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Archaeology Seminar: Female religious in medieval Ireland: the other monasticism

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

Speaker: Tracy Collins Tracy is an experienced professional archaeologist, and holds a PhD from University College Cork on research entitled ‘An Archaeology of Female Monasticism in Medieval Ireland’. She is currently an IRC Government of Ireland research fellow at the Dept of Archaeology UCC, writing a monograph based on her phd research.

Gender ARC

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

“Caution: Children at School, Perspectives on Learning, Leaders and Learners, Imperatives for Inclusive Schools.”

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

New Professors’ Inaugural Lecture Series at NUI Galway Continues: Public Lecture by Professor Gerry Mac Ruairc: “Caution: Children at School, Perspectives on Learning, Leaders and Learners, Imperatives for Inclusive Schools.”  Professor Gerry Mac Ruairc, the Established Professor of Education and Head of the School of Education. The lecture is designed to be of interest to... | Read on »

Celebration Event for Jacopo Bisagni and Rióna Ní Fhrighil

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

An event celebrating the success of Dr Jacopo Bisagni and Dr Rióna Ní Fhrighil who have both been awarded major research grants by the Irish Research Council under the Laureate Scheme.  Please come along to congratulate them and to find out more about their projects.  

Archives and Public History: Witnessing the Past

Seminar Room G011 the Hardiman Reserach Building

                                          Public history and the awareness of shared pasts is becoming ever more prevalent. Recent and ongoing commemorations have brought history and its reassessment into public daily discourse. Current politics and society are being shaped... | Read on »

History Seminar – David Kilgannon

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

David Kilgannon 'I didn't cause the problem, but by hell I was going to finish it':

Ursula Fanning, University College Dublin – Gender in Pirandello: Objects, Subjects, Abjects

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

  This paper will explore those representations of gender in Pirandello in which his female characters function as objects of representation, while their male counterparts attain subject positions; here I am particularly interested in Pirandello’s configuration of the maternal abject as well as of the paternal. It then moves to those areas where Pirandello challenges... | Read on »

Spring 2018 EDEN Peer Review workshop

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

A chairde, Back by popular demand! We are pleased to announce the Spring 2018 EDEN Peer Review workshop. This is an excellent chance to get feedback on works in progress in any form and at any stage of development. Whether it is a chapter draft, a journal article or a conference paper take the opportunity... | Read on »

Dara Downey (Visiting Fellow) The Lady’s Maid’s Burden.

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

Dara Downey (Visiting Fellow) from the School of English in Trinity College Dublin. Title: The Lady’s Maid’s Burden: Ethnicity, Race, and Servant Status in the Late Nineteenth-Century Ghost Story This paper examines a range of uncanny tales by late-nineteenth-century American writers, in which domestic servants and slaves feature to a greater or lesser extent. For the... | Read on »

‘Wobblies and Fenians: The Australian connections of the Larkin family, 1916-19, and the Irish revolution’

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

The Irish Centre for Histories of Labour and Class welcomes Jimmy Yan (Univ. of Melbourne) to give a talk entitled, ‘Wobblies and Fenians: The Australian connections of the Larkin family, 1916-19, and the Irish revolution’. All welcome. Picture shows Peter Larkin, brother of ‘Big Jim’, one of so-called ‘Sydney Twelve’ imprisoned for anti-war activism in 1916.