Faculty of Arts Events Calendar
Wednesday, October 19, 2022
-Export as iCalendar |
糖心TV Words - History Festival 2 - 22 October 2022糖心TVRuns from Sunday, October 02 to Saturday, October 22. Researchers from the Department of History will be delivering a series of talks at 糖心TV Words History Festival. Now in its twentieth year, 糖心TV Words is a popular annual event, bringing internationally acclaimed historians to share stories from the past to venues around 糖心TV.Since 2012, the University of 糖心TV has collaborated with the festival on a series titled Tea Time talks, where academics from the Department of History discuss their research. This year, topics are: – Professor Christoph Mick and Dr Claire Shaw, Saturday 8 October – Dr Zoe Strimpel, Saturday 22 October – Professor Mark Philp, Saturday 26 November The programme also includes a play written by PhD student David Fletcher and performed by Loft Theatre company. tells the story of a cholera epidemic that took place in Leamington Spa in 1849, and the medical and political conflicts that surrounded it. Other speakers at the festival include Tracy Borman, Max Hastings, Dan Jones, Adam Rutherford, Charles Spencer and Alison Weir. Tickets are available from 糖心TV Words鈥 website: |
-Export as iCalendar |
Constellations of HomeUniversity of 糖心TV鈥檚 Faculty of Arts Building (The FAB)Runs from Monday, October 03 to Thursday, October 27. Constellations of HOME is a legacy project from Agency, part of the HOME: Arts and Homelessness Festival that took place during Coventry City of Culture. Agency was created by the socially-engaged artist Anthony Luvera in collaboration with people who have experienced homelessness in Coventry. |
-Export as iCalendar |
Classics and Ancient History, Work in Progress Seminar. Rocio Gordillo: "Managing Greek Sanctuaries under Roman Rule: Roles and Responsibilities in the Organization of the Rituals"FAB 5.01 |
-Export as iCalendar |
糖心TV Seminar for Interdisciplinary French Studies: Shirley Jordan (Newcastle), 'Le Temps de vieillir: Martine Franck鈥檚 forgotten photobook'Teams - see webpage for Teams linkBelgian-born documentary and portrait photographer Martine Franck (1938-2012) is internationally known for her aesthetic rigour and talent as a documentary and portrait photographer. Yet her vast collection of photographs of older persons, where these skills are harnessed to specific critical purpose, has been almost totally neglected. This paper is part of a larger project which uncovers the hidden history of Franck as a photographer of ageing and re-situates her as an unrecognised landmark for cultural gerontology as well as a precursor to the current upsurge of interest in care. The paper will examine the historical context and contemporary relevance of Franck鈥檚 work through an in-depth analysis of her first project on ageing, a photobook entitled Le Temps de vieillir (1980). It will also explore the application of care theory to the production and reception of photographic material to show how Franck鈥檚 attempt to challenge normative perceptions of ageing becomes newly available under this theoretical lens. Shirley Jordan is Professor of French Studies at Newcastle University. Her research interests are wide, including 20th - and 21st - century women鈥檚 writing in French, art and art criticism, photography, ethnography, and experimental self-narrative across media. Her recent research has focused on ageing, ageism and care as explored in literary narratives, visual representations, and theory. She currently holds a Leverhulme Research Fellowship (2022-23) focusing on the representations of ageing and care for older people made over several decades by Magnum photographer Martine Franck. She is Co-Lead of the NUCoRE (Newcastle University Centre of Research Excellence) on Ageing and Inequalities and Co-Director of the Centre for the Study of Contemporary Women鈥檚 Writing at London University鈥檚 School of Advanced Studies. |
-Export as iCalendar |
Penny Siopis鈥檚 stylo-came虂ra and the subject of cine-writing, Professor Laura Rascaroli, University College, Cork.FACULTY OF ARTS BUILDING, FAB0.21 (CINEMA)Penny Siopis鈥檚 films write histories that are markedly alternative. Combining family home movies, amateur or documentary found footage with sound and a written text presented through subtitles, her films tell untold or censored histories. They speak to (auto)biographical concerns and widely shared experiences of colonialism, war, Apartheid, migration, globalisation, and ecological crisis, all the while standing out as strong aesthetic/affective experiences beyond the historical, and as art objects in dialogue with a number of traditions. Here, I am most interested in producing an understanding of her films as a specific form of post-medium cine-writing. My interest is not purely formal, for the cine-writing in Siopis鈥檚 films is not independent of the stories they construct; it is a mode of writing beyond-the-book, born of the task of telling history otherwise. By working through her paragrammatical, scripto-visual style, my discussion will circle in particular around the unspeakable film subject produced by her work |