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X-WR-CALNAME:Moore Institute
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Moore Institute
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TZID:Europe/Dublin
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TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
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TZNAME:IST
DTSTART:20150329T010000
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DTSTART:20151025T010000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150602T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150602T120000
DTSTAMP:20260411T213056
CREATED:20160824T134707Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134707Z
UID:2181-1433246400-1433246400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Digital Scholarship Seminar: Brad Pasanek (University of Virginia) and Moore Institute visiting fellow - Poetic Diction: Tokens and Change
DESCRIPTION:Digital Scholarship Seminar:\nBrad Pasanek (University of Virginia) and Moore Institute visiting fellow\nPoetic Diction: Tokens and Change\nDigital Scholarship Seminar‘s final visiting speaker event of this series takes place next Tuesday lunchtime and features Dr Brad Pasanek from the Department of English at the University of Virginia. Dr Pasanek is a current Moore Institute Visiting Fellow\, and his talk focuses on computing the language of early modern poetry. The presentation will be followed by lunch (kindly provided by the Moore Institute) at 1pm. \nAbstract: “Poetic diction” is an early modern term of art\, used to mark distinctions between prose and verse. It signals a belief that poets speak and write a special kind of language. But “poetic diction” is also the term selected by William Wordsworth in the preface to Lyrical Ballads to sum up and mark a break with eighteenth-century poetics. “Poetic diction\,” complained Wordsworth\, is “mechanical” and “artificial\,” a “hubbub of words.” Poets should instead write poems\, claims Wordsworth\, famously\, in the “real language of men.” By 1800\, it would seem\, the seventeenth- and eighteenth-century stock of words and phrases was well worn if not worn out. \nPoetic diction\, as a topic of scholarly interest\, had itself become a worn one by the 1950s; but then computational methods may offer new insights into moribund topics. In particular\, when I see critics compile a large “set of phrases” that occur with “wearisome iteration” or provide a short list of stock phraseology (“blushing flowers\,” “cool gales\,” ” lab’ring oxen\,” “curling smokes\,” “fleet shades\,” and “dusky green”)\, it is the mechanical\, iterative quality of the verse surveyed that most interests me. Computational methods work by iteration; and from the perspective of a computational linguist\, the stock of phrases complained of by some literary critics are so many types and tokens\, waiting to counted and mapped. In the current moment\, in which great quantities of verse-Metaphysical\, Neoclassical\, Romantic-have been digitized\, an opportunity to identify the stock of phrases and visualize their changing frequencies presents itself. \nBio: Brad Pasanek is an Assistant Professor in the English Department of the University of Virginia. His first book\, Metaphors of Mind: An Eighteenth-Century Dictionary ships in the coming month from Johns Hopkins University Press. (Act now! Buy two\, get one free.) His efforts have been described by one of his colleagues in the digital humanities\, as “distant reading by hand\,” and his book digests and analyzes over 10\,000 of the metaphors collected online at The Mind is a Metaphor. \nFor further informatition\, contact: Dr PÌÁdraic Moran (padraic.moran@nuigalway.ie)\, \nor Dr Justitin Tonra (justitin.tonra@nuigalway.ie) \nwww.nuigalway.ie/digital-seminar ‰ۢ www.facebook.com/nuigdss
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/digital-scholarship-seminar-brad-pasanek-university-of-virginia-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-poetic-diction-tokens-and-change/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150602T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150602T160000
DTSTAMP:20260411T213056
CREATED:20160824T134708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134708Z
UID:2203-1433260800-1433260800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Moore Institute Visiting Fellow Seminar: Maria McGarrity (Long Island University)  'Exhibiting Ireland:  Immigrants and Visual Culture in Derek Walcott's Joycean New World Epic'   - Jack Fennell (University of Limerick)  'Thrasymachus versus Calib
DESCRIPTION:Moore Institute Seminar \nMaria McGarrity \n(Long Island University and Moore Institute) \n‰Û÷Exhibiting Ireland: \nImmigrants and Visual Culture in Derek Walcott’s Joycean New World Epic’ \nJack Fennell \n(University of Limerick and Moore Institute) \n‰Û÷Thrasymachus versus Caliban: Monstrosity and the Limits of Expansion’ \n“Exhibiting Ireland: Immigrants and Visual Culture in Derek Walcott’s Omeros\, a Joycean New World Epic” \nThe John C. Messenger manuscript in the Hardiman library details folklore and ethnography on Montserrat\, “the Emerald Isle of the Caribbean\,” in the mid twentieth century.  Such a vibrant catalog of the Caribbean Irish frames Derek Walcott’s Irish textual exhibit\, a highly organized and illustrated collection of Irish characters in his transatlantic epic Omeros: Major Plunkett\, Maud Plunkett\, and Lawrence. These characters have cultural associations not simply to Ireland but to a specific collection of historical figures that helped shape Dublin museum culture in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This network of allusion\, inspired by the “the keeper of the Kildare street museum” that Joyce mocks in the “Circe” episode of Ulysses becomes reframed and reimagined on St. Lucia in the mid twentieth century.  