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DTSTART:20160101T000000
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DTSTART:20160327T010000
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DTSTART:20161030T010000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20160819T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20160819T100000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134652Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20161014T092048Z
UID:1949-1471600800-1471600800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Tudor and Stuart Conference 2016
DESCRIPTION:Tudor & Stuart Conference 2016\nOnline Registration for this year’s conference is now open!\nThe 6th Annual Tudor & Stuart Ireland Interdisciplinary Conference will be held in the in the Moore Institute\, Hardiman Research Building\, National University of Ireland\, Galway\, on 19-20 August 2016. This year’s programme will feature plenary speakers Prof. Mary O’Dowd (Queen’s University Belfast)\, and Prof. Andrew Hadfield (University of Sussex)\, as well as a special panel session Shakespeare and Ireland  and a session in honour of Professor Steven Ellis. The programme also boasts thirty-six research papers across both days of the conference\, a wine reception\, and a number of informal occasions to meet and network with speakers and delegates. \nRegistration\nClick here to proceed to online registration and payment options. Online registration will close on Tuesday\, 16 August.  \nThe conference registration fee is ‰âÂ30 (or ‰âÂ20 for students\, speakers\, retired and unwaged delegates). All tea / coffee breaks\, lunches\, and a wine reception are included in the registration fee. \nThe conference dinner will be held at Kirby’s Restaurant\, Cross Street Lower\, at 19:00 on Friday\, 19 August. Anyone attending the conference is most welcome to join us for the dinner. The cost of dinner is €35.00\, and includes a three course set menu\, a glass of wine / draught beer\, and tea / coffee with dessert. An area within the pub has been reserved for after dinner for those wishing to socialise with other delegates. \nUseful links: \nInteractive Map of NUI Galway Campus \nGetting to Galway \nAccommodation  \nQueries\nShould you have any questions regarding the 2016 conference please do not hesitate to contact the organisers at 2016@tudorstuartireland.com
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/tudor-and-stuart-conference-2016/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160721T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160721T140000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134652Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134652Z
UID:1948-1469109600-1469109600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:English Seminar ' Towards a World Literature Network Seeding Event Series' - Special Topic: Women and World Literature
DESCRIPTION:Towards a World Literature Network Seeding Event Series  \nSpecial Topic: Women and World Literature \n21st July 2016 – Seminar Room GO10\, Hardiman Research Building. \nRecent debates surrounding the definition and scope of world literature have sparked a resurgence of interest in the concept of the disciplinary boundaries of literary studies. This resurgence has been amplified by questions about the dominance of English as the language of globalisation; the demands of the digital age; and the fallout from the global financial crisis. Some of the key questions that have arisen are: How do we define world literature? How is ‰Û÷world literature’ to be taught? What issues surround the dissemination of research in world literature? Our main focus for this event is to pick up and build on conversations from previous seeding events\, but we are also keen to start some new ones\, particularly with emphasis on the intersection of transnational feminism\, women’s studies\, gender studies and world literature. \nFurther enquiries to Zania Koppe at z.koppe1@nuigalway.ie or Sorcha Gunne at sorcha.gunne@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/english-seminar-towards-a-world-literature-network-seeding-event-series-special-topic-women-and-world-literature/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160708T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160708T090000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134652Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134652Z
UID:1947-1467968400-1467968400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:6th International Conference on the Science of Computus in the Middle Ages
DESCRIPTION:6th International Conference \n on the Science of Computus in the Middle Ages \nOld Moore Institute\, NUI Galway\, 8-10 July 2016 \nFriday 8 July \n16:00-18:00 – Session 1: Liber Nemroth \n Barbara Obrist (Geneva)  Nemroth‘s cosmology and computus in the 12th century \nDavid Juste (Munich)  The lost astrological chapters of the Liber Nemroth and the origin of the text \nPhilipp Nothaft (Oxford)  Chronology and computus in the Liber Nemroth \nIsabelle Draelants (Paris)  Depingimus demonstrando: dialogue between drawings and text for learning efficiency in Nimrod‘s cosmogony \n18:15 – Book-Launch \nSaturday 9 July \n9:00-10:00 – Session 2: The Calculation of Easter \n Marina Smyth (Notre Dame) – Verse mnemonics similar to Nonae Aprilis \nMichael Brennan (Dublin) – Mathematicians in the Carolingian age: Asking in an age of answers \n10:30-12:30 – Session 3:  Bede & his Legacy \n Conor O’Brien (Cambridge)  The scandal of diversity: The uses of tolerance in the early medieval Easter Controversy \nMÌÁirÌ_n MacCarron (Sheffield)  Why did Bede include a chronicle in his De temporibus? \nJoshua Westgard (Maryland)  The transmission of Bede’s scientific works \nJohn J. Contreni (Purdue)  A first look at ninth-century glosses on Bede’s De temporum ratione \n14:30-16:00 – Session 4:  The Computi of 757 & 789 \nJames Palmer (St Andrews)  The many lives of a ‰Û÷faulty’ prototype: the computus of 757 and its relatives \nLeofranc Holford-Strevens (Oxford)  The Computus of 757: text and context \nImmo Warntjes (Belfast)  The unfinished Fulda Computus of AD 789 \n16:30-18:00 – Session 5:  Manuscripts I \n Dimitry Starostin (St Petersburg)  Alcuin\, Hildebald\, and MS. Cologne Dombibliothek 832: Computus and cultural conflicts in time-reckoning among the Carolingian educated elite \nEric RamÌ_rez-Weaver (Princeton / Virginia)  Calculated differences: meaning and change in the image cycle of the Libri computi of AD 809 \nBrigitte Englisch (Paderborn)  Mundus pictus: Die bildliche Darstellung astronomischer und geographischer Strukturen in komputistischen Handschriften des 9. Jhs. \nSunday 10 July \n 9:00-10:30 – Session 6:  Manuscripts II \n Lisa Chen Obrist (Toronto)  Seeing the sources in Book X of Hrabanus Maurus’ De rerum naturis \nWesley Stevens (Manitoba)  Questions about the Tabula paschalis of Dionysius Exiguus from its earliest manuscript \nRichard Corradini (Vienna)  Mastering time: the chronographic collection in Walahfrid Strabo’s handbook \n11:00-12:00 – Session 7:  Arabic Influences \n Fathi Jarray (Tunis)  Astronomie et Gnomonique musulmanes et l’Europe m̩di̩val: rapports d’influence ou h̩ritage partag̩? \nMichael Schonhardt (Freiburg)  … ut fratres surgere faciat ad horma competentem: the transmission and function of Arabic science in Regensburg \n 13:30-15:00 – Session 8:  Late Anglo-Saxon Computistics \nMegan McNamee (Michigan)   Arithmetic\, computus and the ambiguous alphabet c. 1000 \nSabine Rauch (Dublin)  Number symbolic ideas in Byrhtferth’s diagrams of the Enchiridion \nRebecca Stephenson (Dublin)  Visualizing computus: Byrhtferth of Ramsey’s diagrams \n15:30-17:00 – Session 9:  Later Middle Ages \n Sarah Griffin (Oxford)  Diagram and dimension: visualising time in a drawing of Opicinus de Canistris (1296 – c.1354) \nChristian Etheridge (Odense)  The development of computus texts in Sweden and Finland in the Middle Ages \nMichal Choptiany (Warsaw)  An understudied Cistercian computistical source from Silesia: Conrad of Heinrichau’s Computus novus ecclesiasticus (1340)
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/6th-international-conference-on-the-science-of-computus-in-the-middle-ages/
LOCATION:Old Moore Institute\, Ireland
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160701T094500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160701T094500
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134652Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134652Z
UID:1945-1467366300-1467366300@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:War and Revolution Conference ' Place\, Identity and Conflict: War and Revolution in the West of Ireland\, 1913 - 18'
DESCRIPTION:Place\, Identity & Conflict: The West of Ireland in War & Revolution\, 1913-19 \nThis upcoming conference explores War and Revolution in the West of Ireland between 1913 and 1918. The conference runs for two days on Friday and Saturday 1/2 July in the Aula Maxima\, NUIG. All talks are free and open to the public. \nIdentity and a sense of communal resilience lent meaning to chaotic events in Ireland in the decade before the foundation of the state. In the face of social and political upheaval\, regional\, sectional and ethnic identities offered an opportunity to impose order on social change\, making upheaval and loss less threatening\, giving meaning to new political realities. The archival resources pertaining to the revolutionary period in Ireland have changed dramatically in the last decade. This public conference explores the contrasting interpretations of war and revolution in the West of Ireland through the conflicting prisms of class\, regional identity\, religious faith\, language\, ethnicity and gender.  \nConference programme includes talks on contrasting perspectives of the period from the world of the ‰Û÷big house’\, the lives of rural women\, the Irish in America\, the urban poor and a range of competing narratives. The crucial issues of land\, recruitment to the military\, the emergence of the Irish Volunteers\, the irish language\, the Easter Rising in Galway and the social history of ordinary peoples’ lives will all be examined. \nThe conference kicks off at 9.30 am on both days and enquires can be sent to Dr Conor McNamara\, conor.mcnamara@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/war-and-revolution-conference-place-identity-and-conflict-war-and-revolution-in-the-west-of-ireland-1913-18/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160629T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160629T080000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134652Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134652Z
UID:1946-1467187200-1467187200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:UNISCAPE Conference - Landscape Values: Place and Praxis International Conference
