Heritage Ireland 2030,Research and Heritage Workshop NUIG
Seminar Room G011 the Hardiman Reserach Building12:45 Welcome (preceded by light lunch from 12:00) Cathal O’Donoghue, Dean, College of Arts, Social Sciences, and Celtic Studies Daniel Carey, Director, Moore Institute for Research in the Humanities and... | Read on »
Falling star narratives in Hollywood and British film industries, 1950-2019-By Flavia Soubiran
Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research BuildingKey in the history of cinema, the ageing star is a figure of media obsolescence that carries the memory of a bygone era of filmmaking, awakening in the viewer... | Read on »
Graduate Research Seminars in History, 2019
Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research BuildingDr Cristina Bon (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milan). ‘The President Matters’: John Janney and the Virginia Secession Convention (February-April 1861).
Transnational Time: Reading Post War Representations of the Italian Presence in East Africa
Seminar Room G011 the Hardiman Reserach BuildingItalian School of Languages, Literatures & Cultures Talk by Charles Burdett, University of Durham Working from recent theoretical writing on time and the concept of the spectral, the paper... | Read on »
“Classical/Neoclassical/Classic/Tradition/Reception” A lecture by Prof. Brian Arkins
Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research BuildingThe term ‘Classical’ connotes so many things as to be useless. ‘Neoclassical’ is valid for a particular era. ‘Classic’ (minus the suffix -al) may denote various items. ‘Tradition’ and like... | Read on »
‘Hammer and Cycle: Communism’s Cycling Counter Culture in Interwar France’
Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research BuildingMartin Hurcombe is Professor of French Studies at the University of Bristol, UK, and a specialist of early twentieth-century French political culture, history and literature. His PhD examined the... | Read on »
Visualising Maritime Cityscapes: The Representation of Harbours in the Graeco-Roman World
Hardiman Research Building Room G011Dr Federico Ugolini – Visiting Research Fellow ‘Visualising maritime cityscapes’ explains how and why Greek and Romans represented so frequently the sea and the marine infrastructures within their artworks.... | Read on »
Graduate Research Seminars in History, 2019
Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research BuildingJim Reid (NUI Galway) Munster as a frontier of the Roman Empire in the 5th-6th centuries.
CAMPS Talk By Alexander O’Hara
Seminar Room G011 the Hardiman Reserach BuildingThe Politics of Piety: Ritual Communities and Social Cohesion in Merovingian Gaul, 450-750