Walcott’s imaginary museum of the book includes several dominant cultural and political figures from Ireland\, from radically different social registers and affiliations\, and re-locates them to the West Indies.   Walcott’s catalogue becomes a Joycean museum. \nMaria McGarrity is Professor of English at Long Island University in Brooklyn\, New York.  She works on island geographies\, primitivism\, and transnational modernism in Irish and Caribbean literatures.  Her two new books are just out this month: Allusions in Omeros: Notes and a Guide to Derek Walcott’s Masterpiece (University of Florida Press\, 2015) and a co-edited collection\, Caribbean Irish Connections: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (University of the West Indies Press\, 2015). Caution: the ink may not yet be dry.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/moore-institute-visiting-fellow-seminar-maria-mcgarrity-long-island-university-exhibiting-ireland-immigrants-and-visual-culture-in-derek-walcotts-joycean-new-world-epic-jack-fennell-univ/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150603T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150603T160000
DTSTAMP:20260411T213056
CREATED:20160824T134708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134708Z
UID:2201-1433347200-1433347200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Timothy Madigan\, St. John Fisher College and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow - Thomas Duddy and Irish Thought
DESCRIPTION:Timothy Madigan\, St. John Fisher College and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow \nThomas Duddy and Irish Thought\nAn examination of the life and writings of the late NUIG philosopher\, author of A History of Irish Thought\, and his thesis that Irish thought refuses to separate the poetic and the prosaic in the pursuit of truth–something which is exemplified in his own work as a poet\, short story writer\, and professional philosopher. \nFor more information please contact tmadigan@sjfc.edu
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/timothy-madigan-st-john-fisher-college-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-thomas-duddy-and-irish-thought/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150610T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150610T160000
DTSTAMP:20260411T213056
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1968-1433952000-1433952000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Dianne Hall\, Victoria University\, Melbourne and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow - 'Gender\, violence and marriage in seventeenth-century Ireland'
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dianne-hall-victoria-university-melbourne-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-gender-violence-and-marriage-in-seventeenth-century-ireland/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150611T093000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150611T093000
DTSTAMP:20260411T213056
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1966-1434015000-1434015000@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:The Society for the Study of Nineteenth-Century Ireland's 21st Annual Conference - June 11 and 12
DESCRIPTION:The Society for the Study of Nineteenth-Century Ireland’s 21st Annual Conference will take place in the Moore Institute at NUI Galway on Thursday 11th and Friday 12th June 2015. The theme of the conference is Literacy in Nineteenth-Century Ireland. For programme and further details\, see www.ssnciconference2015.wordpress.com or contact the organisers\, Dr Rebecca Barr\, Dr Sarah-Anne Buckley and Dr Muireann O’Cinneide. \nThere will also be a wine reception to celebrate the launch of Laura D. Kelley’s The Irish in New Orleans – 6pm Thurs 11th June in G010. \nEvent sponsored by the Moore Institute and the School of Humanities.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/the-society-for-the-study-of-nineteenth-century-irelands-21st-annual-conference-june-11-and-12/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150611T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150611T180000
DTSTAMP:20260411T213056
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1967-1434045600-1434045600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Book launch of Laura D. Kelley's The Irish in New Orleans
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/book-launch-of-laura-d-kelleys-the-irish-in-new-orleans/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150612T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150612T110000
DTSTAMP:20260411T213056
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1965-1434106800-1434106800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Dr Elizabeth Patton\, John Hopkins University and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow - 'The production\, reception and circulation of books by women in the family and affinity of Dorothy Arundell (1560-1613)'
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dr-elizabeth-patton-john-hopkins-university-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-the-production-reception-and-circulation-of-books-by-women-in-the-family-and-affinity-of-dorothy-arundell-1560-161/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150618T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150618T160000
DTSTAMP:20260411T213056
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1970-1434643200-1434643200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Michael Neiberg\, United States Army War College and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow -Trans-Atlantic Linkages and America's Road to War\, 1914-1917: New Evidence\, New Conclusions.
