Composite Calendar
Tuesday, February 20, 2018
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Forgotten Connections: Linking Africa, the Mediterranean and the Atlantic Worlds in the Early Modern PeriodIAS seminar room, Millburn HouseRuns from Tuesday, February 20 to Wednesday, February 21. A workshop organised by Dr Jose Escribano Paez |
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Forgotten Connections: Linking Africa to the Interconnected Worlds of the Early Modern PeriodRuns from Tuesday, February 20 to Wednesday, February 21. A workshop organised by Dr Jose Escribano Paez |
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Caribbean Committee meeting
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French Studies Research Seminar: Miranda Gill (Jesus College, Cambridge), ‘Emotion therapy for modern men: self-help culture in turn-of-the-century France’Ramphal R0.14 |
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Lecture: Dr Omar Acha (Universidad de Buenos Aires): 'From Marxist to Post-Marxist Populism: The Trajectory of Ernesto Laclau and Argentina's National Left'.Ramphal 1.130 |
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seminar: Dr Miranda Gill (University of Cambridge) ‘Emotion therapy for modern men: self-help culture in turn-of-the-century France'R0.14 Ramphal building, University of ÌÇÐÄTV |
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CHM-French seminar: Dr Miranda Gill (Cambridge) ‘Emotion therapy for modern men: self-help culture in turn-of-the-century France'R0.14 Ramphal building, University of ÌÇÐÄTV |
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H4.50
Tuesday 20 February 2018. (ÌÇÐÄTV), 'Missionaries and Mobility between the Ottoman Empire and Early Modern Italy'. |
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STVDIO Seminar: Dr Felicita Tramontana (ÌÇÐÄTV), 'Missionaries and Mobility between the Ottoman Empire and Early Modern Italy'H4.50All welcome |
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H450
(ÌÇÐÄTV), 'Missionaries and Mobility between the Ottoman Empire and Early Modern Italy'. |
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Caribbean Studies seminar - Michael JosephRoom H0.60Michael Joseph (PhD, University of Oxford) Veteran Politics and Veterans’ Politics: Ex-Servicemen and the State in the British and French Caribbean, 1919-1939 As demobilisation gathered pace in 1919, the colonies of the British and French Caribbean alike were confronted with the problem of reintegrating thousands of returning ex-servicemen. By 1939, the situation had diverged: former members of the British West Indies Regiment and West India Regiment were restive, dissatisfied, and troublesome, while their French counterparts were, if far from apolitical, at least relatively settled. In short, veteran politics influenced veterans’ politics, with lasting effects for the region. This paper compares the approaches of the British and French colonial authorities to the veteran question, asking how and why veterans across the region took such different paths, and what conclusions we can draw about the links between military service and citizenship. |
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Caribbean Seminar
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