DESCRIPTION:CONFERENCE PROGRAMME \nWEDNESDAY 29 JUNE 2016 \nVenue   Institute for Lifecourse and Society (ILAS)\, NUI Galway \n11:30 – 13:45     UNISCAPE GENERAL ASSEMBLY \nVenue: LCI – G006 Seminar Room 5 \n13:00                REGISTRATION OPENS  \nVenue: Foyer\, ILAS\, NUI Galway \n14:00                CONFERENCE LAUNCH \nVenue: LCI-G018\, ILAS\, NUI Galway \nConor Newman                                    School of Geography and Archaeology\, NUI Galway \nTim Collins                               Centre for Landscape Studies\, NUI Galway  \nNessa Cronin                            Centre for Irish Studies\, NUI Galway             \nDaniel Carey                             Moore Institute\, NUI Galway \nColin Brown                             Ryan Institute\, NUI Galway \nJuan-Manual Palerm                   UNISCAPE \n14:15                 KEYNOTE  LECTURE I \nVenue: LCI-G018\, ILAS\, NUI Galway \nJohn Feehan School of Agriculture\, Food Science\, and Veterinary Medicine\, U. C. Dublin  \nLandscape and Belonging – a view from the edge \n15:20 – 17:40     PLENARY PANEL I \nVenue: LCI-G018\, ILAS\, NUI Galway \nElvira Petroncelli                     Civil\, Environmental and Architectural Engineering\,  \nMarialuce Stanganelli              U. of Federico II\, Naples \nPlace Values and Change \nKieran Walsh Centre for Social Gerontology\, NUI Galway  \nPlace and home across the older adult life course: constructions of exclusion\, belonging and adaptation \nDr Neil Hanlon                       U. of Northern British Columbia \nHealth care reform\, place\, and the rhetoric of intimacy \nMarÌ_a GarcÌ_a MartÌ_n                Landscape Management\, U. Freiburg  \nParticipatory mapping of landscape values in a Pan-European perspective \n18:00 – 19:30     RECEPTION AND BBQ – Main Campus\, NUI Galway. \nVenue: College Bar\, NUI Galway  \nNote: Return Shuttle buses will be available from 17.45 for delegates to go to the College Bar\, Main Campus\, NUI Galway\, and will depart from the College Bar from 19.25 to return to ILAS for the IARSMA performance at 20.00. \n20.00                IARSMA: FRAGMENTS FROM AN ARCHIVE \nArtists in the Archive Project\, Tim Robinson Archive\, NUI Galway (2015-16) \nVenue: LCI-G018\, ILAS\, NUI Galway \nNessa Cronin Centre for Irish Studies\, NUI Galway  \nKieran Hoare and Aisling Keane Archives\, James Hardiman Library\, NUI Galway  \nPerformance by The Performing Landscapes Collective: \nTim Collins\, Musician/Composer/Academic\, Centre for Landscape Studies\,  \nNUI Galway  \nRÌ_onach NÌ_ N̩ill\, Choreographer/Dancer\, Galway Dancer in Residence \nDeirdre O’Mahony\, Visual Artist/Academic\, Galway-Mayo Institute of  \nTechnology  \nSpecial Guests:  \nGeraldine Cotter (Piano)\, Eimear Coughlan (Harp)\, Francis Cunningham (Concertina) \nEimear Howley (Viola)\, Sharon Howley (Cello)\, Brian O’Grady (Double Bass)\, Lillis ÌÒ Laoire (Singer)\, Anthony Quigney (Concert Flute). \nTHURSDAY 30 JUNE 2016 \n08:00                REGISTRATION – Venue: Foyer\, ́ras Moyola\, NUI Galway  \n08.30                DEPARTURE FROM ́RAS MOYOLA FOR – \nLANDSCAPES IN ACTION: DESIGNATED FIELD EXCURSIONS \nTHERE IS A ‰âÂ10 SUPPLEMENT FOR EVENING MEAL. THIS IS TO BE PAID AT REGISTRATION.  \nROCK             BURREN UPLANDS : GORT LOWLANDS \nCOAST            ORANMORE :  LEITIR MEALĹIN\, SOUTH CONNEMARA \nSHORE          WESTPORT : NEWPORT : MULRANNY : CLEW BAY \nBOG                LOUGH BOORA : BALLINASLOE : SHANNON \nLANDSCAPES IN ACTION – PANEL SESSIONS \nROCK – BURREN  \nJohn Sunderland                                  Photo Artist USA \nImagining Place: a question of representation \nEileen O’Rourke                                 Dept. Geography\, U.C. Cork  \nHigh Nature Value Farming on the Iveragh Peninsula and its Landscape Implications \nRike  Stotten                                       Dept. Sociology\, U.  Innsbruck  \n Farmers’ Thinking on Cultural Landscapes in Central Switzerland \nCOAST – CONNEMARA  \nMarco Devecchi                                  U. Turin  \nClaudia Cassatella                               Turin Polytechnic \nFederica Larcher                                 U. Turin  \nLandscape and food: a mutualistic symbiosis to be valued \nC.E. Stancioff\,                                                 Faculty of Indigenous Heritage\, U. Leiden  \nLocality and landscape change: cultural values and social-ecological resiliency in the Kalinago Territory \nPadraig ÌÒ Sabhain                               Centre for Adult Learning & Professional Development NUI Galway \nThe Landscape of The Galway Hooker \nIan Mell                                               U. Liverpool  \nRealising the cultural values of green infrastructure: exploring cultural differences in teaching landscape with international students \nAnna Meenan Heritage Council of Ireland \nRepairing Old Farm Buildings as a means of conserving the Irish Rural Landscape \nSEA – CLEW BAY  \nGerd Lupp                                           Landscape Planning & Management\, TU MÌ_nchen \nMarkus Feuerstein                               Blieskastel  \nLinda Heuchele                                   Environment & Natural Resources\, U. Freiburg  \nWerner Konold                                    U. Freiburg \nTrail use and perception of a diverse mountain farming landscape by hikers in the protected area AllgÌ_uer Hochalpen in the German Alps \nClair McDonald                                   Waterford Institute of Technology  \nCultural landscapes and ecological values: a methodology for determining significance on the landscape of the former landed estate at Gurteen \nPenny Johnston                                   Dept. Folklore & Ethnology\, U.C. Cork  \nStories of Place: presenting the local in an-online World \nAlison Harvey Heritage Council of Ireland \nCommunity-Led Village Design Toolkit \nBOG – BOORA  \nEmel Baylan                                        U.Yuzunku Yil  \nErÌÉåÙat HÌ_seyni \nAyÌÉåÙe Demir \nUncovering the cultural landscape values of wetlands \nPatrick Devine-WrightU. Exeter  \nEtienne Bailey U.  Lisbon (ISCTE-IUL)  \nSusana BatelCis-IUL\, Lisbon  \nVarieties of place attachments and community responses to energy infrastructures: a mixed method approach \nTh̩r̬se Conway                                  Tralee Institute of Technology \nMary Cawley                                       Geography\, NUI Galway  \nEcotourism and ecolabels in landscape protection: a critical appraisal of a governance mechanism. \nSophia Meeres                                                 Architecture\, U.C. Dublin  \nInfrastructural struggles: the making of modern Arklow\, Ireland. \n20:00                ARRIVAL OF DELEGATES BACK AT NUI GALWAY \nFRIDAY 1 JULY 2016 \nVenue              ́ras Moyola\, NUI Galway \n9.30-10.50         PARALLEL SESSIONS 1a 1b 1c \nSESSION 1a   Venue: MY129 \nAmy Woolvin                           Centre for Mountain Studies\, U. Islands & Highlands  \nCultural values\, participation and engagement: the potential and  \nchallenges for a ‰Û÷more-than-visual approach. \nMaunu Hayrynen                    U.Turku  \nCultural Planning as Landscape Research \nBrendan McGrath                    å_Planner\, Co. Clare  \nLearning through landscape; place-based learning in the Burren \nSESSION 1b   Venue: MY243  \nGabri̩lle Bartelse                    Environmental Sciences\, U. Wageningen   \nThe ‰Û÷genius loci’ concept in contemporary landscape architecture \nNeil Galway                School of Planning\, Architecture & Civil Engineering\, Queen’s U. Belfast  \nReconsidering Partisan memorial landscapes in un-brotherly and disputed times \nTana Nicolletta Lascu \nMarius Solon \nVlad Balostin                           U. Architecture and Urbanism Bucharest  \nChorography approach as Strategy in the Architectural design \nSESSION 1c   Venue: MY124 \nAoife Kavanagh                       Dept. of Geography\, Maynooth U.  \nMaking music and making place: Mapping musical practice and Metaphor \nEilÌ_s NÌ_ Dh̼ill                         Acadamh na nOllscolaÌ_ochta Gaeilge\, NUIG  \nSounds of the past in west Kerry: Creating\, recalling and transmitting cultural values through place-names and associated narratives \nRenato Bocchi                         U. Venezia Dorsoduro  \nLooking at the landscape as a person \n10.50 – 11.10      TEA/COFFEE BREAK \n11.10 – 12.50      PARALLEL SESSIONS 2a 2b 2c  \nSESSION 2a   Venue: MY124 \nKeith Egan  \nAlexandra Lima RevezProject Lifecourse\, NUI Galway \nLocal moral geographies: reflections from the 3-Cities Project on urban Irish communities as landscapes of enacted/latent values. \nEmilio Rodriguez Blanco        U. of La Coruna  \nPlant a chair: Urban landscape and activism \nSilvia Loeffler                          Irish Research Council Postdoctoral Fellow\, Department of Geography\, Maynooth University  \nGlas Journal: A deep mapping of Dun Laoghaire harbour (2014-2016) \nSESSION 2b   Venue: MY243  \nAndrew Turk                           School of Arts\, Murdoch U. W. Australia \nA Phenomenological Approach to Trans-disciplinary Understanding of  \nLandscape as Place \nAndrew Butler \nCamilo Calderon                     U. Agricultural Science\, Uppsala  \nTowards the development of landscape democracy: a theoretical contribution \nGeraldine Robbins                   Business & Economics\, NUI Galway  \nLocal Government Citizen Participation in Ireland: Intentions versus Reality \nLiam Scott                              Heritage Council of Ireland \nShirley Clerkin \nThe Heritage Officer Programme: heritage expertise and community networking \nSESSION 2c   Venue: MY129 \nSimon Read                             Middlesex U.  \nBeyond Dreaming \nBraha Kunda                            Interior design Dept\, Holon Institute of Technology  \nThe Non-Sense at ‘Non-Place’ \nCiara Healy                             Department of Art\, U. Reading  \nThin Place: An Alternative Approach to Place-based Curation.  \nCristÌ_bal Crespo                      U. La Coruna  \nEncouraging communities to reconquer urban landscapes: Proposals  \nfor the city of Carbolla \n12.50 – 14:00     LUNCH – Venue: Friars Restaurant \n14:00 – 14:40     KEYNOTE LECTURE II  – Venue: MY243 \n                        Teresa Pinto CorreiaICAAM – Instituto de Ci̻ncias AgrÌÁrias e Ambientais Mediterr̢nicas\, Universidade de Ìävora \nLandscape values under pressure: tensions in the management of extensive silvo-pastoral systems in Southern Iberia \n15:00 – 16:20     PARALLEL SESSIONS 3a 3b 3c \nSESSION 3a    Venue: MY129 \nCamilo Calderon         Urban and Rural Development\, Swedish U. Agricultural Science \nMartin Westin              Swedish International Centre of Education for Sustainable Development – SWEDESD\, Uppsala University \nUnderstanding how context influences collaborative approaches to  \nlandscape governance: An analytical framework \nBrendan O’Sullivan     U.C. Cork  \nDisciplinary relationships and landscape values: Star vehicles or ensemble pieces \nJudith Tucker              Leeds U.  \nHarriet Tarlo               Sheffield U.  \nPlace as pause: The value of collaborative\, cross-disciplinary practices \nSESSION 3b   Venue: MY124 \nTerry O’Regan            Landscape Alliance Ireland  \nTravelling methodologies: From Cork to Prishtina \nHannes Palang              Centre for Landscape and Culture\, Tallinn U. Estonia  \nPeeping through the walls \nSESSION 3c   Venue: MY243  \nIain Biggs                    U.  West England  \nBetween creative praxis and place governance: four examples \nAndrew Butler             Swedish U. Agricultural Sciences  \nLandscape as a developing discourse: contested landscape identities in an area affected by forest fire \nShauna Diamond\,  \nChristine Fitzgerald  \nAlexandra Lima RevezProject Lifecourse\, NUI Galway \nCo-producing place: an evaluation of participatory methodologies in the 3-Cities Project for enhancing community participation \n16:20 – 16:40     TEA/COFFEE BREAK \n16:40 – 19:00     PLENARY PANEL II – Venue: MY243  \n Pat Brereton                Dublin City U.  \nGreening a more Sustainable Irish Landscape: A Reading of Postcolonial Irish film. \n Neils Debaut Dept. Geography – Ghent U.  \n Veerle Van Eetvelde Dept. Geography – Ghent U.  \nBas Pedroli Wageningen U. / director UNISCAPE  \nGraham Fairclough McCord Centre for Historic & Cultural Landscapes Newcastle U.  \nCherishing heritage through landscape: a future vision \n Colm Murray               Heritage Council \nA conceptual model for the cultural values ascribed to places \nAnu Printsmann                       \nHannes Palang             Centre for Landscape and Culture\, Tallinn U. \nVegetable garden as a source of identity   \n19:00 – 19.30     UNISCAPE: Results of People’s Landscapes Video Contest  \nVenue: MY243  \n20:00                CONFERENCE RECEPTION AND BOOK LAUNCH  \nVenue: ́ras Moyola\, NUI Galway \nGearÌ_id ÌÒ hAllmhurÌÁin\, Flowing Tides: History and Memory in an Irish Soundscape (Oxford: Oxford University Press\, 2016) \nGearÌ_id ÌÒ hAllmhurÌÁin\, School of Canadian Irish Studies\, Concordia U. Montreal. \nIntroduced by M̩abh NÌ_ FhuarthÌÁin\, Centre for Irish Studies\, NUI Galway. \nLaunched by Harry White\, MRIA\, UC Dublin. \nSATURDAY 2 JULY 2016 \nVenue              ́ras Moyola\, NUI Galway \n9.00-10.20         PARALLEL SESSIONS 4a 4b 4c \nSESSION 4a   Venue: MY243  \nDiana Surova                           U.Ìävora \nTeresa Pinto-Correia \nNuno Guiomar \nDistinct landscape – distinct well-being? How residents evaluate landscape\, environmental and agricultural traits in two contrasting local landscapes of Southern Portugal (Southern Europe) \nAkiko Yoshimura                    Chiba Institute of TechnologyKeijiro Yamada                        Kanazawa Institute of TechnologyYoshinori lida                          CTI Engineering Co.\, Ltd.Hideaki Kawasaki                   Tokyo Metropolitan GovernmentYuko Nagamura                      Huis ten BoschNaho Dokyu                           Urayasu CityTashi Penjor                            Ministry of Works and SettlementUgeyn M Tenzin                      \nMinistry of Works and Settlement \nHow to determine essential values of landscape to be preserved in a non-established heritage village: an interdisciplinary challenge in Tron village\, Zhemgang\, Bhutan \nJane Russell O’Connor            Waterford Institute of Technology  \nA multi-disciplinary approach to landscape assessment for landscape characterization \nSESSION  4b Venue: MY129 \nKaren Till \n                        Gerry Kearns                            Geography Dept. Maynooth U. \nEmplacing ‰Û÷who we are\, what we are’: The embodied and historical geographies of Anu’s Production Laundry \nGearÌ_id ÌÒ hAllmhurÌÁin           School of Canadian Irish Studies\, Concordia U. \nThe Carricks: Irish Famine Dinnseanchas in the New World \nSESSION 4c   Venue: MY124 \nKieran Cunnane                        \nCaoimhÌ_n ÌÒ Maolallaigh         Transition Galway \nHarald Fredheim                     Archaeology\, U. of York \nSustaining Places in Action: Facilitating Community Involvement in Heritage Stewardship by Co-Creation \nJacques Abelman                     Amsterdam Academy of Architecture  \nå_Cultivating the City: Infrastructures of Abundance in Urban Brazil \n10.20-10.40       TEA/COFFEE BREAK \n10.40-12.20       PARALLEL SESSIONS 5a 5b \nSESSION 5a   Venue: MY129 \nLucia Piani \n                        Andrea Guaran \nEnrico Michelutti                    Human Sciences\, U.Udine  \nLandscape as key element in finding coherence in territorial policies \nSylvia Dovl̩n                          U. Agricultural Sciences\, Uppsala  \nLandscape values in the decision-making: Implementation of the European Landscape Convention in Sweden \n Karen Ray                                Geography & Planning U.C. Cork  \nLandscape and Planning: Exploring the Relationship in Decision-Making  \nOlga Maximova                      U. Rome La Sapienza   \nLandscape areas (‰Û÷ambiti’) as a tool for the implementation of the European Landscape Convention: In the case of Italy \nSESSION 5b   Venue: MY243  \n                        CaitrÌ_ona Carlin                       Ryan Institute\, NUI Galway  \n                        Mike Gormley                         Ryan Institute\, NUI Galway  \nDavid Quinn                            Applied Ecology Unit\, Environmental Science\, School of Natural Sciences\, NUI Galway  \nMartin Cormican                     Ryan Institute\, NUI Galway  \nGreenSpace Values: differences between engineers\, planners\, conservationists and health promotion officers \nZlata Vuksanovic Macura \nDragana Corovic                       Faculty of Architecture\, U. Belgrade \nFrom Ottoman Gardens to European parks: Transformation of green spaces in Belgrade \nAidan ffrench                           Landscape Architect \nPeople\, Place and Quality of Life – Achieving Green Infrastructure and Sustainable Placemaking: lessons from Ireland \n                        Giulio Senes \n                        Natalia Fumagalli \nCristina Ferrara \nAntonia Giornelli \nAllessandro Toccolini                  Agricultural & Environmental Sciences\, U. Milan  \nHealing Gardens for Seniors: quality assessment of 67 nursing homes in Milan (Italy) \n12:20 – 14:00     LUNCH – Venue: Friars Restaurant NUI Galway \n13:00                SPECIAL VIEWING OF F̍S NA FUISEOIGE (THE LARK’S CALL) \nThis one-hour documentary explores the deep connection between People and Place. Filmed by Headford-based Counterpoint Films using state-of-the-art aerial cinematography\, the film is a stunning visual exploration of the vast diversity of local places in Ireland\, expressed in the writings of Ireland’s leading Irish-language poets.   \n(Winner of Best Cinematography at the San Francisco Earth Day Film Festival)     \n14:00 – 14.50     KEYNOTE LECTURE III – Venue: MY243  \nMatthijs Schouten Environmental Sciences\, Wageningen U.  \n Orientation\, reorientation and disorientation: landscape and the sense of self. \n15:00 – 16:40     PARALLEL SESSIONS 6a 6b 6c \nSESSIONs 6a – Venue: MY124 \nAurora Carapinha \nPaula Sim̵es                            Landscape\, Environment and Planning\, Ìävora U.  \nThe landscape of wheat: A Landscape of power \nSharon O’Brien                        U. of Limerick  \nPlace-thinking Space-thinking \nKateÌÉåªina PaÌÉåªÌ_zkovÌÁ                Environmental Studies Masaryk U.  \nMind the gap: The need for re-conceptualization of the aesthetic dimension in landscape character assessment and planning \nSESSION 6b – Venue: MY243  \nJohn Manning \nAndrew Turk                           Monash U.  \nHow terrain becomes landscape: Antarctica landscape language case  \nstudy \nBernadette Divilly                   ÌÒmÌ_s ́ite Space & Place Network\, Irish Studies\, NUI Galway  \nWalking Wisdom: Contested Spaces and Mobilising Memory in Galway City \nKate Bevan-Baker                    School of Canadian Irish Studies\, Concordia U.  \nPerformativity and place-making: Vernacular Fiddling on Canada’s Prince Edward Island \nSESSION 6c – Venue: MY129 \nNadja Penko Seidl                   Dept. Landscape Architecture\, U. Ljubljana  \nThe invisible and intangible landscape: Naming\, claiming and  \nmanaging processes \nIan Doyle                                Heritage Council of Ireland \nMapping the historic landscape: recent work in Ireland \nMauro Agnoletti                      Landscape Unit\, Ministry of Agriculture\, Food and Forestry Policies\, Italy \nIndicators of the wellbeing of the population connected to the quality of rural  \nlandscape in Italy. \n16:40 – 17:00     TEA/COFFEE BREAK \n17:00 – 18:20     CLOSING SESSION AND CONCLUDING REMARKS – Venue: MY243 \nVeerle Van Eetvelde                Gent U.  \nIsabel Loupa Ramos                Lisbon U.  \nFatima Bernardo                       Ìävora U.  \nValuing landscape identity of local inhabitants through a tourism discourse \nSelena Bagnara Milan              U. Nova Gorica  \nCultural Landscapes: A framework for their holistic management \nJuan-Manuel Palerm               President\, UNISCAPE \nLandscape Project as place and Praxis
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/uniscape-conference-landscape-values-place-and-praxis-international-conference/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160627T104500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160627T104500
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134652Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134652Z
UID:1944-1467024300-1467024300@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Moore Institute\, SUAS and IDEA host a one day workshop ' Inclusion and Exclusion in Global Citizenship Education'
DESCRIPTION:The Moore Institute at NUIG\, SUAS and IDEA are delighted to invite you to a one-day workshop on Inclusion and Exclusion in Global Citizenship Education.   The workshop will be held at the Moore Institute\, National University of Ireland Galway\, on Monday 27 June\, 10:45 am – 3:45 pm.   \nThe aim of the day is to promote dialogue\, sharing and collaboration between researchers and practitioners in the area of non-discriminatory Global Citizenship Education\, with a particular focus on gender issues\, young people\, and Southern & postcolonial perspectives. The day will be facilitated by Momodou Sallah\, Dalene Swanson and Su Ming Khoo.   Artist Eimear McNally will help us to creatively interweave our insights.      \n Please join us for what promises to be a rich and challenging conversation amongst a diverse group of Global Citizenship Education researchers and practitioners. The event is free but you must register in advance with Susan@ideaonline.ie.   We hope to see you on the 27th! \nUNIFY-SDG \nUniversity-Based Research and Education for Youth Solidarity and Equality toward the SDGs\nInclusion and Exclusion in Global Citizenship Education:   \nA Dialogue between Researchers and Practitioners \n Monday 27 June\, Moore Institute hardinamn Buidling THB G10\, NUIG\, 10:45 – 3:45 \n10:45 – 11:00       Coffee and registration \n11:00 – 11:20      Welcome and introduction to UNIFY-SDG project: Su-ming Khoo\, NUIG\, Frank Geary\, IDEA and Jo Malone\, Suas Educational Development\, Eimear McNally: knowledge capture   \n11:20 -11:30        Ice-breaker incorporating participants’ expectations for the day.  \n11:30 – 12:50   Young people\, inclusion and exclusion in global citizenship education: Southern perspectives   \n\nIn what ways can young people participate more in research and practice on GCE? \nHow are Southern and post-colonial perspectives reflected in our research and practice of GCE? \n\n12:50 – 1:50        Lunch  \n1:50 – 3:00           ‰Û÷Gender and its intersection with other types of non-discrimination’.  Su-ming Khoo\, NUIG\, and Dalene Swanson\, Moore Institute Visiting Fellow \n3:00- 3:45 if running late Closing session: \n\nVisual feedback: Eimear McNally \nPlenary discussion: Chair: Jo Malone\, Suas: Research and Practice working together to advance non-discriminatory GCE\nAction points and closing: Chair Susan Gallwey\, IDEA \n\nAbout our facilitators: \nDr Momodou Sallah is Senior Lecturer at De Montfort University\, Leicester.  His areas of interest and expertise include cultural competency\, global youth work\, youth participation\, diversity\, black young people and young Muslims.  In November 2015\, Momodou was named the ‰Û÷most innovative teacher in the UK’ in the Times Higher Education Awards. \n Dr Dalene Swanson is a senior academic at the University of Stirling. She is interested in critical global citizenship\, postcoloniality\, indigenous thought\, post-foundational methodologies\, dance and mathematics education. \nDr Su-ming Khoo teaches and researches at the National University of Ireland\, Galway. Her interests include postcolonial development studies\, public advocacy and activism\, human rights and the ethics of higher education.  \nEimear McNally is an illustrator and facilitator working mainly in the area of live graphic recording and visual facilitation.  She has many years of experience in Education for Global Citizenship\, and she is passionate about bringing creativity and new ways of seeing into our work and our lives. \nTwitter: #UNIFY-SDG \nUNIFY-SDG is funded by the Irish Research Council New Foundations programme
