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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
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TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
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TZNAME:IST
DTSTART:20130331T010000
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DTSTART:20131027T010000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131129T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131129T140000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134722Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134722Z
UID:2390-1385733600-1385733600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:IMBAS Conference November 29th to December 1st - ' Destruction and Renewal ̢åÛå_and back again?'
DESCRIPTION:IMBAS 2013 \nThe theme for the 2013 conference is ‘ Destruction and Renewal ‰Û_and back again?‰۪\, and it will run from the 29th November to 1st December at the Moore Institute\, NUI Galway. \nThe committee is delighted to announce that this year’s keynote speaker will be Professor Fredric Cheyette of Amherst College\, Massachusetts. Professor Cheyette is one of the world’s foremost scholars of Medieval European culture\, more specifically on the region of Occitania\, what is now Southern France. However\, his more recent research has focused on the topic of climate and climate change during the medieval period. Aspects of this research will addressed in his keynote address\, the title of which will be  ‘From the Ancient to the Medieval Countryside: Old Answers/ New Questions’. \nThe deadline for the Call for Papers has now passed and the committee  would like to very much thank all who have sent in their abstracts.  Delegates for the conference have been selected and the conference schedule will be available to view  here.  Please visit and join our Facebook group too: Imbas Facebook
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/imbas-conference-november-29th-to-december-1st-destruction-and-renewal-%cc%a2aua_and-back-again/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131129T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131129T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134719Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134719Z
UID:2352-1385730000-1385730000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:CAMPS Lab: John Whitman\, Cornell/National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics\, Toyko - 'Kundoku: What is it\, and did anything like it exist in the medieval West?'
DESCRIPTION:John Whitman\, Cornell/National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics\, Toyko \n‰Û÷Kundoku: What is it\, and did anything like it exist in the medieval West?‰۪
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/camps-lab-john-whitman-cornellnational-institute-for-japanese-language-and-linguistics-toyko-kundoku-what-is-it-and-did-anything-like-it-exist-in-the-medieval-west/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131129T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131129T120000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134722Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134722Z
UID:2392-1385726400-1385726400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:The Ryan Institute & Moore Institute present an exploratory seminar  - The Cultural and Physical Landscape
DESCRIPTION:Join us for an hour to network with colleagues and explore potential opportunities for collaboration on research projects\, outreach initiatives\, workshops\,seminars\, summer schools and conferences. \nRefreshments served at 12 noon
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/the-ryan-institute-moore-institute-present-an-exploratory-seminar-the-cultural-and-physical-landscape/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131128T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131128T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134722Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134722Z
UID:2396-1385658000-1385658000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:ECHO Seminar: Love and Happiness with Felix ÌÒ Murchadha and Stephen Cadwell
DESCRIPTION:You are cordially invited to the final ECHO seminar of the semester\, a Christmas circus cracker.  \nWe have two fine speakers\, fine wine\, and fine themes to gladden the heart and deepen the soul.  \nThe Reverend Al Green put it on record: ‘happiness is when you’re really feeling good about somebody’. No doubt he had something particular in mind.  \nWhat he thought about circuses is not recorded. Still\, simply by attending\, participating\, and partaking\, our understanding of all these noble\, philosophical\, fine things: philosophy\, education\, emotion\, aesthetics\, love\, beauty\, and happiness – the very pith and marrow of life –  will surely be immeasurably deepened. \nECHO presents a seminar: \nLOVE & HAPPINESS \nFELIX ÌÒ MURCHADHA \nBeauty\, Love and Emotion \nSTEPHEN CADWELL \nMeasuring Happiness: Eudemonia and Youth Circus \n5pm Thursday 28th November \nMoore Institute Seminar Room \nAll welcome. Wine served \nECHO brings together researchers of all disciplines across the arts and humanities to discuss vital research questions in a collegiate environment. \nContact adrian.paterson@nuigalway.ie or see our website http://echoforum.wordpress.com
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/echo-seminar-love-and-happiness-with-felix-io-murchadha-and-stephen-cadwell/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131127T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131127T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2376-1385568000-1385568000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:History Graduate Research Seminar Series - Joe Regan - Defending Antebellum US Slavery: the impact of Bishop John England & other Irish clerics
DESCRIPTION:Joe Regan \nDefending Antebellum US Slavery: the impact of Bishop John England & other Irish Clerics
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/history-graduate-research-seminar-series-joe-regan-defending-antebellum-us-slavery-the-impact-of-bishop-john-england-other-irish-clerics/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131126T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131126T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134722Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134722Z
