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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Moore Institute
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TZID:Europe/Dublin
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DTSTART:20130331T010000
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DTSTART:20131027T010000
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131121T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131121T090000
DTSTAMP:20260417T065705
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2377-1385024400-1385024400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Irish Centre for the Histories of Labour & Class\, Moore Institute\, NUI Galway  Inaugural conference
DESCRIPTION:Irish Centre for the Histories of Labour & Class \nMoore Institute\, NUI Galway \nInaugural conference \nArts Humanities and Social Science Reserach Building (new extension) \n21-22 November 2013 \nRound One: THURSDAY 21 NOVEMBER\, 9.00 ‰ÛÒ 10.30 \nPanel 1: Irish working life and politics: (i) Primitive rebels \nGary Hussey (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Agrarian secret societies and a moral economy: the case of the Threshers‰۪ \nMaura Cronin (Mary Immaculate College\, Limerick) ‰Û÷Sawyers and vitriol-throwing in 1830s Cork‰۪ \nJohn Cunningham (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷The working class revolt of September 1846‰۪ \nPanel 2: Migrants and transnational labour ‰ÛÒ Session supported by the MA in Culture and Colonialism\, NUI Galway \nKathy Powell (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Mobile labour and violence‰۪ \nEilis Ward (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Migrants or Victims? Debating Prostitution Law Reform in Ireland‰۪ \nMargaret Brehony (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Free Labour and Whitening the Nation: Irish Migrants in Colonial Cuba‰۪ \nPanel 3: Workers‰۪ art \nJames Curry (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏAn inspiration to all who gaze upon it?‰۝ The James Larkin monument on Dublin‰۪s O‰۪Connell Street‰۪ \nKaty Milligan (TCD)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏArtist of the workers‰۝: poverty and politics in the art of Harry Kernoff‰۪ \nJean Walker (NUI Maynooth)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏPlain and fancy workers‰۝: women knitters and identity in Ireland‰۪s nineteenth and twentieth century‰۪ \nRound Two\, THURSDAY 21 NOVEMBER\, 10.50 ‰ÛÒ 12.20: \nPanel 1: Irish working life and politics: (ii) c. 1850-1900 \nLaurence Marley\, (NUI Galway)\, ‘Georgeite radicals in late nineteenth-century Belfast’ \nJohn McGrath (MIC)\, ‰Û÷Organised labour in 19th century Limerick: violence and the struggle for legitimacy‰۪ \nBrian Casey (Clonfert archivist)\, ‰Û÷Matt Harris and the cause of labourers during the Land War‰۪ \nPanel 2: Causes and Campaigns in the Roaring Twenties \nNiall Whelehan (University of Edinburgh)\,‰Û÷Sacco and Vanzetti and Ireland‰۪ \nMark Phelan (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏStrike breaking\, union breaking\, intolerance and bigotry‰۝: Irish labour and Italian Fascism in the 1920s‰۪ \nGerard Watts (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷The battle for Liberty Hall\, 1923-24‰۪ \nPanel 3: Mobility and the intelligentsia \nTomÌÁs Finn (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷The influence of intellectuals in Ireland\, 1940-80‰۪ \nMary Marmion (UCD)\, ‰Û÷From the land of bulrush and bog to the garden party at the Palace: The role of women in the emerging middle class\, 1850-1970‰۪ \nJames O‰۪Donnell (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷A Class of News: an all-Ireland managerial class in Irish newspapers c.1912-1939‰۪ \nRound Three: THURSDAY 21 NOVEMBER\, 1.30 ‰ÛÒ 3.00 \nPanel 1: Irish working life and politics: (iii) 1900-1950 \nDonal O’Drisceoil (UCC)\, ‰Û÷Sex & socialism: the class politics of immorality in early 20th century Ireland‰۪  Niamh Puirs̩il \, ‘The Labourers’ Party: class & politics in early 20th century’ Adrian Grant (Univ. Ulster)\, ‘Radicals: the Irish working class\, republicanism and the radical left\, c.1900-1939’ \nPanel 2: Youth\, class\, and culture \nDonal Fallon (UCD)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏQuick witted urchins‰۝: Dublin‰۪s newsboys\, 1900-25‰۪ \nJonathon Hannon (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Class\, culture and John Cooper Clarke’ \nJulie McGrath (MIC)\, ‰Û÷Sir Edward De Vere and William O‰۪Brien‰۪ \nPaddy McMenamin\, (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷What would James Connolly have made of it all’? Youth & class in late 1960s Belfast\,  \nPanel 3: Class houses  \nThomas Murray (UCD)\, ‰Û÷Ireland‰۪s rebel cities: the untold history of an island‰۪s Housing Action Committees‰۪ \nMichael Dwyer (UCC)\, ‰Û÷Abandoned by God and the Corporation: The anti-slum campaign in Cork city\, 1913-1930‰۪ \nPadraic Kenna (NUI Galway)\, Historical overview of the development of the Irish housing system \nRound Four: THURSDAY 21 NOVEMBER\, 3.15 ‰ÛÒ 4.40 \nPanel 1: Biographies \nGerard Madden (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Bishop Browne of Galway and anti-communism\, 1937-1976‰۪ \nJohn Kehoe (TCD)\, ‘Garda Memoirs: autobiographical writing and occupational identity’ \nMaeve Casserly (TCD)\, ‰Û÷Rosie Hackett: bridging the divide‰۪ \nGerri O‰۪Neill (Mater Dei)\, ‰Û÷The Deportation of James Gralton ‰ÛÒ de Valera and the 1933 Red Scare‰۪ \nPanel 2: Religion and class politics \nDan Finn (New Left Review)\, ‰Û÷Irish Republicans and the Protestant working class\, 1968-1998‰۪ \nTony Varley (NUI Galway)\, ‘Bobby Burke\, Christian Socialism and class politics in post-independence Ireland \nMatthew Collins (Univ. Ulster)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏScourge of the bigot and Tory‰۝: The life and times of Jack Beattie‰۪ \nPanel 3: 1913 and all that \nLeo Keohane ((NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏLabour in Irish History‰۝: a text in support of a Sorel type Syndicalism?‰۪  \nLeah Hunnewell (TCD)\, ‰Û÷Irish working class struggle & postmillennial rhetoric 1911-16: a transatlantic perspective‰۪ \nMeredith Meagher (Univ. of Notre Dame)\, ‰Û÷Ireland & American Labour: an international perspective on Lockout‰۪ \nJohn O‰۪Donovan (UCC) Canon Sheehan and Connolly: Labour\, Nationality and Religion in Ireland 1910 ‰ÛÒ 1913 \nRound Five: THURSDAY 21 NOVEMBER\, 4.45 ‰ÛÒ 6.00 \nPanel 1: CaipitlÌ_ as OileÌÁn an Chrapaigh; cumannach as ́rainn – Session in association with the Liam & Tom O‰۪Flaherty Society \nSeosamh ÌÒ Cuaig (Independent film maker) ‰Û÷Tom O‰۪Flaherty‰۪ \nJackie UÌ_ Chionna (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷MÌÁirtÌ_n MÌ_r McDonogh‰۪ \nPanel 2: Labour and archives \nKieran Hoare\, NUI Galway \nCatrÌ_ona Crowe\, National Archives of Ireland \nFrancis Devine\, Irish Labour History Society \nPanel 3: Class\, conflict and amelioration in early nineteenth Ireland \nDominic Haugh (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷The origins and legacy of the Ralahine commune\, 1831-1833‰۪ \nTerry Dunne (NUI Maynooth)\, ‰Û÷Class in pre-famine Ireland‰۪ \nAlan Noonan\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏNot the slightest appearance of an outbreak‰۝: labour conflict in the mining regions of Ireland‰۪  \nRound Six: THURSDAY 21 NOVEMBER\, 8.00 ‰ÛÒ 9.30 \nMechanics Institute\, The Saothar symposium: \n‰Û÷Forty years on: where next for the history of the Irish working class.‰۪ \nEstablished in 1973\, the Irish Labour History Society has published its annual journal Saothar since 1975. This discussion will feature the following speakers who will assess where to for the history of the Irish working class ‰ÛÒ Mary Jones\, Michael Pierse\, Francis Devine\, Sarah-Anne Buckley and David Convery.  \nCaitriona Crowe will occupy the chair  \nMechanics Institute: book launch of David Convery (ed.) Locked out: a century of Irish working class life  \nRound Seven: FRIDAY 22 NOVEMBER\, 9.00 ‰ÛÒ 10.30 \nPanel 1: In dock\, pew and street \nGerard Farrell (TCD)\, ‰Û÷Class divisions amongst the ‰ÛÏmere Irish‰۝ of colonial Ulster‰۪ \nHilary Taylor (Yale University)\, ‰Û÷Rethinking lower-class ‰ÛÏinarticulacy‰۝ in 18th-century Britain: some evidence from the Old Bailey‰۪ \nSeÌÁn Farrell (Northern Illinois Univ.)\, ‰Û÷Beautiful Vision: Christ Church & Anglican children in early Victorian Britain‰۪ \nPanel 2: The rights of labour \nCathal Smith (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Irish Landlordism\, American slavery and ‰Û÷‰۝rural subjection‰۝‰۪ \nTimothy Keane (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Revisiting Chartism in Ireland‰۪ \nTBC \nPanel 3: Sport\, labour and class  \nDaryl Leeworthy (University of Huddersfield)\, ‰Û÷Class\, labour migration and the making of commercial ice hockey in inter-war Britain and Ireland‰۪ \nDavid Toms (UCC) and Alex Jackson\, ‰Û÷The miner and the darling of the gods: football\, work and migration in inter-war Britain and Ireland‰۪ \nBrian Ward (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Galway press attitudes towards the working classes in 1912‰۪ \nRound Eight: FRIDAY 22 NOVEMBER\, 10.50 ‰ÛÒ 12.10 \nPanel 1: Class and politics in Ireland in 1790s Ireland  \nNiall Gillespie (TCD)\, ‰Û÷The class dynamics of radical literary political culture\,1791-98‰۪ \nTimothy Murtagh (TCD)\, ‰Û÷Dublin‰۪s journeymen – Hibernia‰۪s sans culottes?