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/moore-institute-suas-and-idea-host-a-one-day-workshop-inclusion-and-exclusion-in-global-citizenship-education/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160621T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160621T140000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134652Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134652Z
UID:1942-1466517600-1466517600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Moore Institute Visiting Fellow\, Dr Dalene Swanson( University of Stirling\, Scotland) ' Decolonising Global Citizenship (Education) and ethical\, indigenous\, onto-epistemological alternatives'.
DESCRIPTION:Dr Dalene M. Swanson\, University of Stirling \n Dalene is an educationalist and her research expertise spans (reconceptualist) curriculum perspectives\, mathematics education\, critical cultural studies\, ethical internationalisation\, democracy in education\, and social and ecological justice. She is interested broadly in critical\, ideological and socio-political perspectives in education and society\, and mostly writes from poststructural and de/post-colonial perspectives. In particular\, she has expertise in critical global citizenship\, democratic education\, and indigeneity\, especially the African onto-epistemology of Ubuntu. Philosophical and social concerns around poverty\, marginalisation\, (neo)colonialism\, as well as her research into “the construction of disadvantage” frame much of her work. Hegemonic tenets within neoliberalism\, economic development and globalisation reflect ongoing concerns of global injustice. Dalene also has expertise in critical arts-based and narrative methodologies (especially ‘critical rhizomatic narrative’ methodology she developed)\, and other creative\, post-foundational and counter-hegemonic research and writing methodologies and practices. Dalene also brings arts-based approaches to bear on mathematics education as a decolonising practice.  \n More information can be found at: http://rms.stir.ac.uk/converis-stirling/person/23287 \nDecolonising Global Citizenship (Education) and ethical\, indigenous\, onto-epistemological alternatives \n Global citizenship and associated discourses on globalisation often comport with a moral liberal response to new widespread place-based formations of race\, class\, gender\, migratory and ethnic inequality. This often-imported liberalism resides uncomfortably and selectively alongside increasing politically and ideologically invested polarisations\, pernicious levels of poverty\, global violence and states/frames of war (Butler\, 2009)\, widespread conflict-induced population displacement and mass migration\, human and ecological degradation\, the rise of new forms of extremist ethnic nationalism\, and differentiated capitalist formations geopolitically. It is also associated with a concomitant rise in cosmopolitanism that resides in complex arrangement with a rise in world conservativism and fascism\, theo-political and ideological polarisations\, along with new fragmentations and integrations as the political terrain shifts in accordance with the economic perturbations of late modernity and global capitalism in crisis. With it comes a seeming resurgence of humanism and humanitarianism\, albeit that these are partial and selective. In this sense\, global citizenship is contradictory and less than innocent\, and can be said to be at least partially caught up in the globalisation project of neoliberal spread and capitalist imperialism (Swanson\, 2011). \nOn the international education front\, over the last few decades\, global citizenship discourses have been taken up with some intensity in policy documents\, vision statements and higher education and schooling curricula documents within Western parliamentary democracies\, as well as having increasingly pervaded developing educational contexts. They have also most notably be taken up in internationalisation discourses in higher and further education contexts in an attempt\, as public relations strategy\, to provide ‰Û÷positive’ moral justification for the new forms of academic neo-colonialism. \n On the surface\, global citizenship and globalisation discourses are promoted in ways that seem to herald world humanism\, reflecting a sense of global interdependence and mutualism. Under a banner of globalisation and economic progressivism\, the world embetterment these discourses promise appears uncontestable and lies within the current common-sense doxic order of things that render alternatives improbable and irrational (Bourdieu\, 1990). Much globalisation parlance tends to be framed within Western Enlightenment thinking that suggests that the global citizenship reach and outstretched hand to ‰Û÷the other’ is necessarily benevolent or of mutual interest (Swanson\, 2010\, 2011\, 2015b)\, one which often hides under a banner of neutrality the difference in power relations\, the cultural imperialism\, the individualistic orientation and self-interestedness\, and the latent symbolic violence (Bourdieu & Wacquant\, 1992) in such global citizenship overtures. Global citizenship’s institutionalisation as the ‰Û÷great white hope’ of international relations (Brysk\, 2002) testifies to its often racialised and privileged framing. Education systems and curricula that celebrate the common sense goodness of global citizenship without challenging its hidden curriculum (Jackson\, 1968) create spectres (Derrida\, 1994) of what might otherwise have been imaginable\, and fall short of and even lie counter to their stated purposes in their nullifying effect. In so doing\, they fail to enable a world structured according to a radical hope (Lear\, 2006; Swanson\, 2015a) of global justice\, to development as freedom (Sen\, 1999)\, and to the action-oriented imaginings that bring into the realm of possibility a renewal of the world (Arendt\, 1958). This promise of renewal ushers in an imagined world of widened democratic possibilities and alternative wisdoms as expressions of lived experiences for those living on/within the margins and/or living the violent consequences of perforated borders and border epistemologies. \n This presentation offers perspectives of counter-hegemonic possibility\, of hybrid third fora (Bhabha\, 2004)\, and the inclusion of indigenous wisdom and embodiments\, such as Ubuntu onto-epistemology (Ramose\, 2002a\, 2002b; Swanson\, 2007\, 2015a\, 2015b). It offers a view of surface-to-surface and intersoular (Serres\, 2008) ontologies as alternative onto-epistemologies of conscience (Swanson\, 2015b). It does so to the end of decolonising global citizenship in order to make possible viable ethical alternatives and deep democratic actions.     \n References: \n Arendt\, H. (1958). The human condition. Chicago\, IL: University of Chicago Press. \n Bhabha\, H. K. (2004). The location of culture. Abingdon\, MA: Routledge. \n Bourdieu\, P. (1990). The logic of practice. Stanford\, CA: Stanford University Press. \n Bourdieu\, P.\, & Wacquant\, L. J. D. (1992). An invitation to a reflexive sociology. Chicago\, IL: University of Chicago Press. \n Brysk\, A. (2002). Conclusion: From rights to realities. In A. Brysk (Ed.)\, Globalization and human rights. Oakland\, CA: University of California Press. \n Butler\, J. (2009).  Frames of war: When is this life grievable?: London and New York: Verso. \n Derrida\, J. (1994). Specters of Marx. London: Routledge. \n Jackson\, P. W. (1968). Life in classrooms. New York\, NY: Teachers College Press. \n Lear\, J. (2006). Radical Hope: Ethics in the Face of Cultural Devastation. Cambridge\, \nMassachusetts: Harvard University Press. \nRamose\, M. B. (2002a). “The philosophy of ubuntu and ubuntu as a philosophy.” In African Philosophy Reader\, 2nd Edition\, edited by Pieter H. Coetzee and Abraham P.J. Roux\, (pp. 230- 238). London: Routledge. \n Ramose\, M. B. (2002b). “The ethics of ubuntu.” In African Philosophy Reader\, 2nd edition\, edited by Pieter H. Coetzee and Abraham P.J. Roux\, (pp. 324-330). London: Routledge. \n Sen\, A. (1999). Development as freedom. New York\, NY: Anchor Books. \n Serres\, M. (2008). The Five Senses: A philosophy of mingled bodies (I). [Trans. M. Sankey and P. Cowley]. London: Continuum. \n Swanson\, D.M. (2007). Ubuntu: An African contribution to (re)search for/with a ‰Û÷humble togetherness’. The Journal of Contemporary Issues in Education\, 2\, Special Edition\, 53-67. http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/JCIE/article/viewFile/1028/686 \n Swanson\, D. M. (2010). Value in shadows: A contribution to values education in our times. In T. Lovat (Ed.)\, Springer handbook on values education and student wellbeing (pp. 137-152). New York\, NY: Springer Press. \n Swanson\, D. M. (2011). Parallaxes and paradoxes of global citizenship: Critical reflections and possibilities of praxis in/through an international online course. In L. Shultz\, A. A. Abdi\, & G. H. Richardson (Eds.)\, Global citizenship education in post secondary institutions: Theories\, practices\, policies (pp. 120-139). New York\, NY: Peter Lang Publishers. \n Swanson\, D. M. (2015a). Frames of Ubuntu: (Re)framing an ethical education. In H. Smits & R. Naqvi (Eds.)\, Framing peace: Thinking about and enacting curriculum as radical hope. New York\, NY: Peter Lang. \n Swanson\, D.M. (2015b). Ubuntu\, Radical Hope\, and an Onto-Epistemology of Conscience. Journal of Critical Southern Studies\, 3\, 96 -118.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/moore-institute-visiting-fellow-dr-dalene-swanson-university-of-stirling-scotland-decolonising-global-citizenship-education-and-ethical-indigenous-onto-epistemological-alternatives/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160620T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160620T110000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134652Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134652Z
UID:1943-1466420400-1466420400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Moore Institute Visiting Fellow\, Dr Salvatore Scifo 'The origins and development of community radio in Britain under New Labour (1997 - 2007)'.