UID:2391-1385470800-1385470800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Threesis Heats: Open your mind
DESCRIPTION:THREESIS: Open Your Mind…and Get to the Point!!\nJoin us as NUI Galway researchers use their 3 minutes to Get to the Point and Open Your Mind! \nEilÌ_s Flanagan (Education)\, Fionn ÌÒ Sealbhaigh (Gaeilge) and Paul Flynn (Education).     will participate in this week’s heat. \nCome along and support your colleagues! \nA light lunch will be served after the presentations.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/threesis-heats-open-your-mind/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131123T133000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131123T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2382-1385213400-1385213400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Irish Renaissance Seminar
DESCRIPTION:Irish Renaissance Seminar\nSchedule\n1.30̢åÛå3.00 \nDr Anders Ingram (NUI\, Galway): ‰Û÷Discourse and Digital Methods: EEBO\, Corpus Research and the ‰ÛÏTurk‰۝ in Early Modern England‰۪ \nDr Kathleen Miller (TCD): ‰Û÷Katherine Austen‰۪s Reckoning with Plague in Book M‰۪ \nDr Lindsay Reid (NUI\, Galway): ‰Û÷Vernacular Ovids and the Cross̢åÛåDressed Narcissus of Shakespeare‰۪s Twelfth Night‰۪ \n3.00̢åÛå3.45 \nTea/Coffee \n3.45̢åÛå5.00Dr Tom Roebuck (University of East Anglia): ‰Û÷Writing Medieval History in Seventeenth̢åÛåCentury Britain‰۪ \nDirectionsEnter the Arts/Science Building and walk the length of the concourse to the Bank of Ireland. Turn right at the bank\, continue over the footbridge; the seminar room is at the end of that corridor. \nFor further information contact Daniel Carey (daniel.carey@nuigalway.ie) and Marie̢åÛåLouise Coolahan (marielouise.coolahan@nuigalway.ie). \nThe IRS thanks the Society for Renaissance Studies for its support.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/irish-renaissance-seminar/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131122T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131122T140000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2385-1385128800-1385128800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Annual Conference of the Economic And Social History Society Of Ireland\, Friday 22nd and Saturday 23rd November
DESCRIPTION:ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL HISTORY SOCIETY OF IRELAND \nFriday 22nd November \n2-3.30 session 1  \n18th century economic \nSalim Rashid (Illinois)\, 18c Ireland and the birth of development economics \nAidan Kane (NUIG)\, A database of 18th-century Irish public finances \nPatrick Walsh (UCD)\, Who paid what? Taxation and the financial impact of the state in Ireland\, 1690-1782 \nIndustry and Industrial Policy \nFrank Barry [with MÌ_cheÌÁl ÌÒ Fathartaigh and Eoin O’Malley] (TCD)\,  1960s Ireland and the evolution of the Industrial Development Authority  over its second decade \nCiaran Casey (Oxford)\, The Role of the International Institutions in Irish Policymaking in the years before the crash \nSean Rickard (UL)\, Fishing and technology transfer: Ireland and the Shetlands in the 18th century \n4-5.30/5.45 session 2 \n20th Century: Finance \nEoin Drea (UCC)\, John Busteed and the battle to shape Irish monetary and banking policy 1924-43 \nStefan Gerlach\, Rebecca Stuart (Central Bank of Ireland)\, Money\, interest rates and prices in Ireland\, 1933-2012 \nPaul Ferguson (Sensible Money)\, An electronic penny for your  thoughts: how the rise of digital money has affected Ireland‰۪s recent  past \nRonan Lyons (Oxford) [with Richard Grossman (Wesleyan and Harvard)\,  Kevin O’Rourke (Oxford)\, Madalina Ursu (LSE)]\, A monthly stock exchange  index\, 1864-1930 \nPoverty\, migration and the city \nAlan Noonan (UCC)\, Immigration has killed the country: the Chamberlain letters of the 1880s \nSara Goek (UCC)\, ‰ÛÏThe whole world is out there‰۝: remembering emigration in oral histories \nRichard McMahon (Edinburgh)\, Violence\, migration and the city: the Irish experience in 19th-century Britain and North America \nCarole Holohan (UCD)\, A ‰Û÷rediscovery‰۪ of poverty: Dublin in the 1960s \n6.00 Connell lecture ‰ÛÒ Prof. Cormac ÌÒ GrÌÁda\, ‰Û÷Reflections on Famine‰۪ \n8/8.30 Conference dinner\, Meyrick Hotel \nSaturday ‰ÛÒ Arts Millennium Building \n 9.15-11 session 3  \nThe Famine \nEoin Flaherty (NUIM)\, Socio-ecological resilience\, the rundale system and the Great Irish Famine \nAndrew Newby (Univ. of Helsinki)\, Famine in Ireland and Finland\, c.  1845-1868: transnational\, comparative and long-term perspectives \nCharles Read (Cambridge)\, ‰Û÷Laissez-faire‰۪\, the Irish Famine and British financial crisis \nCiaran Reilly (NUIM)\, Culpability and the Great Irish Famine \nPoverty and the churches \nOlwen Purdue (QUB)\, Negociating the options: poverty\, philanthropy and the female poor of late Victorian Belfast \nSean Smith\, ‰ÛÏGallic gifts‰۝: charitable networks and the Irish College\, Paris\, 1870-1945 \nCiaran McCabe (NUIM)\, Perceptions and experiences of child street beggars in Ireland\, c. 1800 ‰ÛÒ c. 1850 \nSean Farrell (N. Illinois Univ.)\, Beautiful vision: Christ Church and Anglican children in early Victorian Belfast \nLand and elites \nPeter  Hession (TCD)\, Demographic and social transformation in the remaking of the Cork landed elite\, 1880-1914 \nDavid Stead (UCD)\, The farm records of Rev Ralph Sadlier\, Castleknock\, 1857-61 \nEoin McLaughlin (Edinburgh) [with Nathan Foley-Fisher (US Federal  Reserve)]\, Capitalising on the Irish ‰Û÷Land Question‰۪: Irish Land Bonds\,  1891-1938 \n11.30-1 session 4 \nRound table on ‰Û÷Writing the Famine‰۪ \nEnda Delaney (Author of The Curse of Reason: The Great Irish Famine) \nCiaran O Murchadha (Author of The Great Irish Famine: Ireland‰۪s Agony 1845-52) \nPeter Gray (Author of The Irish Famine and Famine Land and Politics) \nChair: Cormac ÌÒ GrÌÁda (Author of The Great Irish Famine) \n18th century  \nAlan Smyth (TCD)\, Destruction\, flight and recovery: the impact of the Williamite-Jacobite war on the Ormond estate \nRobert Whan (QUB)\, Presbyterians and interrelations in Ulster\, 1680-1730 \nEoin Kinsella (UCD)\, The abduction of Jenico Preston\, 12thViscount Gormanston\, in 1786 \n20th Century: Early Free State legislation \nMichael Dwyer (UCC)\, ‰ÛÏAn injustice to the Free State: response and reaction to the Local Government Act 1925 \nLiam O‰۪Callaghan (Liverpool Hope)\, Betting and bookmakers in independent Ireland\, 1922-31 \nDavid Toms (UCC)\, ‰ÛÏBacking It Both Ways‰۝: Gambling and the Introduction of the Betting Act (1926) in Ireland \n1-2 lunch (venue to be confirmed)  \n2-3.30 session 5 \n19thc landlords and tenants \nBrian Casey (Independent)\, ‰Û÷The revolt of the tenantry on the Clancarty estate\, 1886‰ÛÒ91‰۪ \nShane Faherty (UCC) ‰Û÷A Case of Divided Loyalties: Canon Ulick Bourke‰۪s 1882 Plea for the Evicted Tenants of Mayo‰۪ \nKevin Mc Kenna (Independent)\, The gift and the decline of the deferential dialectic on an Irish landed estate\, 1830-1908 \nLiteracy & education \nChris Colvin (QUB) [with Matthias Blum (Munich)\, Laura McAtakney  (UCD)\, Eoin McLaughlin (Edinburgh)] ‰Û÷Can women count?