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X-WR-CALNAME:Moore Institute
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Moore Institute
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TZID:Europe/Dublin
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
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TZNAME:IST
DTSTART:20150329T010000
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DTSTART:20151025T010000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150911T153000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150911T153000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134654Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134654Z
UID:1981-1441985400-1441985400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Gender ARC:'Lily and Lolly: Yeats and his Sisters'   Written and performed by Sinead Murphy and Darina Gallagher
DESCRIPTION:Gender ARC is pleased to invite you to: \n“Lily and Lolly: Yeats and his Sisters” \nWritten and performed by Sinead Murphy and Darina Gallagher \nReception and Performance: Friday 11 September 2015 – 3.30-5.00pm – All Welcome!! \nVenue: Room G006\, Institute for Lifecourse and Society\, NUI Galway \nLily and Lolly is a new work of theatre that looks at the life of poet W.B. Yeats through the eyes of his sisters Lily and Lolly Yeats. Set in their Dublin printing company Cuala Press\, it explores the poetry and plays they publish for their brother Willie. Through storytelling\, poetry and song\, Lily and Lolly opens up the relationships within the Yeats family\, with their brother the artist Jack B.Yeats and their father\, the portrait artist John B. Yeats. Lilly and Lolly and their all-female printing company\, find themselves at the forefront of the Irish Literary Revival surrounded by the characters so important in the life of W.B.Yeats including Maud Gonne\, Lady Gregory\, James Joyce\, AE\, Sean O’Casey and John Millington Synge. \nSince 2010\, Sinead Murphy and Darina Gallagher (the Shannon Colleens)\, have been creating award-winning music-theatre productions relating to the life and works of James Joyce. In 2014\, they created Here Comes Everybody : Songs from Finnegans Wake by James Joyce for Dublin City Public Libraries as part of the Bealtaine Festival to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the publication of Finnegans Wake. They have performed their shows\, Songs of Joyce and Caf̩ Chantant to critical acclaim\, touring nationally and internationally including Moscow\, New York\, Prague\, Vienna\, Trieste\, Glasgow and Coruna. \nGender ARC supports excellence and collaboration in gender research across NUI Galway and University of Limerick.  \nNew members and affiliates are always welcome – for more information see: www.genderarc.org \nFor questions regarding Gender ARC ‰Û÷Lily and Lolly’ performance and to RSVP for catering purposes\, please contact Gillian Browne\, gillian.browne@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/gender-arclily-and-lolly-yeats-and-his-sisters-written-and-performed-by-sinead-murphy-and-darina-gallagher/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150911T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150911T110000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134654Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134654Z
UID:1982-1441969200-1441969200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Gender ARC research seminar:May-Len Skilbrei\, University of Oslo\, Norway   'The Sex Purchase Ban in Sweden and Norway: evaluating law-in-action'
DESCRIPTION:Gender ARC is pleased to invite you to a research seminar May-Len Skilbrei\, University of Oslo\, Norway“The Sex Purchase Ban in Sweden and Norway: evaluating law-in-action”\nThis seminar launches the first all-Ireland network for researchers critically engaged in the area of commercial sex and its attendant politics. A further one-day series of workshops will be held in University of Limerick on November 27th 2015. All are welcome to attend.  For further details and to reserve a place\, contact annmarie.joyce@ul.ie \nAbstract: Much is said about the unilateral sex purchase ban in Sweden and Norway – called the Swedish or Nordic model – in debates on prostitution policies elsewhere. Claims about the laws made in these debates make it necessary to critically assess the evidence of their effects\, and to understand how they operate in a larger context where social welfare provisions and other sets of legal and administrative instruments also apply. \nIn her talk\, Skilbrei goes beyond the ideological arguments and pragmatic reasoning behind the Sex Purchase Act in both countries\, to explore how the Acts are argued for and put to work today. She argues that the explicit intentions behind the acts are counteracted by how their implementation works in practice and that they have been repurposed to meet new goals. Both of these aspects of prostitution law-in-action need to be considered in debates over whether or not to ‘export’ similar Acts to new contexts. \nProfessor May-Len Skilbrei is based in theDepartment of Criminology and Sociology of Law\, University of Oslo. She researches prostitution and prostitution policies\, and labour and migration. In the last decade\, her research has dealt mainly with human trafficking and prostitution policies in the Nordic countries. She published a book on prostitution policies in the Nordic countries with Charlotta Holmstr̦m  (Ashgate 2013). Prof. Skilbrei is Vice Chair of the European network of prostitution scholars\, COST Action “Comparing European Prostitution Policies: Understanding Scales and Cultures of Governance (ProsPol)”\, and is as co-editor of the Routledge book series Interdisciplinary Studies in Sex for Sale. \nFollowed by Gender ARC reception and network members meeting (1.00-3.00pm)
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/gender-arc-research-seminarmay-len-skilbrei-university-of-oslo-norway-the-sex-purchase-ban-in-sweden-and-norway-evaluating-law-in-action/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150910T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150910T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134654Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134654Z
UID:1979-1441900800-1441900800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Irish Centre for the Histories of Labour & Class (ICHLC) Seminar Series
DESCRIPTION:The Irish Centre for the Histories of Labour & Class (ICHLC) is pleased to announce its inaugural seminar series.\nThe first seminar will see\nDavid Convery\,\nIrish Research Council Postdoctoral Fellow at the ICHLC\, speak on\n‘Writing and Theorising the Irish Working Class’.\nAll are welcome to attend. \nFor more information please contact david.convery@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/irish-centre-for-the-histories-of-labour-class-ichlc-seminar-series/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150909T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150909T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134654Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134654Z
UID:1978-1441818000-1441818000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Prof. William Maker Philosophy\, Clemson University  Darkness Made (In)visible:  The Dialectic of Race  in Faulkner's Intruder in the Dust