‰۪ \nUltÌÁn Gillen (Teeside University)\, ‰Û÷Class and United Irish ideology‰۪ \nPanel 2: Collective bargains  \nAlan Power (TCD)\, ‰Û÷Irish Trade Unionism\, centralised bargaining and social justice\, 1961-79‰۪ \nMartin Maguire (Dundalk IT)\, ‰Û÷Confronting state power: civil service trade unions in independent Ireland\, 1922-38‰۪ \nPeter Murray (NUI Maynooth)\, ‰Û÷Adult education and labour movement division in Ireland\, 1940s to 1960s‰۪ \nAudrey Cahill\, ‰Û÷Child poverty\, intergenerational transmission of advantage and basic capital‰۪ \nPanel 3: Oral History\, letters and work \nMary Muldowney (TCD)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏTrusting to their honours for justice‰۝: insights into class relations in the Irish railway industry after the introduction of the state old age pension in January 1909‰۪ \nLiam Cullinane (UCC)\, ‰Û÷Fordism and Ford workers in Ireland\, 1917-1932‰۪ \nIda Milne (Oral History Network)\, ‰Û÷Working in a newspaper industry: the gendering of internal elites‰۪ \nRound Nine: FRIDAY 22 NOVEMBER\, 12.15. ‰ÛÒ 1.30 \nPanel 1: Stage left \nAoife Monks (Birkbeck College\, University of London) ‘Virtuosity\, technique\, craft and the immaterials of Performance.’  \nCharlotte McIvor (NUI Galway) ‰Û÷‰۝Take Me Down to Monto\, Monto\, Monto‰۝: disrupting narratives of economic crisis as states of exception through the experimental Irish community theatre.‰۪  \nMark Phelan (Queen‰۪s) ‰Û÷Performing class\, culture and conflict in Belfast‰ÛÓclass politics and labour relations in forgotten figures from the Irish dramatic canon.‰۪ \nLionel Pilkington (NUI Galway) ‰Û÷1985: Irish theatre and the new spirit of capitalism.‰۪  \nPanel 2: Sustaining and forming children \nEmma O‰۪Toole (NCAD)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏAnxious to provide a good nurse‰۝: employing the Irish wet nurse in upper class households in eighteenth-century Ireland‰۪ \nGeraldine Curtin (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Instilling the habit of labour: children\, work and the early Irish reformatories‰۪ \nIan Miller (University of Ulster)\, ‰Û÷Undernourished infants and ‰ÛÏschool-day starvation‰۝: politics\, class and childhood feeding\, c.1900-1918‰۪ \nSin̩ad Mercier (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷The Irish Magdalene Laundry: establishing state and social responsibility in the ‰ÛÏdisciplinary society‰۝‰۪ \nPanel 3: Class politics and the Irish revolution ‰ÛÒ session supported by the MA in Irish Studies\, NUIG \nAndy Bielenberg (UCC) Protestant emigration during the War of Independence and Civil War‰۪ \nJohn Borgonovo\, (UCC) ‰Û÷Republican civil administration and taxation in the ‰ÛÏMunster  Republic‰۝\, July-August 1922‰۪ \nDara Folan (NUI Galway)\, ‘The Gaelic League and the labour movement: unlikely bedfellows?’ \nPanel 4: Perspectives on class and resistance \nMichael Pierse (Queen‰۪s)\, ‰Û÷Emigration\, counter-culture and writing the Irish working class‰۪ \nPaula Geraghty (Trade Union TV)\, ‘The dialectics of resistance: digital media offering new possibilities for interpretation? \nPaul Garrett (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Destabilizing classifications: thinking with Ranciere about class and history‰۪ \n7.30 pm Mechanics Institute: Preliminaryworkshop for conference participants interested in developing an oral history project on 20th century Galway industries. \nFRIDAY 22 NOVEMBER: The tenth and final round \nMechanics Institute\, ‰Û÷Class\, conflict and culture: the songs‰۪\,
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/irish-centre-for-the-histories-of-labour-class-moore-institute-nui-galway-inaugural-conference/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131121T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131121T130000
DTSTAMP:20260417T065705
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2384-1385038800-1385038800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Finnegans Wake reading group
DESCRIPTION:If you like gossiping\, poetry\, languages\, puns\, puzzles\, jokes\, double entendres or even avant-garde tomes\, you might like Finnegans Wake. Despite its scurrilous critical reputation\, James Joyce’s final workis not as difficult as it would first appear and\,when     read as part of a group\, can be a hugely rewarding experience. It is     our hope to read the text episodically\, playing close attention to  the    rhythm and musicality of the piece; we aim to stress the  looseness of    the text without resort to lucidity. \nNo prior experience of Joyce is necessary and the meetings will be very informal so everyone is very welcome. \nConsider joining our Facebook group to keep abreast of news\, dates and any strange Joycean ephemera that we find. ( https://www.facebook.com/groups/359211964211176/ )  \nFor more information please contact siobhanmpurcell@gmail.com
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/finnegans-wake-reading-group-5/
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