‰۪ Gender and  numeracy in nineteenth-century Ireland \nPamela Emerson (UU)\, ‰Û÷The tree of diabolical knowledge‰۪: the rise of  commercial circulating libraries in Ulster in the nineteenth century \nDeclan O‰۪Keefe (UCD)\, ‰ÛÏTime\, energy and brass‰۝: why Studies did not fail \nLife and death in the 20th century \nDavid Doyle (UCD)\, English Executioners and Irish Executions: an untold story of hired help \nLaura Kelly (UCD)\, ‰ÛÏAn awfully ignorant mob‰۝ medical student life and culture in Ireland\, 1900-1950 \nJames McCafferty (NUIM)\, A New Kind of Death: The Niemba Massacre and Irish military funerary ceremonial \n4-6.00 session 6 \nPopular Politics  \nKerron O Luain (QUB)\, Ribbonism in 1850s Ulster: a spent force? \nDavid Reid (TCD)\, ‰Û÷The Terry Alts seem to consider the possession of land their peculiar property‰۪: the Terry Alt Campaign of 1831. \nDarragh Curran (NUIM)\, ‰ÛÏI believe we are very poor‰۝: the use of Orange Order funding in 1830s Ireland \n19th and 20th century business \nDavid Convery (Melbourne)\, A sociology of Irish shareholders in the 1890s \nKevin Costello (UCD)\, Shopkeepers\, drapers and publicans and the law of bankruptcy in Victorian Ireland \nJohn King\, Leo Crilly: the sad story of the first Irishman to run a British airline \nConor Curran (St. Patrick‰۪s)\, Locating the Irish emigrant  professional footballer within the history of the Irish emigrant in  Britain\, 1945-2010 \nReligion and nationalism \nDaragh Gannon (NUIM)\, Losing their religion? Revolutionary religiosity and the Irish in Great Britain\, 1916-22 \nC. J. Woods (NUIM)\, Pilgrimages to Tone‰۪s grave at Bodenstown\, 1873-1923: time\, place\, popularity \nRichard McElligott (UCD)\, Quenching the prairie fire: the collapse of the GAA in 1890s Ireland \nMatthew Potter (Limerick city archives)\, The political role of Mount St Lawrences cemetery in Limerick\, 1867-2013 \nFor More information please see www.eshsigalway2013.wordpress.com/
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/annual-conference-of-the-economic-and-social-history-society-of-ireland-friday-22nd-and-saturday-23rd-november/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131121T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131121T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2384-1385038800-1385038800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Finnegans Wake reading group
DESCRIPTION:If you like gossiping\, poetry\, languages\, puns\, puzzles\, jokes\, double entendres or even avant-garde tomes\, you might like Finnegans Wake. Despite its scurrilous critical reputation\, James Joyce’s final workis not as difficult as it would first appear and\,when     read as part of a group\, can be a hugely rewarding experience. It is     our hope to read the text episodically\, playing close attention to  the    rhythm and musicality of the piece; we aim to stress the  looseness of    the text without resort to lucidity. \nNo prior experience of Joyce is necessary and the meetings will be very informal so everyone is very welcome. \nConsider joining our Facebook group to keep abreast of news\, dates and any strange Joycean ephemera that we find. ( https://www.facebook.com/groups/359211964211176/ )  \nFor more information please contact siobhanmpurcell@gmail.com
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/finnegans-wake-reading-group-5/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131121T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131121T090000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2377-1385024400-1385024400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Irish Centre for the Histories of Labour & Class\, Moore Institute\, NUI Galway  Inaugural conference
DESCRIPTION:Irish Centre for the Histories of Labour & Class \nMoore Institute\, NUI Galway \nInaugural conference \nArts Humanities and Social Science Reserach Building (new extension) \n21-22 November 2013 \nRound One: THURSDAY 21 NOVEMBER\, 9.00 ‰ÛÒ 10.30 \nPanel 1: Irish working life and politics: (i) Primitive rebels \nGary Hussey (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Agrarian secret societies and a moral economy: the case of the Threshers‰۪ \nMaura Cronin (Mary Immaculate College\, Limerick) ‰Û÷Sawyers and vitriol-throwing in 1830s Cork‰۪ \nJohn Cunningham (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷The working class revolt of September 1846‰۪ \nPanel 2: Migrants and transnational labour ‰ÛÒ Session supported by the MA in Culture and Colonialism\, NUI Galway \nKathy Powell (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Mobile labour and violence‰۪ \nEilis Ward (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Migrants or Victims? Debating Prostitution Law Reform in Ireland‰۪ \nMargaret Brehony (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Free Labour and Whitening the Nation: Irish Migrants in Colonial Cuba‰۪ \nPanel 3: Workers‰۪ art \nJames Curry (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏAn inspiration to all who gaze upon it?