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Conference: ‘Translation Meets Book History: Intersections 1700-1900’

Seminar Rooms G010 & G011, Hardiman Research Building

  This two-day international conference aims at exploring and further promoting the complementarity between translation and book history with a particular focus on the international publishing panorama of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Keynote Speaker: Norbert Bachleitner (Universität Wien) Provisional programme and other information available on the conference website https://intersections2017.wordpress.com/    

World Literature and the Short Story in the 21st Century

The Bridge Room 1001 First Floor Hardiman Research Building, University of Galway

World Literature and the Short Story in the 21st Century ‘Capitalism-in-Crisis and Narrating the World in Rana Dasgupta’s Tokyo Cancelled’ Dr Treasa De Loughry (Maynooth University)    

UNESCO Bioethics Ireland, COBRA: Roundtable workshop on exchanging information on participants’ bioethical-related work & on the needs of the bioethics community in Ireland.

AM205

Room AM205, Arts Millennium Building, NUI Galway  14.00-15.30: Outline of roundtable workshop Maureen O’Sullivan (School of Law) ‘Patents, morality, biotech inventions and a role for participatory democracy’ – short presentation followed by discussion Su-Ming Khoo (School of Political Science and Sociology) ‘Bioethics, public ethics and collective capabilities’ Oliver Feeney (UNESCO Bioethics Ireland, COBRA) ‘Electronic health... | Read on »

Public Lecture: ‘Evidence-based humanitarian work and research ethics’ by Dr Dónal O’Mathúna (DCU)

The Bridge Room 1001 First Floor Hardiman Research Building, University of Galway

UNESCO Bioethics Ireland, COBRA in conjunction with the NUI Galway Research Ethics Committee, NUIG Humanitarian work and disaster responses are increasingly encouraged to be evidence-based. For this and other reasons, more research and other evidence-generation activities are being conducted in disaster and humanitarian settings. This has led to attention to the ethical issues in such research, and how... | Read on »

Huston School of Film & Digital Media, NUI Galway PhD Research Symposium 2017

Huston School of Film & Digital Media NUI Galway

The annual PhD research day of the Huston School of Film & Digital Media, NUI Galway will be held on Monday May 29th. Huston currently has ten PhD students engaged in a variety of pioneering research projects, both traditional and practice-based. These include projects examining punk cinema, digital comics, what New Media can learn from... | Read on »

‘Was Hitler an Arab?: Islam and the Enlightenment in Contemporary German Discourse’ by MI Visiting Fellow, Dr. Joseph Twist

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

Joseph Twist (Galway/Limerick) - Joseph is interested in the intersection of philosophy, religion and literature. His current research focuses on the interaction between mystical and postmodern thought in the work of Zafer Şenocak, SAID, Feridun Zaimoglu and Navid Kermani (all contemporary German authors of varying Muslim backgrounds). He is particularly interested in the non-identitarian spirituality... | Read on »

Seminar: ‘Transnational encounters between Irish, Australian and Aotearoa New Zealand universities, 1850s to 1900s: the beginnings of a project’ by Moore Institute Visiting Fellow, Professor Catherine Manathunga

Room 1001, the Bridge, Hardiman Research Building

Professor Catherine Manathunga, Victoria University, Melbourne and Moore Institute Fellow Irish universities such as Trinity College Dublin, the three Queen’s Colleges of Cork, Galway and Belfast and the Catholic University of Ireland in Dublin served as key models for the development of early Australian and Aotearoa New Zealand universities.  They also contributed many academics to... | Read on »

Agrarian Reform and Resistance in an ‘Age of Globalization’: The Euro-American World, 1815-1914

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

The purpose of this two day international conference is to explore the myriad experiences of agrarian reform and resistance that characterized rural regions of Europe and the Americas, whether based on either free or unfree labour, between 1815 and 1914. In this period, the economic changes associated with the influence of the Industrial Revolution transcended... | Read on »