DESCRIPTION:Prof. William Maker \nPhilosophy\, Clemson University \nDarkness Made (In)visible:  \nThe Dialectic of Race  \nin Faulkner’s Intruder in the Dust \nWednesday 9 September \n5pm \nHardiman Research Building seminar room G011 \nFor more information please contact daniel.carey@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/prof-william-maker-philosophy-clemson-university-darkness-made-invisible-the-dialectic-of-race-in-faulkners-intruder-in-the-dust/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150904T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150904T000000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134654Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134654Z
UID:1975-1441324800-1441324800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Workshop - 'Researching the Irish Parliamentary Party in the Decade of Centenaries'
DESCRIPTION:As part of NUI Galway’s commemorative programme\, Friday 4 September 2015 will see a one day workshop on \nResearching the Irish Parliamentary Party in the Decade of Centenaries.\nThis workshop will feature speakers outlining their own particular research focus and its aims as well as commenting on perceived opportunities and/or challenges when researching the Irish Party in the build up to the centenary of the 1916 Rising. Diverse aspects of the Irish Party and its following throughout the country will be discussed while the interaction of the party with the events of 1916 and afterwards will also be considered. Speakers are invited to offer their own observations on the Decade of Centenaries. Each presentation will be followed by questions and discussion. \nConfirmed Speakers: Elaine Callinan\, Mary Harris\, Tony King\, Pat McCarthy\, Conor McNamara\, Martin O’Donoghue\, John O’Donovan\, CiarÌÁn Wallace. \nFriday 4 September 2015\, Room G010\, Hardiman Research Building\, NUI Galway. All Welcome. \nFor further information on participating and/or attending the workshop contact Martin O’Donoghue. Email: t.odonoghue2@nuigalway.ie \nProgramme\n‰Û÷Researching the Irish Parliamentary Party in the Decade of Centenaries’ \n10.15 – Welcome  \n10.30 – 12.00 \nThe IPP and the revolution \nElaine Callinan (Carlow College/Trinity College Dublin) \nDr Mary Harris (NUI Galway) \nDr Conor McNamara (NUI Galway) \n—- \n12.00 – 1.00 – Lunch \n1.00 – 2.30 \nHow did the Irish Party function? \nDr CiarÌÁn Wallace (Trinity College Dublin) \nDr Pat McCarthy (Author: Waterford: The Irish Revolution) \nMartin O’Donoghue (NUI Galway) \n—– \n2.30- 3.00 Coffee \n3.00- 4.30 \nDissonance within the Home Rule movement:  \nTony King (NUI Galway) \nJohn O’Donovan (University College Cork) \n4.30 – 5.00 – Final Discussion \nAll Welcome.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/workshop-researching-the-irish-parliamentary-party-in-the-decade-of-centenaries/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150624T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150624T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1974-1435161600-1435161600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Carrie Griffin\, Bristol University and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow -Ink Recipes in Domestic Culture: Women and Textual Production\, 1500-1700
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/carrie-griffin-bristol-university-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-ink-recipes-in-domestic-culture-women-and-textual-production-1500-1700/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150624T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150624T090000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134709Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134709Z
UID:2204-1435136400-1435136400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:DhÌÁ leagan D̩ag: An Sean-nÌ_s san aonÌÄå¼ haois is fiche - 24 agus 25 Meitheamh
DESCRIPTION:DhÌÁ leagan D̩ag: \nAn Sean-nÌ_s san aon̼ haois is fiche\nClÌÁr na ComhdhÌÁla \nD̩ C̩adaoin 24 Meitheamh  \n  \n9.00 ClÌÁr̼ \n9.15 Oscailt Oifigi̼il An Dr. Jeannine Woods\, Ceann GnÌ_omhach na Gaeilge\, OÌä Gaillimh \nPain̩al 1 \n9.30-11.00 Cathaoirleach: Jeannine Woods \nLillis ÌÒ Laoire OÌä Gaillimh \nCÌÁ bhfuil an Sean-nÌ_s? An Miotas\, An R̩altacht agus an SpÌÁs Idir Eatarthu \nSÌ_le Denvir\, ColÌÁiste PhÌÁdraig\, Ollscoil Chathair ́tha Cliath \nFÌ_or nÌ_ Fiar? Ceist na BarÌÁnt̼lachta in AmhrÌÁnÌ_ocht Dh̼chasach na Gaeilge \nRÌ_isÌ_n Nic Dhonncha\, ColÌÁiste Mhuire gan SmÌÁl \nAn tAmhrÌÁnaÌ_\, An Pobal agus LÌÁithri̼ na F̩ini̼lachta \nSos \nPain̩al 2 \n11.30-1.00 Cathaoirleach: Aingeal NÌ_ ChualÌÁin \nTrÌ_ona NÌ_ ShÌ_ochÌÁin Ollscoil Luimnigh \nEisp̩ireas\, BrÌ_ agus Machnamh: an Smaointeoireacht agus an AmhrÌÁnaÌ_ocht \nPÌÁdraig ÌÒ Cearbhaill Brainse na Logainmneacha \nAn bhfuil ̩inne inÌÁr dteannta ag triall ar an tobar? \nOdÌ_ NÌ_ Ch̩illeachair Acadamh na hOllscolaÌ_ochta Gaeilge\, OÌä Gaillimh \nRTÌä RaidiÌ_ na Gaeltachta: SlÌÁnaitheoir an tSean-nÌ_is? \n1.00 – 2.00 LÌ_n \nPain̩al 3 \n2.00-3.00 Cathaoirleach: RÌ_isÌ_n Nic Dhonncha \nMicheÌÁl ÌÒ GionnÌÁin NeamhspleÌÁch \nFanann an braon sna clÌÁir: An duine\, an ÌÁit agus na hamhrÌÁin sa lÌÁ inniu \nVirginia Blankenhorn\, Ollscoil Dh̼n Ìäideann \nÌÒ Chalifornia go Conamara ar lorg an tSean-nÌ_is \n3.00-3.30 Sos \nPain̩al 4 \n3.30-4.30 Cathaoirleach: Ailbhe NÌ_ Ghearbhuigh \nÌäadaoin NÌ_ Mhuircheartaigh\, ColÌÁiste PhÌÁdraig \nContrÌÁrthachtaÌ_ agus CoimhlintÌ_ ag na Feiseanna Luatha. Sc̩al na nAmhrÌÁn \nSeosamh Mac Donnchadha\, ColÌÁiste na nDÌÁn\, Ollscoil na hÌäireann\, Gaillimh. \nAn sean-nÌ_s: BÌÁite sa traidisi̼n nÌ_ BÌÁite ag an traidisi̼n? \n7.00 Dinn̩ar na ComhdhÌÁla ÌÒstÌÁn Harbour\, BÌ_thar na nDuganna\, Gaillimh. \n9.30 Ceol 7 AmhrÌÁnaÌ_ocht sa Chrane. \nAÌ_onna speisialta: AmhrÌÁnaithe ÌÒga an Ghaelacadaimh \nD̩ardaoin 25 Meitheamh \nPain̩al 5 \n9.15-11.15 Cathaoirleach: Lillis ÌÒ Laoire \nRob Dunbar\, Ollthaigh DhÌ_n Ìöideann \nDualchas Seann-NÌ_s na GÌÊidhlig agus an Tasglann \nSeumas Watson\, An Clachan\, Ceap Breatainn\, Alba Nuadh \nAg Ìäirigh air ÌÕran an Albainn Nuaidh: Suas e! \nTiber Falzett\, Ionad an EÌ_lais Eileanaich\, Oilthigh Eilean a’ Phrionnsa Iomhair \nSÌ_il air Seinn\, Seanchas agus Meatafor am measg an t-Sluaigh \nGriogair Labhruidh\, Ollscoil na hÌäireann\, Gaillimh. \nTraidisean Seinn Ath-Chruthaichte nan GÌÊidheal Albannach \nSos \nPain̩al 6 \n11.45-1.15 Cathaoirleach: An Dr. Clodagh Downey\, Roinn na Gaeilge \nLiam ÌÒ Maoildhia Sti̼rthÌ_ir an Oireachtais \nAn AmhrÌÁnaÌ_ocht agus an Sean-nÌ_s ag an Oireachtas \nAntaine ÌÒ FarachÌÁin Institi̼id TeicneolaÌ_ochta Bhaile ́tha Cliath \nAg lorg ÌÁite don amhrÌÁnaÌ_ocht dh̼chasach \nMÌÁire Breathnach ColÌÁiste PhÌÁdraig Droim Conrach \nIomramh Aonair i dtreo an tSean-nÌ_is: Sc̩alta Ì_ fhoghlaimeoirÌ_ \nLÌ_n \nPain̩al 7 \n2.30-4.30 ModhnÌ_ir: Louis de Paor \nS̼il Siar\, S̼il ar Aghaidh: Pl̩ Oscailte faoin amhrÌÁnaÌ_ocht \nJosie SheÌÁin Jeaic Mac Donnchadha\, MÌÁire PhÌ_otair NÌ_ DhroighneÌÁin\, S. NÌ_ Bheaglaoich \n4.30 Clabhs̼r \n  \nClÌÁr̼: Saor in Aisce. TÌÁille Dinn̩ir: ‰âÂ30  TeagmhÌÁil: Lillis ÌÒ Laoire  ag sean.nos2015@gmail.com
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dhia-leagan-d%cc%a9ag-an-sean-ni_s-san-aoniaa%c2%bc-haois-is-fiche-24-agus-25-meitheamh/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150623T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150623T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1972-1435075200-1435075200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Dr Jodi Schneider\, INRIA Sophia Antipolis - M̩diterran̩e\, France and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow -Persons\, documents\, models: organising and structuring information for the Web