‰۝ The James Larkin monument on Dublin‰۪s O‰۪Connell Street‰۪ \nKaty Milligan (TCD)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏArtist of the workers‰۝: poverty and politics in the art of Harry Kernoff‰۪ \nJean Walker (NUI Maynooth)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏPlain and fancy workers‰۝: women knitters and identity in Ireland‰۪s nineteenth and twentieth century‰۪ \nRound Two\, THURSDAY 21 NOVEMBER\, 10.50 ‰ÛÒ 12.20: \nPanel 1: Irish working life and politics: (ii) c. 1850-1900 \nLaurence Marley\, (NUI Galway)\, ‘Georgeite radicals in late nineteenth-century Belfast’ \nJohn McGrath (MIC)\, ‰Û÷Organised labour in 19th century Limerick: violence and the struggle for legitimacy‰۪ \nBrian Casey (Clonfert archivist)\, ‰Û÷Matt Harris and the cause of labourers during the Land War‰۪ \nPanel 2: Causes and Campaigns in the Roaring Twenties \nNiall Whelehan (University of Edinburgh)\,‰Û÷Sacco and Vanzetti and Ireland‰۪ \nMark Phelan (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏStrike breaking\, union breaking\, intolerance and bigotry‰۝: Irish labour and Italian Fascism in the 1920s‰۪ \nGerard Watts (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷The battle for Liberty Hall\, 1923-24‰۪ \nPanel 3: Mobility and the intelligentsia \nTomÌÁs Finn (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷The influence of intellectuals in Ireland\, 1940-80‰۪ \nMary Marmion (UCD)\, ‰Û÷From the land of bulrush and bog to the garden party at the Palace: The role of women in the emerging middle class\, 1850-1970‰۪ \nJames O‰۪Donnell (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷A Class of News: an all-Ireland managerial class in Irish newspapers c.1912-1939‰۪ \nRound Three: THURSDAY 21 NOVEMBER\, 1.30 ‰ÛÒ 3.00 \nPanel 1: Irish working life and politics: (iii) 1900-1950 \nDonal O’Drisceoil (UCC)\, ‰Û÷Sex & socialism: the class politics of immorality in early 20th century Ireland‰۪  Niamh Puirs̩il \, ‘The Labourers’ Party: class & politics in early 20th century’ Adrian Grant (Univ. Ulster)\, ‘Radicals: the Irish working class\, republicanism and the radical left\, c.1900-1939’ \nPanel 2: Youth\, class\, and culture \nDonal Fallon (UCD)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏQuick witted urchins‰۝: Dublin‰۪s newsboys\, 1900-25‰۪ \nJonathon Hannon (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Class\, culture and John Cooper Clarke’ \nJulie McGrath (MIC)\, ‰Û÷Sir Edward De Vere and William O‰۪Brien‰۪ \nPaddy McMenamin\, (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷What would James Connolly have made of it all’? Youth & class in late 1960s Belfast\,  \nPanel 3: Class houses  \nThomas Murray (UCD)\, ‰Û÷Ireland‰۪s rebel cities: the untold history of an island‰۪s Housing Action Committees‰۪ \nMichael Dwyer (UCC)\, ‰Û÷Abandoned by God and the Corporation: The anti-slum campaign in Cork city\, 1913-1930‰۪ \nPadraic Kenna (NUI Galway)\, Historical overview of the development of the Irish housing system \nRound Four: THURSDAY 21 NOVEMBER\, 3.15 ‰ÛÒ 4.40 \nPanel 1: Biographies \nGerard Madden (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Bishop Browne of Galway and anti-communism\, 1937-1976‰۪ \nJohn Kehoe (TCD)\, ‘Garda Memoirs: autobiographical writing and occupational identity’ \nMaeve Casserly (TCD)\, ‰Û÷Rosie Hackett: bridging the divide‰۪ \nGerri O‰۪Neill (Mater Dei)\, ‰Û÷The Deportation of James Gralton ‰ÛÒ de Valera and the 1933 Red Scare‰۪ \nPanel 2: Religion and class politics \nDan Finn (New Left Review)\, ‰Û÷Irish Republicans and the Protestant working class\, 1968-1998‰۪ \nTony Varley (NUI Galway)\, ‘Bobby Burke\, Christian Socialism and class politics in post-independence Ireland \nMatthew Collins (Univ. Ulster)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏScourge of the bigot and Tory‰۝: The life and times of Jack Beattie‰۪ \nPanel 3: 1913 and all that \nLeo Keohane ((NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏLabour in Irish History‰۝: a text in support of a Sorel type Syndicalism?‰۪  \nLeah Hunnewell (TCD)\, ‰Û÷Irish working class struggle & postmillennial rhetoric 1911-16: a transatlantic perspective‰۪ \nMeredith Meagher (Univ. of Notre Dame)\, ‰Û÷Ireland & American Labour: an international perspective on Lockout‰۪ \nJohn O‰۪Donovan (UCC) Canon Sheehan and Connolly: Labour\, Nationality and Religion in Ireland 1910 ‰ÛÒ 1913 \nRound Five: THURSDAY 21 NOVEMBER\, 4.45 ‰ÛÒ 6.00 \nPanel 1: CaipitlÌ_ as OileÌÁn an Chrapaigh; cumannach as ́rainn – Session in association with the Liam & Tom O‰۪Flaherty Society \nSeosamh ÌÒ Cuaig (Independent film maker) ‰Û÷Tom O‰۪Flaherty‰۪ \nJackie UÌ_ Chionna (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷MÌÁirtÌ_n MÌ_r McDonogh‰۪ \nPanel 2: Labour and archives \nKieran Hoare\, NUI Galway \nCatrÌ_ona Crowe\, National Archives of Ireland \nFrancis Devine\, Irish Labour History Society \nPanel 3: Class\, conflict and amelioration in early nineteenth Ireland \nDominic Haugh (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷The origins and legacy of the Ralahine commune\, 1831-1833‰۪ \nTerry Dunne (NUI Maynooth)\, ‰Û÷Class in pre-famine Ireland‰۪ \nAlan Noonan\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏNot the slightest appearance of an outbreak‰۝: labour conflict in the mining regions of Ireland‰۪  \nRound Six: THURSDAY 21 NOVEMBER\, 8.00 ‰ÛÒ 9.30 \nMechanics Institute\, The Saothar symposium: \n‰Û÷Forty years on: where next for the history of the Irish working class.‰۪ \nEstablished in 1973\, the Irish Labour History Society has published its annual journal Saothar since 1975. This discussion will feature the following speakers who will assess where to for the history of the Irish working class ‰ÛÒ Mary Jones\, Michael Pierse\, Francis Devine\, Sarah-Anne Buckley and David Convery.  \nCaitriona Crowe will occupy the chair  \nMechanics Institute: book launch of David Convery (ed.) Locked out: a century of Irish working class life  \nRound Seven: FRIDAY 22 NOVEMBER\, 9.00 ‰ÛÒ 10.30 \nPanel 1: In dock\, pew and street \nGerard Farrell (TCD)\, ‰Û÷Class divisions amongst the ‰ÛÏmere Irish‰۝ of colonial Ulster‰۪ \nHilary Taylor (Yale University)\, ‰Û÷Rethinking lower-class ‰ÛÏinarticulacy‰۝ in 18th-century Britain: some evidence from the Old Bailey‰۪ \nSeÌÁn Farrell (Northern Illinois Univ.)