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Wednesday, February 06, 2019

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Aby Warburg Workshop no. 2.
IAS Seminar Room, Millburn House.
Lunch followed by papers and discussion
Johannes von M眉ller (Warburg Institute, London), 'Aby Warburg's essay 'Words and Images in the Age of Luther'.
Steffen Haug, (Warburg Institute, London), 'Aby Warburg and the First World War'.

Visit our Research Seminars page for information about this series of events.

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Tim Lawrence, "Counterculture, Postindustrial Creativity, the 1970s Dance Floor and鈥isco鈥
Humanities H5.02

Challenging the conventional reading of disco as a genre that defined the 1970s, riled punks and rappers in equal measure, and owed its downfall to corporate exploitation and homophobic opposition, Tim Lawrence argues for it to be understood as a convergent cultural practice rooted in countercultural politics and the melting pot demographics of NYC. Developing an argument sketched out in Love Saves the Day: A History of American Dance Music Culture, 1970-79, he maintains that disco embodied the emergence of a new form of postindustrial creativity that carried the promise of a flexible, cooperative, participatory social democratic settlement. This form of disco suffered its first near-death experience not in 1979, when the national backlash against disco reached its peak, but in 1984, with the setback traceable back to 1975. How come?

Tim Lawrence is a Professor of Cultural Studies in University of East London鈥檚 School of Arts and Digital Industries, where he teaches music. He is the author of Love Saves the Day: A History of American Dance Music Culture, 1970-79 (Duke University Press, 2003), Hold On to Your Dreams: Arthur Russell and the Downtown Music Scene, 1973-92 (Duke University Press, 2009) and Life and Death on the New York Dance Floor, 1980-83 (Duke University Press, 2016).

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WiP Guest Speaker: Prof. Mich猫le Lowrie (Chicago)
Oculus 1.02

Prof. Mich猫le Lowrie (Chicago)

"An Empire of Security and Care"

Prof. Mich猫le Lowrie is an Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Classics at the University of Chicago. Her research focuses on the intersection of ideology and literary form in Roman literature and its reception. She is the author of Writing, Performance, and Authority in Augustan Rome (OUP 2009) and Horace's Narrative Odes (OUP 1997). In 2018, she delivered the J.H. Gray Lecture at the University of Cambridge on the subject of the idea of security in Roman thought and literature.

Chair: Victoria Rimell

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Research Seminar: Professor Eugenie Brinkema (MIT), 鈥業ncremental Love'
A0.28 (Millburn House)

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