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‘The Clonbrock Photographic Collection and Lady Clonbrock (1839-1928): Contemporary Contexts and Public Activism’ by Úna Kavanagh

Seminar Room, Centre for Irish Studies, Distillery Road

The Centre for Irish Studies invites you to attend the final seminar of our Irish Studies’ Seminar Series by Úna Kavanagh, PhD Scholar at the Centre for Irish Studies, will speak on her current research, ‘The Clonbrock Photographic Collection and Lady Clonbrock (1839-1928): Contemporary Contexts and Public Activism’. The seminar will take place at 4pm,... | Read on »

‘From Ethics to Ontology to the Anthropocene’ by Dr. Nora Ward

Tom Duddy Seminar Room Philosophy Department Morrisroe House, Distillery Road

Dr. Nora Ward (NUI, Galway) will present a paper. 'From Ethics to Ontology to the Anthropocene', as part of the seminar series of the Values and Identities research group on Monday 18th November. About the speaker Nora Ward is a lecturer in the philosophy department. She received her BA and MA from NUIG, and completed... | Read on »

‘The Irish Leviathan and Late Norse Paganism’ by Prof. Mikael Males, University of Oslo

The River Room, AS203, Arts/Science Building

  Mikael Males is Associate Professor at the Dept of Linguistics and Scandinavian Studies at the University of Oslo, and PI of the project Myths about Language in the Middle Ages. Publications include Etymology and Wordplay in Medieval Literature (ed.) (Turnhout: Brepols, 2019) The Poetic Genesis of Old Icelandic Literature (Berlin: De Gruyter, in press... | Read on »

‘Prosimetrical sagas in Irish and Norse: the background of the form’ by Prof. Mikael Males, University of Oslo

The River Room, AS203, Arts/Science Building

Mikael Males is Associate Professor at the Dept of Linguistics and Scandinavian Studies at the University of Oslo, and PI of the project Myths about Language in the Middle Ages. Publications include Etymology and Wordplay in Medieval Literature (ed.) (Turnhout: Brepols, 2019) The Poetic Genesis of Old Icelandic Literature (Berlin: De Gruyter, in press for... | Read on »

The Rory Kavanagh Bursary Presentation

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

The Rory Kavanagh Bursary Presentation is an event showcasing the Erasmus experience in Italy by students of Italian at NUIG,  the opportunity to celebrate the memory of Rory Kavanagh and his passion for Italian life, language and culture, and the generosity of Mary and Des Kavanagh, whose endowment to the University has made it possible... | Read on »

Symposium on Hispanic Crime Narrative

Hardiman Research Building Room G011

                                         Including a keynote by Dr Stewart King (Monash, Australia) on ‘Spanish Crime Fiction in and beyond Spanish Studies, this symposium brings together specialists from Ireland who approach ‘Hispanic’ crime fiction from a range of different perspectives: Dr David Conlon (Maynooth) takes a comparative look at Borges and Twin Peaks: The Return; Dr... | Read on »

Web maps, data visualisation, and mapping with Neatline

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

This session will introduce some key aspects of visualising your research data using web-based maps. You will have the opportunity to get hands-on and follow along with a demonstration of how to create your own simple web-based map using an online service and an institutional version of Omeka/Neatline. There will also be a short overview... | Read on »

Republic of Conscience: Human Rights and Modern Irish Poetry by Dr. Rióna Ní Fhrighil

Seminar Room, Irish Centre for Human Rights

The triadic relationship between poetry, human rights and literary translation is at the heart of the research project Republic of Conscience: Human Rights and Modern Irish Poetry upon which this presentation is based. Cognisant that Percy Bysshe Shelley claimed that “poets were the unacknowledged legislators of the world”, this presentation will critically examine the relationship between poetry,... | Read on »

‘“Averred with Solemn Emotion’s Fire”: The Affective Contours of Finnegans Wake’ by Dr. Frances McCormack, NUIG

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

Modernist Studies Ireland Works in Progress   To see out this semester’s series of Works in Progress talks, please join us for a fascinating Christmas talk (avec gingerbread & wine) by NUI Galway’s own Frances McCormack. Frances’s paper will shine a light on one of the most critically neglected universals underpinning Joyce’s Finnegans Wake: emotional expression.  ... | Read on »

‘Life and Labor in Hannah Arendt’s Thought’ by Prof. Peg Birmingham (De Paul University)

Seminar Room G010, Hardiman Research Building

Peg Birmingham is a world renowned authority on the work of Hannah Arendt, while her interests also range widely in social and political philosophy, as well as feminist theory. She is the author of Deception, Violence and Law Renewing the Political (Rowman & Littlefield, 2017) Hannah Arendt and Human Rights (Indiana University Press, 2006) and co-editor (with Anna Yeatman) of Aporia of Rights: Explorations... | Read on »