\, ‰Û÷Beautiful Vision: Christ Church & Anglican children in early Victorian Britain‰۪ \nPanel 2: The rights of labour \nCathal Smith (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Irish Landlordism\, American slavery and ‰Û÷‰۝rural subjection‰۝‰۪ \nTimothy Keane (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Revisiting Chartism in Ireland‰۪ \nTBC \nPanel 3: Sport\, labour and class  \nDaryl Leeworthy (University of Huddersfield)\, ‰Û÷Class\, labour migration and the making of commercial ice hockey in inter-war Britain and Ireland‰۪ \nDavid Toms (UCC) and Alex Jackson\, ‰Û÷The miner and the darling of the gods: football\, work and migration in inter-war Britain and Ireland‰۪ \nBrian Ward (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Galway press attitudes towards the working classes in 1912‰۪ \nRound Eight: FRIDAY 22 NOVEMBER\, 10.50 ‰ÛÒ 12.10 \nPanel 1: Class and politics in Ireland in 1790s Ireland  \nNiall Gillespie (TCD)\, ‰Û÷The class dynamics of radical literary political culture\,1791-98‰۪ \nTimothy Murtagh (TCD)\, ‰Û÷Dublin‰۪s journeymen – Hibernia‰۪s sans culottes?‰۪ \nUltÌÁn Gillen (Teeside University)\, ‰Û÷Class and United Irish ideology‰۪ \nPanel 2: Collective bargains  \nAlan Power (TCD)\, ‰Û÷Irish Trade Unionism\, centralised bargaining and social justice\, 1961-79‰۪ \nMartin Maguire (Dundalk IT)\, ‰Û÷Confronting state power: civil service trade unions in independent Ireland\, 1922-38‰۪ \nPeter Murray (NUI Maynooth)\, ‰Û÷Adult education and labour movement division in Ireland\, 1940s to 1960s‰۪ \nAudrey Cahill\, ‰Û÷Child poverty\, intergenerational transmission of advantage and basic capital‰۪ \nPanel 3: Oral History\, letters and work \nMary Muldowney (TCD)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏTrusting to their honours for justice‰۝: insights into class relations in the Irish railway industry after the introduction of the state old age pension in January 1909‰۪ \nLiam Cullinane (UCC)\, ‰Û÷Fordism and Ford workers in Ireland\, 1917-1932‰۪ \nIda Milne (Oral History Network)\, ‰Û÷Working in a newspaper industry: the gendering of internal elites‰۪ \nRound Nine: FRIDAY 22 NOVEMBER\, 12.15. ‰ÛÒ 1.30 \nPanel 1: Stage left \nAoife Monks (Birkbeck College\, University of London) ‘Virtuosity\, technique\, craft and the immaterials of Performance.’  \nCharlotte McIvor (NUI Galway) ‰Û÷‰۝Take Me Down to Monto\, Monto\, Monto‰۝: disrupting narratives of economic crisis as states of exception through the experimental Irish community theatre.‰۪  \nMark Phelan (Queen‰۪s) ‰Û÷Performing class\, culture and conflict in Belfast‰ÛÓclass politics and labour relations in forgotten figures from the Irish dramatic canon.‰۪ \nLionel Pilkington (NUI Galway) ‰Û÷1985: Irish theatre and the new spirit of capitalism.‰۪  \nPanel 2: Sustaining and forming children \nEmma O‰۪Toole (NCAD)\, ‰Û÷‰ÛÏAnxious to provide a good nurse‰۝: employing the Irish wet nurse in upper class households in eighteenth-century Ireland‰۪ \nGeraldine Curtin (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Instilling the habit of labour: children\, work and the early Irish reformatories‰۪ \nIan Miller (University of Ulster)\, ‰Û÷Undernourished infants and ‰ÛÏschool-day starvation‰۝: politics\, class and childhood feeding\, c.1900-1918‰۪ \nSin̩ad Mercier (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷The Irish Magdalene Laundry: establishing state and social responsibility in the ‰ÛÏdisciplinary society‰۝‰۪ \nPanel 3: Class politics and the Irish revolution ‰ÛÒ session supported by the MA in Irish Studies\, NUIG \nAndy Bielenberg (UCC) Protestant emigration during the War of Independence and Civil War‰۪ \nJohn Borgonovo\, (UCC) ‰Û÷Republican civil administration and taxation in the ‰ÛÏMunster  Republic‰۝\, July-August 1922‰۪ \nDara Folan (NUI Galway)\, ‘The Gaelic League and the labour movement: unlikely bedfellows?’ \nPanel 4: Perspectives on class and resistance \nMichael Pierse (Queen‰۪s)\, ‰Û÷Emigration\, counter-culture and writing the Irish working class‰۪ \nPaula Geraghty (Trade Union TV)\, ‘The dialectics of resistance: digital media offering new possibilities for interpretation? \nPaul Garrett (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Destabilizing classifications: thinking with Ranciere about class and history‰۪ \n7.30 pm Mechanics Institute: Preliminaryworkshop for conference participants interested in developing an oral history project on 20th century Galway industries. \nFRIDAY 22 NOVEMBER: The tenth and final round \nMechanics Institute\, ‰Û÷Class\, conflict and culture: the songs‰۪\,
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/irish-centre-for-the-histories-of-labour-class-moore-institute-nui-galway-inaugural-conference/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131120T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131120T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2375-1384963200-1384963200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:History Graduate Research Seminar Series - Laura O'Brien - The Bishop on the Barricades: French commemorations of the death of  Archbishop Denis Affre\, 1848-1871
DESCRIPTION:Laura O’Brien \nThe Bishop on the Barricades: French commemorations of the death of  \nArchbishop Denis Affre\, 1848-1871
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/history-graduate-research-seminar-series-laura-obrien-the-bishop-on-the-barricades-french-commemorations-of-the-death-of-archbishop-denis-affre-1848-1871/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131120T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131120T120000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2387-1384948800-1384948800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Digital Scholarship Seminar
DESCRIPTION:Digital Scholarship Seminar\, November 2013. \n12-2pm\, Wednesday 20 November\, Moore Institute Seminar Room. \nThe second event of the Autumn/Winter series of DSS is a lunchtime seminar featuring presentations from researchers in English and Huston School (abstracts below):  \nCiara Griffin (English). ‰Û÷The Author is Glitched: Media-Specificity and the Non-Western Writer.‰۪ \nHilary Dully (Huston School). ‰Û÷Digital Issues in Practice-based Research.‰۪ \nThe seminar will be followed by discussion and lunch\, provided by the Moore Institute\, at 1pm. \nwww.facebook.com/nuigdss  \nwww.nuigalway.ie/digital-seminar  \nJoin the DSS mailing list \nCiara Griffin (English). ‰Û÷The Author is Glitched: Media-Specificity and the Non-Western Writer.