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Workshop: Online and digital identity for scholars

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

This workshop will explore the ideas of online and digital identity from a scholarly perspective. Participants will learn how tools such as blogging, twitter and a ‘domain of one’s own’ can allow them to professionally connect, share and network online. We will discuss the challenges of developing an ‘authentic online voice’, and explore the benefits... | Read on »

Seminar: Mobilizing Digital Tools for Academic Research: The State Funding for Social Movements Project

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

A seminar by Moore Institute Visiting Fellow, Prof Dominique Clément, University of Alberta The State Funding for Social Movements research team brings together scholars from universities across Canada in history, political science and sociology. Our team has developed an innovative new database (database.statefunding.ca) and digital archive that lists grants from governments in Canada to non-governmental organizations... | Read on »

History Research Seminar Series: ‘Milesians and Manifest Destiny: A Borderlands History of American Fenianism (1865-1871)’

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

This seminar will be given by Patrick J. Mahoney, a Fulbright Scholar at the Moore Institute and History Department and a PhD candidate at Drew University (New Jersey). His book ‘From a Land Beyond the Wave’: Connecticut’s Irish Rebels 1798-1916 won the Connecticut League of History Organizations’ Publication Prize (2018). He is currently translating and editing a... | Read on »

Seminar: The Alchemical Prince: Enlightenment, Freemasonry, and Cultural Nationalism In Eighteenth-Century Naples

Hardiman Research Building Room G011

In this paper, Prof. Enrico Dal Lago, NUI Galway will focus on the life and achievements of Raimondo Di Sangro, Prince of San Severo (1710-1771). A high profile member of the court nobility in the eighteenth-century Kingdom of Naples, San Severo was a polymath, with interests that spanned the entire spectrum of human knowledge, from... | Read on »

Values and Identities Seminar: Retrospection and Revaluation in Nietzsche: Overcoming our Evolution in the Pursuit of Freedom

Tom Duddy Seminar Room Philosophy Department Morrisroe House, Distillery Road

Ashling McEvaddy, IRC funded PhD candidate in Philosophy, will present a paper, 'Retrospection and Revaluation in Nietzsche: Overcoming our Evolution in the Pursuit of Freedom' as part of the Values and Identities seminar series on Monday 24th February Time: 3 pm Venue: Tom Duddy seminar room, Philosophy Building, Morrisroe House, 19 Distillery Road ALL WELCOME Abstract: For... | Read on »

Seminar: ‘Serial Encounters: Ulysses and the Little Review’ by Dr Clare Hutton (Loughborough University)

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

Why and when was Joyce’s Ulysses first deemed controversial and how did Joyce respond? This paper, based on Dr Hutton’s OUP monograph, looks at the circumstances in which Joyce’s work was first serialised in the US, and the nature of the post-serial revisions which Joyce made to the text. Dr Clare Hutton is Senior Lecturer... | Read on »

Launch of MA Sports Journalism and Communication

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

NUI Galway hosts a lunchtime seminar on sports journalism at 1pm on Tuesday 25 February in G010, Moore Institute/Hardiman Research Building to announce the launch of the new MA Sports Journalism and Communication programme from September 2020. Panel to feature:Keith Duggan (Chief Sports Writer, The Irish Times) Máire Treasa Ní Dhubhghaill (Presenter, Rugbaí Beo , TG4) Mike Finnerty... | Read on »

History Research Seminar Series: Sons of Legends: The Politics and Implications of Irish Dynastic Frameworks by Neil Gordan

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

Neil is the third year of the Medieval Studies PhD programme and is working with Prof. Dáibhí Ó'Cróinín. The recipient of an IRC Postgraduate Scholarship, Neil is writing a thesis entitled “Built to Last: The Construction and the Benefits of Uí Néill Dynastic Identity in Early Medieval Ireland”.

Book Launch: Bede and Time by Maírín MacCarron

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

Bede and Time is published in the Routledge series Studies in Early Medieval Britain and Ireland and provides the first integrated analysis of Bede’s thought on time. This approach allows for a greater understanding of Bede’s writings on time, and illuminates the place of time and chronology in his other works, including his creation of... | Read on »