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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20140625T093000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20140625T093000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041549
CREATED:20160824T134713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134713Z
UID:2254-1403688600-1403688600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Chaucer at Galway II: Chaucer and realism - 25th and 26th June\, 2014
DESCRIPTION:Chaucer at Galway II: Chaucer and Realism\nwednesday 25th– thursday 26th June\, 2014\nVenue: Hardiman Research Building\, Room G011\nProgram\nWednesday 25th June 2014\n9.30-10am: Registration (Hardiman Research Building\, Room GO11) \n10.00-11.00am:  \nSarah Nangle (UCD): Music\, Rationality and Chaucer’s Unnatural Birdsongs \nSimonne Berry (Trinity): The ‰Û÷Substaunce’ of Sound: Musical Instruments in Chaucer’s House of Fame \n11.00-11.30am: coffee \n11.30am-1.00pm: \nFrances McCormack (Galway): Chaucer and the Theology of Emotion \nDarragh Greene (UCD): ‰Û÷What is this world?’: Chaucer and Metaphysics \nBrendan O’Connell (Trinity): Nought That Was Aught: The Death of Good\, Fair Whyte \n1.00-2.30pm: lunch \n2.30-3.30pm: \nJohn Scattergood (Trinity): ‰Û÷Degree’\, ‘estaat’ and ‘array’ in the Canterbury Tales: the Limits of Chaucer’s Realism \n3.30-4.00pm: coffee \n4.00-5.30pm: \nMalte Urban (Queen’s): Chaucer on screen \nRod Stoneman (Galway): Chaucer\, Pasolini and Resistance \n5.30-6.00pm: drinks reception and formal welcome \n6.00-7.00pm: \nPaul Strohm (Columbia)\, Chaucer on the Waterfront \n8.00pm: dinner in Nimmo’s restaurant\, near the Spanish Arch \nThursday 26th June\n10.00 -11.30am:  \nClÌ_odhna Carney (Galway) ‰Û÷One of the greatest tragedies of my life…’: is there a Chaucerian realism? \nOya BayiltmiÌÉåÙ ÌÐÌãåÙÌ_tcÌ_ (Hacettepe University\, Ankara): A Change in Chaucerian Aesthetics: From The Tale of Sir Thopas to The Tale of Melibee \nCatherine Emerson (Galway): ‘The Lady and the Lamprey’\, from Cent Nouvelles Nouvelles and connections to Arabian Nights and Shipman’s Tale \n11.30am-12.00pm: coffee \n12.00-1.00pm:  \nPiero Boitani (Rome)\, The Realism of Dante and the Realism of Chaucer \n1.00 – 2.30pm: lunch \n2.30-4.00pm: \nDavid Clare (Galway): The Influence of Chaucer and Irish Mythology on C.S. Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia \nJennifer Alberghini (CUNY): The Hybrid Contours of English in Chaucer’s Time: Anglo-Norman Speakers in the Canterbury Tales \nNiamh Pattwell (UCD):Exploring Ancrene Wisse in Frank McGuinness’s Someone Who’ll Watch Over Me \n4.00-4.30pm: coffee \n4.30-5.30pm: \nFrancisco Rozano-Garcia (Galway): Opposites Reconciled: The Wife of Bath’s Fictional Subjectivity \nHuiyi Bao (UCD) Poetic Reality of the Night Sky: Chaucer’s Erratik Sterres \nFor more information please contact cliona.carney@nuigalway.ie \nChaucer at Galway is grateful to the following for generous support: Millennium Fund\, Office of the Registrar and Deputy President\, MA in Medieval Studies\, Centre for Antique\, Medieval and Pre-Modern Studies (CAMPS)\, Moore Institute\, College of Arts\, English Department (all at the National University of Ireland\, Galway).
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/chaucer-at-galway-ii-chaucer-and-realism-25th-and-26th-june-2014/
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20140625T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20140625T120000
DTSTAMP:20260417T041549
CREATED:20160824T134713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134713Z
UID:2255-1403697600-1403697600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:'Women\, Conflict and Transitional Justice: two case studies - Bangladesh and Kenya" - Mayesha Alam\, Georgetown Institute for Women Peace and Security and Moore Institute visiting fellow
DESCRIPTION:Global Women’s Studies  \nIn association with the \nMoore Institute for Research in the Humanities and Social Studies \nGender ARC – Gender\, Discourse and Identity Cluster \nis pleased to invite you to a Summer Seminar with  \nMayesha Alam  \n“Women\, Conflict and Transitional Justice: two case studies – Bangladesh and Kenya” \nWednesday June 25th – 12.00-2.00 pm \nTHB-G010 Moore Institute Seminar Room  \nFree event – all welcome – light lunch provided! \nTo reserve a place\, email: Gillian.browne@nuigalway.ie \nMayesha Alam is the Assistant Director of the Georgetown Institute for Women Peace and Security WAshington\, DC\, and in this role\, manages the Institute’s various projects\, including the Profiles in Peace oral histories project\, major convenings\, in-house research\, the Hillary R. Clinton Fellowship program\, the Summer Graduate Research Fellows program\, and the online repository. She is also in charge of operations at the Institute and supports the Executive Director in fundraising and building external relations. Mayesha co-teaches a graduate seminar on Women\, Peace and Security with Ambassador Verveer in the School of Foreign Service. She is the author of Women and Transitional Justice: Progress and Persistent Challenges(Palgrave Macmillan\, 2014). Originally from Bangladesh\, Mayesha received her M.A. in Conflict Resolution at Georgetown University\, during which she specialized on gender mainstreaming in peacebuilding\, security and post-conflict reconstruction as well as human rights more broadly. She has previously worked in the U.S. and internationally for The World Bank\, the United Nations and a number of NGOs. Mayesha received her B.A. in international relations and biology from Mount Holyoke CollegeShe is currently a Moore Institute Visiting Fellow\, co-hosted by Global Women’s Studies at NUI Galway. \nFor more information please contact gillian.browne@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/women-conflict-and-transitional-justice-two-case-studies-bangladesh-and-kenya-mayesha-alam-georgetown-institute-for-women-peace-and-security-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow/
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