‰۪ \nScholarly interest in the materiality of the book has accelerated alongside the proliferation of the digital-born text. The paradigmatic book at the centre of much media-specific literary analysis is often that particular object emergent from the development of print in Europe and the Occident. In this paper I examine ‰Û÷flawed‰۪ or ‰Û÷imperfect‰۪ editions (UK/India) of Bapsi Sidhwa‰۪s text Ice-Candy Man (1988) to discuss the ways that theorisations of the ‰Û÷glitch‰۪ can allow us to unpack the specific hegemonies implicit to what we mean by the ‰Û÷materiality of the book‰۪. I explore the ways in which the hidden machinery of texts has been revealed through philosophical explorations of otherness as well as those newly emerging discourses of media-specific analysis focusing on the body of the text. I argue that an integration of such subject and object-oriented approaches\, through the lens of the glitch\, offers new tools for theorising the non-Western or marginal author-function. \nHilary Dully (Huston School). ‰Û÷Digital Issues in Practice-based Research.‰۪ \nThe digital revolution of the past decade has altered filmmaking and artistic practice in many interesting and profound ways.In the history of film the auteur has been accorded a degree of reverence\, occupying top position in the traditional\, hierarchical crewing system for the production of films\, formally a collaborative process\, involving the specialised creative skills of crewmembers in the film production line. Digital technology\, in particular the development of desktop post-production software\, has altered and disrupted the traditional filmmaking practice.What are the possibilities and pitfalls for ‰Û÷the new digital auteur\,‰۪ working alone\, filming on an iphone\, editing on a laptop\, and publishing on Youtube?And\, how do these questions and issues relate to digital arts research and practice in third level institutions? This presentation will also consider the possibilities and implications of ‰Û÷fair use‰۪ and copyright law in digital arts practice and scholarship.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/digital-scholarship-seminar-3/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131119T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131119T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2383-1384884000-1384884000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Performance Matters - Irish Theatre Discussion Group
DESCRIPTION:Performance Matters\nIrish Theatre Discussion Group\nhttps://www.facebook.com/groups/PerformanceMatters/ \nFor more information please contact lisa.fitzgerald@nuigalway.ie or m.nichualain5@nuigalway.ie\nAll theatre practitioners\, theorists and students are welcome to attend \nFor more information please email  PerformanceMattersNUIG@gmail.com.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/performance-matters-irish-theatre-discussion-group-23/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131119T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131119T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2386-1384866000-1384866000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Threesis: Open your mind
DESCRIPTION:THREESIS: Open Your Mind…and Get to the Point!!\nJoin us as NUI Galway researchers use their 3 minutes to Get to the Point and Open Your Mind!  \nJames Curry (Moore Institute & History) and EilÌ_s NÌ_ Dh̼ill (Gaeilge) will participate in this week‰۪s heat.  \nNext week‰۪s heat on November 26th  will feature presentations from EilÌ_s Flanagan (Education)\, Fionn ÌÒ Sealbhaigh (Gaeilge) and Paul Flynn (Education). \nCome along and support your colleagues!  \nA light lunch will be served after the presentations.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/threesis-open-your-mind/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131118T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131118T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2379-1384779600-1384779600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Gender ARC lunchtime seminar series - 'Reproductive health and rights: Ireland and India\, historical and contemporary struggles'
DESCRIPTION:Global women’s Studies and Gender ARC are pleased to invite you to a lunchtime seminar: \n ‘Reproductive health and rights: Ireland and India\, historical and contemporary struggles’\n With guest speakers \n Dorothea Melvin – pioneer in the Irish movement for access to contraception and the establishment of the Galway Family Planning Association in the 1970s \nand \nLakshmi Lingam – Professor\, School of Social Sciences and Deputy Director of Tata Institute of Social Sciences at Hyderabad\, who recently completed a National Review of Maternity  Protection Policies and Programmes\, commissioned by the International Labour Organisation. \nLight snacks and refreshments will be served \nAll Welcome! \nRSVP (for catering numbers) to: gillian.browne@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/gender-arc-lunchtime-seminar-series-reproductive-health-and-rights-ireland-and-india-historical-and-contemporary-struggles/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131114T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131114T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2380-1384452000-1384452000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Jorge Fondebinder \, 'Translating Irish literature into Spanish: a bridge over troubled waters'
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/jorge-fondebinder-translating-irish-literature-into-spanish-a-bridge-over-troubled-waters/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131114T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131114T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2378-1384444800-1384444800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:ECHO Seminar: Synge Song with Tim Collins on Traditional Music Composition in East Galway and Deirdre NÌ_ Chongaile on J.M.Synge as song collector
DESCRIPTION:SYNGE SONG \nTIM COLLINS \nInspired By Place: Traditional Music Composition  \nin East Galway \nDEIRDRE N̍ CHONGAILE  \n‰Û÷Listening to this rude and beautiful poetry‰۪:  \nJohn Millington Synge as song collector in the  \nAran Islands \n4pm Thursday 14th November  \nApplied Optics Seminar Room \nAll welcome \nECHO brings together researchers of all disciplines to discuss research questions in a friendly environment. \nContact: adrian.paterson@nuigalway.ieor see our website:http://echoforum.wordpress.com
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/echo-seminar-synge-song-with-tim-collins-on-traditional-music-composition-in-east-galway-and-deirdre-ni_-chongaile-on-j-m-synge-as-song-collector/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131114T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131114T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2381-1384444800-1384444800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Geography and Archaeology inter-disciplinary seminar - Dr David Drew\, Emeritus\, Trinity College Dublin: 'Karst Landscapes and Archaeology'
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/geography-and-archaeology-inter-disciplinary-seminar-dr-david-drew-emeritus-trinity-college-dublin-karst-landscapes-and-archaeology/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131113T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131113T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2374-1384358400-1384358400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:History Graduate Research Seminar Series - Michael O'Dowd - The Speculum Matricis Hybernicum (1670)\, Ireland's first book on midwifery published in English
DESCRIPTION:Michael O’Dowd \nThe Speculum Matricis Hybernicum (1670)\, Ireland’s first book on midwifery published in English
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/history-graduate-research-seminar-series-michael-odowd-the-speculum-matricis-hybernicum-1670-irelands-first-book-on-midwifery-published-in-english/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131108T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131108T120000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134719Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134719Z
UID:2351-1383912000-1383912000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:CAMPS Lab: Peter Kelly\, Classics Department\, NUIG - 'Suspending suicide: trees and transformation in Ovid's Metamorphoses'
DESCRIPTION:Peter Kelly\, Classics Department\, NUIG \n‘Suspending suicide: trees and transformation in Ovid’s Metamorphoses‘
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/camps-lab-peter-kelly-classics-department-nuig-suspending-suicide-trees-and-transformation-in-ovids-metamorphoses/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131107T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131107T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2373-1383829200-1383829200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Finnegans Wake reading group
DESCRIPTION:If you like gossiping\, poetry\, languages\, puns\, puzzles\, jokes\, double entendres or even avant-garde tomes\, you might like Finnegans Wake. Despite its scurrilous critical reputation\, James Joyce’s final workis not as difficult as it would first appear and\,when    read as part of a group\, can be a hugely rewarding experience. It is    our hope to read the text episodically\, playing close attention to the    rhythm and musicality of the piece; we aim to stress the looseness of    the text without resort to lucidity. \nNo prior experience of Joyce is necessary and the meetings will be very informal so everyone is very welcome. \nConsider joining our Facebook group to keep abreast of news\, dates and any strange Joycean ephemera that we find. ( https://www.facebook.com/groups/359211964211176/ )  \nFor more information please contact siobhanmpurcell@gmail.com
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/finnegans-wake-reading-group-4/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131106T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131106T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134720Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134720Z
UID:2371-1383753600-1383753600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:History Graduate Research Seminar Series - Lesa NÌ_ Mhunghaile -  The representation of the Pre-Colonial Gaelic past in Karl Gottlob KÌÄå_ttner's  Briefe ÌÄå_ber Irland (1785)
DESCRIPTION:Lesa NÌ_ Mhunghaile \nThe representation of the Pre-Colonial Gaelic past in Karl Gottlob KÌ_ttner’s  \nBriefe Ì_ber Irland (1785)
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/history-graduate-research-seminar-series-lesa-ni_-mhunghaile-the-representation-of-the-pre-colonial-gaelic-past-in-karl-gottlob-kiaa_ttners-briefe-iaa_ber-irland-1785/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131105T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131105T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134721Z
UID:2372-1383674400-1383674400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Performance Matters - Irish Theatre Discussion Group
DESCRIPTION:Performance Matters\nIrish Theatre Discussion Group\nhttps://www.facebook.com/groups/PerformanceMatters/ \nFor more information please contact lisa.fitzgerald@nuigalway.ie or m.nichualain5@nuigalway.ie\nAll theatre practitioners\, theorists and students are welcome to attend \nFor more information please email  PerformanceMattersNUIG@gmail.com.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/performance-matters-irish-theatre-discussion-group-22/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131030T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131030T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134720Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134720Z
UID:2370-1383152400-1383152400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Thesis Talk
DESCRIPTION:You are invited to the launch of\nThesis Talk\nThesis Talk is a bilingual blog created by College of Arts\, Social Science & Celtic Studies PhD students under EXPLORE 2013.\nThe aim of the blog is to create and participate in an online postgraduate research community.\nTheisis Talk/TrÌÁcht ar ThrÌÁchtais – Deis chainte dÌ_ibh si̼d atÌÁ i mbun thaighde iarch̩ime.\nD̩an teagmhÌÁil linn\nhttp://thesistalk.wordpress.com\nhttps://www.facebook.com/thesistalk.wordpress
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/thesis-talk/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131030T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131030T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134720Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134720Z
UID:2369-1383148800-1383148800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:History Graduate Research Seminar Series - Gerry Watts\, James Larkin and the Secret Service agents Sinbad and Estero.
DESCRIPTION:Gerry Watts\nJames Larkin and the Secret Service agents Sinbad and Estero.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/history-graduate-research-seminar-series-gerry-watts-james-larkin-and-the-secret-service-agents-sinbad-and-estero/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131024T200000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131024T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134720Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134720Z
UID:2368-1382644800-1382644800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Soir̩e:Music-Discussion-Reception\, with MÌ_cheÌÁl O SÌÄå¼illeabhÌÁin
DESCRIPTION:Soir̩e \nMusic ‰ÛÒ Discussion ‰ÛÒ Reception \n8pm\, Maoin Cheoil na Gaillimhe\, St Mary‰۪s College\, St Mary‰۪s Road\, Galway.  \nYou are invited to a performance\, discussion and reception; composerMÌ_cheÌÁl O S̼illeabhÌÁin will present a short recital of his music accompanied by traditional percussionist Mel Mercier (BodhrÌÁn and Bones).This will be followed by a short panel discussion of Jean Cocteau‰۪s contention ‰ÛÏThe arts are essential ‰ÛÒ if  only one knew what for‰۝ with speakers who will also participate in the symposium on The Intelligence of Art at the Huston School of Film & Digital Media from 25th ‰ÛÒ 26th October. After the music and panel there will be a reception to launch the symposium. \nTo reserve a place please contact Shadi Abu-Ayyash: s.abu-ayyash1@nuigalway.ie \nOrganised by Maoin Cheoil na Gaillimhe\, Burren College of Art\, Huston School of Film & Digital Media\, Department of English NUI Galway\, Irish World Academy of Music and Dance\, University of Limerick. UL NUIG alliance.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/soir%cc%a9emusic-discussion-reception-with-mi_cheial-o-siaa%c2%bcilleabhiain/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131024T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131024T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134720Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134720Z
UID:2367-1382619600-1382619600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Finnegans Wake reading group
DESCRIPTION:If you like gossiping\, poetry\, languages\, puns\, puzzles\, jokes\, double entendres or even avant-garde tomes\, you might like Finnegans Wake. Despite its scurrilous critical reputation\, James Joyce’s final workis not as difficult as it would first appear and\,when   read as part of a group\, can be a hugely rewarding experience. It is   our hope to read the text episodically\, playing close attention to the   rhythm and musicality of the piece; we aim to stress the looseness of   the text without resort to lucidity. \nNo prior experience of Joyce is necessary and the meetings will be very informal so everyone is very welcome. \nConsider joining our Facebook group to keep abreast of news\, dates and any strange Joycean ephemera that we find. ( https://www.facebook.com/groups/359211964211176/ )  \nFor more information please contact siobhanmpurcell@gmail.com
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/finnegans-wake-reading-group-3/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131023T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131023T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134719Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134719Z
UID:2343-1382544000-1382544000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:History Graduate Research Seminar Series - Raina Howe -  Contested Paper-Trails - Historiography of Irish woodlands in Pre-Modern Ireland
DESCRIPTION:Raina Howe\nContested Paper-Trails ‰ÛÓ Historiography of Irish woodlands in Pre-Modern Ireland
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/history-graduate-research-seminar-series-raina-howe-contested-paper-trails-historiography-of-irish-woodlands-in-pre-modern-ireland/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131022T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131022T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134720Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134720Z
UID:2366-1382464800-1382464800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Performance Matters - Irish Theatre Discussion Group
DESCRIPTION:Performance Matters\nIrish Theatre Discussion Group\nhttps://www.facebook.com/groups/PerformanceMatters/ \nFor more information please contact lisa.fitzgerald@nuigalway.ie or m.nichualain5@nuigalway.ie\nAll theatre practitioners\, theorists and students are welcome to attend \nFor more information please email  PerformanceMattersNUIG@gmail.com.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/performance-matters-irish-theatre-discussion-group-21/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131021T163000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20131021T163000
DTSTAMP:20260403T225815
CREATED:20160824T134719Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134719Z
UID:2344-1382373000-1382373000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Dr ÌÄålvaro Enrigue - 'Valiente clase media: dinero\, letras y cursilerÌ_a'
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dr-iaa%c2%81lvaro-enrigue-valiente-clase-media-dinero-letras-y-cursileri_a/
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR