Faculty of Arts Events Calendar
Wednesday, January 26, 2022
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FAB Digital Wednesdays - GoReact demo - a platform for student video projectsVirtual - TeamsGoReact is a well-designed platform for recording student presentations (individual or team), peer review, assessment and feedback. It has been used effectively in WMG, WBS, and Education. We are reviewing it for the Arts Faculty. Join us in the session as we watch a demo by Jenny from GoReact, hear from people at 糖心TV who have used it, and consider how well it fits with our needs. Please use |
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Work in Progress SeminarMS TeamsSpeaker: Dr Irene Soto Marin, University of Michigan Chair: Dr Clare Rowan 鈥淭he Sources and Implications of Egyptian Silver Coinage鈥 |
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FAB Digital Wednesdays - Virtual Reality (VR) ClubVirtual - Teams |
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Research seminar: Clare Siviter (Bristol), Revolutionary Cancel Culture? Rethinking Censorship during the French RevolutionTeamsIn democracies with a legal right to free speech, we often see commentators are calling out what they term 'new censorship', citing examples like cancel culture and sensitivity readers. This is often presented as worryingly novel, but as this paper shows through the case of the French Revolution, it is anything but. We will examine how, despite the 1789 Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen's protection of the freedom of speech, and multiple promises to this effect after 1789, censorship by state and non-state actors continued. In so doing, this paper explores the complex, and at times paradoxical, relationship between democracy, freedom of speech, and censorship, and it proposes a new methodology to understand better how non-state actors can act as censors - both in the 1790s and today. Clare Siviter is a theatre historian of eighteenth and nineteenth-century France and senior lecturer in French Theatre and Performance at the University of Bristol. Her monograph, Tragedy and Nation in the Age of Napoleon, appeared with Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment in 2020. She has co-edited a special issue of the Journal of War & Culture Studies (2021), and the collective volumes Celebrity Across the Channel, 1750-1850 (University of Delaware Press, 2021) and L鈥橢ngagement en vers et contre tous. Servir les r茅volutions, rejouer leurs m茅moires (1789-1848) (Presses universitaires Blaise Pascal, forthcoming). She is currently undertaking a Leverhulme Research Fellowship for the project 鈥楽urveilling the Stage: Censorship and Subjectivity in the Age of the Revolution鈥. Clare's paper will be followed by a Response from Kate Astbury, Professor of French Studies. Her research focuses on extending our understanding of French culture 1750-1815 by examining the traditions, themes, aesthetics and politics of novels, prints, theatrical texts, scores and performances of the time. Between 2013 and 2017, she was PI on an AHRC-funded project on French Theatre of the Napoleonic Era which subsequently generated two follow-on funding awards for collaborative work with English Heritage and the National Youth Theatre. |