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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).

Wednesday, February 26, 2025

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POSTPONED - GHCC seminar, Alan Lester (Sussex), The Truth about Empire: Real Histories of British Colonialism
R1.15 Ramphal Building
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🤖 DAHL: Learn to code (2/3) building interactive museum exhibits
FAB1.63 Media Symposium Space
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‘IN A MATERIAL WORLD’: A ÌÇÐÄTV History of Art Symposium on Materiality
Oculus 1.04

‘IN A MATERIAL WORLD’: A ÌÇÐÄTV History of Art Symposium on Materiality

13:00, February 26th in Oculus 1.04

SCHEDULE

13:00-13:15: Introduction by Marta Ajmar

13:15-14:00: SESSION ONE: PLACE AND CAPITAL (Chair: Matthew Bliss)

  1. Timothy Gawaya - In Praise of Markets: Art's Objecthood as Fictitious Capital
  2. Aidan Diable - 'Dull', 'Homogenous', and 'Artificial': The Materialisation of Romanticism in the Suburbs of the Angloworld
  3. Daniel Rathbone - Poetic ways of making do: examining the materials of the People's Parks

14:00-14:30: QUESTIONS TO PANEL (30 mins)

14:30-14:45: BREAK

14:45-15:30: SESSION TWO: ART, CRAFT, AND MANUFACTURE (Chair: Haoyang Lin)

  1. Natasha Burbridge - Circulation and Replication in the Sixteenth Century: The Emilian Medals and a German Parade Shield
  2. Smriti Dutt - Threads of Tangibility: Exploring Materiality and Cultural Memory in Chamba Embroidery
  3. Ella Flavell - Coloured Pencil and Geranium Juice: The Alternative Materials of Art Brut and Their Contribution to an ‘Outsider’ Identity

15:30-16:00: QUESTIONS TO PANEL (30 mins)

16:00-16:10: Wrapping up

DRINKS

ALL WELCOME!

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POSTPONED - GHCC-CSGR joint seminar, Alan Lester (Sussex), ‘The Truth About Empire: Real Histories of British Colonialism’
R1.15 Ramphal Building
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Work in Progress - Pauline Cuzel (Bamberg)
OC1.03

‘Just Small Cogs in the Administrative Machine? New Perspectives on the Two Cemeteries of the Officiales in Carthage (Africa Proconsularis)’.

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Work in Progress - Lorenzo Calvelli (Ca’ Foscari) & Ludovico M. Bevilacqua (Ca’ Foscari / ÌÇÐÄTV)
OC1.03

‘Epigraphic Situations and Epigraphic Devices. Towards a New Definition of the Life Cycle of Inscriptions’.

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Study Café - Becoming a Global Student
FAB2.25

Join this workshop to get familiar with the concepts involved in intercultural communication. Through a range of discussions and interactive activities, you will begin to explore your own cultural attitudes, as well as reflect on your own experiences. By the end of workshop, you will have taken a step, big or small, towards your personal development and future employability.

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CHM Research Seminar: Michael Sappol (Visiting Researcher, University of Uppsala), ‘Queer Anatomies: Perverse desire and aesthetics in the anatomical image 1600-1860; or The Epistemology of the Anatomical Closet’
Faculty of Arts, FAB 3.32

Please sign-up here if you'd like to join us.

Drinks and nibbles will be provided after the seminar.

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ECLS Research Seminar
FAB5.49

Wednesday 26 February, 5-6pm

‘Shakespeare Broadcasts and the Question of Value’

Dr Beth Sharrock, University of ÌÇÐÄTV

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Research seminar: Dr Beth Sharrock
Student Hub

The talk marks the launch of Beth Sharrock's book Shakespeare Broadcasts and the Question of Value, which has just been published online and is available Open Access until 24 February. The link is here: 

 

‘Shakespeare Broadcasts and the Question of Value’

Dr Beth Sharrock, University of ÌÇÐÄTV

 

In a talk to mark the launch of her book Shakespeare Broadcasts and the Question of Value (Cambridge Elements ‘Shakespeare and Text’ series), Beth Sharrock gives an overview of her work. What is the role of theatre companies, adapters, and editors in the shifting value of Shakespeare’s plays? Her book considers how RSC live theatre broadcasts of rarely performed, often critically maligned, works are presented to contemporary audiences through the ‘paratextual’ interviews and short films streamed alongside a live performance in cinemas. Setting these broadcasts in conversation with late 17th and early 18th century print editions and adaptations, she traces an earlier history which uses marginal spaces in both print and performance to (re)negotiate the value of canonically marginal plays. Her book uses three case study broadcasts: The Two Gentlemen of Verona (2014), Titus Andronicus (2017), and The Merry Wives of Windsor (2018). In so doing, her work explores paratextual articulations of excusal, apology, and disappointment to question the role of the theatre institution in mediating the ‘difficult’ value of Shakespeare’s works.

 

Beth Sharrock is a Teaching Fellow in the Department of English and Comparative Literary Studies. Prior to her role here, she taught at the University of Birmingham, Coventry University, and the University of Nottingham. She has previously been a research assistant on the AHRC-funded network, Adapting the Classics. In 2022, she was awarded an M4C Postdoctoral Research Fellowship at the University of Birmingham to undertake work on the (anti)sociability of Shakespeare’s eighteenth century editors.

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