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TZID:Europe/Dublin
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DTSTART:20130331T010000
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DTSTART:20131027T010000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20130604T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20130604T000000
DTSTAMP:20260416T103244
CREATED:20160824T134732Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134732Z
UID:2525-1370304000-1370304000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Mission and Frontiers: Perspectives on Early Modern Missionary Catholicism
DESCRIPTION:Mission   and Frontiers: Perspectives on Early Modern Missionary Catholicism \nNational   University of Ireland\, Galway\, 4th and 5th June\, 2013 \nWhen\, in 1893\, Frederick Turner spoke of a phenomenon that ‰Û÷broke the   bonds of custom\, offered new experiences\, [and] called out new institutions   and activities‰۪\, he was referring to the American frontier\,   but his description can be aptly applied to the missionary challenges the   Catholic church encountered at the ‰Û÷frontiers‰۪ of mission in the early modern   era.These were places and spaces with   amorphous cultural and/or politico-geographical boundaries\, unsettled or   changing ‰Û÷certainties‰۪\, and innovations stemming from the shifting realities   of contact and diffusion which those involved in mission experienced within   and without Europe.This symposium   will seek to examine afresh the contours of mission in frontier zones\,   exploring the character and impact of missionary activity at the boundaries   of Catholic culture and geography. \nPossible topics for   consideration include but arenot   limited to: \nåáDefining   the meaning and applicability of frontier in relation to early modern   Catholicism \nåáExploring   the meanings of ‰Û÷mission church‰۪ and ‰Û÷missionary Catholicism‰۪ \nåáCompetition   and co-operation in the competition for souls \nåáCohesion   and difference\, relating to gender\, native ‰Û÷church‰۪\, and inter-religion   contacts \nåáColonial   religion and the ‰Û÷process‰۪ of imperial empire-making \nåáCentre   and periphery ‰ÛÒ authority and autonomy in missionary enterprises \nRegistration is FREE.If interested in attending the symposium   and/or in offering a paper\, please contact the event organisers: \nDr Alison   Forrestal \n Dr Sean Smith \nalison.forrestal@nuigalway.ie \n s.smith12@nuigalway.ie \n\n\n\n\nSymposium Programme\n\n\n\n\nTuesday\, 4 June 2013 \n11.00 Welcome and Opening Remarks\,   Alison Forrestal (NUIG) \n11.15-13.00 Session 1  \nLuke Clossey (Simon Fraser   University) \n“Comparative Perspectives on Frontier and Mission in Early   Modern Islam and Catholicism.” \nSean Smith (NUIG) \n“Mortification in a frontier zone: survival versus   salvation in Madagascar\, 1648-1674.” \n13.00-14.00 Lunch \n14.00-15.30 – Session 2:  \nKarin Velez (Macalester College) \n“With   wonderful lamentation”: Soliciting Tears on Jesuit Frontiers in the Italian   Marche\, Huron and Moxos Missions\, 1560-1760.” \nThierry Issartel (Lyc̩e Louis-Barthou\, Pau) \n“At a corner of the Kingdom…” The   Pyr̩n̩es: missions across a religious border in tension (16th and   17th centuries).” \n15.30-15.45 Coffee \n15.45- 17.15- Session 3 \nAndrew Redden (University of   Liverpool) \n“Not So   Good Shepherds?: Reluctant Jesuit Martyrs on the c.17th Chilean   Frontier.” \nGauvin   Bailey (Queen’s University) \n“Missionaries and Global   Artistic Exchange in Catholic America 1520-1650: Spanish America\, Brazil\, and   Nouvelle-France.” \n19.00 Conference   Dinner \n Wednesday\, 5 June 2013 \n10.00-11.30 – Session 4:  \nMegan   Armstrong (McMaster University) \n“Catholic Frontier or Homeland?   The Custody of the Holy land as a Site of Missionary Competition\, 1600-1700.” \nAndrew McCormick (l’Institut national des langues et civilisation   orientale) “Pierre-Fran̤ois Viguier\, the Congregation of the Mission and the   Gallican conquest of the Levant.” \nCoffee   11.30-11.45 \n 11.45 – 13.00 – Session 5 \nJohn McCafferty (UCD) \n“Apostolical Missioner:  Nicholas Archbold\, Capuchin (d. 1645).” \nMargaret Brennan    (University of Illinois) \n“Seducers come from Hell”?   Paul Harris’s Polemic against Regular Missionary Privilege in Post-Tridentine   Ireland.” \n13.00-14.00 Lunch \n14.00-15.15- Session 6 \nFelicia Rosu (Leiden University) \n“Helping Transylvania: Jesuit   missions in late 16th-century Eastern Europe.” \nTadhg O’Hannrachain (UCD) \n“Nullum aliud emolumentum quaerere   quam salutem animarum”? Catholic Missionary activity in the Turkish   Balkans in the early seventeenth century.” \n15.15-15.30 Coffee \n15.30-  16.30 Session   7 \nRonnie Po-chia Hsia (Penn State   University) \n“Missionary Frontiers: A Comparison of Colonial Latin   America and Portuguese Asia in the early modern era.”
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/mission-and-frontiers-perspectives-on-early-modern-missionary-catholicism/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20130606T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20130606T160000
DTSTAMP:20260416T103244
CREATED:20160824T134734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134734Z
UID:2553-1370534400-1370534400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Dr. Fred Freeman\, Hon. Fellow in English at the University of Edinburgh- The Irish In Scotland : Robert Tannahill
DESCRIPTION:LECTURE  – THE IRISH IN SCOTLAND : ROBERT TANNAHILL\nAfter releasing THE COMPLETE SONGS OF ROBERT BURNS (12 vols\, Linn Records 1996-2003) I turned my attention to a sadly neglected artist: Robert Tannahill of Paisley (1774-1810).  Tannahill was a weaver\, a song-writer and poet who wrote over 100 songs of a quality comparable to Burns. \nThis illustrated lecture\, drawing musical examples from my COMPLETE SONGS OF ROBERT TANNAHILL\, concentrates on a unique collection of songs – with their Irish melodies and subject matter written in defence of the early 19th-century Irish emigrants to Scotland.  A total non-sectarian\, Tannahill\, in his own way\, contributed a great deal to changing perceptions of the downtrodden Irish as they settled into their new country; and\, at the same time\, he left us with a lovely body of Irish song. \nMoreover\, as an early Romantic artist\, he was far ahead of his time.  His unique\, urban Paisley songs movingly provide a critical insight into both the despair and the dynamism of early industrialisation. And his use of the comic and the grotesque certainly does look forward to Blake with its mixed message in relation to the working classes: figures both corrupted and enervated by urban life and\, simultaneously\, morally and socially liberated from the constraints of their ‰Û÷betters’. \nThe McPeake family of Northern Ireland based their famous folk song\, ‰Û÷The Wild Mountain Thyme’\, directly upon the Paisley poet’s ‰Û÷The Braes o Balquhidder’; and\, over the past 200 years\, his works have been published in various Irish and Northern Irish editions. \nDr. Fred Freeman\, a short biography \nSometime Fellow in English at University of Edinburgh\, I am a graduate of Aberdeen and Edinburgh universities (Ph.D. Edinburgh).  I have taught Scottish literature at The School of Scottish Studies and in the English Department of Edinburgh; held postdoctoral posts (several times over) at The Advanced Studies Institute\, The School of Scottish Studies\, the English Department\, University of Edinburgh.  I had a postdoctoral appointment at St Antony’s College\, University of Oxford for two years in the late ‰Û÷80s\, concentrating on ethnic minority writers in Scotland. \nI am author of a book on the 18th-century Edinburgh poet\, Robert Fergusson (EUP 1984) and a children’s book on the Paisley poet\, Robert Tannahill (2009); have published over 100 articles on Scottish literature\, folk music and history.  I am on the official Live Literature Scotland authors’ list for grants. \nOver the past decade I have drawn upon my extensive musical background\, producing over 42 (internationally acclaimed) CDs – amongst them: “THE COMPLETE SONGS OF ROBERT BURNS” (13 Cds\, 12 vols\, Linn Records 1996-2003); (for Scottish Borders Region) “BORDERS FIDDLES”\, “BORDERS SANGSTERS”\, “BORDERS BOXES”\, “BORDERS PIPES”; “BORDERS YOUNG PIPERS” (1999-2012); “A’THE BAIRNS O’ ADAM – A TRIBUTE TO HAMISH HENDERSON” (Greentrax 2004);  “A’ ADAM’S BAIRNS” National Library of Scotland\, 2008); numerous solo CDs – “YONT THE TAY” (Jim Reid) which won BBC’s ‰Û÷Best Singer of the Year 2005′; “THE COMPLETE SONGS OF ROBERT TANNAHILL” – Vols I\, II & III (with 2 vols still to come).
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dr-fred-freeman-hon-fellow-in-english-at-the-university-of-edinburgh-the-irish-in-scotland-robert-tannahill/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20130607T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20130607T110000
DTSTAMP:20260416T103244
CREATED:20160824T134718Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134718Z
UID:2328-1370602800-1370602800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Dr Fred Freeman\, Hon. Fellow in English at the University of Edinburgh - 'A fiddler and a poet' : Songs of Robert Burns
DESCRIPTION:‰Û÷I am a fiddler and a poet’ : Robert Burns as a song-writer \nThis illustrated talk is designed to introduce a wholly unknown Robert Burns to the general public.  For over 200 years Burns has been misrepresented as Scotland’s national ‰Û÷poet’\, yet he was primarily a song-writer\, composing upwards of 400 songs. \nMost of the songs have been lying in abeyance since 1796 though they are of a quality which should easily have established Burns as one of the greatest song-writers of the 18th-century.  The presentation considers why this did not happen as it explores the activities of George Thomson\, Burns’s second editor\, in commissioning Viennese/German composers – Pleyel\, Kozeluch\, van Weber\, Hummel\, Haydn\, Beethoven\, etc. – to recast Burns’s folk composition into an alien classical mould which put paid to it\, almost irrevocably.    Much of the approach considers Burns’s background as a fiddler and folk musician\, quite generally; his innovative use of folk dance/instrumental forms (strathspeys\, reels\, jigs\, slip jigs\, hornpipes); his curious method of composition – always from the tune to the words; his seminal theory of ‰Û÷ballad simplicity’ which relates to language\, form\, rhythm\, tonality and more. \nThe lecture is both informative and entertaining\, with numerous musical examples played throughout the presentation – drawn from Freeman’s THE COMPLETE SONGS OF ROBERT BURNS (12 vols\, Linn Records 1996-2003). \nBiography of Dr Fred Freeman \nSometime Fellow in English at University of Edinburgh\, I am a graduate of Aberdeen and Edinburgh universities (Ph.D. Edinburgh).  I have taught Scottish literature at The School of Scottish Studies and in the English Department of Edinburgh; held postdoctoral posts (several times over) at The Advanced Studies Institute\, The School of Scottish Studies\, the English Department\, University  of Edinburgh.  I had a postdoctoral appointment at St Antony’s College\, University of Oxford for two years in the late ‰Û÷80s\, concentrating on ethnic minority writers in Scotland. \nI am author of a book on the 18th-century Edinburgh poet\, Robert Fergusson (EUP 1984) and a children’s book on the Paisley poet\, Robert Tannahill (2009); have published over 100 articles on Scottish literature\, folk music and history.  I am on the official Live Literature Scotland authors’ list for grants. \n Over the past decade I have drawn upon my extensive musical background\, producing over 42 (internationally acclaimed) CDs – amongst them: “THE COMPLETE SONGS OF ROBERT BURNS” (13 Cds\, 12 vols\, Linn Records 1996-2003); (for Scottish Borders Region) “BORDERS FIDDLES”\, “BORDERS SANGSTERS”\, “BORDERS BOXES”\, “BORDERS PIPES”; “BORDERS YOUNG PIPERS” (1999-2012); “A’THE BAIRNS O’ ADAM – A TRIBUTE TO HAMISH HENDERSON” (Greentrax 2004);  “A’ ADAM’S BAIRNS” National Library of Scotland\, 2008); numerous solo CDs – “YONT THE TAY” (Jim Reid) which won BBC’s ‰Û÷Best Singer of the Year 2005′; “THE COMPLETE SONGS OF ROBERT TANNAHILL” – Vols I\, II & III (with 2 vols still to come). \nfwfreeman@talk21.com
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dr-fred-freeman-hon-fellow-in-english-at-the-university-of-edinburgh-a-fiddler-and-a-poet-songs-of-robert-burns/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20130613T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20130613T140000
DTSTAMP:20260416T103244
CREATED:20160824T134718Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134718Z
UID:2327-1371132000-1371132000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Landed estates & Irish society
DESCRIPTION:Landed estates & Irish society\nMoore Institute\, NUI Galway\n13 – 14 June 2013\n(Revised Programme) \nThursday 13 June \n2.15 William Smyth (Professor Emeritus\, UCC)\, ‰Û÷Landlordism\, Evictions and the Great Famine’ \nChair: James Harrold (Arts Officer\, Galway City) \n3.45. Singular figures of landed background \nPauline Scott (NUI Galway)\, ‘Agent\, tenant\, advocate & agitator: Michael Kelly & the Burke & Pollok estates’ \nLeo Keohane (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷”Quare folk”: the Whites of Whitehall’ \nMadeline O’Neill (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷Senator Colonel Maurice Moore of Moore Hall’ \nChair: Gerard Moran (NUI Maynooth) \n7.00. Reception marking Patrick Melvin’s Estates and landed society in Galway (Dublin: de B̼rca\, 2012). Speaker: Tadhg Foley. \nIntroduced by Marie Mannion (Heritage Officer\, Co. Galway) \n8 pm. Philip Bull (Visiting Fellow\, An Foras Feasa\, NUI Maynooth & La Trobe University\, Melbourne) \n‘A nineteenth-century Irish estate: New records for the history of Irish landed estates’ \nChair: Noel Wilkins (President Galway Arch. & Hist. Society) \nFriday 14 June \n10.00. Texts\, cultures and contexts: new scholarship. \nJoanne McEntee (NUI Galway) ‰Û÷Squires and Solicitors: an important relationship in 19th century Ireland’ \nConor Montague (NUI Galway)\, ‘The Light of Evening\, Lissadell’ \nLaura Vickers (NUI Galway) ‘”A well abused set of men”: The land agent in nineteenth century Ireland’ \nChair: John Cunningham (NUI Galway) \n2.00. Accessing the estate record. \nMarie Boran (NUI Galway)\, ‰Û÷”Can you help me to find out?” The Landed Estates database\, five years on’ \nBrigid Clesham (NUI Galway)\, ‘Solicitors’ Collections – an unrecognised source?’ \nChair: Adrian Frazier (NUI Galway) \n3.00. Class\, gender and landed society \nAdrian Grant (NUI Galway) ‰Û÷Using landed estate records to better understand the rural Irish worker: some findings from the estates of Connacht and Ulster.’ \nMaeve O’Riordan (UCC) ‘The social and cultural world of women of the Munster landed class\, 1860-1914’ \nChair: Laurence Marley (NUI Galway) \n4.30. Olwen Purdue (Queen’s\, Belfast)\, ‘”The price of our loyalty”: the Northern Ireland Land Act of 1925’ \n5.15 Closing remarks from GearÌ_id ÌÒ Tuathaigh (NUI Galway) \nConference organisers: Marie Boran; John Cunningham; Joanne McEntee \nRegistration free; inquiries to john.cunningham@nuigalway.ie \n* Event supported by HEA under PRTLI Cycle 4 *
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/landed-estates-irish-society/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20130622T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20130622T090000
DTSTAMP:20260416T103244
CREATED:20160824T134734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134734Z
UID:2552-1371891600-1371891600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Conference on 'Gender and Sexuality in the Crime Genre'
DESCRIPTION:June 22nd and 23rd\nConference on\n‘Gender and Sexuality in the Crime Genre’.\nOrganisers Dr Kate Quinn\, NUIG\nand Dr Marieke Krajenbrink\, UL.\nFor more information contact kate.quinn@nuigalway.ie \nFriday 21st June \nRegistration: 9:00-9:30 \n 9:30-11:00       Parallel Session 1 \nScandinavian Crime I: Women Crime   Writers \n\n\n\n\nChair: \n\n\nNoir Men and   Women I \nChair: \n\n\n\n\nPaula   Arvas (Helsinki) \nIs   there a glass ceiling for Finnish women crime writers? \n\n\nDeborah   Walker  (Auckland) \nFatal   men in classic French film noir \n\n\n\n\nJacky   Collins (Northumbria) \nThe   ‰Û÷Irene Huss’ novels by Helene Tursten \n\n\nMartin   Rosenstock (Kuwait) \nSterile Erotics in the Interwar Period: Marek Krajewski’s Death in   Breslau (1999) \n\n\n\n\nJane   Rosenbaum (Rider) \nNina   Borg The Boy in the Suitcase and   the gendering of heroes and victims \n\n\nMaysaa   Jaber (Baghdad) \nOpening   the “Forbidden Box”: female criminality and agency in the works of James M.   Cain \n\n\n\n\n11:00-11:30  Coffee \n 11:30-13:00 – Parallel Session 2 \n\n\n\n\nScandinavian Crime II: The Millennium Trilogy. \nChair: \n\n\nNoir Men and   Women II \nChair: \n\n\n\n\nV̩ronique   Kwak (Taiwan National Cheng-chi University) \nFrom   victim to victimizer: Corporeal suffering as spatial transcendence of genders   in the case of Stieg Larsson’s The Girl   who Played with Fire \n\n\nLinda   Crawford (Salve Regina) \nMen   writing women in noir: Paco Ignacio   Taibo II and Luis Sep̼lveda \n\n\n\n\nDeepthi   Sebastian (QUB) \nThe   dissonant body of Lisbeth Salander \n\n\nVeronika   PitukovÌÁ (Masaryk University) \nHard-boiled   Mike Hammer and seductive babes \n\n\n\n\nKerstin   Bergman (Lund) \nThe women who are hated by men: Women   victims and Heroes in the Millennium   Trilogy \n\n\nRichard   Williams (Independent Scholar) \nInterrogating   the alleged misogyny of Gardner’s portrayal of Bertha Cool \n\n\n\n\n13:00-14:30 Lunch \n14:30-16:00 – Parallel Session 3 \n\n\n\n\nFrench Crime \nChair: \n\n\nNew incarnations and the ongoing   influence of Sherlock Holmes \nChair: \n\n\n\n\nMeryem   BelkaÌød \nWomen   written and women writers in modern French crime fiction \n\n\nPalle   Schantz Lauridsen (Copenhagen) \nHolmes   & Watson: Friendship\, bromance\, and sexuality\, 1887-2014 \n\n\n\n\nEva   Robustillo-BayÌ_n (Seville) \nFrench   women detectives in contemporary French crime fiction: Louise Morvan and   Gloria Parker-Simmons \n\n\nMalcah   Effron (Case Western Reserve\, Ohio) \nHolmes’s   female companions: Re-figuring Watson as a woman \n\n\n\n\nAndrea   Hynynen (Abo Akademi University\, Finland and Universit̩ Paris 13) \nSize   matters: challenging gender and sexual norms through the detective’s body – a   comparison of Fred Vargas’s and Pierre Lemaitre’s crime novels \n\n\nAntoine   Dech̻ne (Li̬ge/CIPA/Belspo) \nGender   and sexuality in the metaphysical thriller: the case of Paul Auster \n\n\n\n\n16:00-16:30 Coffee \n16:30-18:00 – Parallel Session 4 \n\n\n\n\nMasculinities \nChair: \n\n\n18th and 19th-century   constructions of the female criminal \nChair: \n\n\n\n\nDominique   Jeannerod (QUB) \nPutting the killer to rest:   Gender and generic exhaustion in Manchette’s The Prone Gunman \n\n\nAnna   C. Jenkin (Sheffield) \n‰Û÷Sensation\,   seduction and submission: representations of murderous wives in   eighteenth-century London and Paris’ \n\n\n\n\nJeffrey   Halpern (Rider) \n‰Û÷When   worlds collide: images of masculinity in the novels of Tony Hillerman’ \n\n\nShampa   Roy (Delhi) \nErrant Wives and Wanton   Widows: Gender and Crime in the Crime Narratives of one of the first crime   writers in Bengal \n\n\n\n\nLouise Vincent (Rhodes) \nGender and Sexuality in   South African Twenty-first Century Crime Fiction \n\n\nJoanne   Simpson (University of Ulster) \n‰Û÷Mad\,   bad and pathetic: engendering evil in the Victorian novel’ \n\n\n\n\n18:15-19:15 Keynote by Dr Andrew Pepper of QUB (Academic and Crime Writer) \n‘Appropriating the Nineteenth Century: The New Economy of Work and Sex in Crime Fiction’ \n19:15 Wine Reception and Formal Welcome \nSaturday 22nd June \n09:30-11:00 Parallel Session 5 \n\n\n\n\nWomen in Contemporary International Crime   Fiction \nChair: \n\n\nPartners in crime.  \nChair: \n\n\n\n\nLiala   Khronopoulo (St Petersburg) \n‰Û÷”Weak”   and “strong” women characters in contemporary Japanese crime stories \n\n\nEva   Erdmann (Freiburg) \nMasculine/feminine   – detecting couples in crime fiction: from Miss Marple/Hercule Poirot to Sarah   Lund/Jens=Peter Raben \n\n\n\n\nMadhumita   Chakraborty (Delhi) \nWomen   in Bangla detective fiction \n\n\nArco   van Ieperen (PWSZ) \nThe   equilibrium of the sexes: gender equality in Robert B. Parker’s Spenser   series \n\n\n\n\nPatricia   Plummer (Duisburg-Essen) \nFemale   sleuths: a survey of contemporary trends \n\n\nLinda   Ledford-Miller (Scranton) \nJust   hot enough: gender roles and sexuality in J. D. Robb’s detective series \n\n\n\n\n11:00-11:30 Coffee \n 11:30-13:00 Parallel Session 6 \n\n\n\n\nDeadly Affairs \nChair: \n\n\nScreening Gender I \nChair: \n\n\n\n\nSilvia   Ammary (John Cabot University\, Rome) \nPoe’s   beautiful dead women: males’ fictional ideals \n\n\nEduardo   ObradÌ_ (Cantabria) \nThis   is a man’s world: the women of the game in The Wire \n\n\n\n\nTina   Pusse (NUIG) \nH.   H. Jahnn’s The Wooden Ship trilogy \n\n\nNoel   O’Shea (UL) \nPerforming   masculinity in the films of Michael Mann \n\n\n\n\nJoel   Phillips (Rider) \nLove Triangle as Mise en   Abyme in Wesley Stace’s Charles Jessold\, Considered as a Murderer \n\n\nNatascha Haarstick (Ruprecht-Karls-UniversitÌ_t   Heidelberg) \nFemale   investigators in the German TV series Tatort \n\n\n\n\n13:00-14:30     Lunch \n 14:30-16:00 Parallel Session 7 \n\n\n\n\nItalian Crime Writers and Gender \nChair: \n\n\nScreening Gender II \nChair: \n\n\n\n\nCarol   Nicholson (Rider) \nOckham’s Razor\, Women\, and God: Philosophical Themes   in The Name of the Rose \n\n\nHenrietta   Phillips (Birmingham) \nCompetition\,   narcissism and the spectacle of British “Northern” masculinity in   pop-cultural accounts of Ian Brady and Peter Sutcliffe \n\n\n\n\nElizabeth   Scheiber (Rider) \nBending   Gender and Genre: Changing Gender Roles in Italian Crime Fiction \n\n\nSamantha   Lindop (Queensland) \nDeadly   Lesbians and the Contemporary Cinematic Crime Thriller \n\n\n\n\nBarbara   Pezzotti (Independent Scholar) \nBlame it on the Tranny:   Transvestism and Transgender in Andrea G. Pinketts’s Crime Fiction \n\n\nKylo-Patrick   Hart (Texas Christian University) \nQueering the Crime   ‰Û÷Splatter Film’: The Case of William Friedkin’s Cruising \n\n\n\n\n16:00-16:30 Coffee \n16:30-18:00 Parallel Session 8 \n\n\n\n\nTrue   Crimes and Criminals Revisited \nChair: \n\n\nScreening Gender III: Psychology  \nChair: \n\n\n\n\nDunlaith   Bird (Oxford/ENS Paris) \nBodies   in the Bosphorus: true crime and travel writing \n\n\nRachel   MagShamhrÌÁin (University College Cork) \nThe Female Thief in Marnie: Poor or Poorly? \n\n\n\n\nMarian   Lara-Ja̩n and Jean-Philippe Imbert (DCU) \nBleeding   Borders\, Bleeding Bodies: Violence and Sexuality in Desert Blood (Alicia Gaspar De Alba\, 2005) \n\n\nJacqui   Miller (Liverpool Hope) \n‰Û÷He certainly wasn’t a pervert‘: (A)sexuality\, Abnormal Psychology\, and Criminality in   the novels of Patricia Highsmith and their filmed adaptations \n\n\n\n\nKatarina   Gregersdotter (Ume̴ University\, Sweden) \nGender\,   sexuality and the power of storytelling in Margaret Atwood’s Alias Grace \n\n\nSujata Moorti (Middlebury\, Vermont) \nCrime on   your mind: Scientific identities \n\n\n\n\n18:00-19:00 Keynote: Professor Lisa Downing (Birmingham) \n‰Û÷Romancing the Cannibal: Genre and Gender Trouble in Thomas Harris’s Hannibal (1999)’ \n 20:00 or 20:30:  Conference Dinner in the Radisson Blu Hotel (Time to be confirmed)
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/conference-on-gender-and-sexuality-in-the-crime-genre/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20130628T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20130628T000000
DTSTAMP:20260416T103244
CREATED:20160824T134718Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134718Z
UID:2329-1372377600-1372377600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Postgraduate Hispanic Studies Conference 2013\, June 28th and 29th
DESCRIPTION:The Postgraduate Hispanic Studies Conference of Ireland and the UK 2013 will take place in the Moore Institute on the 28th and 29th of June.  The plenary speakers are Professor Bill Richardson\, Head of the Spanish Department at NUI Galway\, who will give a lecture entitled: “The Path Not Taken: Borges\, Labyrinths\, and the Location of Translation”; Dr. Chris Harris from the University of Liverpool who will deliver a talk on “Latin American Literature and Feminist Theory: Do Men and Masculinities Matter?”; and Clare Murphy who will speak on ‘Storytelling in South America’. \nDr. Mel Boland of the Spanish Department in NUI\, Galway will also be launching his recent publication\, Displacement in Isabel Allende’s Fiction\, 1982-2000 (Hispanic Studies: Culture and Ideas) during the conference on Friday\, 28 June 2013 in The Moore Institute. \nFor further information about the conference you may refer to the following Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/events/202983149775588/\, or alternatively: http://hispanic-conference.com \nPostgraduate Hispanic Studies Conference of Ireland and the UK\, 2013 Programme \nDay 1: Friday\, 28 June\, 2013 \n\n\n\n\nTime \n\n\nEvent \n\n\nLocation \n\n\n\n\n08.30-09.15 \n\n\nRegistration \n\n\nMoore Institute Seminar Room \n\n\n\n\n9.15-9.30 \n\n\nConference Opening by Dr.   Lillis O Laoire and Dr. Lorna Shaughnessy \n\n\nMoore Institute Seminar Room \n\n\n\n\n9.30-10.30 \n\n\nPlenary: Prof.   Bill Richardson (NUI Galway) \nTitle: ‰Û÷The Path Not Taken:   Borges\, Labyrinths\, and the Location of Translation‰۪ \n\n\nMoore institute Seminar Room \nIntroduced by Dr. Lorna   Shaughnessy \n\n\n\n\n10.30-10.45 \n\n\nTea/Coffee break \n\n\nMoore Institute Seminar Room \n\n\n\n\n10.45-11.45 \n\n\nPanel   1: Translations \nOwen Harrington FernÌÁndez (NUI   Galway) \nTitle: ‰Û÷Indexing Identity in   Translation: Character Idiolect and Sociolect in the Spanish Translation of   John Updike’s ‘Rabbit Redux’‰۪ \nDr. Patricia Holmes (NUI   Galway) \nTitle: ‰Û÷C̩sar Aira: innovation   and experimentation in process and narrative‰۪ \n\n\nMoore Institute Seminar Room \nChair: Bego̱a Sangrador-Vegas \n\n\n\n\n11.45-12.00 \n\n\nTea/Coffee break \n\n\nMoore Institute Seminar Room \n\n\n\n\n12.00.13.30 \n\n\nPanel   2: Spanish   Historiography \nMark McKinty (Queens‰۪   University Belfast) \nTitle: ‰Û÷Origen y progresos: NicolÌÁs FernÌÁndez de MoratÌ_n‰۪s Carta histÌ_rica as the start of the   modern bullfighting debate‰۪ \nFrancis Kelly (University   College Cork) \nTitle: ‰Û÷Tales of a Knight   Errant or Universal Soldier of Golden Age Spain?‰۪ \nAntonio Rojas (Universitat Pompeu Fabra) \nTitle:   ‰Û÷The Spanish Golden Age\, Baroque and GÌ_ngora‰۪ \n\n\nMoore Institute Seminar Room \nChair: Ivan Kenny \n\n\n\n\n13.30-15.00 \n\n\nLunch \n\n\nAn Bhialann \n\n\n\n\n15.00-16.00 \n\n\nPlenary: Clare   Muireann Murphy \nTitle: ‰Û÷Storytelling y cuentos;   the power of words‰۪ \n\n\nMoore Institute Seminar Room \nChair: Dr. Kate Quinn \n\n\n\n\n16.15-16.30 \n\n\nTea/ Coffee break \n\n\nMoore Institute Seminar Room \n\n\n\n\n16.30-17.30 \n\n\nPanel   3:The Arts of Storytelling \nKate Dunn (University of Edinburgh) \nTitle: ‰Û÷How   can the Poem Testify? Speaking and the Unspeaking in Alicia Partnoy‰۪s Venganza de la manzana‰۪ \nDiletta Panero (NUI Galway) \nTitle: ‰Û÷Generational   Storytelling in Chilean Narrative: Isabel Allende and Marta Blanco‰۪ \n\n\nMoore Institute Seminar Room \nChair: Dr. Niamh McNamara \n\n\n\n\n18.00-19.00 \n\n\nBook Launch\nDr Mel   Boland of NUI Galway will launch Displacement   in Isabel Allende’s Fiction\, 1982-2000 (Hispanic Studies: Culture and Ideas) (2013)\n\n\nMoore Institute Seminar Room \nIntroduced by Dr. Chris Harris \n\n\n\n\nThe conference dinner will take place at 20.00 in Vi̱a Mara\, 19 Middle St\, Galway.  \nDay 2: Saturday\, 29 June\, 2013 \n\n\n\n\nTime \n\n\nEvent \n\n\nLocation \n\n\n\n\n9.30-10.30 \n\n\nPanel 1: Southern   Cone Narratives \nDr.   David Conlon (NUI Galway) \nTitle:   ‰Û÷The Trauma of Nature in Zama by Antonio Di Benedetto‰۪ \nC̩ire Broderick(NUI Galway) \n‰Û÷Negotiating the Fragments in Gustavo FrÌ_as‰۪ Tres nombres para Catalina: la do̱a de   CampofrÌ_o‰۪ \n\n\nMoore   Institute Seminar Room \nChair:   Jennie Galvin \n\n\n\n\n10.30-10.45 \n\n\nTea/Coffee   break \n\n\nMoore   Institute Seminar Room \n\n\n\n\n10.45-12.15 \n\n\nPanel 2: Analysing   Spanish Visual Media \nMirna   Vohnsen (University College Dublin) \nTitle:   ‰Û÷The Metamorphis of the Jewish Character in Argentine Cinema‰۪ \nIvan   Kenny (NUI Galway) \nTitle:   ‰Û÷Images of Entropy in The Exterminating Angel by Luis Bu̱uel‰۪ \nRuth Miriam Cereceda Gaton (BISC Queen‰۪s University) \nTitle: ‰Û÷Marinero en tierra: anÌÁlisis de la cultura   marinera del norte de Espa̱a en la obra y la persona del pintor Eduardo Sanz   fraile‰۪ \n\n\nMoore   Institute Seminar Room \nChair:   Diletta Panero \n\n\n\n\n12.15-12.30 \n\n\nTea/Coffee   break \n\n\nMoore   Institute Seminar Room \n\n\n\n\n12.30-13.30 \n\n\nPanel   3: Historical Memory and Contemporary Spain \nImogen   Bloomfield \n(University   of Hull) \nTitle:   ‰Û÷Spain‰۪s (Un)Dead Children: A Haunting Presence in Historical Memory‰۪ \nAisling   O‰۪Connor (University of Limerick) \nTitle:   ‰Û÷A postgenerational perspective on   Republican women and Spain‰۪s stolen babies: BenjamÌ_n Prado‰۪s Mala gente que camina (2006)‰۪ \n\n\nMoore   Institute Seminar Room  \nChair:   Owen Harrington-FernÌÁndez \n\n\n\n\n13.30-15.00 \n\n\nLunch \n\n\n37   West \n\n\n\n\n15.00-16.00 \n\n\nPlenary: Dr. Chris   Harris \n(University   of Liverpool) \nTitle:   ‰Û÷Latin American Literature and Feminist Theory: Do Men and Masculinities   Matter?‰۪ \n\n\nMoore   Institute Seminar Room \nChair:   Prof. Bill Richardson \n\n\n\n\n16.00-16.15 \n\n\nTea/Coffee   break \n\n\nMoore   Institute Seminar Room \n\n\n\n\n16.15-17.45 \n\n\nPanel 4: Representations   of Violence\, Gender Roles and Drug trafficking in Popular Culture in Mexico   and the Borderlands \nDr.   Niamh McNamara (University College Cork) \nTitle: ‰Û÷Drugs\, Violence and Ambiguity: Breaking Bad on the U.S. ‰ÛÒ Mexico   border‰۪ \nJennie   Galvin (NUI Galway) \nTitle:   ‰Û÷El   Movimiento Alterado: narrating a world of gender   hierarchies\, drugs and violence‰۪ \nDr.   Yolanda Reyes  \n(University   College Dublin) \nTitle: ‰Û÷Hypermasculinity\, Violence and the re-enacted ‰ÛÏMacho‰۝ in XXI Century   Mexican Cinema‰۪ \n\n\nMoore   Institute Seminar Room \nChair:   C̩ire Broderick \n\n\n\n\n17.45-18.30 \n\n\nRound   table discussion and conference close \n\n\nMoore   Institute Seminar Room
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/postgraduate-hispanic-studies-conference-2013-june-28th-and-29th/
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