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CAMPS: Shady Ladies in Medieval Iceland

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

Rosemary Power speaking on Shady ladies from Ireland to Iceland and this will be followed on 6th March by Francisco Rozano-García speaking on Old English Poetry in Medieval European Perspective: The Exeter Book, the House of Wessex and Carolingian Models.  

Values and Identities Seminar: The Changing Virtues of the Hosting Language: Notes on the Philosophy of Translation by Dr. Gerald Cipriani

Tom Duddy Seminar Room Philosophy Department Morrisroe House, Distillery Road

Dr. Gerald Cipriani will present a paper, 'The Changing Virtues of the Hosting Language: Notes on the Philosophy of Translation', as part of the Values and Identities seminar series on Monday 2nd March. Depending on whether translation leans toward objective rendering or subjective interpretation it will have different truth-functions. This paper reflects on the issues... | Read on »

History Seminar Series: Orphans, refugees and Scandinavian relief in the Middle East, 1920-1935 by Prof. Inger Marie Okkenhaug

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

Inger Marie Okkenhaug is a Professor of History at Volda University College, Norway, and is currently a visiting fellow at the Moore Institute. She specializes in the history of missionary and humanitarian activity in the Middle East. She has published extensively on these topics, most notably, the monograph, “The Quality of Heroic Living, of High... | Read on »

Italian – School of Languages, Literatures & Cultures – ‘Heritage Film, Neapolitan Style’ by Ruth Glynn, University of Bristol

Hardiman Research Building Room G011

This paper explores how recent films addressing Naples – the Manetti Bros’ Ammore e malvita (2017) and Ferzan Özpetek’s Napoli velata (2017) – work to counter the ‘Gomorra-effect’ and rehabilitate the city in cinematic representation. It explores the politics of heritage film, the genre’s relationship with popular culture and Naples’s place in the national imaginary.... | Read on »

International Women’s Day and RECIRC: Guided Tour of Readers and Reputations: The Reception and Circulation of Early Modern Women’s Writing, 1550-1700

Foyer the Hardiman Research Building

What impact did women writers make in history? When is a female author (not) a female author? Join us as we explore these questions in a guided tour of the ‘Readers & Reputations’ exhibition, to celebrate International Women’s Day, on Saturday 7 March 2020. The exhibition, sponsored by the Irish Research Council, showcases the work... | Read on »

Workshop: Video production for scholars

The Moore Institute Seminar Room G010 Ground floor The Hardiman Research Building

The aim of this workshop is to provide participants with the tools and confidence to create video content using the technology already in their pockets – their smart phones. This content can be utilised for anything from conference, event or course promotion, to effective communication of complex research topics. The session will cover basic composition,... | Read on »

Italian – School of Languages, Literatures & Cultures – Between silence and translation: Italy at the time of the ‘refugee crisis’ by Anne O’Connor & Andrea Ciribuco, NUI Galway

Hardiman Research Building Room G011

Between 2013 and 2018, approximately 700,000 individuals have crossed the Mediterranean to seek asylum in Italy. The LINCS project (Language Integration and New Communities in  a multicultural Society) explores the role of language and translation in their lives, as they forge links with the Italian society and make sense of the new environment. Andrea Ciribuco... | Read on »

History Research Seminar Series: When and where was “Early America”? by Prof. Peter Cooper Mancall

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

Peter C. Mancall is the Andrew W. Mellon Professor of the Humanities at the University of Southern California.  His books include Hakluyt’s Promise: An Elizabethan’s Obsession for an English America (2007), Fatal Journey: The Final Expedition of Henry Hudson—A Tale of Mutiny and Murder in the Arctic (2009), and, the just-released The Trials of Thomas... | Read on »