DESCRIPTION:Persons\, documents\, models: organising and structuring information for the Web \nPeople and documents are of enduring interest. Documents may be generated by individuals\, collective groups\, and administrations\, on any number of topics. We are particularly interested in the relationships between people and documents. The most important relationships are creation (authors\, illustrators\, translators\, …)\, usage (e.g. association copies)\, and topic-of (e.g. people may be the subjects of biographies). \nIn this lecture\, we will talk about several approaches for modeling\, or representing\, people and documents. We pay particular attention to computer-based approaches to organization\, and to organizing information for websites. We will talk briefly about TEI and XML\, and the focus on my area of research expertise: modeling “linked data”\, a widely adopted approach for interlinking data. Adopted by the UK and US governments and search engines such as Google and Yahoo!\, linked data has also been widely used in the digital humanities and by libraries\, archives\, and museums. It consists in naming objects of interest (be they authors\, documents\, or whatnot) and using standard data formats to enable interlinking.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dr-jodi-schneider-inria-sophia-antipolis-m%cc%a9diterran%cc%a9e-france-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-persons-documents-models-organising-and-structuring-information-for-the-web/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150623T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150623T150000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1971-1435071600-1435071600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Dr. Peter Webster\, The British Library and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow -Prospects & pitfalls in using web archives for research
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dr-peter-webster-the-british-library-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-prospects-pitfalls-in-using-web-archives-for-research/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150622T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150622T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1973-1434988800-1434988800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Derek Gladwin\, University of British Columbia and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow - 'North Atlantic Poetry and Multimedia: Environmentalism\, Space and Websites'
DESCRIPTION:Derek Gladwin\, University of British Columbia and Moore Institute Visiting Research Fellow’North Atlantic Poetry and Multimedia: Environmentalism\, Space and Websites’\nThis talk discusses the relationship between two interdisciplinary environmental and spatial approaches to literature\, known as ecocriticism and geocriticism\, through two interactive websites that focus on the poetry of Eavan Boland and Marlene Creates. In one website\, Creates\, who is an environmental poet and photographer from Newfoundland\, Canada\, has created a multimedia experience titled A Virtual Walk of the Boreal Poetry Garden. Across the North Atlantic\, another website titled The Poetry Project: Poetry and Art from Ireland employs a similar multimedia format\, incorporating short videos of place-based poetry read orally in built and non-built environments. Boland’s poem ‰Û÷In Our Own Country’\, which is accompanied by Oliver Comerford’s short film Distance\, is the selection from ‰Û÷The Poetry Project’ considered in this talk. What is important about these two projects is that they are meant to be experienced on the web. These online representations of environmental poetry also use elements of interest for ecocritics and geocritics alike\, capturing both real and imagined spaces\, while also expanding the boundaries among disciplines\, genres\, and platforms. Ultimately\, this talk examines how these two websites demonstrate through poetry\, image\, and virtual experience the ability to promote environmental awareness through spatial representations of place. \nDerek Gladwin is a Social Sciences and Humanities Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Department of English at the University of British Columbia. His work primarily focuses on the environmental humanities in 20th– and 21st-century literary\, film\, and visual cultures in Ireland\, the UK\, and the North Atlantic. Gladwin is author of the forthcoming book\, Contentious Terrains: Boglands in the Irish Postcolonial Gothic (2016)\, and co-editor of Eco-Joyce: The Environmental Imagination of James Joyce (2015) and Unfolding Irish Landscapes: Tim Robinson\, Culture and Environment (2015). He is currently co-editing an issue on ‰Û÷Irish Environmental Criticism’ for the Canadian Journal of Irish Studies\, and will serve as an Environmental Humanities Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Edinburgh in the autumn of 2015.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/derek-gladwin-university-of-british-columbia-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-north-atlantic-poetry-and-multimedia-environmentalism-space-and-websites/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150619T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150619T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1969-1434718800-1434718800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Irish Centre for the Histories of Labour & Class Conference - 'From Civil Rights to the Bailout: Social movements\, workers agitation and left-wing activism in Ireland\, 1968-2010' - 19th and 20th June
DESCRIPTION:From Civil Rights to the Bailout: Social movements\, workers agitation\, and left-wing activism in Ireland\, 1968-2010\nIrish Centre for the Histories of Labour & Class\,\nhttp://fromcivilrightstothebailout.wordpress.com/ \nConference Overview\nFriday 19 June \n13.00-13.45 Registration \n13.45 Welcome address \n14.00-15.30 Panel 1: The context of Northern Ireland \n15.30-15.45 Break \n15.45-17.15 Panel 2: Varieties of Protest \n19.30 Mechanics’ Institute\, Middle Street: ‰Û÷Civil Rights and Union Rights: Veteran Voices from the West of Ireland’ \nSaturday 20 June \n10.00-11.30 Panel 3: Radical Politics \n11.30-11.45 Break \n11.45-13.15 Panel 4: Challenging legal and cultural constraints \n13.15-14.00 Lunch \n14.00-15.30 Panel 5: Engaging Beyond Ireland \n15.30-15.45 Break \n15.45-17.45 Panel 6: Preserving History: Oral History and Archives \nCLOSE OF CONFERENCE \n************ \nRegistration: ‰âÂ5 \nThis will help cover the costs which include coffee\, tea and biscuits to be provided at all \nbreaks\, and a lunch of sandwiches to be provided on Saturday. If you would like to attend\, \nbut feel you cannot afford the registration fee\, please let us know. \nIn order to provide for catering\, we need an estimate of the number of attendees. If you would \nlike to attend\, please contact David Convery at david.convery@nuigalway.ie and please also \nmake us aware of any special dietary requirements. \nThis conference is organised with the generous support of the Discipline of History\, NUI \nGalway\, and the Moore Institute for Research in the Humanities & Social Sciences. \nFor more information\, please see the conference website at http://fromcivilrightstothebailout.wordpress.com
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/irish-centre-for-the-histories-of-labour-class-conference-from-civil-rights-to-the-bailout-social-movements-workers-agitation-and-left-wing-activism-in-ireland-1968-2010-19th-and-20th-june/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150618T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150618T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1970-1434643200-1434643200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Michael Neiberg\, United States Army War College and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow -Trans-Atlantic Linkages and America's Road to War\, 1914-1917: New Evidence\, New Conclusions.