DESCRIPTION:Moore Institute Visiting Fellow\, Dr Salvatore Scifo presents a talk : \n‘ The origins and development of community radio in Britain under New Labour (1997 – 2007)’. \nMonday\, 20th June @ 11am in The Bridge\, First Floor\, Hardiman Research Building.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/moore-institute-visiting-fellow-dr-salvatore-scifo-the-origins-and-development-of-community-radio-in-britain-under-new-labour-1997-2007/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160616T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160616T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134651Z
UID:1939-1466092800-1466092800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Prof Peter Glazer (University of Berkeley) and Patrick Ball (Musician)\, Moore Institute Visiting Fellows present ' Musics of a Lost Kingdom: Yeats\, Story and Song'.
DESCRIPTION:Prof. Peter Glazer (Berkeley) and Patrick Ball (musician) \n‰Û÷Musics of a Lost Kingdom:  \nYeats\, Story and Song’ \nThe remarkable\, crystalline sound of the wire strung harp (the clÌÊrsach) was at the centre of Irish culture and legend for 700 years\, most famously in the playing of Turlough O’Carolan. Yet it was wholly absent from the Celtic Revival. This talk investigates how the clÌÊrsach might help illuminate Yeats’s stories and poetry. Patrick Ball and Peter Glazer will discuss their collaboration to develop a performance piece on this subject\, with demonstrations of the harp by Patrick. \n 4pm Thursday 16 June \nBridge Seminar Room\, 1001 \nHardiman Research Building
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/prof-peter-glazer-university-of-berkeley-and-patrick-ball-musician-moore-institute-visiting-fellows-present-musics-of-a-lost-kingdom-yeats-story-and-song/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20160616T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20160616T113000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20161013T131053Z
UID:1938-1466076600-1466076600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Dr. Justin Carville (IADT and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow) presents a talk 'Primitive Faces and Ungovernable Eyes: Racial Photography\, Anthropology and Counter-Visuality in Ireland.
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Justin Carville \n(Dun Laoghaire Institute of Art and Design and Moore Institute) \nPrimitive Faces and Ungovernable Eyes: \nRacial Photography\, Anthropology\, and Counter-Visuality in Ireland \n 11.30 Thursday 16 June \n‘The Bridge’ Seminar Room 1001 \nHardiman Research Building
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dr-justin-carville-iadt-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-presents-a-talk-primitive-faces-and-ungovernable-eyes-racial-photography-anthropology-and-counter-visuality-in-ireland/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160616T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160616T090000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134652Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134652Z
UID:1941-1466067600-1466067600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:1916 in Global Context: Connections and Comparisons Conference
DESCRIPTION:1916 IN GLOBAL CONTEXT: \nCONNECTIONS AND COMPARISONS \nConference Programme \nThursday 16th June — Friday 17th June 2016 \nHardiman Research Building\, NUI Galway \nand \nNotre Dame Centre\, Kylemore Abbey\, \nConnemara \nOrganised by RÌ_isÌ_n Healy\, Enrico Dal Lago and GearÌ_id Barry of History\, NUI Galway  \nThursday 16th June:  \nG010\, Hardiman Building\, Moore Institute\, NUI Galway \n9.00   Registration  \n9.15   Opening Remarks by Jane Ohlmeyer\, Chair of the Irish Research Council\, and the conference organisers \n9.30-11.20 Panel 1: AFRICA \nChair: RÌ_isÌ_n Healy (NUI Galway) \nJonathan Krause (Oxford University) \nThe World Set Alight: Rebellion in the French Empire\, 1916 \nFilipe Ribeiro de Meneses (Maynooth University) \nAnti-colonial revolts against the Portuguese Republic\, 1914-1918 \nJonathan Hyslop (Colgate University) \nThe Boers Were the Beginning of the End? Southern African Connections in the Making and Aftermath of the Easter Rising\, c. 1896-1931 \nKatja Fortenbacher-Nagel (University of Marburg) \n“Travelling the Same Painful Road”: Links and References between Ireland and South Africa on their Road to Independence \n11.20-11.40 Coffee break \n11.40-1.30 Panel 2: AMERICAS \nChair: Enrico Dal Lago (NUI Galway) \nDavid Brundage (University of California Santa Cruz) \nThe Easter Rising and Anticolonial Nationalism: The View from New York \nCecelia Hartsell (Fordham University) \nReflections on the Great Migration of 1916 \nNicola Miller (University College London) \nLiberalism Besieged: A Comparison of 1916 in Argentina and Mexico \nCharles-Philippe Courtois (College militaire royal de Saint-Jean) \nIreland’s 1916 and Quebec’s Conscription Crisis \n1.30-2.15    Lunch at NUI Galway \n2.15-3.30    Bus trip to the Notre Dame Centre for Educational Excellence\, Kylemore Abbey\, Connemara \n4.30-6.30    Panel 3: BRITISH EMPIRE AND ASIA \nChair: GearÌ_id Barry (NUI Galway) \nDaniel Marc Segesser (University of Bern) \n“Rebel Irish and Syndicalists Would Come into Office!”: The Easter Rising\, Climatic Conditions\, and the 1916 Australian Referendum on Conscription \nSucheta Mahajan (Jawaharlal Nehru University\, New Delhi) \nIn League with the Irish?: Annie Besant and Home Rule in India \nStephen McQuillan (Trinity College Dublin) \nFailed Uprisings and Fraternal Relations: The Indo-Irish Nexus in 1916 \nKate O’Malley (Royal Irish Academy) \nIreland\, India\, and a ‰Û÷Cult Following’ of Easter 1916? \n6.30   Bus departs for dinner at Power’s Thatch Bar\, Oughterard \n9.30   Bus departs Oughterard for Galway \nFriday 17th June \nG010\, Hardiman Building\, Moore Institute\, NUI Galway \n9.10-11.00  Panel 4: MUSLIM WORLD \nChair: Enrico Dal Lago (NUI Galway) \nFatemeh Masjedi (Zentrum Moderner Orient\, Berlin) \nTabriz during colonial Russia (1908-1917) \nMichael Provence (University of California San Diego) \nThe Crisis of Empire and the Ottoman Great War: 1916 \nDanielle Ross (Utah State University) \nNational Resistance across Borders: Parallel Depictions of the Easter Rising and the Turkestani Uprising in Russia’s Muslim Newspapers \nErin O’Halloran (University of Oxford) \nA Tempest in a British Tea Pot: ‰Û÷The Arab Question’ in Cairo and Delhi \n11.00-11.20          Coffee Break \n11.20-12.50           Panel 5: EUROPEAN counter-currentS \nChair: RÌ_isÌ_n Healy (NUI Galway) \nGeoffrey Bell (independent scholar) \n‰Û÷Surely\, for the first time England can try and understand?’: the British labour movement and the Easter Rising \nHeike Liebau (Zentrum Moderner Orient\, Berlin) \nIndependence Committees in First World War Germany: common goals\, mutual perceptions and collaboration \nPadraic Kenney (Indiana University) \nNational\, and thus Revolutionary ? Revolutionary\, and thus National? Polish Struggles in Context \n12.50-1.30 Lunch \n1.30-3.00    Panel 6: PERCEPTIONS AND LEGACIES \nChair: GearÌ_id Barry (NUI Galway) \nAndrew Newby (University of Helsinki) \nA German Agitation in Ireland: Finnish Perceptions of the 1916 Rising \nSeÌÁn Brady (Trinity College Dublin) \nAn Embarrassing Parody of Garibaldi\, a Salutary Lesson\, and a Sign of Hope: Ireland’s 1916 Easter Rising seen through Italian Eyes \nTimothy D. Hoyt (U.S. Naval War College\, Newport) \nThe Easter Rising and the Beginnings of Modern Irregular Warfare \n3.00 Closing Remarks \nConference participants and attendees are invited to visit the exhibition\, “A University in War and Revolution\, 1913-1919: The Galway Experience”\, on view in the Hardiman Research Building. \nNote: The conference is open to the public\, but the organisers would ask those planning to attend to let us know in advance by sending an email to history@nuigalway.ie. There may be a small fee to cover catering costs and the bus journey to Kylemore Abbey.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/1916-in-global-context-connections-and-comparisons-conference/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160615T123000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160615T123000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134651Z
UID:1940-1465993800-1465993800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Prof Alain Dubreucq\, Moore Institute Visiting Fellow presents a talk 'The Manuscript Transmission of the Vita Columbani. Prolegomenes to a new edition'.
