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This is a composite calendar page template pulling in feeds from events calendars in department and research centre sites. It is purely used as a tool to collect the event details before filtering through to a publicly-visible calendar filter page template. To remove or add a feed to this composite calendar, please contact the IT Services Web Team (webteam at warwick dot ac dot uk).

Monday, March 20, 2017

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Workshop on 'Arguments for the against Socioeconomic rights, Past and Present'
Harvard Law School, US

Runs from Monday, March 20 to Tuesday, March 21.

The 4th workshop of the Leverhulme Network 'Socioeconomic rights in History', 20-21 March 2017, Harvard Law School, US

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Workshop on 'Arguments for the against Socioeconomic rights, Past and Present'
Harvard Law School, US

Runs from Monday, March 20 to Tuesday, March 21.

The 4th workshop of the Leverhulme Network 'Socioeconomic rights in History', 20-21 March 2017, 

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Venue: Seminar Room 1, Wolfson Research Exchange, Level 3, ÌÇÐÄTV Library

In the second half of the 19th century, decorative objects from China and Japan became more widely available in Britain, thereby encouraging British consumers to conflate the names of these objects with the names of their countries of origin ("china" for porcelain plate; "japan" for lacquer ware). How did this increased exposure to Chinese and Japanese art objects - and the distinctive forms of aesthetics that these objects manifested - affect the production of British art and literature in the 19th and early 20th centuries? Can we compare British responses to Chinese art with British responses to Japanese art? How can such comparisons help us understand the ways in which Britain engaged with China and Japan not only as individual countries, but also as part of a regional entity we might call "East Asia"?

We will address these questions at our seminar with Dr Jenny Holt (Meiji University), who will be presenting research from her current book project. We will read extracts from Jenny's book as well as from Elizabeth Hope Chang's Britain's Chinese Eye: Literature, Empire, and Aesthetics in Nineteenth-Century Britain (2010).

 

We welcome researchers from all disciplines, who are working on Britain's relations with East Asia in the long 19th century. If you're interested in attending our seminar, please contact Waiyee Loh at W.Loh@warwick.ac.uk. Readings will be circulated before the seminar.

 

Jenny Holt is Associate Professor in English Literature at Meiji University, Tokyo. Her research examines Anglophone writing on Japan in the 19th and early 20th centuries, the travel writing of Isabella Bird, and Victorian children's literature.

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Seminar Room 1, Wolfson Research Exchange, Library Level 3

In the second half of the 19th century, decorative objects from China and Japan became more widely available in Britain, thereby encouraging British consumers to conflate the names of these objects with the names of their countries of origin ("china" for porcelain plate; "japan" for lacquer ware). How did this increased exposure to Chinese and Japanese art objects - and the distinctive forms of aesthetics that these objects manifested - affect the production of British art and literature in the 19th and early 20th centuries? Can we compare British responses to Chinese art with British responses to Japanese art? How can such comparisons help us understand the ways in which Britain engaged with China and Japan not only as individual countries, but also as part of a regional entity we might call "East Asia"?

We will address these questions at our seminar with Dr Jenny Holt (Meiji University), who will be presenting research from her current book project. We will read extracts from Jenny's book as well as from Elizabeth Hope Chang's Britain's Chinese Eye: Literature, Empire, and Aesthetics in Nineteenth-Century Britain (2010).

 

We welcome researchers from all disciplines, who are working on Britain's relations with East Asia in the long 19th century. If you're interested in attending our seminar, please contact Waiyee Loh at W.Loh@warwick.ac.uk. Readings will be circulated before the seminar.

 

Jenny Holt is Associate Professor in English Literature at Meiji University, Tokyo. Her research examines Anglophone writing on Japan in the 19th and early 20th centuries, the travel writing of Isabella Bird, and Victorian children's literature.

-
Export as iCalendar
Seminar Room 1, Wolfson Research Exchange, Library Level 3

In the second half of the 19th century, decorative objects from China and Japan became more widely available in Britain, thereby encouraging British consumers to conflate the names of these objects with the names of their countries of origin ("china" for porcelain plate; "japan" for lacquer ware). How did this increased exposure to Chinese and Japanese art objects - and the distinctive forms of aesthetics that these objects manifested - affect the production of British art and literature in the 19th and early 20th centuries? Can we compare British responses to Chinese art with British responses to Japanese art? How can such comparisons help us understand the ways in which Britain engaged with China and Japan not only as individual countries, but also as part of a regional entity we might call "East Asia"?

We will address these questions at our seminar with Dr Jenny Holt (Meiji University), who will be presenting research from her current book project. We will read extracts from Jenny's book as well as from Elizabeth Hope Chang's Britain's Chinese Eye: Literature, Empire, and Aesthetics in Nineteenth-Century Britain (2010).

 We welcome researchers from all disciplines, who are working on Britain's relations with East Asia in the long 19th century. If you're interested in attending our seminar, please contact Waiyee Loh at W.Loh@warwick.ac.uk. Readings will be circulated before the seminar.

 Jenny Holt is Associate Professor in English Literature at Meiji University, Tokyo. Her research examines Anglophone writing on Japan in the 19th and early 20th centuries, the travel writing of Isabella Bird, and Victorian children's literature.

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