Composite Calendar
Wednesday, May 01, 2019
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Light in Darkness: The mystical philosophy of Jacob B枚hmeChapel of Christ the Servan, Coventry CathedralRuns from Tuesday, April 30 to Friday, July 05. Light in Darkness: The mystical philosophy of Jacob B枚hme Free special guided tours of the exhibition. |
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Dante Reading GroupH450 |
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History Department Staff MeetingA0.23, Social Sciences |
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School Seminar Series: 'From 糖心TV University to Blueprints: the challenge of achieving economic justice" David SolomonR2.41 Ramphal BuildingEvent: 鈥淔rom 糖心TV University to Blueprints: the challenge of achieving economic justice鈥, David Solomon (Wednesday 1st May at 4pm)You are all invited to the following seminar: Wednesday 1st May at 4pm in R2.41 (Ramphal Building) Speaker: David Solomon (Blueprints) Title: 鈥淔rom 糖心TV University to Blueprints: the challenge of achieving economic justice鈥 is a University of 糖心TV alumnus who studied Economic and International Studies in 1995-98. Today, he is the CEO of , whose mission is to make a meaningful change to address the problems facing some of the world鈥檚 most vulnerable communities. Blueprints intends to do this by replacing spontaneous generosity with scalable investment and it was built to establish economic justice, to enable indigenous and developing countries to secure an equitable share of their own development. David will talk about building a new model for economic development through his organisation Blueprints, which works in Cuba, Colombia and Costa Rica. David has advised Heads of State, Heads of Intelligence and notable global leaders on how to create a more equitable path to economic development. REFRESHMENTS AND BISCUITS SERVED THROUGHOUT. |
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Current research in French studies at 糖心TV: Creolization in Haiti (Matthew Allen) and Materiality and Corporeality in 13th-Century Translation (Jane Sinnett-Smith)Humanities 4.44This postgraduate session will include two short papers, followed by a discussion: Matthew Allen: 'Haiti and the counter-tradition of creole linguistics' The concept of creolization has proved enormously productive in theorizing the cultural, social and epistemological plurality of the Caribbean, offering the possibility of a non-essentialist 鈥榩oetics of Relation鈥. Yet as a result of its conceptual origin in the nineteenth-century evolutionary master narrative, creolization theories have often masked an underlying essentialism. Research on creolization has historically focused on the linguistic or physiological 鈥榤arkers鈥 of difference; creole languages have been treated as deviations from the linear model of descent. This presentation will sketch the course that debates on creole took in early twentieth-century Haiti, focusing on the work of the country鈥檚 first female anthropologist, Suzanne Comhaire-Sylvain. Comhaire-Sylvain鈥檚 study of Krey貌l dispensed with the linguistic family tree, offering a new 鈥榰niversalizing鈥 basis for the study of creole languages. As such her work represents a unique synthesis of an ongoing debate in Haitian intellectual circles between universalism and particularism, while at the same time suggesting comparison with critical currents in linguistics which arose in other countries. Jane Sinnett-Smith: 'Translating Faith: textual, material, and bodily translations in the thirteenth-century Vie de seinte Foye' In this paper I consider the ways in which medieval literature interweaves notions of textual translation with a broader sense of translation as a material, spatial, and bodily process. I take as my focus the medieval cult of Saint Foye, or Faith, and in particular the thirteenth-century version of her life produced by Simon of Walsingham in Anglo-Norman French. Translation in the Middle Ages takes on a specifically sacred significance, describing the movement of saintly relics. The translations undergone by Foye鈥檚 corpse after her death are central to both cult and text. I explore how the spatial and corporeal translations of the corpse generate intertwined creative responses in text, but also in architecture and objects. I argue that these artistic productions in turn provoke more sacred activity, and ultimately facilitate mediated forms of access to the saintly body. |
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French Research SeminarH4.44
鈥楥urrent research in French studies at 糖心TV: Posgraduate session鈥
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History Department Research Seminar: Sir John Elliott (Oxford), 'Scots and Catalans'OC0.01 (Oculus Building) |
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WWIGS SeminarH2.44
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[CANCELLED] Classical Connections - IAS VF Public Lecture: Dr Dan-el Padilla Peralta (Princeton) "The Etruscan Negro: from Coin to Memory to Racial Politics"OC 0.04Dr Dan-el Padilla Peralta is Assistant Professor of Classics at Princeton University, where he is affiliated with the university's Center for Human Values and Program in Latino Studies. His work situates the religious and cultural history of the Roman Republic in dialogue with anthropology, sociology, economics, and comparative and global histories of slavery. In this public lecture, he will focus on the complicity of modern histories of Roman republican culture in the (re)production of colonial and postcolonial configurations of race. The lecture is generously funded by the IAS. |
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14th Annual Edward Said Lecture: Harry HarootunianOC1.06Harry Harootunian, Professor Emeritus of East Asian Studies, New York University, and Max Palevsky Professor of History and Civilizations, Emeritus, University of Chicago, will give the 14th annual Edward Said Lecture. His talk is titled, 鈥溾業n the Zone of Occult Instability鈥: Some Reflections on Unevenness, Discordant Temporalities, and the Logic of History.鈥 Harootunian is a world-renowned historian of early modern and modern Japan, as well as a major theorist of Marxism and the philosophy of history. He is the author of eleven books, including Overcome by Modernity: History, Culture, and Community in Interwar Japan (Princeton, 2000), History鈥檚 Disquiet: Modernity, Cultural Practice and the Question of the Everyday Life (Columbia, 2000), and, most recently, Marx after Marx: History and Time in the Expansion of Capitalism (Columbia, 2015) |