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/michael-neiberg-united-states-army-war-college-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-trans-atlantic-linkages-and-americas-road-to-war-1914-1917-new-evidence-new-conclusions/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150612T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150612T110000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1965-1434106800-1434106800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Dr Elizabeth Patton\, John Hopkins University and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow - 'The production\, reception and circulation of books by women in the family and affinity of Dorothy Arundell (1560-1613)'
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dr-elizabeth-patton-john-hopkins-university-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-the-production-reception-and-circulation-of-books-by-women-in-the-family-and-affinity-of-dorothy-arundell-1560-161/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150611T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150611T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1967-1434045600-1434045600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Book launch of Laura D. Kelley's The Irish in New Orleans
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/book-launch-of-laura-d-kelleys-the-irish-in-new-orleans/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150611T093000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150611T093000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1966-1434015000-1434015000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:The Society for the Study of Nineteenth-Century Ireland's 21st Annual Conference - June 11 and 12
DESCRIPTION:The Society for the Study of Nineteenth-Century Ireland’s 21st Annual Conference will take place in the Moore Institute at NUI Galway on Thursday 11th and Friday 12th June 2015. The theme of the conference is Literacy in Nineteenth-Century Ireland. For programme and further details\, see www.ssnciconference2015.wordpress.com or contact the organisers\, Dr Rebecca Barr\, Dr Sarah-Anne Buckley and Dr Muireann O’Cinneide. \nThere will also be a wine reception to celebrate the launch of Laura D. Kelley’s The Irish in New Orleans – 6pm Thurs 11th June in G010. \nEvent sponsored by the Moore Institute and the School of Humanities.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/the-society-for-the-study-of-nineteenth-century-irelands-21st-annual-conference-june-11-and-12/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150610T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150610T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1968-1433952000-1433952000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Dianne Hall\, Victoria University\, Melbourne and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow - 'Gender\, violence and marriage in seventeenth-century Ireland'
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dianne-hall-victoria-university-melbourne-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-gender-violence-and-marriage-in-seventeenth-century-ireland/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150603T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150603T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134708Z
UID:2201-1433347200-1433347200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Timothy Madigan\, St. John Fisher College and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow - Thomas Duddy and Irish Thought
DESCRIPTION:Timothy Madigan\, St. John Fisher College and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow \nThomas Duddy and Irish Thought\nAn examination of the life and writings of the late NUIG philosopher\, author of A History of Irish Thought\, and his thesis that Irish thought refuses to separate the poetic and the prosaic in the pursuit of truth–something which is exemplified in his own work as a poet\, short story writer\, and professional philosopher. \nFor more information please contact tmadigan@sjfc.edu
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/timothy-madigan-st-john-fisher-college-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-thomas-duddy-and-irish-thought/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150602T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150602T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134708Z
UID:2203-1433260800-1433260800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Moore Institute Visiting Fellow Seminar: Maria McGarrity (Long Island University)  'Exhibiting Ireland:  Immigrants and Visual Culture in Derek Walcott's Joycean New World Epic'   - Jack Fennell (University of Limerick)  'Thrasymachus versus Calib
DESCRIPTION:Moore Institute Seminar \nMaria McGarrity \n(Long Island University and Moore Institute) \n‰Û÷Exhibiting Ireland: \nImmigrants and Visual Culture in Derek Walcott’s Joycean New World Epic’ \nJack Fennell \n(University of Limerick and Moore Institute) \n‰Û÷Thrasymachus versus Caliban: Monstrosity and the Limits of Expansion’ \n“Exhibiting Ireland: Immigrants and Visual Culture in Derek Walcott’s Omeros\, a Joycean New World Epic” \nThe John C. Messenger manuscript in the Hardiman library details folklore and ethnography on Montserrat\, “the Emerald Isle of the Caribbean\,” in the mid twentieth century.  Such a vibrant catalog of the Caribbean Irish frames Derek Walcott’s Irish textual exhibit\, a highly organized and illustrated collection of Irish characters in his transatlantic epic Omeros: Major Plunkett\, Maud Plunkett\, and Lawrence. These characters have cultural associations not simply to Ireland but to a specific collection of historical figures that helped shape Dublin museum culture in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This network of allusion\, inspired by the “the keeper of the Kildare street museum” that Joyce mocks in the “Circe” episode of Ulysses becomes reframed and reimagined on St. Lucia in the mid twentieth century.  Walcott’s imaginary museum of the book includes several dominant cultural and political figures from Ireland\, from radically different social registers and affiliations\, and re-locates them to the West Indies.   Walcott’s catalogue becomes a Joycean museum. \nMaria McGarrity is Professor of English at Long Island University in Brooklyn\, New York.  She works on island geographies\, primitivism\, and transnational modernism in Irish and Caribbean literatures.  Her two new books are just out this month: Allusions in Omeros: Notes and a Guide to Derek Walcott’s Masterpiece (University of Florida Press\, 2015) and a co-edited collection\, Caribbean Irish Connections: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (University of the West Indies Press\, 2015). Caution: the ink may not yet be dry.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/moore-institute-visiting-fellow-seminar-maria-mcgarrity-long-island-university-exhibiting-ireland-immigrants-and-visual-culture-in-derek-walcotts-joycean-new-world-epic-jack-fennell-univ/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150602T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150602T120000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134707Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134707Z