DESCRIPTION:Prof Alain Dubreucq\, Moore Institute Visiting Fellow presents a talk ‘ \n“The manuscript transmission of the Vita Columbani. Prolegomenes to a new edition” \nWednesday 15th June @12.30pm. \nThe Bridge\, Room 1001\, First Floor\, Hardiman Research Building.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/prof-alain-dubreucq-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-presents-a-talk-the-manuscript-transmission-of-the-vita-columbani-prolegomenes-to-a-new-edition/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160610T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160610T090000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134651Z
UID:1936-1465549200-1465549200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:'The Next Eighteenth - Century Ireland Society/ An Cumann ÌÄåäire San OchtÌÄå¼ C̩ad D̩ag' Annual Conference
DESCRIPTION:The next Eighteenth-Century Ireland Society  / An Cumann Ìäire San Ocht̼ C̩ad D̩ag Annual Conference will be held in National University of Ireland Galway\, 10-11 June 2016.  \nPlenaries will be delivered by Prof. Michael Brown (Aberdeen)\, Prof. Norma Clark (Kingston)\, and Dr MeidhbhÌ_n NÌ_ Ì_rdail (UCD). \nHarvard University Press will also mark the Irish launches of Michael Brown’s The Irish Enlightenment (2016) and Norma Clarke’s Brothers of the Quill: Oliver Goldsmith in Grub Street (2016)at the conference. \nThe conference is organised by Dr Rebecca Barr (English\, Humanities) and Dr Lesa NÌ_ Mhunghaile (Gaeilge\, Scoil na dTeangacha\, na LitrÌ_ochtaÌ_ & na gCult̼r). The event is generously supported by the Moore Institute\, NUI Galway School of Humanities\, and the School of Languages\, Literatures and Cultures. \nConference programme and registration details can be found at the following link: http://www.ecis.ie/annual-conference/
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/the-next-eighteenth-century-ireland-society-an-cumann-iaaaire-san-ochtiaa%c2%bc-c%cc%a9ad-d%cc%a9ag-annual-conference/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160609T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160609T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134651Z
UID:1937-1465488000-1465488000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Moore Institute Visiting Fellow Prof Padraic Kenney (Indiana University\, USA) ' Farewell to the Transnational: Global History in Theory and Practice'
DESCRIPTION:Moore Institute Visiting Fellow Prof Padraic Kenney (Indiana University\, USA) gives a talk entitled ‘ Farewell to the Transnational: Global History in Theory and Practice’. \n9th June @4pm Seminar Room GO10\, Ground Floor\, Hardiman Research Building.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/moore-institute-visiting-fellow-prof-padraic-kenney-indiana-university-usa-farewell-to-the-transnational-global-history-in-theory-and-practice/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160601T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160601T140000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134651Z
UID:1935-1464789600-1464789600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Irish Protestant Playwrights Conference
DESCRIPTION:THE “IRISH PROTESTANT PLAYWRIGHTS” CONFERENCE \n1-3 JUNE 2016 \nMoore Institute\, NUI Galway\, IRELAND \nFeaturing: \n-Keynote addresses by Prof. SeÌÁn Kennedy (St. Mary’s University\, Halifax) and Dr. Emilie Pine (University College Dublin) \n-Panel papers and roundtable discussions on the great Irish Protestant playwrights\, including (among others) George Farquhar\, Oliver Goldsmith\, R.B. Sheridan\, Elizabeth Griffith\, Dion Boucicault\, Oscar Wilde\, Bernard Shaw\, J.M. Synge\, Lady Augusta Gregory\, W.B. Yeats\, SeÌÁn O’Casey\, Denis Johnston\, Mary Manning\, Samuel Beckett\, Stewart Parker\, and Christina Reid \n-Performances of the plays Grania by Lady Gregory and Purgatory by W.B. Yeats \nA remarkable number of Ireland’s great playwrights have hailed from Protestant backgrounds\, despite the fact that Catholics have always comprised a much greater proportion of the Irish population. There are\, of course\, two primary reasons for this. First\, since conventional plays were not written in the Irish language until the late nineteenth century\, Irish Gaelic Catholics were\, for a long time\, without a dramatic tradition to plug into (by contrast\, Irish Protestants often felt a strong cultural tie to the English dramatic tradition). Second\, Irish Protestants had\, for centuries\, much greater access to formal education and to the theatre worlds of Dublin and London than Catholics did\, due to the Penal Laws and other repressive\, anti-Catholic measures. \nWhile these factors may explain Protestant dominance in Irish drama prior to Catholic Emancipation and the widespread adoption of the English language in the early-to-mid-nineteenth century\, it is a curious fact that\, since that time\, a significant number of Ireland’s great playwrights have continued to come from the island’s relatively small Protestant communities. What is perhaps even more curious is that critics have often failed to spot the degree to which the works by these playwrights betray the influence of the beliefs and social values/anxieties associated with their Protestant backgrounds. Indeed\, in Inventing Ireland (1995)\, Declan Kiberd rightly points out that\, while critics of Irish literature have readily recognised the importance of Roman Catholicism to the work of lapsed Catholics like James Joyce\, they have frequently ignored or underestimated the importance of the specifically Protestant preoccupations found in works by “lapsed Protestants” like Bernard Shaw\, W.B. Yeats\, J.M. Synge\, SeÌÁn O’Casey\, and Samuel Beckett. \nIn the years since Kiberd made that observation\, an increasing number of scholars have begun to investigate the ways in which the great Irish Protestant dramatists were shaped by their Protestant upbringings. This conference aims to bring many of these exciting\, new scholars together to share and discuss their groundbreaking work. At the conference\, their remit will\, of course\, involve illuminating the Protestant aspects of the classic works they discuss\, but they will also demonstrate – by examining a wide variety of writers\, including frequently neglected women playwrights – the heterogeneity of Irish Protestantism. (There are\, after all\, marked cultural and social differences between the various Protestant communities in Ireland; one need only think of the repeatedly rude remarks that Irish Anglicans like Jonathan Swift\, Lady Morgan\, and Bernard Shaw made about Ulster Scots Presbyterians.) Finally\, these scholars will try to understand why Irish Protestants have been so successful at writing plays; is there something about drama and performance that particularly appeals to the Irish Protestant psyche? \nTo register for this conference – or to obtain more information about it – please write to Dr. David Clare (david.clare@nuigalway.ie) or Dr. Feargal Whelan (feargal.whelan@gmail.com). The conference is free of charge but space is limited\, so advance registration is required. For more information\, please visit https://protestantplaywrights.wordpress.com. \nFINAL PROGRAMME \nAll events held in Room G010\, Moore Institute\, Hardiman Research Building\, NUI Galway (except where indicated).WED.\, 1 JUNE 2016 \n 2-3.15pm / Registration \n 3.15pm-3.30pm / Welcome and Opening Remarks \n3.30pm-5pm / PANEL ONE: EARLY IRISH DRAMA IChair: Feargal Whelan (UCD) \n-James Ward (University of Ulster) – “Remembering Farquhar”-Heather Ladd (University of Lethbridge) – “The Outsider as Cultural Critic: Arthur Murphy’s News From Parnassus“ \n-David Clare (NUI Galway) – “Reflections on Catholic Ireland in the Plays of Elizabeth Griffith and Maria Edgeworth”5pm-6pm / PLENARY ADDRESS \nSeÌÁn Kennedy (St. Mary’s University) – “Beckett and the Specters of Irish Modernism” \n6pm-7pm / Wine Reception \n7.30pm-8.30pm / PERFORMANCE \nFull Production of Lady Gregory’s Grania at the Bank of Ireland Theatre\, NUI Galway (Part of the “Waking the Feminists West” Initiative) \n Directed by Justine Nakase \nLighting Design by Nelson Barre \nSet Design by Chris McCormack \nCAST: \nGRANIA – Hannah Carleton \nFINN – Sam ÌÒ Fearraigh \nDIARMUID – Cillian Browne \nCHORUS – Sarah Vargo and Grainne O’Reilly \nThurs.\, 2 JUNE 2016 \n 9am-9.30am / Registration \n 9.30am-11am / PANEL TWO: EARLY IRISH DRAMA IIChair: Rebecca Barr (NUI Galway) \n-David Clare (NUI Galway)\, Feargal Whelan (University College Dublin)\, and Des Lally (NUI Galway) – “Oliver Goldsmith’s The Good-Natured Man at the Gate Theatre\, Dublin 1974″-Conrad Brunstr̦m (Maynooth University) – “Family Rivals: Thomas\, Frances\, and Richard Brinsley Sheridan – the co-creation of an eighteenth-century classic”-Deirdre McFeely (Trinity College Dublin) – “Dion Boucicault: a Dublin Huguenot”11am-11.30am / Coffee and Tea Break \n 11.30am-1pm / PANEL THREE: WILDE AND SHAWChair: David Clare (NUI Galway) \n-Graham Price (University of Limerick) – “Wilde and Hegel: Irish Peacock and Protestant Aquinas”-Audrey McNamara (University College Dublin) – “Bernard Shaw: Puritan or The Devil’s Disciple?”-Nelson O’Ceallaigh Ritschel (Massachusetts Maritime Academy) – “Bernard Shaw the Journalist: Saving the Free Press 1914-1916”1pm-2pm / Lunch Break \n2pm-3pm / ROUNDTABLE: “Bernard Shaw and His Irish Contemporaries” \nChair: Ian Walsh (NUIG) \nPanellists: Audrey McNamara (UCD)\, Nelson O’Ceallaigh Ritschel (MMA)\, David Clare (NUIG) \n3pm-4.40pm / PANEL FOUR: DIRECTORS OF THE EARLY ABBEYChair: Thomas Conway \n-Anna Pilz (University College Cork) – “‰Û÷Dirty James’: Religion and the Politics of Representation in Gregory’s The White Cockade“-Catherine Wilsdon (University College Dublin) – “Synge\, Paris\, and Progressive Protestantism”-Adrian Paterson (NUI Galway) – “‰Û÷The dry bones of the dead’: Yeats and The Dreaming of the Bones“ \n-Derek Hand (St. Patrick’s College\, Dublin City University) – “The Purgatory of W. B. Yeats”4.40am-5pm / Coffee and Tea Break \n5pm-6pm \nRehearsed Reading of W. B. Yeats’s Purgatory \n Directed by David Clare \nCAST:  \nOLD MAN – Ian Walsh \nBOY – Dylan McCormack \nFRI.\, 3 JUNE 2016  \n9am-9.30am / Registration \n9.30am-11am / PANEL FIVE: “STRAY REVELLERS FROM THE REVIVAL”Chair: Charlotte McIvor (NUI Galway) \n-Des Lally (NUI Galway) – “Lord Dunsany: The Wisdom of Bog Watchers” -Ian Walsh (NUI Galway) – “A Vaudeville of Frustration: Jack B. Yeats’s La La Noo“ \n-SiobhÌÁn Purcell (NUI Galway) – “The Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken away: Disability and Sacrifice in O’Casey’s Plays”11am-11.30am / Coffee and Tea Break \n11.30am-1pm / PANEL SIX: EARLY GATE PLAYWRIGHTS \nChair: Des Lally(NUI Galway)-Feargal Whelan (University College Dublin) – “The Boys say ‰Û÷Yes’!: Denis Johnston\, The Gate and National Mythmaking in the 1930s”-Ciara Conway (NUI Galway) – “‰Û÷Let’s be Dublin’: The Work of Understudy\, Actress and Playwright Mary Manning”-Ruud van den Beuken (Radboud University) – “‰Û÷How can you call it a nation?’: The Ascendancy and the Free State in Christine Longford’s Mr. Jiggins of Jigginstown (1933)”1pm-2pm / Lunch Break \n2pm-3pm / ROUNDTABLE: “Samuel Beckett and the ‰Û÷State’ of Ireland (Revisited)” \nChair: Feargal Whelan (UCD) \nPanellists: Alan Graham (UCD)\, Scott Eric Hamilton (UCD)\, SeÌÁn Kennedy (St. Mary’s)\, SiobhÌÁn Purcell (NUIG) \n3pm-3.20pm / Tea and Coffee Break \n3.20pm-5pm / PANEL SEVEN: GODOT AND AFTERChair: ClÌ_odhna Carney (NUI Galway) \n-Thomas Conway (NUI Galway) – “‰Û÷I’m a dirty\, low church P’: Illuminating the Revisions to Waiting for Godot (1975) by Means of the Beckett/McGreevy Correspondence (1932-35)” \n-Barry Houlihan (NUI Galway) – “The Numbers Game: Protestants on Stage at the Abbey and Lyric Theatres in Jack White’s The Last Eleven“-Megan Minogue (Independent Scholar) – “Alternative Ulster: The Musicality of Stewart Parker’s ‰Û÷Working Models of Wholeness'” \n-MÌÁria Kurdi (University of P̩cs) – “‰Û÷I really do exist’: the Individual in the Monologue Theatre of Jennifer Johnston” \n5pm-6pm / PLENARY ADDRESS \nEmilie Pine (University College Dublin) – “Memory Generations: The Work of Remembering in the Plays of Christina Reid”