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/michael-neiberg-united-states-army-war-college-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-trans-atlantic-linkages-and-americas-road-to-war-1914-1917-new-evidence-new-conclusions/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150619T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150619T130000
DTSTAMP:20260411T213056
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1969-1434718800-1434718800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Irish Centre for the Histories of Labour & Class Conference - 'From Civil Rights to the Bailout: Social movements\, workers agitation and left-wing activism in Ireland\, 1968-2010' - 19th and 20th June
DESCRIPTION:From Civil Rights to the Bailout: Social movements\, workers agitation\, and left-wing activism in Ireland\, 1968-2010\nIrish Centre for the Histories of Labour & Class\,\nhttp://fromcivilrightstothebailout.wordpress.com/ \nConference Overview\nFriday 19 June \n13.00-13.45 Registration \n13.45 Welcome address \n14.00-15.30 Panel 1: The context of Northern Ireland \n15.30-15.45 Break \n15.45-17.15 Panel 2: Varieties of Protest \n19.30 Mechanics’ Institute\, Middle Street: ‰Û÷Civil Rights and Union Rights: Veteran Voices from the West of Ireland’ \nSaturday 20 June \n10.00-11.30 Panel 3: Radical Politics \n11.30-11.45 Break \n11.45-13.15 Panel 4: Challenging legal and cultural constraints \n13.15-14.00 Lunch \n14.00-15.30 Panel 5: Engaging Beyond Ireland \n15.30-15.45 Break \n15.45-17.45 Panel 6: Preserving History: Oral History and Archives \nCLOSE OF CONFERENCE \n************ \nRegistration: ‰âÂ5 \nThis will help cover the costs which include coffee\, tea and biscuits to be provided at all \nbreaks\, and a lunch of sandwiches to be provided on Saturday. If you would like to attend\, \nbut feel you cannot afford the registration fee\, please let us know. \nIn order to provide for catering\, we need an estimate of the number of attendees. If you would \nlike to attend\, please contact David Convery at david.convery@nuigalway.ie and please also \nmake us aware of any special dietary requirements. \nThis conference is organised with the generous support of the Discipline of History\, NUI \nGalway\, and the Moore Institute for Research in the Humanities & Social Sciences. \nFor more information\, please see the conference website at http://fromcivilrightstothebailout.wordpress.com
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/irish-centre-for-the-histories-of-labour-class-conference-from-civil-rights-to-the-bailout-social-movements-workers-agitation-and-left-wing-activism-in-ireland-1968-2010-19th-and-20th-june/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150622T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150622T160000
DTSTAMP:20260411T213056
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1973-1434988800-1434988800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Derek Gladwin\, University of British Columbia and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow - 'North Atlantic Poetry and Multimedia: Environmentalism\, Space and Websites'
DESCRIPTION:Derek Gladwin\, University of British Columbia and Moore Institute Visiting Research Fellow’North Atlantic Poetry and Multimedia: Environmentalism\, Space and Websites’\nThis talk discusses the relationship between two interdisciplinary environmental and spatial approaches to literature\, known as ecocriticism and geocriticism\, through two interactive websites that focus on the poetry of Eavan Boland and Marlene Creates. In one website\, Creates\, who is an environmental poet and photographer from Newfoundland\, Canada\, has created a multimedia experience titled A Virtual Walk of the Boreal Poetry Garden. Across the North Atlantic\, another website titled The Poetry Project: Poetry and Art from Ireland employs a similar multimedia format\, incorporating short videos of place-based poetry read orally in built and non-built environments. Boland’s poem ‰Û÷In Our Own Country’\, which is accompanied by Oliver Comerford’s short film Distance\, is the selection from ‰Û÷The Poetry Project’ considered in this talk. What is important about these two projects is that they are meant to be experienced on the web. These online representations of environmental poetry also use elements of interest for ecocritics and geocritics alike\, capturing both real and imagined spaces\, while also expanding the boundaries among disciplines\, genres\, and platforms. Ultimately\, this talk examines how these two websites demonstrate through poetry\, image\, and virtual experience the ability to promote environmental awareness through spatial representations of place. \nDerek Gladwin is a Social Sciences and Humanities Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Department of English at the University of British Columbia. His work primarily focuses on the environmental humanities in 20th– and 21st-century literary\, film\, and visual cultures in Ireland\, the UK\, and the North Atlantic. Gladwin is author of the forthcoming book\, Contentious Terrains: Boglands in the Irish Postcolonial Gothic (2016)\, and co-editor of Eco-Joyce: The Environmental Imagination of James Joyce (2015) and Unfolding Irish Landscapes: Tim Robinson\, Culture and Environment (2015). He is currently co-editing an issue on ‰Û÷Irish Environmental Criticism’ for the Canadian Journal of Irish Studies\, and will serve as an Environmental Humanities Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Edinburgh in the autumn of 2015.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/derek-gladwin-university-of-british-columbia-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-north-atlantic-poetry-and-multimedia-environmentalism-space-and-websites/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150623T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150623T150000
DTSTAMP:20260411T213056
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1971-1435071600-1435071600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Dr. Peter Webster\, The British Library and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow -Prospects & pitfalls in using web archives for research
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dr-peter-webster-the-british-library-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-prospects-pitfalls-in-using-web-archives-for-research/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150623T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150623T160000
DTSTAMP:20260411T213056
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1972-1435075200-1435075200@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Dr Jodi Schneider\, INRIA Sophia Antipolis - M̩diterran̩e\, France and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow -Persons\, documents\, models: organising and structuring information for the Web
DESCRIPTION:Persons\, documents\, models: organising and structuring information for the Web \nPeople and documents are of enduring interest. Documents may be generated by individuals\, collective groups\, and administrations\, on any number of topics. We are particularly interested in the relationships between people and documents. The most important relationships are creation (authors\, illustrators\, translators\, …)\, usage (e.g. association copies)\, and topic-of (e.g. people may be the subjects of biographies). \nIn this lecture\, we will talk about several approaches for modeling\, or representing\, people and documents. We pay particular attention to computer-based approaches to organization\, and to organizing information for websites. We will talk briefly about TEI and XML\, and the focus on my area of research expertise: modeling “linked data”\, a widely adopted approach for interlinking data. Adopted by the UK and US governments and search engines such as Google and Yahoo!\, linked data has also been widely used in the digital humanities and by libraries\, archives\, and museums. It consists in naming objects of interest (be they authors\, documents\, or whatnot) and using standard data formats to enable interlinking.
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dr-jodi-schneider-inria-sophia-antipolis-m%cc%a9diterran%cc%a9e-france-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-persons-documents-models-organising-and-structuring-information-for-the-web/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150624T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150624T090000
DTSTAMP:20260411T213056
CREATED:20160824T134709Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134709Z
UID:2204-1435136400-1435136400@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:DhÌÁ leagan D̩ag: An Sean-nÌ_s san aonÌÄå¼ haois is fiche - 24 agus 25 Meitheamh
DESCRIPTION:DhÌÁ leagan D̩ag: \nAn Sean-nÌ_s san aon̼ haois is fiche\nClÌÁr na ComhdhÌÁla \nD̩ C̩adaoin 24 Meitheamh  \n  \n9.00 ClÌÁr̼ \n9.15 Oscailt Oifigi̼il An Dr. Jeannine Woods\, Ceann GnÌ_omhach na Gaeilge\, OÌä Gaillimh \nPain̩al 1 \n9.30-11.00 Cathaoirleach: Jeannine Woods \nLillis ÌÒ Laoire OÌä Gaillimh \nCÌÁ bhfuil an Sean-nÌ_s? An Miotas\, An R̩altacht agus an SpÌÁs Idir Eatarthu \nSÌ_le Denvir\, ColÌÁiste PhÌÁdraig\, Ollscoil Chathair ́tha Cliath \nFÌ_or nÌ_ Fiar? Ceist na BarÌÁnt̼lachta in AmhrÌÁnÌ_ocht Dh̼chasach na Gaeilge \nRÌ_isÌ_n Nic Dhonncha\, ColÌÁiste Mhuire gan SmÌÁl \nAn tAmhrÌÁnaÌ_\, An Pobal agus LÌÁithri̼ na F̩ini̼lachta \nSos \nPain̩al 2 \n11.30-1.00 Cathaoirleach: Aingeal NÌ_ ChualÌÁin \nTrÌ_ona NÌ_ ShÌ_ochÌÁin Ollscoil Luimnigh \nEisp̩ireas\, BrÌ_ agus Machnamh: an Smaointeoireacht agus an AmhrÌÁnaÌ_ocht \nPÌÁdraig ÌÒ Cearbhaill Brainse na Logainmneacha \nAn bhfuil ̩inne inÌÁr dteannta ag triall ar an tobar? \nOdÌ_ NÌ_ Ch̩illeachair Acadamh na hOllscolaÌ_ochta Gaeilge\, OÌä Gaillimh \nRTÌä RaidiÌ_ na Gaeltachta: SlÌÁnaitheoir an tSean-nÌ_is? \n1.00 – 2.00 LÌ_n \nPain̩al 3 \n2.00-3.00 Cathaoirleach: RÌ_isÌ_n Nic Dhonncha \nMicheÌÁl ÌÒ GionnÌÁin NeamhspleÌÁch \nFanann an braon sna clÌÁir: An duine\, an ÌÁit agus na hamhrÌÁin sa lÌÁ inniu \nVirginia Blankenhorn\, Ollscoil Dh̼n Ìäideann \nÌÒ Chalifornia go Conamara ar lorg an tSean-nÌ_is \n3.00-3.30 Sos \nPain̩al 4 \n3.30-4.30 Cathaoirleach: Ailbhe NÌ_ Ghearbhuigh \nÌäadaoin NÌ_ Mhuircheartaigh\, ColÌÁiste PhÌÁdraig \nContrÌÁrthachtaÌ_ agus CoimhlintÌ_ ag na Feiseanna Luatha. Sc̩al na nAmhrÌÁn \nSeosamh Mac Donnchadha\, ColÌÁiste na nDÌÁn\, Ollscoil na hÌäireann\, Gaillimh. \nAn sean-nÌ_s: BÌÁite sa traidisi̼n nÌ_ BÌÁite ag an traidisi̼n? \n7.00 Dinn̩ar na ComhdhÌÁla ÌÒstÌÁn Harbour\, BÌ_thar na nDuganna\, Gaillimh. \n9.30 Ceol 7 AmhrÌÁnaÌ_ocht sa Chrane. \nAÌ_onna speisialta: AmhrÌÁnaithe ÌÒga an Ghaelacadaimh \nD̩ardaoin 25 Meitheamh \nPain̩al 5 \n9.15-11.15 Cathaoirleach: Lillis ÌÒ Laoire \nRob Dunbar\, Ollthaigh DhÌ_n Ìöideann \nDualchas Seann-NÌ_s na GÌÊidhlig agus an Tasglann \nSeumas Watson\, An Clachan\, Ceap Breatainn\, Alba Nuadh \nAg Ìäirigh air ÌÕran an Albainn Nuaidh: Suas e! \nTiber Falzett\, Ionad an EÌ_lais Eileanaich\, Oilthigh Eilean a’ Phrionnsa Iomhair \nSÌ_il air Seinn\, Seanchas agus Meatafor am measg an t-Sluaigh \nGriogair Labhruidh\, Ollscoil na hÌäireann\, Gaillimh. \nTraidisean Seinn Ath-Chruthaichte nan GÌÊidheal Albannach \nSos \nPain̩al 6 \n11.45-1.15 Cathaoirleach: An Dr. Clodagh Downey\, Roinn na Gaeilge \nLiam ÌÒ Maoildhia Sti̼rthÌ_ir an Oireachtais \nAn AmhrÌÁnaÌ_ocht agus an Sean-nÌ_s ag an Oireachtas \nAntaine ÌÒ FarachÌÁin Institi̼id TeicneolaÌ_ochta Bhaile ́tha Cliath \nAg lorg ÌÁite don amhrÌÁnaÌ_ocht dh̼chasach \nMÌÁire Breathnach ColÌÁiste PhÌÁdraig Droim Conrach \nIomramh Aonair i dtreo an tSean-nÌ_is: Sc̩alta Ì_ fhoghlaimeoirÌ_ \nLÌ_n \nPain̩al 7 \n2.30-4.30 ModhnÌ_ir: Louis de Paor \nS̼il Siar\, S̼il ar Aghaidh: Pl̩ Oscailte faoin amhrÌÁnaÌ_ocht \nJosie SheÌÁin Jeaic Mac Donnchadha\, MÌÁire PhÌ_otair NÌ_ DhroighneÌÁin\, S. NÌ_ Bheaglaoich \n4.30 Clabhs̼r \n  \nClÌÁr̼: Saor in Aisce. TÌÁille Dinn̩ir: ‰âÂ30  TeagmhÌÁil: Lillis ÌÒ Laoire  ag sean.nos2015@gmail.com
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/dhia-leagan-d%cc%a9ag-an-sean-ni_s-san-aoniaa%c2%bc-haois-is-fiche-24-agus-25-meitheamh/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150624T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20150624T160000
DTSTAMP:20260411T213056
CREATED:20160824T134653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134653Z
UID:1974-1435161600-1435161600@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Carrie Griffin\, Bristol University and Moore Institute Visiting Fellow -Ink Recipes in Domestic Culture: Women and Textual Production\, 1500-1700
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/carrie-griffin-bristol-university-and-moore-institute-visiting-fellow-ink-recipes-in-domestic-culture-women-and-textual-production-1500-1700/
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR