Studies Colloquium Room ST274/275

Reception studies colloquium

16 December 2011 10:00–18:00 Institute of Historical Research Conference / Symposium Chancellor’s Hall

Princes consort in history

Keynote speaker: Silvana Patriarca Conference organisers: Carl Levy (Goldsmiths), Charlotte Ross (Birmingham) Marcella Sutcliffe (Newcastle)

Contact: sarah.mayhew@sas.ac.uk

Speakers include: Professor Derek Beales (Cambridge), Luc Duerloo (Antwerp), Charles Beem (North Carolina, Pembroke), Paul Keenan (LSE), Daniel Alves (Nova de Lisboa), Karina Urbach (Institute of Historical Research), Franz Bosbach (Duisburg-Essen), Maria Grever (Erasmus, Netherlands) 2011 is the 150th anniversary of the death of Prince Albert and also the 90th birthday of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. This conference, held in collaboration with the Society for Court Studies, brings together a range of international historians to look at the peculiar yet influential institution of the male royal consort from Ferdinand of Castile through to the famous examples of the 18th century such as Prince George of Denmark, and onto contemporary personalities in western Europe. Our interest lies in studying how male partners of female monarchs have had and used power, how gender affected their perceived role, what sort of court and political influence they were able to wield and attract, how they often defined themselves in distinctive spheres of the arts or war, and more generally, the extent to which they contributed to the changing ideal and reality of royal families and dynasties over the centuries. Contact: manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

13 January 2012 10:00–18:00 Institute of Philosophy Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

www.sas.ac.uk

The editors cut Contact: philosophy@sas.ac.uk Supported by Metaphilosophy

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Events calendar

October 2011–January 2012

Events calendar Friday 30 September 2011 30 September–1 October 10:00–18:00 Institute of Philosophy Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

Was autonomy the wrong ideal? Autonomous judgement and its critics For more information see p.11 P

Saturday 1 October 2011 14:00–16:00 Institute of English Studies Modernism research seminar series Room G37

Modernism and the mind Cu

Monday 3 October 2011 11:00–18:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Conference / Symposium Jessell Room

Diversity, identity and governance: Canada perspectives For more information see p.11 Cu, E, H, Po

16:00–18:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies German philosophy reading group seminar STB5

Retracing Adorno’s Heidegger-critique

16:00–18:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar Charles Clore House

The Hamlyn Seminar 2011: Lawyers and the public good

Cu

Alan Paterson Discussants: Hazel Genn (UCL), David Feldman (Cambridge), Richard Moorhead (Cardiff) Chair: Avrom Sherr (Institute of Advanced Legal Studies) L

16:30–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Ancient philosophy seminar series Room G34

Longinus and Plotinus on rhetoric

17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Greek literature seminar series Room G37

The Pindaric first person in flux

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Malcolm Heath (Leeds) C, P

B. Currie (UCL) C, P

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012 18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Postgraduate feminist reading group venue tbc

Events calendar

Postgraduate feminist reading group Cu

Tuesday 4 October 2011 16:00–18:00 Warburg Institute Workshop Warburg Institute

Dialogue poems as cultural encounters: a comparative reading of Syriac, Greek, Latin and medieval vernacular texts. Reading session 1: Mary and Joseph Cu, H

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research British maritime history seminar series Wolfson Room

London Sons of the Sea: a new look at British imports in the Second World War

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Latin American history seminar series Room G34

Mexican nationalism: history and theory

18:00–19:30 Institute of English Studies Book collecting research seminar series venue tbc

Book Collecting Research Seminar

David Edgerton (Imperial) H

David Brading (Cambridge) H

Cu

Wednesday 5 October 2011 12:30–14:00 Institute of English Studies Director’s seminar venue tbc

“Pardon may be found in time bethought”: Two time structures of the mind in Paradise Lost and McTaggart’s Theory of Time Ayelet C. Langer (Hebrew, Jerusalem) Cu

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

Rethinking the interests of 18th-century Britain

17:30–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar Room 102

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

Julian Hoppit (UCL) H

Gian Luca Gardini (Bath) D, E

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

October 2011–January 2012 Cloud computing: identifying and managing legal risks Christopher Millard (Queen Mary) L

Thursday 6 October 2011 14:00–20:00 Institute of Classical Studies Colloquium Room G22/26

Colloquium on ancient drama in honour of Eric Handley For more information see p.11 C

15:30–17:30 Institute of Philosophy Perception, senses and action forum seminar Room ST273

Integrating sensory substitution devices: an analogy with reading

16:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Ancient history seminar series venue tbc

Ancient history

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research British history 1815–1945 seminar series Room G37

Roundtable on the legacies of British slave owning project

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research European history 1150–1550 Court Room

How I work on medieval government

Malika Auvray (LIMSI-CNRS, Orsay) P

Lin Foxhall (Leicester) C, H

Catherine Hall (UCL), Nick Draper (UCL) and Keith McLelland (UCL) H

Michael Clanchy (Institute of Historical Research), Alice Taylor (King’s, London), John Sabapathy (UCL) Chair: David Carpenter (Queen Mary) H

17:30–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Lecture Senate Room

Liberalism in the Great Depression

17:30–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Book launch Room 104

Catastrophe – what went wrong in Zimbabwe?

Alan Brinkley (Columbia) H, E, Po

Richard Bourne (Institute of Commonwealth Studies and author of Catastrophe – what went wrong in Zimbabwe?) and Philip Murphy (Institute of Commonwealth Studies) Followed by a reception. D, E, H, Hu, L, Po

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October 2011–January 2012

Events calendar

17:30–20:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Reception of German/Austrian/Swiss literature working group lecture Room ST273

Double lives: Alexander von Humboldt’s work in 19th-century English translation

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Stephen Spender research seminar venue tbc

Stephen Spender research seminar

Cu

Cu

Friday 7 October 2011 16:00–19:30 Institute of Philosophy IP aesthetics forum Room G22/26

IP aesthetics forum

16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room G34

Classical studies postgraduate work in progress

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research History of gardens and landscapes seminar series Room 104

Edith Wharton: interior design and gardens

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Irish studies seminar venue tbc

Irish studies

19:30 Institute of Musical Research DeNOTE Lecture-Recital St Mary’s Arts Centre, Strand Street,Sandwich, Kent

Exploring classical chamber music: Mozart and his Viennese contemporaries

Cain Todd (Lancaster) P

C

Helena Chance (Buckingham New) H

Cu

Jane Booth (classical clarinet), Peter Collyer (classical viola), John Irving (fortepiano) M

Saturday 8 October 2011 14:00–16:00 Institute of Historical Research Education in the long 18th century seminar series Court Room

‘My materials are copious’: three schoolboypublished periodicals and what they reveal about extra-curricular education in the late 18th century Jill Gage (Queen Mary) H

www.sas.ac.uk

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Events calendar

October 2011–January 2012

Monday 10 October 2011 16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute History of art seminar series Warburg Institute

History of art

17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Greek literature seminar series Room G37

Greek literature

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Voluntary action history Room 104

Two tier philanthropy: the philanthropists who funded the Bishop of London’s Fund and the work that the Fund financed, 1863–1914

Paul Taylor and Rembrandt Duits (Warburg Institute) Cu, H

L. Swift C

Sarah Flew (Open) H

Tuesday 11 October 2011 17:00–20:00 Institute of Historical Research Launch Chancellor’s Hall

Launch of Victoria County History’s new interactive digital resources

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Life-cycles seminar series Room G34

Class, children’s clothing and life-cycle: four generations of ‘Make, Do and Mend’ in professional families, 1900–2000 Mary Clare Martin (Greenwich) H

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies History of libraries research seminar series venue tbc

History of libraries research

18:15–20:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies International refugee law seminar series Charles Clore House

Article 1F(c) of the 1951 Convention: denying refugee status because of acts contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations

Cu

Guy Goodwin-Gill (Oxford) Hu

Wednesday 12 October 2011 12:30–14:00 School of Advanced Study Dean’s Seminars Room 103

Theories of privacy Michael Birnhack (Tel Aviv; Institute of Advanced Legal Studies) For more information see p.6 L

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October 2011–January 2012 15:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Mycenaean seminar series Room G22/26

Events calendar

Spinning a communications web: media interactivity and the political management of Mycenaean Messenia Mark Peters (Sheffield) C

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

Emblems in the margins: the Four Seasons Tapestries at Hatfield House Michael Bath Cu, H, P

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research International Conference of Near Eastern Archaeomusicology ICONEA seminar Room 103

Between truth and knowledge: the Lacanian contribution to musicology

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Histories of home seminar series Room 102

Centre for Studies of Home seminar

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies London old and middle English research seminar (LOMERS) venue tbc

London old and middle English research

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Psychoanalysis and history seminar series Room G37

Anna Freud’s war nurseries

17:30–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar Macmillan Hall

Caribbean creative writing

Bruno de Florence M

H

Cu

Angela Davies (Warwick) H

Amanda Smyth and Monique Roffey Cu

Thursday 13 October 2011 16:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Ancient history seminar series Room G22/26

Settlement and productivity in the Greek landscape Robin Osborne (Cambridge) C, H

www.sas.ac.uk

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Events calendar

October 2011–January 2012

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

‘Sea of blood’: a night at the North Korean Opera

17:00–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar King’s College London

The political and moral economy of corruption

Keith Howard (SOAS) Chair: Nathan Hesselink (British Columbia) M

Alpa Shah (Goldsmiths), Sambit Bhattacharyya (Oxford), Mushtaq Khan (SOAS) Contact: louise.tillin@kcl.ac.uk or james.manor@sas.ac.uk Organised jointly with the India Institute, King’s College London Po

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies London seminar in digital text and scholarship venue tbc

The role of narrative bifurcation in web design and content presentation

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Medieval manuscripts seminar series venue tbc

Illuminated manuscripts at the V&A: cataloguing “one of the smaller collections”

Helena Barbas Cu

Cu 18:00–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Oral history seminar series STB5

Opportunities and challenges in the re-use of archived oral history: a case study from the history of geriatric medicine Joanna Bornat (Open) H

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Stephen Spender research seminar venue tbc

Stephen Spender research seminar

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

Entre Escritoras: Cristina Cerezales Laforet remembers Carmen Laforet

Cu

Cu

Friday 14 October 2011 13:05 Institute of Musical Research DeNOTE Lecture-Recital Clothworkers Centenary Concert Hall, School of Music, University of Leeds

Exploring classical chamber music: Mozart and his Viennese contemporaries Jane Booth (classical clarinet), Peter Collyer (classical viola), John Irving (fortepiano) M

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October 2011–January 2012

Events calendar

14:00–16:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar Room 102

Peru since Humala’s election

16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room G37

Classical studies postgraduate work in progress

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Ezra Pound Cantos reading group venue tbc

Ezra Pound Cantos

Javier Diez Canseco, member of the Peruvian congress Po

C

Cu

Saturday 15 October 2011 09:30–17:15 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Senate House

Dickens Day 2011: Republics of the imagination: Dickens and travel For more information see p.11 Cu

Monday 17 October 2011 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar Charles Clore House

The current Colombian legal system: an update. The proposed judicial reforms: an analysis. Contact: IALS.Events@sas.ac.uk L

10:00–18:00 Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

Study day on tuning and temperament

16:00–18:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies German philosophy reading group seminar STB5

Retracing Adorno’s Heidegger-critique

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute History of art seminar series Warburg Institute

History of art

www.sas.ac.uk

For more information see p.12 M

P

Paul Taylor and Rembrandt Duits (Warburg Institute) Cu, H

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Events calendar 16:30–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Ancient philosophy seminar series Room G34

October 2011–January 2012 The anonymous Isocrates: the close of the Euthydemus and Socrates’ claim for philosophy MM McCabe (King’s, London) C, P

17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Greek literature seminar series Room G37

Greek literature

17:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies London Shakespeare seminar series Chancellor’s Hall

London Shakespeare seminar

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies London forum for authorship studies and digital text and scholarship seminar Room 104

Case studies in traditional and non-traditional authorship attribution

17:30–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar Senate Room

The Argentine elections

C

Cu

Cu

Panel on the 2011 Argentine elections with Celia Szusterman (Westminster), Colin Lewis (LSE), Martin Castro (Oxford) H, Po

Tuesday 18 October 2011 16:00–18:00 Warburg Institute Workshop Warburg Institute

Dialogue poems as cultural encounters: a comparative reading of Syriac, Greek, Latin and medieval vernacular texts. Reading session 2: Christ and John the Baptist (The Epiphany) C

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research British maritime history seminar series Wolfson Room

Keeping it in the family: the Nelson tradition in 20th-century children’s fiction

17:30–20:30 Institute of Classical Studies Accordia lecture seminar series Room G22/26

From religion to science: another look at Etruscan divination

Hazel Sheeky (University of Newcastle; National Maritime Museum) H

Jean Turfa (Pennsylvania Museum) C

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October 2011–January 2012

Events calendar

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Latin American history seminar series Room G34

Weetman Pearson and Mexican national development 1889–1919

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Textual scholarship research seminar Room 103

The manuscripts of Jonathan Swift’s “Journal to Stella”

Paul Garner (Leeds) H

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

Cloud computing and law enforcement access to confidential data Ian Walden (Queen Mary) L

18:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies Senate House Friends Charles Holden Lecture Senate Room

Borges meets Orwell: the 21st-century research library

18:00–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Black Britain seminar series Court Room

The legacy of Atlantic slavery: the unfinished business of emancipation

For more information see p.10 Cu

Kwame Nimako Po, Hu

Wednesday 19 October 2011 12:30–14:00 Institute of English Studies Director’s seminar venue tbc

“Here’s the product of my hand and quill”: English children’s “school pieces”, c.1650–c.1850 Jill Shefrin (Toronto) Cu

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

Chancery Lane: politics, space and the built environment, c.1760–1815

17:30–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Panel and book launch Senate Room

The Caudillo of the Andes: Andres de Santa Cruz

Francis Boorman (Institute of Historical Research) H

Natalia Sobrevilla (Kent) Comments by James Dunkerley (Queen Mary) and Alejandra Irigoin (LSE) Cu, H, Po

www.sas.ac.uk

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Events calendar 17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies The inter-university romantic period seminar Room 103

October 2011–January 2012 Key voices of the 1790s: “The use of conversation”: William Godwin, Mary Hays, and Mary Wollstonecraft in the 1790s Cu

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

Bosnia – an overview of the historical and current situation Ed Vulliamy (Senior Correspondent, The Observer/The Guardian) Hu, L

Thursday 20 October 2011 12:00–15:20 School of Advanced Study Workshop Senate House

Open Access journal publishing

15:30–17:30 Institute of Philosophy Perception, senses and action forum Room ST273

Iconic representation and its limitations

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

Moving stories: mobility, power and the development of the Greek city

For more information see p.12

Mohan Matthen (Toronto) P

Janett Morgan (Royal Holloway) C, H

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research British history 1815-1945 seminar series Room G37

“Sometimes it was necessary, for the sake of the class, to exclude a hopeless case.” London’s elementary schools and the origins of classification 1870–1904 Imogen Lee (Goldsmiths) H

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

Borderland views of the British musical Renaissance: the cultural politics of the English Eisteddfod Rachel Cowgill (Cardiff) Chair: Meirion Hughes M

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research European history 1150-1550 Court Room

The regulation of marital sex in medieval Europe: Jews and Christians Evyatar Marienberg (North Carolina) H

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October 2011–January 2012 17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Film history seminar series Room ST274

Events calendar

Intersecting lives: racial segregation, colonial nostalgia and the making of Charles Chauvel’s Jedda (1955) Catherine Kevin (Flinders University) H

17:30–19:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Reception of classical antiquity in German literature lecture Room ST273

Inflections of the claim to truth: from Greek tragedy to Richard Strauss

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Society, culture and belief, 1500-1800 seminar series Room 102

Reformation and the distrust of the projector in the Hartlib Circle

Erika Swales (Cambridge) C, Cu

Koji Yamamoto (Edinburgh) H

Friday 21 October 2011 21–22 October 2011 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Senate House

Rudyard Kipling: an international writer

11:30–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Workshop and book launch Chancellor’s Hall

Decolonization workshop

For more information see p.12 Cu

Followed by a reception and the launch of John Stuart’s British Missionaries and the End of Empire: East, Central and Southern Africa, 1939–64 Cu, D, E, H, Hu, L, Po

13:00–17:00 Institute of Historical Research Workshop Chancellor’s Hall

Locating London’s past To showcase locating London’s past mapping tools and a more broad discussion of the use of mapping in historical research H

14:00–17:40 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Conference / Symposium Charles Clore House

EU defence rights

16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room 102

Classical studies postgraduate work in progress

www.sas.ac.uk

For more information see p.12 L

C

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Events calendar

October 2011–January 2012

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research History of gardens and landscapes seminar series Senate Room

“I walked in the garden”: Mary, Marchioness of Huntly 1822–1893, her life, her diary, her gardens

18:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies John Coffin Memorial Lecture in English Beveridge Hall

The emergence of the everyday: Kipling and Indian regional writing

Maxine Eziefula H

For more information see p.5 Cu

Saturday 22 October 2011 22–23 October 2011 10:00–18:00 on 22 October 11:00–17:00 on 23 October School of Advanced Study Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Senate House

The Magical Library presents – the ghosts of Senate House

22–23 October 2011 11:00–18:00 on 22 October 11:00–17:00 on 23 October School of Advanced Study Institute of Historical Research Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Jessell Room

The Institute of Historical Research – 90 years on

11:00–13:00 Institute of English Studies London 19th-century studies seminar series Room G37

London 19th-century studies research

14:00–15:30 School of Advanced Study Institute of Historical Research Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Walking point, Russell Square

Garden squares of Bloomsbury

14:00–16:00 Institute of English Studies EMPHASIS (Early Modern Philosophy and the Scientific Imagination) seminar series Room G37