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/irish-protestant-playwrights-conference/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160527T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160527T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134651Z
UID:1933-1464364800-1464364800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Discipline of Philosophy\, School of Humanities\, UNESCO Child and Family Research Centre and the School of Sociology and Politics - Book Launch
DESCRIPTION:Discipline of Philosophy\, School of Humanities\, UNESCO Child and Family Research Centre and School of Sociology and Politics are hosting a Book Launch \n‘ Philosophy and Political Engagement: Reflection in the public sphere’. \nLaunched by Prof James Edwin Mahon (CUNY – Lehman). \nSeminar Room GO10\, Ground Floor\, Hardiman Research Building.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/discipline-of-philosophy-school-of-humanities-unesco-child-and-family-research-centre-and-the-school-of-sociology-and-politics-book-launch/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160527T103000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160527T103000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134651Z
UID:1934-1464345000-1464345000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Discipline of French present a workshop ' France-Algeria: Memories and Identitites International Workshop'.
DESCRIPTION:France-Algeria: Memories and Identities International Workshop \nDiscipline of French\, School of Languages\, Literatures and Cultures \nNUI\, Galway \n27 May 2016 \nRoom: AMB 2070 (Arts Millennium Building)
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/discipline-of-french-present-a-workshop-france-algeria-memories-and-identitites-international-workshop/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160525T163000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160525T163000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134651Z
UID:1931-1464193800-1464193800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Dept of History NUIG present Dr Jenny Hillman (University of Chester\, UK and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow) 'Multiple hands and multiple voices: Writing Female Lives in the French Counter-Reformation'.
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dept-of-history-nuig-present-dr-jenny-hillman-university-of-chester-uk-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-multiple-hands-and-multiple-voices-writing-female-lives-in-the-french-counter-reformatio/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160525T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160525T140000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134651Z
UID:1932-1464184800-1464184800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Seminar on Poetry and Philosophy - Prof William Desmond (KU Leuven\, Moore Institute Visiting Fellow) and Prof Felix ÌÒ Murchadha (NUIG)
DESCRIPTION:Seminar on Poetry and Philosophy \nProf William Desmond (KU Leuven and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow) \n‘Poetic porosity and Astonished Prayer: On the Poetics of Sean O’Riordan’ \nProf Felix ÌÒ Murhcadha (NUIG) \n‘ Gerald Manley Hopkins: Nature and Emotion’. \nSeminar Room GO11\, Ground Floor\, Hardiman Research Building.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/seminar-on-poetry-and-philosophy-prof-william-desmond-ku-leuven-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-and-prof-felix-io-murchadha-nuig/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160524T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160524T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134651Z
UID:1930-1464112800-1464112800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Centre for Drama\, Theatre and Performance participatory theatre Play/Test ' New Voices in Art. Who would you become if you became suddenly famous?'
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/centre-for-drama-theatre-and-performance-participatory-theatre-playtest-new-voices-in-art-who-would-you-become-if-you-became-suddenly-famous/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160523T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160523T110000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134651Z
UID:1929-1464001200-1464001200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:One day Workshop 'Popular Publishing in Europe ( 18th/19th Centuries)'
DESCRIPTION:One-day Workshop \nSeminar Room GO10 \nHardiman Research Building\, NUI Galway \n \nAll welcome! \n \nFree event email \nalice.colombo@nuigalway.ie to register \n \n11.00 – 11.15 \nCoffee \n11.15 – 11.30 \nIntroduction \n11.30 – 12.10 \nHansJÌ_rgen LÌ_sebrink (UniversitÌ_t des Saarlandes) ‘Patriotic relics and carnavalesque visions – \nPolitical transformations of traditional popular culture \nin the public sphere of the French Revolution’ \n12.10 – 12.50 \nAntonio Serrano DurÌÁ (Universidad CatÌ_lica de Valencia) ‘Spanish Popular Literature in the \neighteenth century. Production and distribution’ \n12.50 -14.00 \nLunch and networking \n14.00 – 14.40 \nJeroen Salman (Universiteit Utrecht)’The transnational and intermedial features of a Dutch \nmass medium. Demonic narratives in catch penny prints(18th -19thcentury)’ \n14.40 – 15.20 \nNiall ÌÒ CiosÌÁin (NUI Galway) \n‘InterCeltic print connections\, 17901900’ \n15.20 – 15.40 \nCoffee \n15.40 – 16.20 \nAlice Colombo (NUI Galway) ‘Translation and the transnationalisation of popular publishing in nineteenthcentury Italy’ \n16.20 – 17.00 \nRound table and conclusions
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/one-day-workshop-popular-publishing-in-europe-18th19th-centuries/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160520T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160520T090000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134651Z
UID:1926-1463734800-1463734800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Centre for Drama\, Theatre and Performance: Conference - '1916 in Irish Theatre/1916 as Irish Theatre.
DESCRIPTION:9.30: Welcome and introduction   \nPanel 1: Internatoinalising the Rising  \n\n? Patrick Lonergan\, “Easter 1916 and Internationalising Irish Theatre’ \n? Charlotte McIvor\, “Rehearsing Revolution as a prelude to 1916: Yeats\, Tagore and Peruse and the Staging of Transactional Nationalist Masculinities” \n? David Clare: “Anthropological Gays: Casement\, Pearse\, and 1916”\n\n11.00: Keynote Lecture 1 Paige Reynolds (Holy Cross)\, “The “Rising” of the American Avant-Garde: The Gate\, 1916\, and Experimental Theater in Boston” \n 12.00: Coffee  \n 12.15: Panel 2 The Rising on the Irish Stage \n\n? Ryan K Evans\, “An Evolution of the Production History of The Plough and the Stars” \n? Christopher McCormack\, “”Scenographies of Augusta Gregory’s Plays\, Before and After 1916”.\n\n 13.15 – Break for Lunch  \n 14.00: Panel 3:  \nPearse and Irish Theatre  \n\n? Eugene McNulty\, “‰Û÷Exceptional Bodies: Pearse’s drama and the search for the Law beyond the law’\n? Marianne Kennedy\, “Pearse as guerrilla\, site-specific performance artist. A master of reception.”\n? Barry Houllhan\, “Decisions at Easter: Pearse Takes the Stage” \n\n 15.15 – Break  \n 15.45: Panel 4: Commemorations  \n\n? Ian Walsh\, “The Performance of 1916 at the Abbey Theatre in 1966: Walter Macken’s Recall the Years‘ \n? Maeve Casserly\, “‰Û÷Commemoration as Staged Memory: A comparative analysis of commemoration in Ireland marking the 1991\, 2006and 2016 anniversaries of the Easter Rising and the Battle of the Somme”\n? Akiko Satake\, “”The Easter Risingfrom a Wider Perspective: Cries of Casement as his Bones are Brought to Dublin and The Non-Stop Connolly ShowPart 6″\n\n 17.00: Keynote Lecture (2) James Moran (Nottingham):”Child’s Play: Looking again at 1916 Onstage” \n 18:00: Conference Conclusion
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/centre-for-drama-theatre-and-performance-conference-1916-in-irish-theatre1916-as-irish-theatre/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160519T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160519T150000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134651Z
UID:1928-1463670000-1463670000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Talk hosted by CAMPS and the English Dept NUIG ' An Irish Franciscan's Pocketbook: British Library MS Harley 913 and Colonial Ireland in the Early Fourteenth Century'
DESCRIPTION:Speaker:                Professor John Scattergood (Trinity College\, Dublin) \n Title:                     ‘An Irish Franciscan’s Pocketbook: British Library MS Harley 913 and Colonial Ireland in  \n                               the Early Fourteenth Century’ \n Location:              Hardiman Research Building\, Room 1001 (‘The Bridge’) \n Date:                     Thursday\, 19 May\, at 3.00pm
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/talk-hosted-by-camps-and-the-english-dept-nuig-an-irish-franciscans-pocketbook-british-library-ms-harley-913-and-colonial-ireland-in-the-early-fourteenth-century/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160517T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160517T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134651Z
UID:1927-1463500800-1463500800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Book Launch: 'The British Labour Party & Twentieth Century Ireland: The Cause of Ireland\, The Cause of labour'.
DESCRIPTION:You are cordially invited to the launch of \nThe British Labour Party & Twentieth-Century Ireland: \nThe Cause of Ireland\, The Cause of labour \nEdited by Laurence Marley \n The book will be launched by Dr Martin Mansergh\, \nformer Minister of State and Vice-Chair of the Irish Government Expert Group on the Decade of Centenaries
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/book-launch-the-british-labour-party-twentieth-century-ireland-the-cause-of-ireland-the-cause-of-labour/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160511T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160511T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134650Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134650Z
UID:1925-1462982400-1462982400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Gender ARC and Global Women's Studies at NUIG Research Seminar
DESCRIPTION:Gender ARC and Global Women’s Studies at NUI Galway are pleased to invite you to the following research seminar: \n \nIrish Women Screenwriters cast in the shadows – Knocknagow (1918) and Guests of the Nation (1935) \nDr DÌ_Ì_g O’Connell \n\, Film & Media Studies at the D̼n Laoghaire Institute of Art\, Design and Technology  \nDate: Wednesday 11 May 2016 \nTime: 4.00-5.00 pm \nVenue: The Hardiman Research Building\, R1001 \nWith Introduction by Dr Miriam Haughton\, Lecturer in Drama\, Theatre and Performance at NUI Galway \n.For questions\, please contact Gender ARC Seminar and Public Lecture Series Coordinator: Amie Lajoie\, a.lajoie1@nuigalway.ie \n Abstract \n: This paper explores how Irish women screenwriters are often written out of the historical record\, and cast in the shadows of male directors and novelists. In the case of Knocknagow (Ireland 1918) and Guests of the Nation (Ireland 1935)\, two significant films in the early history of Irish cinema\, very little is known about the screenwriters – Mrs. NF Patton (Knocknagow) and Mary Manning (Guests of the Nation). These films could be considered landmark films in early Irish cinema history at the level of narrative theme\, historical significance and audience appeal. Both films were written by women but very little historical references are found for either writer. Examining the archive material of both these films\, this study traces through the reviews of these films\, the place awarded to the screenwriter in the documented history. Is this just a case of the screenwriter being cast to the periphery or is there further marginalisation happening at the level of gender? Drawing on theories around social capital\, this paper explores what the barriers are to recognition and record. Is the status of the male author privileged over that of the screenwriter\, or is there a gender bias at work\, relegating women screenwriters to the margins\, on two levels\, as screenwriters and as women?  \nDr DÌ_Ì_g O’Connell \nlectures in Film & Media Studies at the Institute of Art\, Design & Technology\, Dun Laoghaire\, Co. Dublin. She is the author of New Irish Storytellers: Narrative Strategies in Film (Intellect\, 2010) and Documentary in a Changing State (Cork University press\, 2012). She has written extensively on Irish Cinema\, Television Drama and Screenwriting. She has also been a member of a Writers’ Team for Irish television drama.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/gender-arc-and-global-womens-studies-at-nuig-research-seminar/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160505T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160505T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134650Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134650Z
UID:1923-1462467600-1462467600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Gender ARC and Centre for Global Women's Studies - Book Launch and Public Lecture 'What we preserve from the past and what we ignore: some new perspectives on women in Ireland in the 1950's and 60's' presented by Dr Caitriona Clear (Senior Lecturer in His
DESCRIPTION:Is mÌ_r ag Gender ARC agus ag Ionad L̩ann Domhanda na mBan in OÌä Gaillimh \ncuireadh a thabhairt duit freastal ar Sheoladh Leabhair agus ar L̩acht PhoiblÌ_: \nWhat we preserve from the past and what we ignore: some new \nperspectives on women in Ireland in the 1950s and 60s \ń chur i lÌÁthair ag an Dr Caitriona Clear\, L̩achtÌ_ir Sinsearach le Stair in OÌä Gaillimh chun ceili̼radh a dh̩anamh ar sheoladh a leabhair nua: \nWomen’s Voices in Ireland: women’s magazines in the 1950s and 60s \nLe r̩amhrÌÁ Ì_n bhfile agus drÌÁmadÌ_ir Mary Coll \nDÌÁta: D̩ardaoin\, 5 Bealtaine 2016 \nAm: 5.00pm – 6.30pm \nIonad: ́ras Taighde UÌ_ ArgadÌÁin\, Seomra SeimineÌÁir G011 \n\nGender ARC and the Centre for Global Women’s Studies at NUI Galway \nare pleased to invite you to the following Book Launch and Public Lecture: \nWhat we preserve from the past and what we ignore: some new \nperspectives on women in Ireland in the 1950s and 60s \nPresented by Dr Caitriona Clear\, Senior Lecturer in History at NUI Galway to mark the launch of her upcoming book: \n Women’s Voices in Ireland: women’s magazines in the 1950s and 60s \n With an introduction by poet and playwright Mary Coll \n Date: Thursday 5 May 2016 \nTime: 5.00pm – 6.30pm \nVenue: The Hardiman Research Building\, G011 Seminar Room \n Light refreshments – all welcome \n\nCaitriona Clear is a Senior Lecturer in modern Irish and European history at NUI\, Galway. Women’s Voices in Ireland: women’s magazines in the 1950s and 60s\, (Bloomsbury 2016) is her fourth book\, following Social Change and Everyday Life in Ireland 1850-1922 (Manchester University Press 2007)\, Women of the House: women’s household work in Ireland 1926-1961 (Irish Academic Press 2000) and Nuns in Nineteenth-century Ireland (Gill & Macmillan 1987). She has also published research on homelessness in post-Famine Ireland\, Irish women during the First World War\, twentieth-century Irish women writers\, and clothes and fashion in Ireland. She is a contributor to the forthcoming Cambridge History of Ireland edited by Thomas Bartlett. \nMary Coll is a Limerick poet\, playwright and broadcaster. Publications include All Things Considered (Salmon 2002) numerous contributions to RTE Radio One and RTE Lyric FM. She has had stage productions of Excess Baggage (2007) and Anything But Love (2010) at The Belltable Arts Centre\, radio plays commissioned by RTE Drama On One\, lyrics for the Choral Work ‰Û÷Spirestone’ and two art song cycles in association with the composer Fiona Linnane\, a new play Diamond Rocks: Sunset\, commissioned by The Lime Tree Theatre\, Limerick (2014) and a second collection of poems entitled Silver due for publication in 2016. \nFor questions about this event\, please contact NUI Galway’s Gender ARC Convenor and Co-Director of the Centre for Global Women’s Studies: Dr Niamh Reilly\, niamh.reilly@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/gender-arc-and-centre-for-global-womens-studies-book-launch-and-public-lecture-what-we-preserve-from-the-past-and-what-we-ignore-some-new-perspectives-on-women-in-ireland-in-the-1950s-and-60s/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160505T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160505T090000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134650Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134650Z
UID:1924-1462438800-1462438800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:School of Languages\, Literature and Culture - School Research Day
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/school-of-languages-literature-and-culture-school-research-day/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160422T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160422T120000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134647Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134647Z
UID:1893-1461326400-1461326400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:CAMPS Lab - Eugene Costello\, Archaeology\, NUI Galway 'Ar cuairt bhuailltechuis: the medieval origins of transhumance or ''booleying'' in Ireland'.
DESCRIPTION:CAMPS Lab – Eugene Costello\, Archaeology\, NUI Galway ‘Ar cuairt bhuailltechuis: the medieval origins of transhumance or ”booleying” in Ireland’
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/camps-lab-eugene-costello-archaeology-nui-galway-ar-cuairt-bhuailltechuis-the-medieval-origins-of-transhumance-or-booleying-in-ireland/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160420T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160420T140000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134647Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134647Z
UID:1888-1461160800-1461160800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Drama\, Theatre and Performance Speaker Series: Dr Ian Walsh\, Lecturer at the Centre for Drama\, Theatre and Performance\, NUI Galway
DESCRIPTION:Drama\, Theatre and Performance Speaker Series: Dr Ian Walsh\, Lecturer at the Centre for Drama\, Theatre and Performance\, NUI Galway
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/drama-theatre-and-performance-speaker-series-dr-ian-walsh-lecturer-at-the-centre-for-drama-theatre-and-performance-nui-galway/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160414T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20160414T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T191641
CREATED:20160824T134650Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134650Z
UID:1922-1460649600-1460649600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:ICHLC Seminar Series - 'Aspects of anti-communism in 20th Century Ireland' with Diane Kirby (UU)\, Gerard Madden (NUIG) and John Mulqueen (TCD)
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/ichlc-seminar-series-aspects-of-anti-communism-in-20th-century-ireland-with-diane-kirby-uu-gerard-madden-nuig-and-john-mulqueen-tcd/
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR