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Heritage Ireland 2030,Research and Heritage Workshop NUIG

Seminar Room G011 the Hardiman Reserach Building

12:45 Welcome (preceded by light lunch from 12:00) Cathal O’Donoghue, Dean, College of Arts, Social Sciences, and Celtic Studies Daniel Carey, Director, Moore Institute for Research in the Humanities and Social Studies 13:00 Panel discussion 1: Public participation, well-being and shared stewardship Gesche Kindermann & Caitriona Carlin: Natural heritages, community, and human health Maggie Ronayne:... | Read on »

Falling star narratives in Hollywood and British film industries, 1950-2019-By Flavia Soubiran

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

  Key in the history of cinema, the ageing star is a figure of media obsolescence that carries the memory of a bygone era of filmmaking, awakening in the viewer nostalgia and anxiety, which the film industry continues to capitalize on. Building on her doctoral findings, Flavia’s research aims to analyze the strategies specific to... | Read on »

Graduate Research Seminars in History, 2019

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

 Dr Cristina Bon (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milan). ‘The President Matters’: John Janney and the Virginia Secession Convention (February-April 1861).

Transnational Time: Reading Post War Representations of the Italian Presence in East Africa

Seminar Room G011 the Hardiman Reserach Building

Italian School of Languages, Literatures & Cultures Talk by Charles Burdett, University of Durham    Working from recent theoretical writing on time and the concept of the spectral, the paper begins by questioning how we can talk about transnational temporalities. The paper then looks at some of the ways in which the Italian colonial and... | Read on »

‘Hammer and Cycle: Communism’s Cycling Counter Culture in Interwar France’

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

  Martin Hurcombe is Professor of French Studies at the University of Bristol, UK, and a specialist of early twentieth-century French political culture, history and literature. His PhD examined the French combat novel of the First World War, arguing that the experience of combat led to a fundamental shift in the way that a generation... | Read on »

Visualising Maritime Cityscapes: The Representation of Harbours in the Graeco-Roman World

Hardiman Research Building Room G011

  Dr Federico Ugolini – Visiting Research Fellow ‘Visualising maritime cityscapes’ explains how and why Greek and Romans represented so frequently the sea and the marine infrastructures within their artworks. This paper argues that the available textual and iconographic evidence supports the argument that these representations have a symbolic, rather than literal, meaning and message.... | Read on »