UID:2181-1433246400-1433246400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Digital Scholarship Seminar: Brad Pasanek (University of Virginia) and Moore Institute visiting fellow - Poetic Diction: Tokens and Change
DESCRIPTION:Digital Scholarship Seminar:\nBrad Pasanek (University of Virginia) and Moore Institute visiting fellow\nPoetic Diction: Tokens and Change\nDigital Scholarship Seminar‘s final visiting speaker event of this series takes place next Tuesday lunchtime and features Dr Brad Pasanek from the Department of English at the University of Virginia. Dr Pasanek is a current Moore Institute Visiting Fellow\, and his talk focuses on computing the language of early modern poetry. The presentation will be followed by lunch (kindly provided by the Moore Institute) at 1pm. \nAbstract: “Poetic diction” is an early modern term of art\, used to mark distinctions between prose and verse. It signals a belief that poets speak and write a special kind of language. But “poetic diction” is also the term selected by William Wordsworth in the preface to Lyrical Ballads to sum up and mark a break with eighteenth-century poetics. “Poetic diction\,” complained Wordsworth\, is “mechanical” and “artificial\,” a “hubbub of words.” Poets should instead write poems\, claims Wordsworth\, famously\, in the “real language of men.” By 1800\, it would seem\, the seventeenth- and eighteenth-century stock of words and phrases was well worn if not worn out. \nPoetic diction\, as a topic of scholarly interest\, had itself become a worn one by the 1950s; but then computational methods may offer new insights into moribund topics. In particular\, when I see critics compile a large “set of phrases” that occur with “wearisome iteration” or provide a short list of stock phraseology (“blushing flowers\,” “cool gales\,” ” lab’ring oxen\,” “curling smokes\,” “fleet shades\,” and “dusky green”)\, it is the mechanical\, iterative quality of the verse surveyed that most interests me. Computational methods work by iteration; and from the perspective of a computational linguist\, the stock of phrases complained of by some literary critics are so many types and tokens\, waiting to counted and mapped. In the current moment\, in which great quantities of verse-Metaphysical\, Neoclassical\, Romantic-have been digitized\, an opportunity to identify the stock of phrases and visualize their changing frequencies presents itself. \nBio: Brad Pasanek is an Assistant Professor in the English Department of the University of Virginia. His first book\, Metaphors of Mind: An Eighteenth-Century Dictionary ships in the coming month from Johns Hopkins University Press. (Act now! Buy two\, get one free.) His efforts have been described by one of his colleagues in the digital humanities\, as “distant reading by hand\,” and his book digests and analyzes over 10\,000 of the metaphors collected online at The Mind is a Metaphor. \nFor further informatition\, contact: Dr PÌÁdraic Moran (padraic.moran@nuigalway.ie)\, \nor Dr Justitin Tonra (justitin.tonra@nuigalway.ie) \nwww.nuigalway.ie/digital-seminar ‰ۢ www.facebook.com/nuigdss
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/digital-scholarship-seminar-brad-pasanek-university-of-virginia-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-poetic-diction-tokens-and-change/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150528T133000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150528T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134708Z
UID:2199-1432819800-1432819800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Professor Kate Nash\,Department of Sociology\, Goldsmiths\, University of London - 'Women's rights\, distant suffering and neo-imperialism'
DESCRIPTION:Gender ARC and Global Women’s Studies at NUI Galway  \nAre pleased to invite you to a Reception & Public Lecture   “Women’s rights\, distant suffering and neo-imperialism”  Professor Kate Nash \nDepartment of Sociology\, Goldsmiths\, University of London \nAbstract: Earlier this year the film ‰Û÷India’s Daughter’ was banned in India: it is illegal to show it there.  It is widely agreed that at least part of the Indian government’s reasoning was that it is a form of imperialism.  In responding to the ban\, the Israeli born\, UK-based director of the film\, Leslee Udwin\, claimed that\, as a global citizen\, she had the right to make it\, and to criticise Indian society.  Justifying imperialism using the rhetoric of human rights has a long and continuing history.  At the same time\, however\, the question of how we should respond to representations of people suffering in other countries cannot be avoided.  If neo-imperialism is the state of mind that ‰Û÷They need us to achieve rights; while we didn’t need them’\, what can we learn from the film and its reception about women’s rights\, distant suffering\, and neo-imperialism?  \n Kate Nash is a leading political sociologist whose work focuses on the nexus of human rights\, politics and culture.  Professor Nash has been with the Department of Sociology at Goldsmiths since 1999 where she teaches on the sociology of human rights; cultural politics; political sociology; feminist theory; citizenship; social movements; and equality and diversity. She earned a degree in Sociology at City University as a mature student\, completing in 1990\, and then a PhD in the Department of Government at Essex University\, finishing in 1995. She is Co-Director of the Centre for the Study of Global Media and Democracy at Goldsmiths\, and a Fellow of the Center for Cultural Sociology at Yale University. In 2010\, Professor Nash she was Visiting Professor at the New School for Social Research\, New York and Vincent Wright Professor at Sciences Po\, Paris.  Kate Nash is a highly-regarded\, pioneering thinker on the sociology and politics of human rights in a context of globalisation. She is author of: The Political Sociology of Human Rights (Cambridge University Press\, July 2015); Contemporary Political Sociology: globalization\, politics\, power (Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell\, 2010) and The Cultural Politics of Human Rights: Comparing the US and UK (Cambridge University Press\, 2009). See: http://www.gold.ac.uk/sociology/staff/nash/ \n To RSVP and for more information: Gillian Browne\, Global Women’s Studies\, gillian.browne@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/professor-kate-nashdepartment-of-sociology-goldsmiths-university-of-london-womens-rights-distant-suffering-and-neo-imperialism/
LOCATION:Seminar Room G011 the Hardiman Reserach Building\, Ireland
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150528T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150528T110000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134701Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134701Z
UID:2095-1432810800-1432810800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Gender ARC Research Workshop: Dr. Ivana Radacic\, Ivo Pilar Institute\, Croatia & Dr. EilÌ_s Ward\, Political Science and Sociology\, NUI Galway - Methods and methodologies in researching the sex trade: Ireland and Croatia considered
DESCRIPTION:Gender ARC is pleased to host a \nResearch Workshop \nwith \nDr. Ivana Radacic\, Ivo Pilar Institute of Social Sciences\, Zagreb\, Croatia & Dr. EilÌ_s Ward\, School of Political Science and Sociology\, NUI Galway \n“Methods and methodologies in researching the sex trade: Ireland and Croatia considered” \nFollowed by Gender ARC reception and public lecture with Professor Kate Nash \, Goldsmiths (details to follow) \nThis workshop will focus on the many challenges facing anyone researching the sex trade with reference to the experience of Dr. Radacic and Dr. Ward in Croatia and Ireland respectively. It will unpack these challenges\, with an emphasis on how we do knowledge production in this contentious area of public policy. We will look at data gathering tools and mechanisms and also the attendant ethical\, political and epistemological aspects. It understands research in this area as necessarily creating particular sets of tensions that researchers need to acknowledge. Following opening presentations\, the workshop will proceed through an open dialogue.  \nBiographical Notes: \nDr. EilÌ_s Ward is a member of the Management Committee of ProsPoi\, the EU funded Cost Action network on prostitution policies and has been writing and researching in this area for over ten years. She recently completed a joint QUB/NUIG research project on prostitution in Northern Ireland (Huschke et al 2014)\, funded by the N I Department of Justice and has engaged with the policy process in the Republic of Ireland on proposed changes in its prostitution regime. \nDr. Ivana Radacic is also a member of the ProsPol management Committee and is a Research Associate at the Ivo Pilar institute and part time lecturer in the University of Zagreb. Her background is in human rights\, women’s rights and feminism and she has worked as a lawyer at the European Court of Human Rights and has written on women’s righs jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights. \nAll Welcome\nFor more information please contact gillian.browne@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/gender-arc-research-workshop-dr-ivana-radacic-ivo-pilar-institute-croatia-dr-eili_s-ward-political-science-and-sociology-nui-galway-methods-and-methodologies-in-researching-the-sex-trade-i/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150528T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150528T000000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134708Z
UID:2202-1432771200-1432771200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Inish Festival - Thursday 28th May to Sunday 31st May
DESCRIPTION:Inishbofin festival promises a wealth of poetry\, music and ‰Û÷Island Conversations’ \nAn innovative cultural festival\, featuring the best in literature\, poetry\, film and music will take place on the island of Inishbofin from Thursday 28th to Sunday 31st May next.  The inaugural Inish Festival – subtitled “Island Conversations”- will see international musicians\, writers and artists convene in this special\, secluded place for performances\, talks\, and conversations based around themes of insularity\, isolation and the role of the arts in society. The island of Inishbofin itself has inspired a host of writers\, including the poets Ted Hughes\, Sylvia Plath and Richard Murphy\, and its strong musical and cultural traditions make it the ideal venue in which to examine what makes islands such special places\, and examine what it is live on\, or be culturally inspired by\, Ireland’s offshore islands. The programme for the festival will appeal to a wide range of tastes\, featuring as it does readings from writers such as Kevin Barry\, Bernard O’Donoghue and Moya Cannon\, concerts with Declan O’Rourke\, The Voice Squad\, musicians Renaud Garcia-Fons\, Zoe Conway and John McIntyre\, and films by Directors Pat Collins\, Kieran Concannon and Alec Moore. Leading academics\, such as Prof. Lee Morrissey\, Prof. Daniel Carey\, Dr. Adrian Paterson and Dr. Rebecca Barr will address subjects such as ‰Û÷Literary Islands’ and the concept of ‰Û÷Citizenship\, Identity and the Irish Archipelago’. A highlight of the festival will be an examination of the poetry of Richard Murphy\, whose ‰Û÷Sailing to an Island’ is the poem most people associate with Inishbofin. Murphy\, now eighty-eight\, currently lives in Sri Lanka\, but a recorded interview with him by festival organiser\, filmmaker and Inishbofin native\, Peadar King will be a rare opportunity to hear the poet talk about his work\, and the inspiration behind it.  A full programme for the festival can be found at inishfestival.com. As accommodation on the island is limited\, early booking is advisable. \nFor further information log in to www.inishfestival.com or email inishfestival@gmail.com
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/inish-festival-thursday-28th-may-to-sunday-31st-may/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150525T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150525T140000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134708Z
UID:2200-1432562400-1432562400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Charles Barr\, Moore Institute Visiting Fellow - Filming O'Casey
DESCRIPTION:Charles Barr\, Moore Institute Visiting Fellow \nFilming O’Casey \nVenue: Huston School Main Room \nSean O’Casey never had much respect for commercial cinema\, even though he worked with two of its greatest directors. Alfred Hitchcock filmed Juno and the Paycock in England in 1929; John Ford filmed The Plough and the Stars in Hollywood in 1937. Both directors had sincere respect for the plays\, and for the Abbey Theatre actors whom they took care to use in many key roles\, but critics have agreed with O’Casey in disliking the results. This talk\, illustrated with documents as well as extracts\, examines the reasons for this hostility\, while making a revisionist case for the value of both films. Hitchcock’s\, as an early-sound record of\, especially\, Sarah Allgood’s definitive performance as Juno; Ford’s\, as a legitimate\, and historically fascinating\, reworking of O’Casey from his own more romantic perspective on the Easter Rising of 1916. Young Cassidy (1965) provides a footnote: a loose and lively biopic of O’Casey\, part-directed by Ford\, partly in Dublin\, towards the end of Ford’s career and of O’Casey’s life. Charles Barr has taught in the past at the Huston School as an Adjunct Professor\, and is back in Galway thanks to a research grant from the Moore Institute. His talk draws on collections held in the library. He has published extensively both on Ford and on Hitchcock; his new book\, co-authored for the University of Kentucky Press with the Parisian scholar Alain Kerzoncuf\, is Hitchcock\, Lost and Found – the Forgotten Films. There are two events at Filmbase in Dublin on the afternoon of 27th May\, to discuss Educating Film-makers and to launch Charles Barr’s Hitchcock Lost and Found – The Forgotten Films: ‘Cultivating Film-makers’ Hitchcock Lost and Found  \nFor more information please contact rod.stoneman@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/charles-barr-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-filming-ocasey/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150521T083000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150521T083000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134708Z
UID:2198-1432197000-1432197000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Digital Material Conference - May 21 and 22 2015
DESCRIPTION:Digital Material is a conference that considers the intersections of digital and material cultures in the humanities. \nRecent years have seen an intensification of interest in both digital and material cultures. This broad trend has been mirrored in the academy by the growing prominence of digital humanities and the renewed focus on materiality and material objects within humanities disciplines. Proposals are invited for an international interdisciplinary conference that addresses this important confluence in our contemporary culture.\nPlenary speakers: Jerome McGann (University of Virginia) & Matthew G. Kirschenbaum (University of Maryland).The deadline for submitting proposals to Digital Material has now passed\, and registration for the conference has opened.\nQueries may be addressed to conference organiser\, Justin Tonra.\nAcknowledgements\nDigital Material is supported by the Moore Institute and the Digital Arts and Humanites PhD Programme (DAH).For their generous assistance\, thanks to: Daniel Carey\, David Kelly\, Julie Murphy\, Martha Shaughnessy\, Kate Thornhill\, June Webb.\nProgramme\nThe following is a provisional conference programme\, and may be subject to change (updated 7 May 2015). \nClick on panel titles to read the abstracts of individual papers. Panels prefaced with an asterisk are proposed panels. \nDigital MaterialProvisional Conference Programme \nThursday 21 May 2015 \n0830-0915: Registration & tea/coffee. \n0915-0930: Opening address by Prof. PÌ_l ÌÒ Dochartaigh\, Registrar and Deputy President of NUI Galway. \n0930-1030: Plenary lecture:Jerome McGann (University of Virginia)“Truth and Method. Scholarship as a Science of Exceptions.” \n1030-1100: Tea/coffee. \n1100-1230: \nPanel 1: Early Modern and Medieval Media \nGiles Bergel (University of Oxford)”Affordance and Ideology: Genealogical Diagrams in Manuscript\, Print and XML.” \nPip Willcox & David de Roure (University of Oxford)”‰Û÷Friends\, should associate Friends’: the Social\, the Material\, and the Digital in Shakespeare’s First Folio.” \nAlison Harper (University of Rochester)”Not Just a Text: Piers Plowman in the Medieval Multi-media Culture.” \nPanel 2: Surfaces and Inscriptions \nNicola Rodger (Monash University)”Getting Thingy With It: How the Book Became a Thing.” \nMarion Lam̩ (Centre Camille Jullian\, Maison M̩diterran̩enne des Sciences de l’Homme / Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale\, CNR)”Textuality & Inscriptions: Hypothesis About Autopoietic System and Dispositive Analysis.” \nPatrick Egan (University College Cork)”Developing ‰Û÷Special’ Collections and New Forms of Narrative.” \n1230-1330: Lunch \n1330-1500: \n*Panel 3: Books/Texts/Documents Between Print\, Manuscript and Digital \nBrendan Dooley (University College Cork)”Angelica’s Book and the Lure of the Material.” \nNella Porqueddu (Trinity College Dublin)”Digital Materiality and Historical Research.” \nGiorgio Guzzetta (University College Cork)”The Literary System Between Materiality and Virtuality.” \nPanel 4: Digital Material Writ Large & Small \nRoman Bleier (Trinity College Dublin)”Encoding Text and Context in the Manuscript Witnesses of Saint Patrick’s Epistles.” \nJason McElligott (Marsh’s Library)”How John Hewson Signed His Name: Or\, How to Spot a Monster in a (Digital) Archive.” \nRonan Crowley (University of Passau)”Between a Micro and a Macrocosm Ineluctably Constructed: Digital Materiality at Scale.” \n1530-1600: Tea/coffee \n1600-1730: \nPanel 5: (Digital) Archive Fever \nÌ_na Bhreathnach (Dublin City University)”Crowdsourcing Irish-Language Folklore Material: the D̼chas Project.” \nPenny Johnston (University College Cork)”Is Intangible Culture Different? Looking at Ideas of Digital and Immaterial in the Oral History Archive.” \nOrla Egan (University College Cork)”Digitising Queer Materials.” \nPanel 6: Curating & Using \nBenjamin Nicoll (University of Melbourne)”Videogame Fan Sites and the Vernacular Curation of Gaming History.” \nSharon Webb & Natalie Harrower (Digital Repository of Ireland)”Curating Historical Narratives: Online Representations of History and ‰Û÷Inspiring Ireland.'” \nJeffrey P. Emanuel (Harvard University)”Digital Material: Improving Access\, Intimacy\, and Scholarship With New Collaborative Technologies.” \n2000: Conference Dinner \nFriday 22 May 2015 \n0800-0900: Tea/coffee \n0900-1030: \nPanel 7: Hybrid Literatures \nFrancesca Benatti (Open University)”Embodying the University of Air: Teaching Digital Literature at The Open University.” \nKrista Stinne Greve Rasmussen (University of Copenhagen)”Print or Perish.” \nBrianne Bilsky (United States Military Academy)”Books and Bytes: Maus in the Digital Age.” \nPanel 8: Encoding Memory \nSusan Schreibman (Maynooth University)”Changing the Narrative: The Digital as Un-Remembering.” \nClaire Lynch (Brunel University)”Nursing the Anecdotes: Material and Digital Practices in the Archives of Lives.” \nMoritz Hiller (Humboldt University Berlin)”Signs O’ the Times: Towards a Philology of Software/Code.” \n1030-1100: Tea/coffee \n1100-1230: \nPanel 9: Seeing & Hearing \nWest Connolly (Trinity College Dublin)”To Be or Not To Be… Material: Digital Acts of Resistance.” \nKarolina Badzmierowska (Trinity College Dublin)”Digital Materiality and Art Historical Research.” \nStephen Roddy (Trinity College Dublin)”Sonification and the Digital Divide.” \nPanel 10: Beyond the Book \nSimon Rowberry (University of Stirling)”1984 Redux: The Long-term Materiality of the Kindle Infrastructure.” \nPatrick Smyth (City University of New York)”Ebooks and the Digital Paratext: Emerging Trends in the Interpretation of Digital Media.” \nSue Hemmens (Marsh’s Library)”‰Û÷Books are [in]finite’: Breaking the Bounds of the Information Space.” \n1230-1330: Lunch \n1330-1500: \n*Panel 11: ‰Û÷Print/Screen’ – Expanding the Digital Library at the James Hardiman Library\, NUI Galway \nAisling Keane & Kieran Hoare (NUI Galway)”Partnerships\, Metadata and Possibilities: Digital Preservation in the Archives.” \nCillian Joy (NUI Galway)”Digital Preservation Workflows and Integrations.” \nNiall McSweeney & Barry Houlihan (NUI Galway)”From the Cloud to the Reading-Room: Digital Archives in Research\, Learning and Teaching.” \n*Panel 12: A Matter of Substance\, Size and Style? Remediating the Archive in the Digital Age \nMichael Goodman (Cardiff University)”The Victorian Illustrated Shakespeare Archive.” \nJulia Thomas & Nicola Lloyd (Cardiff University)”Lost Visions: Retrieving the Visual Element of Printed Books.” \nAnthony Mandal (Cardiff University)”Strange Case of Digital Jekyll and Remediated Hyde: Literary Narrative as Pervasive Media.” \n1500-1530: Tea/coffee \n1530-1700: \nPanel 13: Mechanisms \nAbigail De Kosnick (University of California\, Berkeley)”The Media Crease: Traces of Repetitious Media Use in Hard and Soft Copies.” \nRen̩e Farrar (United States Military Academy)”Word Processor Art and the Graphical User Interface.” \nVinayak Das Gupta (Trinity College Dublin)”The Material and the Immaterial in an Age of Anxiety” \n*Panel 14: Digital Materialities of the Literary Text \nAna Marques da Silva (University of Coimbra)”Performative Materialities of Language and Meaning.” \nDiogo Marques (University of Coimbra)”Inter[sur]faces.” \nSandra Bettencourt (University of Coimbra)”Digital and Material Feedbacks in Steve Tomasula’s Printed Novels.” \n1715-1815: Plenary lectureMatthew G. Kirschenbaum (University of Maryland)“Green-Screeners: Locating the Literary History of Word Processing.” \n1815-1830: Closing remarks \nSaturday 23 May 2015 \n1100: Excursion to Computer and Communications Museum of Ireland. (Excursion will last approximately ninety minutes).
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/digital-material-conference-may-21-and-22-2015/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150514T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150514T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134708Z
UID:2195-1431608400-1431608400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Sara Brennan of Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh - Can Irish be Sold Outside the Gaeltacht? A Critical Sociolinguistic Investigation of the Contemporary Promotion of Irish in Business
DESCRIPTION:Sara Brennan of Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh \nCan Irish be Sold Outside the Gaeltacht? \nA Critical Sociolinguistic Investigation of the Contemporary Promotion of Irish in Business \nThis talk will present insights from on-going PhD research on the promotion of Irish as an economic resource for businesses in urban areas located outside the Gaeltacht. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork\, it will examine the dynamics and consequences of advocating the use of Irish as a valuable business tool in the traditionally Anglophone sphere of urban commerce. \nFor more information please contact john.walsh@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/sara-brennan-of-heriot-watt-university-in-edinburgh-can-irish-be-sold-outside-the-gaeltacht-a-critical-sociolinguistic-investigation-of-the-contemporary-promotion-of-irish-in-business/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150512T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150512T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134708Z
UID:2193-1431435600-1431435600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Ian McBride\, Kings College London and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow -Dealing with the Past in Northern Ireland
DESCRIPTION:The recent controversy over the ‰Û÷Boston Project’ tapes has demonstrated that the unfinished business of the Troubles still has the power to disrupt political progress in Northern Ireland; but it also reveals the attempts of disparate republican voices to establish the dominant narrative of ‰Û÷armed struggle’.  This talk examines the memoirs of former IRA men (Sean O’Callaghan\, Eamon Collins\, Gerry Bradley\, Brendan Hughes)\, focusing on varieties of disenchantment with the republican campaign and the anticipated futures that have fuelled republican activism.  It will explore the particular political junctures that have shaped these works and the difficulties they present as sources for historians. \nAbout the Speaker\nIan McBride is Professor of Irish and British History at King’s College London. He has written on various aspects of modern Irish history. His forthcoming works include Irish Political Writings 1: TheCambridge Edition of the Works of Jonathan Swift (2016) and The Princeton History of Modern Ireland\, co-edited with Richard Bourke (2015).  Since editing History and Memory in Modern Ireland (Cambridge\, 2001) he has been interested in contemporary uses of the past.  His current research focuses on debates over truth and reconciliation in Northern Ireland since 1998\, and the relationship between political violence\, representations of the past and professional historiography. \nOrganised by the Conflict\, Humanitarianism and Security Research Custer \nFor more information please contact niall.odochartaigh@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/ian-mcbride-kings-college-london-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-dealing-with-the-past-in-northern-ireland/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150511T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150511T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134708Z
UID:2197-1431370800-1431370800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Dr Kevin James is Associate Professor of History at the University of Guelph and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow - 'Take my advice\, go to Mongan's Hotel': Sport\, Charity\, and Tourism in late-Victorian Rural Co. Galway
DESCRIPTION:Dr Kevin James\, University of Guelph and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow\n‘Take my advice\, go to Mongan’s Hotel’: Sport\, Charity\, and Tourism in late-Victorian Rural Co. Galway\n A free public lecture entitled ‰Û÷Take my advice\, go to Mongan’s Hotel: Sport\, Charity\, and Tourism in Late-Victorian Connemara’ will be held in Galway city on Monday\, 11 May at 7 pm. The lecture will be delivered by Dr Kevin James\, Associate Professor of History at the University of Guelph\, Ontario\, and will take place in the Galway City Library in Augustine St\, under the auspices of NUI Galway’s Moore Institute \nMongan’s Hotel in Carna\, Co. Galway\, was an historic site of pilgrimage for the sporting tourist in the nineteenth century\, and served as a social\, commercial\, and cultural hub of the district. In the 1890s\, initiatives aimed at alleviating distress and developing the district’s economy highlighted the important role of the hotel and its proprietor\, Martin Mongan. He forged connections between the locality and organisations and markets farther afield – notably in Manchester. The evidence appears in the hotel’s historic visitors’ book. \nThis public lecture will look at how Mongan’s provided a venue for tourism\, a magnet for sports enthusiasts\, and a site for charitable activity. \nProfessor Daniel Carey\, Director of the Moore Institute at NUI Galway\, said: “Kevin James’s work has opened up new vistas on the history of travel to Co. Galway. Visitors’ books offer an intriguing glimpse into a lost world in the nineteenth century.”  Dr Kevin James is author of Tourism\, Land and Landscape in Ireland: The Commodification of Culture. In spring 2014\, he held a Moore Institute Visiting Research Fellowship to support his research at the James Hardiman Library\, NUI Galway. \nFor more information contact : Dr John Cunningham\, Department of History\, NUI Galway at john.cunningham@nuigalway.ie or phone 091 493902.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dr-kevin-james-is-associate-professor-of-history-at-the-university-of-guelph-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-take-my-advice-go-to-mongans-hotel-sport-charity-and-tourism-in-late-victorian/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150511T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150511T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134708Z
UID:2196-1431360000-1431360000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Andrew Laurence-King - Play\, Work/Chaos\, Ordomedieval Opera? Bringing 13th Century Life to Performance in Ludus Danielis (MS Egerton 2615)
DESCRIPTION:Public Lecture\nAndrew Laurence-King\nPlay\, Work/Chaos\, Ordomedieval Opera? Bringing 13th Century Life to Performance in Ludus Danielis (MS Egerton 2615)\nFÌÁilte Roimh ChÌÁch!\nFor more information please contact kim.loprete@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/andrew-laurence-king-play-workchaos-ordomedieval-opera-bringing-13th-century-life-to-performance-in-ludus-danielis-ms-egerton-2615/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150507T093000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150507T093000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134708Z
UID:2194-1430991000-1430991000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:School of Languages\, Literatures and Cultures Reserach Day
DESCRIPTION:School of Languages\,Literatures and Cultures Reserach Day\nPROGRAMME  \n9.30 – 10am: Reception with tea and coffee & Welcome from Professor PÌ_l ÌÒ Dochartaigh  \n10 – 11 am: Panel 1 (Chair: Tina-Karen Pusse)  \nBarry NEVIN (French): Ida (1935) Revisited: Post-war Trauma and the Looming Threat of Fascism in Jean Renoir’s Front Populaire Output’ \nMaura STEWART (French): ‰Û÷Le Pen\, Sarkozy and the battle over Joan of Arc’ \nPaolo BARTOLONI (Italian): ‰Û÷Things That Matter: Objects in Italian Life and Culture’ \n11 – 11.30am: Break  \n11.30 – 12.30 pm: Panel 2 (Chair: Mel Boland)  \nJennifer WOOD (Spanish): ‰Û÷Echoes of Medieval Elegies in the Poetry of the Falklands War’ \nDeirdre BYRNES (German): ‰Û÷The Recovery of Marginalised Voices: Exploring the Permanent Exhibition at the Berlin-Hohensch̦nhausen Memorial’ \n12.30 – 2 pm: Lunch break  \n2.00 – 3.00pm: Panel 3 (Chair: Mark Stansbury)  \nChris DIXON (Spanish): ‰Û÷Translating the Wild West’ \nMarie BLOM (French): ‰Û÷The Translatability of Hiberno-English into French with the works of Roddy Doyle as a case study’. \n3.00 – 4.00pm: Open discussion (Chair: Sylvie Lannegrand): Brief presentation by Ivan Kenny (Spanish) on Early Career Researchers followed by more general discussion on research-related matters. \nFor more information please contact Suzanne.gilsenan@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/school-of-languages-literatures-and-cultures-reserach-day/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150506T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150506T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T223827
CREATED:20160824T134708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134708Z
UID:2192-1430917200-1430917200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Special Collections Lunchtime Lectures Series  -Dr. Micheline Sheehy Skeffington\,Early floras and natural history guides -what can we learn?
DESCRIPTION:Special Collections Lunchtime Seminar Series\nDr. Micheline Sheehy Skeffington  \nEarly floras and natural history guides -what can we learn?\nDr. Micheline Sheehy Skeffington will look at some of the unusual\, rare and key natural history books in Special Collections and explain the significance of a selection of these.Some examples will be on display during the talk.\nFor more information please contact olivia.lardner@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/special-collections-lunchtime-lectures-series-dr-micheline-sheehy-skeffingtonearly-floras-and-natural-history-guides-what-can-we-learn/
LOCATION:Seminar Room G011 the Hardiman Reserach Building\, Ireland
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END:VCALENDAR