Giordano Bruno’s Cantus Circaeus and demonic deception

32

For more information see p.7 Cu, H

For more information see p.7 Cu, H

Cu

For more information see p.7 Cu, H

Cu

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012

Events calendar

14:30–16:00 School of Advanced Study Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Walking point, Russell Square

The ghosts of Senate House ghost walk

16:30–17:30 School of Advanced Study Institute of English Studies Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Beveridge Hall

“The Bloomsbury Flâneur”: reading the streets of WC1

18:00–19:00 School of Advanced Study Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Chancellor’s Hall

A Bloomsbury foursome

19:15–21:00 School of Advanced Study Institute of Philosophy Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Senate House

Philosophy of taste: tutored wine tasting

For more information see p.7 Cu, H, S

For more information see p.7 Cu, H

For more information see p.7 Cu, M

For more information see p.7 Cu, P

Saturday 23 October 2011 11:00–12:00 School of Advanced Study Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Crush Hall

The ghosts of Senate House – artists’ talk

14:00–15:00 School of Advanced Study Institute of English Studies Bloomsbury Festival 2011 Beveridge Hall

Faber contemporary poets

For more information see p.7 Cu, H

For more information see p.7 Cu

Monday 24 October 2011 16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute History of art seminar series Warburg Institute

History of art

17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Greek literature seminar series Room G37

Greek literature

www.sas.ac.uk

Paul Taylor and Rembrandt Duits (Warburg Institute) Cu, H

C

33


Events calendar 17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Voluntary action history Room 104

October 2011–January 2012 The Hoxton Cafe Project: following the fault lines of community, welfare and perception Kate Bradley (Kent) H

Tuesday 25 October 2011 17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Life-cycles seminar series Room G34

Changing relationships: parents and the lifecourse in Georgian England Joanne Bailey (Oxford Brookes) H

18:00–19:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Centre for Contemporary Women’s Writing Spanish reading group Room 103

Centre for Contemporary Women’s Writing Spanish reading group Cu

Wednesday 26 October 2011 17:00–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Institute for the Study of the Americas Caribbean seminar series Room 102

Suriname: moving from the Netherlands to Venezuela?

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

Collecting objects and people: Charles Newton and Cyprus

Rosemarijn Hoefte, KITLV Cu, H

Thomas Kiely (British Museum) Cu, H

17:30–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies New challenges in refugee integration seminar series Chancellor’s Hall

Authority and inclusion: reconsidering the meaning of integration in a fragmented age

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Open University book history and bibliography seminar series venue tbc

Open University book history and bibliography

Loren B Landau (Witwatersrand) Hu, Po

Cu

Thursday 27 October 2011 16:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Ancient history seminar series Room G22/26

34

Ancient history Guy Bradley (Cardiff) C, H

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012 17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Directions in musical research seminar series Room G35

Events calendar

IMR/Brunel Centre for Contemporary Music Practice seminar Paul Griffiths Chair:Bob Gilmore (Brunel) M

17:00–19:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar Room ST275

Transformations and transmutations

17:00–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar King’s College London

Pro-poor politics and policy making under the United Progressive Alliance

Ana Maria Pacheco Cu

Anuradha Joshi (Sussex) on the right to food, James Manor (Institute of Commonwealth Studies) on NREGA and Suchi Pande (Sussex) on the right to information Contact: louise.tillin@kcl.ac.uk or james.manor@sas.ac.uk Organised jointly with the India Institute, King’s College London Po

17:15–19:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies English Goethe Society lecture Room ST273

“Des Menschen Herz, o Gott! welch Elend kann es stiften!”: The tragedies of Christian Felix Weisse Cu

17:30–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Visiting fellow seminar Room 349

Nigeria’s 2011 elections: postscript and prognosis Kayode Samuel (Institute of Commonwealth Studies) H, Hu, L,Po

18:00–19:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Family law lecture Charles Clore House

Islamic family law in legal practice Aina Khan (Senior Consultant Solicitor, Family Law Department, Russell Jones & Walker Solicitors, London) L

18:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies John Coffin Memorial Lecture in English Beveridge Hall

“Prometheus”: the two Shelleys and romantic science

18:30–20:30 Institute of English Studies London theatre seminar series venue tbc

London theatre

www.sas.ac.uk

For more information see p.5 Cu

Cu

35


Events calendar

October 2011–January 2012

Friday 28 October 2011 28–29 October 2011 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Senate House

Love, sex, desire and the (post)colonial

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

Classical studies postgraduate work in progress

17:00–19:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Book launch Room G22/26

The legacy of the Italian resistance

For more information see p.13 Cu

C

Cu, H

Saturday 29 October 2011 14:00–16:00 Institute of English Studies Contemporary fiction research seminar series Room G34

Contemporary fiction research seminar: inaugural session

15:00–18:00 Institute of Classical Studies Virgil Society lecture Room G22/26

Virgil Society lecture

Cu

C

Monday 31 October 2011 10:00–20:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Institute for the Study of the Americas Conference / Symposium Macmillan Hall

Human rights defenders, environmental degradation and land rights

13:00–17:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar Senate Room

Liberalism in the Americas: what is to be done

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

Alan Knight (Oxford), Klaus Gallo (Torcuato di Tella, Buenos Aires), Natalia Sobrevilla Perea (Kent), James Dunkerley (Queen Mary), Colin Lewis (London School of Economics) By invitation only. Expressions of interest can be sent to deborah.toner@sas.ac.uk Po

36

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012

Events calendar

16:00–18:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies German philosophy reading group seminar STB5

Retracing Adorno’s Heidegger-critique

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute History of art seminar series Warburg Institute

History of art

16:30–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Ancient philosophy seminar series Room G34

Good and bad rhetoric in Plato’s Gorgias

17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Greek literature seminar series Room G37

‘Occasion’ and occasions in Callimachus and Posidippus

P

Paul Taylor and Rembrandt Duits (Warburg Institute) Cu, H

Jimmy Doyle (Bristol) C, P

Evelyne Prioux (Paris) C

17:00–19:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Lecture Senate Room

The liberal traditions in the Americas

18:00–19:00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Sir William Dale Memorial Lecture Senate House

Drafting comprehensible legislation in a multilingual, multi-legal-system environment: some reflections on the EU drafting process and its consequences

Gregory J. Grandin (New York) E, H, Po

Eleanor Sharpston, QC (Advocate General at the Court of Justice of the European Union) Chair: The Hon Mr Justice Sales L

Tuesday 1 November 2011 11:00–18:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Colloquium Macmillan Hall

The Day of the Dead

12:00–14:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar Venue tbc

Political philosophy in 19th-century Argentina

www.sas.ac.uk

For more information see p.13 Cu, H, S

Klaus Gallo (Torcuato di Tella, Buenos Aires)

37


Events calendar

October 2011–January 2012

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research British maritime history seminar series Wolfson Room

The latitude of the search for the longitude in 18th-century Britain

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies History of libraries research seminar series venue tbc

History of libraries research

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Latin American History seminar series Room G34

Citizens in arms: the army, the militias and the national guards and the creation of the Peruvian state (1821–1861)

Alexi Baker (Cambridge) H

Cu

Natalia Sobrevilla (Kent) H

18:00–19:30 Institute of English Studies Book collecting research seminar series venue tbc

Book collecting research seminar

18:00–20:30 Institute of Classical Studies FBSA Lecture Room G22/26

Friends of the British School at Athens lecture

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

Data protection jurisdiction in cloud computing and international data transfers

Cu

C

Julia Hornle, Kuan Hon (Queen Mary) L

Wednesday 2 November 2011 2–4 November 2011 09:15–17:55 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

Vampires: myths of the past and the future

12:30–14:00 Institute of English Studies Director’s seminar venue tbc

Institute of English Studies Director’s seminar

38

For more information see p.13 Cu, H

Tatiana Kontou Cu

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012 16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute Lecture Warburg Institute

Events calendar

Homo Ludens revisited: from Huizinga to Zemon Davis and beyond Lisa Jardine Cu, H, P

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

Pecha Kucha! Three minute seminars

17:30–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar Room 102

¿Narcoamérica? Panel on the political economy of drugs, drug trafficking, and drug cultures in Latin America

H

Alan Knight (Oxford), Tom Grisaffi (LSE), Jeff Garmany (King’s, London) E, H, Po 17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Research forum Royal Academy of Music

Birth of an oboe M

Thursday 3 November 2011 17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Directors in musical research seminar series Room G32

Digitalisation not dematerialisation: the musical artefact in the digital age. A case study of Björk’s Biophilia Nicola Dibben (Sheffield) Chair: Keith Negus (Goldsmiths) M

17:00–18:30 Warburg Institute Maps and society seminar series Warburg Institute

Maps and society Catherine Delano Smith (Institute of Historical Research), Tony Campbell (formerly British Library) and Alessandro Scafi (Warburg Institute) H

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research British history 1815-1945 seminar series Room G32

The twin-crime: Cultural conflations of abortion and infanticide in England, 1860–1967

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research European history 1150-1550 Senate Room

The contested order: conflicts and interactions between civic powers and the Venetian people in the 15th century

Daniel Grey (Oxford) H

Claire Judde-de-la-Rivire (Toulouse) H www.sas.ac.uk

39


Events calendar 17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Film history seminar series STB8

October 2011–January 2012 Circles, columns and screenings: mapping the spaces of film criticism in 1940s London Melanie Selfe (Glasgow) H

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research History of education seminar series venue tbc

Creating world citizens? League of Nations teaching in English schools, 1919–39 Susannah Wright (Oxford Brookes) H

17:30–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Reception of classical antiquity in German literature lecture Room ST273

The Greek chorus through German eyes: putting philosophy on stage

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Stephen Spender research seminar venue tbc

Stephen Spender research seminar

18:20–20:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Coffin Trust lecture Room G22/26

The nightmare of Bram Stoker

Simon Goldhill (Cambridge) C, Cu

Cu

Christopher Frayling For more information see p.6 Cu, H

Friday 4 November 2011 4–5 November 2011 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Senate House

Ruins in 20th-century British art and fiction

14:00–19:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Workshop Room 261

Reading women’s history: a roundtable discussion about scholarship on women’s history in the Americas

For more information see p.13 Cu

H 16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room 102

40

Classical studies postgraduate work in progress C

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012 17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research History of gardens and landscapes seminar series Court Room

Events calendar

The role of the gardener in England from 1600 to 1730: studies from Knole in Kent and Arbury in Warwickshire Sally O’Halloran (Sheffield) H

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Irish studies seminar venue tbc

Irish studies Cu

Saturday 5 November 2011 Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Room ST274/275

Listening for a change: environment, music, action For more information see p.14 M

10:00–18:00 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Court Room

Re-imagining the Brontës

11:00–13:00 Institute of English Studies Modernism research seminar series Room G37

Modernism and disability

14:00–16:00 Institute of English Studies EMPHASIS (Early Modern Philosophy and the Scientific Imagination) seminar series Room G37

Locke on the law of nature

For more information see p.14 Cu

Cu

Cu

Monday 7 November 2011 10:30–17:15 Institute of Musical Research Study day Deller Hall

Sight, sound and semantics – the representation and iconology of western musical performance Antonio Baldassare, Dorothea Baumann, Antonio Corona, Emily Peppers and Debra Pring To be followed at 19:45 by a concert at Fenton House, Hampstead. In association with Repertoire International d’Iconographie Musicale M

www.sas.ac.uk

41


Events calendar

October 2011–January 2012

17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Greek literature seminar series Room G37

Greek literature

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Voluntary action history Room 104

From ‘cruelty men’ to ‘rottweilers’. The Royal Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children and Child Protection 1960–2000

C

Chris Nottingham (Glasgow Caledonian) H 18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Postgraduate feminist reading group venue tbc

Postgraduate feminist reading group Cu

Tuesday 8 November 2011 17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Life-cycles seminar series Room G34

‘Deedes are males and woordes are females’? Verbal abuse and gender in 16th-century England Donald Spaeth (Glasgow) H

17:30–20:30 Institute of Classical Studies Accordia lecture Institute of Archaeology

Grotta dell’Uzzo and the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in Sicily’ Sebastiano Tusa (Soprintendente del Mare della Regione Siciliana) C

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Textual scholarship research seminar Room 103

Textual scholarship research seminar Cu

Wednesday 9 November 2011 12:30–14:00 School of Advanced Study Dean’s Seminars Room 103

Big money and the threat of new music: issues in the historiography of new music in Britain Roddy Hawkins (Institute of Musical Research) For more information see p.6 M

17:00–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Institute for the Study of the Americas Caribbean seminar series Room 103

42

Kanaval – a people’s history of Haiti Leah Gordon (film-maker and photographer) Cu, H, Hu, Po

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012

Events calendar

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Open University book history and bibliography seminar series venue tbc

Open University book history and bibliography

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Psychoanalysis and history seminar series STB7

Historical subjectivity

Cu

Barbara Taylor (East London) H

Thursday 10 November 2011 10–11 November 2011 10:00–17:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies WISPS XII annual conference Room ST274/275

Performance, interpretation, translation

16:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Ancient history seminar series Room ST274/275

The changed landscape of South Etruria: the imperial landscape of the middle Tiber valley

Cu

Robert Witcher (Durham) C, H

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Directions in musical research seminar series Room 104

Exploding the monochord: an intuitive spatial representation of microtonal relational structures Nick Stylianou (independent researcher) Chair:Bruno de Florence (independent researcher) M

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Medieval manuscripts seminar series venue tbc

Medieval manuscripts

17:30–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies International refugee law seminar series Charles Clore House

Armed conflict and refugee law: are courts getting it right?

Cu

Hugo Storey (senior immigration judge, Asylum and Immigration Tribunal) Hu

Friday 11 November 2011 16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room 102

www.sas.ac.uk

Classical studies postgraduate work in progress C

43


Events calendar 18:00–20:00 Institute of Historical Research Conversations and disputations: discussions among historians Senate Room

October 2011–January 2012 Biology, brain theory and history: what, if anything, can historians learn from biology? Lisa Blackman (Goldsmiths), Hera Cook (Birmingham), Roger Cooter (UCL) Chair: Joanna Bourke (Birkbeck) H

18:30–20:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar G22/26

The foreign relations of Peru with Great Britain and the United States in the mid 19th century Rosa Garibaldi, Peruvian historian and diplomat, with comments by Natalia Sobrevilla (Kent) and Rory Miller (Liverpool) H

Saturday 12 November 2011 14:30–16:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Seminar Room ST273

Contemporary women’s writing in French: ‘rentre text’ Cy

Monday 14 November 2011 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies 2011 London postgraduate French studies conference Room ST274/275

How do you talk about books you haven’t read?

Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Lecture Charles Clore House

The victim’s law – pros, cons, implementation, challenges for the future: with specific reference to Colombia

For more information see p.14 Cu

Edwin Rubio (Asociacion Colombiana de Abogados Defensores ‘Eduardo Umana Mendoza’ ACADEUM) Contact: IALS.Events@sas.ac.uk L 16:00–18:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies German philosophy reading group seminar STB5

Retracing Adorno’s Heidegger-critique

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute History of art seminar series Warburg Institute

History of art

44

Cu

Paul Taylor and Rembrandt Duits (Warburg Institute) Cu, H

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012 17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Greek literature seminar series Room G37

Greek literature

17:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies London Shakespeare seminar series Deller Hall

London Shakespeare seminar

Events calendar

C

Cu

Tuesday 15 November 2011 16:00–18:00 Warburg Institute Workshop Warburg Institute

Dialogue poems as cultural encounters: a comparative reading of Syriac, Greek, Latin and medieval vernacular texts. Reading session 3: The Sinful Woman (Luke 7:3650)

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research British maritime history seminar series Wolfson Room

“As his was not a surgical case it was not my duty to attend upon him”: The surgeon’s role in the 19th-century royal dockyards Richard Biddall (Wellcome Institute, Oxford) H

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Latin American history seminar series Room G34

Great wealth in Argentina, 1810–1930

18:30–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Black Britain seminar series Room STB8

An introduction to the Black presence in Renaissance Europe

Roy Hora (Universidad Nacional de Quilmes/Conicet, Argentina) H

Michael Ohajuru H

Wednesday 16 November 2011 12:00–15:00 Institute of Classical Studies Dynamis seminar Room ST276

Dynamis seminar

15:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Mycenaean seminar series Room G22/26

Mycenaean seminar

www.sas.ac.uk

C

Yannis Fappas C

45


Events calendar

October 2011–January 2012

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research International Conference of Near Eastern Archaeomusicology (ICONEA) seminar Room 104

An old Babylonian lament with instruments

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

Sex and illegitimacy during the long 18th century: evidence from working-class autobiographies

Irving Finkel (British Museum) M

Emma Griffin (East Anglia) H

17:30–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar Room 102

From multiculturalism to social justice

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies South Asian fiction: contemporary transformations venue tbc

South Asian fiction: contemporary transformations

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies The inter-university romantic period seminar Room 103

Key voices of the 1790s: Charlotte Smith, William Wordsworth and romanticism

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

The situation in Belarus, is there any hope for democracy? The view from two prominent Belarus human rights lawyers (working title)

David Lehmann (Cambridge) Hu, H, Po

Cu

Cu

Aleh Volchek and Harry Poginiajlo Hu, L 18:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies Senate House Friends lecture Court Room

From centre of culture to cultural centre: the public library in Britain since 1850 For more information see p.10 Cu

Thursday 17 November 2011 17–18 November Starts at 18:00 on 17 November Ends at 17:15 Institute of Historical Research Winter conference 2011 Chancellor’s Hall 46

Novel approaches – from academic history to historical fiction For more information see p.14 Cu, H

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012 10:00–17:00 Warburg Institute Conference / Symposium King’s College London / Warburg Institute

Events calendar

Palaeography, humanism and manuscript illumination in Renaissance Italy: a conference in memory of A. C. de la Mare For more information see p.15 C, Cu, H, P

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

Garamantian landscapes: irrigation and settlement in the Libyan Sahara Andrew Wilson (Oxford) C, H

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research British history 1815-1945 seminar series Court Room

Globalization and its discontents: Dundee circa 1870–1939

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

IMR/Brunel Centre for Contemporary Music Practice seminar

Jim Tomlinson (Dundee) H

François-Bernard Mâche Chair: Bob Gilmore (Brunel) M

17:00–18:30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Seminar Charles Clore House

The European Investigation Order: progress update Kenny Bowie and Sara Khan (Judicial Co-operation Unit, Home Office) Chair: John Spencer, President of European Criminal Law Association L

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research European history 1150-1550 Room G37

High politics and local acquisitiveness: the Bassets of High Wycombe in the 13th century William Stewart-Parker (King’s, London) H

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Film history seminar series Room ST273

Early film criticism and the concept of rhythm

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies London seminar in digital text and scholarship venue tbc

The translator’s other invisibility: stylometry in translation

www.sas.ac.uk

Laura Marcus (Oxford) H

Cu

47


Events calendar 17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Society, culture and belief, 1500-1800 seminar series Room 102

October 2011–January 2012 Trading on others’ credit: imitation, copying and plagiarism in the business of 18th-century science Florence Grant (King’s, London) H

18:30–20:30 Institute of English Studies London theatre seminar series venue tbc

London theatre Cu

Friday 18 November 2011 14:30–17:00 Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Royal Academy of Music, Piano Gallery, York Gate

Study day on technology in creative research

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

Classical studies postgraduate work in progress

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research History of gardens and landscapes seminar series Court Room

Urban design and landscape architecture in the UK and Hungary: Thomas Mawson and Bela Rerrich

For more information see p. M

C

Luca Csepeley-Knorr (Manchester; Corvinus, Budapest) H

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Ezra Pound Cantos reading group venue tbc

Ezra Pound Cantos Cu

Saturday 19 November 2011 09:00–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Colloquium Room G22/26

British Epigraphy Society colloquium

09:30–17:30 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Senate House

George Eliot conference: The Lifted Veil and Silas Marner

For more information see p.15 C

For more information see p.16 Cu

48

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012

Events calendar

11:00–13:00 Institute of English Studies London 19th–century studies seminar series Room G37

London 19th–century studies research

14:00–16:00 Institute of Historical Research Education in the long 18th century seminar series Room G37

Genlis’s Tales, and the learning of French in Britain and North America

Cu

Gillian Dow (Southampton; Chawton) H

Monday 21 November 2011 16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute History of art seminar series Warburg Institute

History of art

17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Greek literature seminar series Room G37

Greek literature

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Performance/research seminar Chancellor’s Hall

CMPCP performance/research seminar

Paul Taylor and Rembrandt Duits (Warburg Institute) Cu, H

C

Deniz Peters (independent researcher) Chair: Mine Dogantan Dack (Middlesex) M

Tuesday 22 November 2011 17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research Life-cycles seminar series Room G34

From boy to man: renegotiating relationships with fathers in the 19th century Julie-Marie Strange (Manchester Metropolitan) Title tbc H

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Contemporary fiction research seminar series Room ST275

Contemporary fiction research seminar: postgraduate forum Cu

Wednesday 23 November 2011 12:30–14:00 Institute of English Studies Director’s seminar venue tbc

www.sas.ac.uk

Towards a modernist ‘Tractatus’ Benjamin Ware (Manchester; Institute of English Studies) Cu

49


Events calendar

October 2011–January 2012

17:00–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Institute of Commonwealth Studies Caribbean seminar series Room 102

The Turks and Caicos Islands: can the cloud be banished?

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies London old and middle English research seminar (LOMERS) venue tbc

London old and middle English research

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Open University book history and bibliography seminar series venue tbc

Open University book history and bibliography

Peter Clegg (West England) H, Po

Cu

Cu

Thursday 24 November 2011 16:30–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Ancient history seminar series Room G22/26

Ancient history

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

Paul Bekker’s ambivalent modernism

17:00–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar King’s College London

The politics of protest

Ray Laurence (Kent) C, H

Nanette Nielsen (Nottingham) Chair: Julian Johnson (Royal Holloway) M

Carole Spary (York) and others Contact: louise.tillin@kcl.ac.uk or james.manor@sas.ac.uk Organised jointly with the India Institute, King’s College London Po

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research History of education seminar series Room G27

The origins, rise and crisis of scientific rationalism in English education Bernard Barker (Leicester) H

17:30–20:30 Institute of Classical Studies Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies The reception of classical antiquity in German literature II Room ST273

50

Correcting ancient myths – Brecht’s approach to antiquity Martin Vohler (Berlin; Nicosia) C, Cu, H, P

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012 17:30–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar Chancellor’s Hall

Events calendar

An unfinished revolution: Karl Marx and Abraham Lincoln Robin Blackburn (Essex). Comments by Tristram Hunt MP (Queen Mary) and Adam Smith (UCL) H, Hu, Po

18:00–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar Room ST274

Perspectives on the presidency of Theodore Roosevelt H, Po

Friday 25 November 2011 09:15–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Room ST274/275

Middle East and Central Asia music forum

09:30–18:00 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

Book history research network

10:30–18:00 Warburg Institute Conference / Symposium Lecture room

Looking for meaning in Renaissance Art

For more information see p.16 M

For more information see p.16 Cu

Michael Cole, Caroline Elam, Paul Hills, Amanda Lillie, Pat Rubin and Salvatore Settis Cu, H

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

Classical studies postgraduate work in progress

17:30–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar Room 349

Two hundred years of Sarmiento: looking backwards and forwards

C

Richard Gott, Adrián Gorelik (Cambridge), Eduardo Ortiz (Imperial) H

Saturday 26 November 2011 10:15–18:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Institute of Musical Research Workshop Chancellor’s Hall

www.sas.ac.uk

Latin American music seminar Cu, M

51


Events calendar 11:00–16:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Cultural memory seminar Room G34

October 2011–January 2012 Learning memory’s lessons Cu

Monday 28 November 2011 16:00–18:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies German philosophy reading group seminar STB5

Retracing Adorno’s Heidegger-critique

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute History of art seminar series Warburg Institute

History of art

16:30–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Ancient philosophy seminar series Room ST273

Likely rhetoric and the Phaedrus

17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Greek literature seminar series Room G37

Greek literature

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Performance/research seminar Chancellor’s Hall

CMPSP performance/research seminar

18:00–20:00 Institute of Historical Research 2011 Creighton Lecture Beveridge Hall

Macaulay and son: an imperial story

Cu

Paul Taylor and Rembrandt Duits (Warburg Institute) Cu, H

Jenny Bryan (UCL) C, P

C

Darla Crispin (Orpheus Institute) Chair: John Rink (Cambridge) M

Catherine Hall (UCL) For more information see p.6 H

Tuesday 29 November 2011 12:30–14:00 Institute of Philosophy Lunchtime seminar Room ST274/275

Cognitive disparities: dimensions of intellectual diversity and the resolution of disagreements Robert Audi (Notre Dame) P

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www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012

Events calendar

16:00–18:00 Warburg Institute Workshop Warburg Institute

Dialogue poems as cultural encounters: a comparative reading of Syriac, Greek, Latin and medieval vernacular texts. Reading session 4: The lament of Mary (the passion of Christ)

17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research British maritime history seminar series Wolfson Room

Traversing the Arabian Seas: the ‘worlds’ of British Trade in the Indian Ocean, 1680–1760

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Latin American history seminar series Room ST273

The rivalry between Spanish and Californian quicksilver, and the consequences for Bolivian liberalization (1850–80)

Timothy Davies (Warwick) H

Tristan Platt (St Andrews) H

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Medieval and early modern reading group venue tbc

Medieval and early modern closed reading group

18:00–19:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Centre for Contemporary Women’s Writing Spanish reading group Room 103

Centre for Contemporary Women’s Writing Spanish reading group

Cu

Cu

Wednesday 30 November 2011 17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research British history in the long 18th century seminar series Room ST274/275

Print culture and punishment: the Murder Act of 1752

17:30–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies New challenges in refugee integration seminar series Charles Clore House

Refugee centred versus state centred approaches to integration: processes, practices and narratives

Richard Ward (Sheffield) H

Maja Korac-Anderson (East London) Hu

www.sas.ac.uk

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Events calendar

October 2011–January 2012

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies South Asian fiction: contemporary transformations venue tbc

South Asian fiction: contemporary transformations

18:00–20:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Research centre for German and Austrian exile studies seminar Room ST273

Investigating the roots of 20th-century German art

Cu

Cu

Thursday 1 December 2011 1–3 December Institute of Musical Research ICONEA conference Chancellor’s Hall

The oud from its Sumerian origins to modern times For more information see p.17 M

1–3 December 09:45–17:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

First person writing, four-way reading

09:45–17:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Realism and Romanticism in German literature seminar series Room ST274/275

Realism and romanticism in German literature

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

Travels with Malthus: landscape, development, and Roman history

For more information see p.17 Cu

Cu, H

Richard Alston (Royal Holloway) C, H

17:00–18:30 Warburg Institute Maps and society seminar series Warburg Institute

Maps and society Catherine Delano Smith (Institute of Historical Research), Tony Campbell (formerly British Library) and Alessandro Scafi (Warburg Institute) H

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research British history 1815-1945 seminar series Room G37

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On an equal footing with men? Women and work at the BBC, 1923–39 Kate Murphy (Goldsmiths) H

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012

Events calendar

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research European history 1150-1550 Senate Room

Women in office and late medieval jurists

18:30–20:30 Institute of English Studies London theatre seminar series venue tbc

London theatre

Serena Ferente (KCL) H

Cu

Friday 2 December 2011 10:15–18:00 Warburg Institute Colloquium Warburg Institute

Demons and devils in early modern Europe

16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room G32

Classical studies postgraduate work in progress

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research History of gardens and landscapes seminar series Room G35

Sir Thomas Hanmer of Bettisfield: travel, plants and gardens in the mid 17th century

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Irish studies seminar venue tbc

Irish studies

For more information see p.17 C, Cu, H, P, S

C

Jill Francis (Birmingham) H

Cu

Saturday 3 December 2011 10:00–18:00 Institute of English Studies Modernism research seminar series Room G37

Future work in modernist studies

15:00–18:00 Institute of Classical Studies Virgil Society lecture Room G22/26

Virgil Society lecture

www.sas.ac.uk

Cu

C

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Events calendar

October 2011–January 2012

Monday 5 December 2011 16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute History of art seminar series Warburg Institute

History of art

17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Greek literature seminar series Room G37

Greek literature

17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Seminar Chancellor’s Hall

Centre for Musical Performance as Creative Practice performance/research seminar

Paul Taylor and Rembrandt Duits (Warburg Institute) Cu, H

C

John Wallace (Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Dance) Chair: Paul Archbold (Institute of Musical Research) M

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Voluntary action history Room 104

A ‘movement that moves’: the settlement movement in Britain after the First World War Mark Freeman (Glasgow) H

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

Russia’s economy under Putin: energy superpower or oil-eependent laggard? Simon Pirani (Oxford Institute of Energy Studies; author of Change in Putin’s Russia: Power, Money and People) Hu, L

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Postgraduate feminist reading group venue tbc

Postgraduate feminist reading group Cu

Tuesday 6 December 2011 17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research British maritime history seminar series Wolfson Room

The South Sea Company

17:15–17:15 Institute of Historical Research Life-cycles seminar series Room G34

Life-cycles seminar

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Patrick Walsh (Trinity College Dublin) Title tbc H

H

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012

Events calendar

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies History of libraries research seminar series venue tbc

History of libraries research

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies Textual scholarship research seminar Room 103

Textual Scholarship Research Seminar

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

Copper from Cyprus: the Bronze Age metal trade in the Central Mediterranean

Cu

Cu

Fulvia Lo Schiavo (formerly Soprintendente per i Beni Archeologici della Toscana, Firenze) C

18:00–19:30 Institute of English Studies Book collecting research seminar series venue tbc

Book collecting research seminar Cu

Wednesday 7 December 2011 12:30–14:00 School of Advanced Study Dean’s Seminars Court Room

Mapping the religious mind: India and the medieval geography of religion Alessandro Scafi (Warburg Institute) For more information see p.6 Cu, H, S

15:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Mycenaean seminar series Room G22/26

Cacophony and silence: the place of religion in Neopalatial Crete Matthew Haysom (Cambridge) C

17:00–19:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Institutes of Commonwealth Studies Caribbean seminar series Room 102

Slavery, emancipation, and the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Open University book history and bibliography seminar series venue tbc

Open University book history and bibliography

www.sas.ac.uk

Cu, H

Cu

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Events calendar

October 2011–January 2012

17:30–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies International refugee law seminar series The Chancellor’s Hall

The right to asylum in EU law

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Psychoanalysis and history seminar series STB7

The single swallow does not make a summer: psychological approaches in late 19th-century asylum case histories

Raza Husain (Matrix Chambers) Hu

Sarah Chaney (UCL) H

Thursday 8 December 2011 09:00–18:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas Conference / Symposium Court Room

Crisis, response and recovery: a decade on from the Argentinazo 2001–11 For more information see p.18 H, E, Po

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

The search for Roman urban landscapes: innovation,interpretation and invention from Britain to the Mediterranean William Bowden (Nottingham) C, H

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

Absent cadences

17:15–19:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies English Goethe Society lecture Room ST273

Was Frankenstein’s monster Jewish? Uncanny anthropoids from British gothic to modern German-Jewish folktale writing

Danuta Mirka (Southampton) Chair:David Wyn Jones (Cardiff) M

Cu 18:30–20:30 Institute of English Studies London theatre seminar series venue tbc

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London theatre Cu

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012

Events calendar

9 December 2011 16:30–18:30 Institute of Classical Studies Postgraduate work in progress seminar Room G35

Classical studies postgraduate work in progress

17:15–18:30 Warburg Institute Literature, ideas and society seminar series Warburg Institute

The limits of believability

C

Eugenio Refini (Warwick): ‘“No Empty Fiction Wrought by Magic Lore”’: wonders of nature, irony and disbelief in 16th-century Italian fiction narratives’ Stephen Clucas (Birkbeck): ‘“Dowt not for We are Good Angells”: John Dee, Meric Casaubon and the limits of early modern credulity’ Cu, H, P, S

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Ezra Pound Cantos reading group venue tbc

Ezra Pound Cantos Cu

Saturday 10 December 2011 09:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Conference / Symposium Chancellor’s Hall

The Singing Detective

10:00–18:00 Institute for the Study of the Americas South American archaeology seminar Institute of Archaeology

South American archaeology

11:00–13:00 Institute of English Studies London 19th–century studies seminar series Room G37

London 19th–century studies research

14:00–16:00 Institute of English Studies Contemporary fiction research seminar series Room G34

Contemporary fiction research seminar: Rewriting Exodus: American Futures from Du Bois to Obama

For more information see p.18 Cu

Jointly organised with the Institute of Archaeology Cu, H

Cu

Cu 14:00–16:00 Institute of English Studies EMPHASIS (Early Modern Philosophy and the Scientific Imagination) seminar series Room G37

www.sas.ac.uk

Italian renaissance philosophy in the vernacular: ‘Logic, rhetoric and poetics as rational faculties in Alessandro Piccolomini’s map of knowledge’ Cu 59


Events calendar

October 2011–January 2012

12 December 2011 16:00–18:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies German philosophy reading group seminar STB5

Retracing Adorno’s Heidegger-critique

16:30–19:00 Institute of Classical Studies Ancient philosophy seminar series Room ST273

The liver and the cave: rhetoric, imagery, and the non-rational soul

Cu

Jessica Moss (Oxford) C, P

17:00–19:30 Institute of Classical Studies Greek literature seminar series Room 103

Greek literature

17:00–19:00 Institute of English Studies London Shakespeare seminar series Deller Hall

London Shakespeare Seminar

C

Cu

Tuesday 13 December 2011 Institute of Musical Research Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

Technology and musical thought For more information see p.19 Convenor: John Dack M

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar Room 273

Art in the aftermath of violence: Peru in comparative perspective Cynthia Milton (Montréal) Po

Wednesday 14 December 2011 17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research British history in the long 18th century seminar series Court Room

Space, place, and popular politics in northern England, 1789–1848

17:30–19:00 Institute of Commonwealth Studies New challenges in refugee integration seminar series The Chancellor’s Hall

Employment: integration, exclusion and human rights

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Katrina Navickas (Hertfordshire) H

Alice Bloch (City University) Hu www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012

Events calendar

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies South Asian fiction: contemporary transformations venue tbc

South Asian fiction: contemporary transformations

17:30–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Seminar Room 102

Londres Latino: academic perspectives on Latin American migrants in London

Cu

Libia Villazana (Institute for the Study of the Americas), Cathy McIlwaine (Queen Mary), Patria Román-Velasquez (City University) S

Thursday 15 December 2011 15–16 December 2011 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies ASMI 2011 conference Room G22/26

The Italian ‘character’: virtues and vices

15–16 December 2011 12:30–18:00 Institute of Classical Studies Colloquium Room ST274/275

Reception studies colloquium

17:00–19:00 Institute of Historical Research British history 1815-1945 seminar series Room G37

Rulers who neither see, nor feel, nor know? The United Kingdom in 1820

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies London seminar in digital text and scholarship venue tbc

Hidden histories: computing and the humanities c.1949–1980

17:30–19:00 Institute of English Studies Medieval manuscripts seminar series venue tbc

Medieval manuscripts

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Society, culture and belief, 1500-1800 seminar series Room 102

Debate, public truth and natural knowledge in 18th-century Mexico

www.sas.ac.uk

For more information see p.19 Cu, H

For more information see p.19 C

Kate Murphy Malcolm Chase (Leeds) H

Cu

Cu

Miruna Achim (Autnoma Metropolitana, Mexico City) H

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Events calendar

October 2011–January 2012

Friday 16 December 2011 10:00–18:00 Institute of Historical Research Conference / Symposium Chancellor’s Hall

Princes consort in history For more information see p.19 H

Monday 9 January 2012 16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute History of art seminar series Warburg Institute

History of art Paul Taylor and Rembrandt Duits (Warburg Institute) Cu, H

Tuesday 10 January 2012 17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research British Maritime History seminar series Wolfson Room

The role of secondary navies under Pax Britannica: the Spanish case

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Latin American history seminar series Room G35

Of ‘savages’ and sailors: British consular contacts with the Mapuche of Chile during the 1820s and 1830s

Carlos Alfaro Zaforteza (King’s, London) H

Manuel Llorca (Chile) H

Thursday 12 January 2012 10:00–18:30 Institute for the Study of the Americas Workshop Room 261

What makes indicators of societal progress politically successful? Lessons from international history H, E

17:30–20:00 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Working group for the reception of German/Austrian/Swiss literature lecture Room ST273

Germania in England: functions of the ‘Germanic’ in English identity constructions and British historical thinking in the 19th century Maike Oergel (Nottingham) Cu

Friday 13 January 2012 10:00–18:00 Institute of Philosophy Conference / Symposium Room G22/26

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The editors cut For more information see p.19 P

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012 17:00–18:30 Warburg Institute The history of scholarship seminar series Warburg Institute

The history of scholarship

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Irish studies seminar venue tbc

Irish studies

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Ezra Pound Cantos Reading Group venue tbc

Ezra Pound Cantos reading group

Events calendar

Christopher Ligota (Warburg Institute) H

Cu

Cu

Saturday 14 January 2012 11:00–13:00 Institute of English Studies London nineteenth–century studies seminar series Court Room

London 19th–century studies research seminar

14:00–16:00 Institute of English Studies EMPHASIS seminar series Room G37

EMPHASIS (Early Modern Philosophy and the Scientific Imagination)

Cu

Cu

Monday 16 January 2012 16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute History of art seminar series Warburg Institute

History of art Paul Taylor and Rembrandt Duits (Warburg Institute) Cu, H

Wednesday 18 January 2012 12:30–14:00 School of Advanced Study Dean’s Seminars Room 103

The Balkans in the Cold War and film Katia Pizzi (Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies) Title tbc. For more information see p.6 Cu, H, S

17:00–19:30 Institute of Commonwealth Studies Caribbean seminar series Room 102

www.sas.ac.uk

Caribbean seminar Cu, H

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Events calendar 17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Psychoanalysis and history seminar series Room G37

October 2011–January 2012 Inversions: casts, masks and mortality Marcia Pointon (Manchester) P, H

Thursday 19 January 2012 17:00–18:30 Institute of Musical Research Directions in musical research seminar series Room G26

Jewish cupids and Scottish valkyries: once more Mendelssohn and Wagner

18:00–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Oral history seminar series Room 104

Oral history in conditions of political conflict and controversy

Monika Hennemann M

Carrie Hamilton (Roehampton) H

Friday 20 January 2012 17:00–18:30 Warburg Institute The history of scholarship seminar series Warburg Institute

The history of scholarship

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies The Charles Peake Ulysses seminar series venue tbc

The Charles Peake Ulysses

Christopher Ligota (Warburg Institute) H

Cu

Monday 23 January 2012 23–24 January Institute of Musical Research Arditti Quartet Composition workshops Court Room

Arditti Quartet composition

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute History of art seminar series Warburg Institute

History of art

64

M

Paul Taylor and Rembrandt Duits (Warburg Institute) Cu, H

www.sas.ac.uk


October 2011–January 2012

Events calendar

Tuesday 24 January 2012 17:15–19:15 Institute of Historical Research British Maritime History seminar series The Wolfson Room (IHR)

Creolizing steam: the Royal Mail steam packet company’s ship as place

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Institute for the Study of the Americas Seminar Room G35

Evolution into what? 19th-century Brazilian social thought and the prospect of Republicanism

Anyaa Anim-Addo (Royal Holloway; National Maritime Museum) H

Isabel DiVanna (Cambridge) H

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Seminar Room ST274

The impact of digitisation and its implications for the future direction of archives and special collections Richard Ovenden (Bodleian Library, Oxford) H

Tuesday 25 January 2012 17:15–18:30 Warburg Institute Literature, ideas and society seminar series Warburg Institute

Literature, ideas and society

17:30–19:30 Institute of English Studies London Old and Middle English research seminar (LOMERS) venue tbc

London old and middle English research

19:30 Institute of Musical Research Concert St Giles Cripplegate

Arditti Quartet concert: works by Harvey, Rihm, Archbold and and early-career composers

Guido Giglioni (Warburg Institute), Jacqueline Glomski and Emily Butterworth (King’s, London) Cu, H, P, S

Daniel Wakelin (Oxford) Cu, H

M

Wednesday 26 January 2012 14:00 Institute of Musical Research Rehearsal Jerwood Hall, LSO St Luke’s

Arditti Quartet open rehearsal: Jonathan Harvey String Quartet no.4

17:00–18:30 Warburg Institute Maps and society seminar series Warburg Institute

Maps and society

M

Catherine Delano Smith (Institute of Historical Research), Tony Campbell (formerly British Library) and Alessandro Scafi (Warburg Institute) H

www.sas.ac.uk

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Events calendar

October 2011–January 2012

17:15–19:30 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies English Goethe Society lecture Room ST274

Visiting Goethe: the diary of Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna, 1829–32

17:30–19:30 Institute of Historical Research Society, culture and belief, 1500-1800 seminar series Room 102

The experiential world of Jean Bodin

Utz Raphael (Jena) Cu, H

Mark Greengrass (Albert-Ludwigs Universität Freiburg) H

Friday 27 January 2012 17:00–18:30 Warburg Institute The history of scholarship seminar series Warburg Institute

The history of scholarship

18:00–20:00 Institute of English Studies Finnegans Wake research seminar venue tbc

Finnegans Wake research

Christopher Ligota (Warburg Institute) H

Cu

Saturday 28 January 2012 14:00–16:00 Institute of Historical Research Education in the Long 18th Century seminar series Court Room

Patterns of virtue: books recommended for boys and girls in the long 18th century Polly Bull (Royal Holloway) H

Monday 30 January 2012 14:00–17:00 Institute of Musical Research DeNOTE seminar series Room G22/26

Recreating early 19th-century style in a 21stcentury marketplace: an orchestral violinist’s perspective Claire Holden (Cardiff) M

16:30–18:00 Warburg Institute History of art seminar series Warburg Institute

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History of art Paul Taylor and Rembrandt Duits (Warburg Institute) Cu, H

www.sas.ac.uk


Research training

Research training 3 and 5 October 2011 10.30–12.00 6 and 10 October 2011 14.30–16.00 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

Introduction to electronic resources

4 October 2011 10.30–12.00, 13.00–14-30 and 15.00–16.30 6 October 2011 10.30–12.00 7 October 2011 10.30–12.00, 13.00–14.30 and 15.00–16.30 10–13, 17, 18 and 26 October 2011 10.30–12.00 24, 25 and 27 October 2011 18.00–19.30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

Introduction to Lexis and Westlaw: hands-on session

4, 11, 18, 25 October 2011 1, 15, 22, 29 November 2011 6 December 2011 10, 17, 24, 31 January 2012 13:10–14:15 Warburg Institute Warburg Institute

From devilry to divinity: readings in the Divina Commedia

5 October 2011 12:45–16:00 Institute of Historical Research Woburn Room

Day for new research students in history

www.sas.ac.uk

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 journal articles, and how to find help with databases when you need it. Contact: ials@sas.ac.uk , or phone 020 7862 5821

Electronic information training session for postgraduate law students. How to login and find different databases, and how to search and browse effectively for legislation, case law and journal articles. Small group teaching, advance registration is recommended. Further sessions will be available in October. Contact: ials@sas.ac.uk , or phone 020 7862 5821

Alessandro Scafi (Warburg Institute), John Took (UCL) Autumn term – Hell; Spring term – Purgatory; Summer term – Paradise Fee: £80 per term - Free to Warburg Institute and UCL staff, students and fellows. Contact: warburg@sas.ac.uk

Contact: simon.trafford@sas.ac.uk In conjunction with The History Lab

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Research training 7, 14, 21, 28 October 2011 4, 18, 25 November 2011 2, 9 December 2011 11:00–12:00 Warburg Institute Droz Library

German palaeography Dr Dorothea McEwan - Dr Claudia Wedepohl Fridays 11:00–12:00 am (autumn term only), commencing on 7 October 2011 in the Droz Library. This class is a reading class. Its aim is to familiarize students with a number of different handwritings. Participants should have a reading knowledge of German. We will read and examine a variety of texts from the 17th to the 20th centuries, and offer some flexibility in as much as it will be possible to present documents from different centuries and handwriting styles in order to suit the needs of its participants. Fee: £80 per term - Free to Warburg Institute staff, students and fellows. Contact: Warburg@sas.ac.uk

11 October –13 December 2011 09:00–17:00 Institute of Historical Research venue tbc

An introduction to medieval and renaissance Latin This ten-week course will provide an introduction to Latin grammar and vocabulary, together with practical experience in translating typical post-classical Latin documents. It is intended for absolute beginners, or for those with a smattering of the language but who wish to acquire more confidence. Students will emerge at the end with not just a strong grounding in the mechanics of Latin, but also an understanding of the changes that it underwent, and the new ways in which it was used in medieval and early modern Europe. The course isopen to all who are interested in using Latin for their research. The fee for the course is £200. This course will take place every Tuesday from 11th October–13th December 2011. Contact: simon.trafford@sas.ac.uk or visit www.history.ac.uk/research-training

22 October 2011 10:30–16:15 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Room ST273

Research projects in the modern languages

24 October 2011 10:30–17:30 Institute of Musical Research Room ST273

Practicalities of PhD study

29 October 2011 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Jesus College, Oxford

50th National Postgraduate Colloquium in German Studies

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Contact: christopher.barenberg@sas.ac.uk

Paul Archbold (Institute of Musical Research), Laudan Nooshin (City), Rachel Cowgill (Cardiff)

Contact: jane.lewin@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk


Research training 2 November 2011 10.00–16.30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

How to get a PhD in Law: meeting the challenges of the first year This National Training Day is intended for MPhil/PhD students in Law, particularly those enrolled in their first year of study. MPhil/PhD law students from across the UK are warmly invited to attend this specially tailored day of presentations and networking opportunities at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies. This is the first of three training days to be held in 2011–12 for MPhil/PhD students in law. Fee: £35 Contact: Belinda.Crothers@sas.ac.uk

4 November 2011 9.30–16.30 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies Charles Clore House

Archives, records and repositories for socio-legal research Organised by the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies and the British Library with support from the Socio-Legal Studies Association. This National Training Day is aimed at doctoral students and early career academics planning to embark on archival socio-legal projects. Contributors: Professor William Twining, UCL; Professor David Fraser, Nottingham; Dr Sarah Wilson, York; Dr simon Trafford, IHR; Dr Amanda Bevan, National Archives. Fee: £25 Contact: Belinda.Crothers@sas.ac.uk

5 November 2011 10:30–16:15 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Room G35

Modern language archives and libraries

7–11 November 2011 09:00–17:00 Institute of Historical Research venue tbc

Methods and sources for historical research

Contact: christopher.barenberg@sas.ac.uk

This long-standing course is an introduction to finding and using primary sources for research in modern British, Irish and colonial history. The course will include visits to the British Library, the National Archives, the Wellcome Institute and the House of Lords Record Office, amongst others. Fee: £210. Contact: simon.trafford@sas.ac.uk or visit www.history.ac.uk/research-training

7 November 2011 10:30–17:30 Institute of Musical Research Room ST273

Iconographies of music

3 December 2011 10:30–16:15 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Room G35

Digital languages

www.sas.ac.uk

Debra Pring with Antonio Baldassare and other colleagues from Rpertoire International d’Iconographie Musicale Contact: music@sas.ac.uk

Workshop Contact: christopher.barenberg@sas.ac.uk

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Research training 7 December 2011 09:00–17:00 Institute of Historical Research venue tbc

Internet sources for historical research This course provides an intensive introduction to use of the internet as a tool for serious historical research. It includes sessions on academic mailing lists, usage of gateways, search engines and other finding aids, and on effective searching using Boolean operators and compound search terms, together with advice on winnowing the useful matter from the vast mass of unsorted data available, and on the proper caution to be applied in making use of online information. Fee: £70. For venue information, please contact simon.trafford@sas.ac.uk or visit www.history.ac.uk/research-training k

12 December 2011 09:00–17:00 Institute of Historical Research venue tbc

Qualitative data analysis workshop Researchers in the social sciences and humanities are increasingly using computers to manage, organise and analyse non-numerical data from textual sources. This workshop introduces historians to this rapidly growing field and will furnish participants with a good working grasp of the NVivo 8 software package and its uses for all historical research projects. Note that the course consists of two sessions, a month apart. Fee: £120. For venue information, please contact simon.trafford@sas.ac.uk or visit www.history.ac.uk/research-training

13–16 December 2011 09:00–17:00 Institute of Historical Research venue tbc

Databases for historians This four-day course introduces the theory and practice of constructing and using databases. Through a mixture of lectures and practical, hands-on, sessions, students will be taught both how to use and adapt existing databases, and how to design and build their own. No previous specialist knowledge apart from an understanding of historical analysis is needed. The software used is MS Access, but the techniques demonstrated can easily be adapted to any package. Thiscourse is open to postgraduate students, lecturers and all who are interested in using databases in their historical research. Fee: £200. For venue information, please contact simon.trafford@sas.ac.uk or visit www.history.ac.uk/research-training

16 December 2011 14:00–17:00 Institute of Musical Research Room G37

Research training reading group: Classic texts in music and culture Convenor: Anahid Kassabian (Liverpool) Discussion of readings (available in advance) A Cyborg Manifesto by Donna Haraway Contact: music@sas.ac.uk

9–13 January 2012 09:00–17:00 Institute of Historical Research

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Methods and sources for historical research Contact: manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

www.sas.ac.uk


Research training 9 January–20 March 2012 09:00–17:00 Institute of Historical Research Research training

An introduction to oral history

10 January–7 March 2012 09:00–17:00 Institute of Historical Research Research training

Intermediate medieval and renaissance Latin

14 January 2012 10:30–16:15 Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies Research training workshop Room ST273

Theories

www.sas.ac.uk

This course will take place every Monday between 9 January and 20 March 2012 Contact: manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

This course will take place every Tuesday between 10 January and 7 March 2012 Contact: manjeet.sambi@sas.ac.uk

Johan Siebers (UCLAN/IGRS), Akane Kawakami (Birkbeck), James Williams (Royal Holloway), Michael Witt (Roehampton) Contact: christopher.barenberg@sas.ac.uk

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How to find us

How to find us Venue Unless otherwise stated, all events are held in the School of Advanced Study which is located within the central University of London precinct in Bloomsbury, central London. Most events take place in or around Senate House or Stewart House which are adjacent. The School of Advanced Study is part of the University of London and takes its responsibility to visitors with special needs very seriously and will endeavour to make reasonable adjustments to facilities to accommodate such needs. If you have a particular requirement, please discuss it confidentially with the event organiser ahead of the event taking place. Rooms listed in the events brochure are located as follows: Room STB2/3/5/6/7 Room G22/24/26 Room G32/34/35/37 Beveridge Hall Crush Hall Deller Hall Macmillan Hall Room 102/103/104 Chancellor’s Hall Court Room Jessell Room Senate Room Room 254, Library Training Suite Room 261 Room ST273/274/275/276 Common Room Ecclesiastical History Room Germany Room Low Countries Room Wolfson Room Charles Clore House IALS Lecture Theatre Warburg Institute

Stewart House, basement Senate House, ground floor Senate House, ground floor Senate House, ground floor Senate House, ground floor Senate House, ground floor Senate House, ground floor Senate House, first floor Senate House, first floor Senate House, first floor Senate House, first floor Senate House, first floor Senate House Library Senate House, second floor Stewart House, second floor Senate House, third floor Institute of Historical Research, Senate House, North Block Institute of Historical Research, Senate House, North Block Institute of Historical Research, Senate House, North Block Institute of Historical Research, Senate House, North Block Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, 17 Russell Square Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, 17 Russell Square Warburg Institute, Woburn Square

A number of events will be held at external venues. Please see www.sas.ac.uk/events.html 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.events@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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POSTGRADUATE STUDY in the humanities and social sciences at the University of London The School of Advanced Study, University of London, unites ten prestigious research institutes to form the UK’s national centre for the facilitation and promotion of research in the humanities and social sciences. The School offers full- and part-time Master’s and research degrees in its specialist areas, including: LLM in Advanced Legislative Studies LLM in Advanced Legislative Studies by distance learning LLM in International Corporate Governance, Financial Regulation and Economic Law MA in Caribbean and Latin American Studies MA in Comparative American Studies MA in Cultural and Intellectual History 1300–1650 MA in Historical Research MA in the History of the Book MA in Latin American Studies MA in Taxation (Law, Administration and Practice) MA in Understanding and Securing Human Rights MA in United States Studies: History and Politics MRes in the History of the Book MSc in Environment and Development in Latin America and the Caribbean MSc in Globalisation and Latin American Development MSc in Latin American Politics MSc in Latin American Studies (Development) Postgraduate Diploma in Taxation Postgraduate Certificate in Taxation

Postgraduate Open Day: Wednesday 8 February 2012 For further information email sas.info@sas.ac.uk or visit our website www.sas.ac.uk/postgraduatestudy.html





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