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Κυριακή 20 Νοεμβρίου 2022

Digital seminar on gender and power in Early Modern France, Seminar, December 7, 2022, United Kingdom

 



Subject Fields: 
Early Modern History and Period Studies, Women's & Gender History / Studies, French History / Studies

 

Dr Williams’s Trust & Library, London 

Assoc. Professor Derval Conroy (University College Dublin:  School of Languages, Culture and Linguistics) 

Changing places: paratexts and gender in translations of Le Moyne's “La Gallerie de Femmes Fortes” (1647)

 

DATE:   Wednesday 7th December 2022     TIME:   5.30 pm - 7.00 pm 

By ZOOM:   Meeting ID:   853 5419 0446   Pass: 377656 


This seminar is one of a forthcoming occasional series highlighting the riches and diversity of collections held by the Dr Williams’s Trust in London. The Trust’s sizable early modern French print holdings, numbering over 1000 texts, covers a range of topics including prose literature, rhetoric and travel writing. 

The focus of this evening’s talk will be on themes of gender and power, a field well represented in the collections.   The Dr Williams’s collections contain funeral sermons written for aristocratic women, panegyrics and works concerned with modelling female virtue.   

The author of Ruling Women, Vol 1 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016) Prof Conroy’s talk will focus on Pierre Le Moyne’s La Gallerie de femmes fortes (1647), particularly on the translation of paratextual elements in the text in the Spanish language edition of Le Moyne’s text.   In addition to the broad themes of gender and power, she will touch upon the history of printing as well as the theorisation of paratexts, text and images. 

 

Contact Email: 

Δευτέρα 9 Μαΐου 2022

Colloquium Biopoliticum (virtual seminar)

 



Type: 
Workshop
Date: 
May 19, 2022
Location: 
Finland
Subject Fields: 
Classical Studies, Humanities, Intellectual History, Philosophy, Political Science

Colloquium Biopoliticum (virtual seminar)

Thursday, May 19, 14.30–17.00 EEST (Helsinki time) 

 

The Colloquium Biopoliticum is a periodic academic event during which researchers discuss work in progress and recent developments in the field of biopolitics.

 

Programme

14.30: Opening Remarks

14.35–15.20: Mika Ojakangas (Jyväskylä): On the Reasons Why Agamben Is Not a Theorist of Biopolitics  

15.25–16.10: Jussi Backman (Jyväskylä): On the (Meta)biopolitics of Happiness 

16.15–17.00: S.M. Amadae (Helsinki): The Biopolitics of Violence

 

For more information about the Colloquium Biopoliticum, please visit: https://colloquiumbiopoliticum.com/ 

 

Registration

Please, email marco.piasentier@gmail.com for the Zoom link. 

Contact Info: 

Marco Piasentier (Jyväskylä)

Care-led innovation: The case of elderly care in France and Japan - Webinar, Seminar, May 11, 2022

 





Subject Fields: 
French History / Studies, Health and Health Care, Humanities, Japanese History / Studies, Social Sciences

The Fondation France-Japon de l'EHESS is pleased to announce the 2nd Webinar of its project "Care-led innovation: The case of elderly care in France and Japan" (INNOVCARE) to be held on Wednesday 11 May 2022, 9 am to 11 am (France) / 4 pm to 6 pm (Japan).

For this session, we will have two presentations from:

  • Louis Braverman (IRIS, Université Sorbonne Paris Nord) - Nursing home “beyond the walls”: a case study of a French Red-Cross innovation

Encouraging aging at home of elderly people with a loss of autonomy leads to the development of new care organisations. This presentation focuses on an innovative solution launched by the French Red-Cross: Vivre@lamaison. This solution is based on a nursing home and provides enhanced support by offering a range of services within the institution or at home. Thus, long-term care is provided at home, beyond the walls of the institution. This innovation raises many questions, especially about the suitability of the services provided in response to the needs expressed by the elderly. Based on interviews with professionals and beneficiaries, this presentation discusses how Vivre@lamaison provides more integrated care between nursing home and home care. The analysis leads us to consider this solution as an effective means of strengthening and supporting the anchoring of the elderly in their environment. We then show the value of the continuum of services offered by this solution to promote health and tackling isolation. Finally, the discussion highlights the main limitations of Vivre@lamaison.

  • Katsunori Shimohara (Doshisha University) - Relationality Design with Emphasis on Clinical Aspects for System of Systems in Local Community

We have worked on a system design of community aiming to establish methodologies for a system of systems (SoS) in local community. For that purpose, we have introduced relationality assets as a concept, to quantify and visualize relationality that people generate daily through interactions between “Hito,” “Mono,” and “Koto” in a local community, and propose mechanisms to drive the generation, circulation, and communalization of relationality assets. Since people in a community are diverse in terms of age, occupation, family composition, human relations, ways of thinking and sense of value, it is imperative to design incentives to prompt their self-motivated involvement in community activities so that they function as a system. Rethinking the so-called equality-based approach taken so far, we propose to change it and employ the equity-based approach. Based on the premise of “Clinical Wisdom” that focuses on locality, multiplicity, and embodiment instead of “Science Wisdom” that focuses on universality, logicality, and objectivity, I would like to discuss the inevitability in taking a clinical approach in relationality design toward creating an SoS in a local community.

Our 3rd Webinar will be held on Friday 20 May 2022, 9 am to 11 am (France) / 4 pm to 6 pm (Japan):  https://innovcare.hypotheses.org/webinar/webinar-3

>> Program: https://innovcare.hypotheses.org/webinar/webinar-2

>> Link for the Zoom videoconference: https://zoom.us/j/94464908931?pwd=OENRZlJZTHdZWUpIb2xxTlZMQnh3Zz09

Meeting ID: 944 6490 8931
Passcode: 425991

 

You can find further information on INNOVCARE on our project's website: https://innovcare.hypotheses.org/about

 

Contact Email: 

Τρίτη 19 Απριλίου 2022

Berlin Brandenburg Colloquium on Environmental History Summer 2022 (online)

 



Type: 
Seminar
Date: 
April 28, 2022 to June 23, 2022
Location: 
Germany
Subject Fields: 
Environmental History / Studies, German History / Studies, American History / Studies, History of Science, Medicine, and Technology, Economic History / Studies

 

 

ONLINE. Please write to us for the zoom login: meyer@zzf-potsdam.de.

Thursdays

19:00 - 21:00 hrs CET DST

Program

Thurs, 28.04.2022 Siegfried Evens (Stockholm):
Streams, Steams, and Steels: The Governance of Nuclear and Non-Nuclear Risks

Abstract:
As light water reactors are increasingly seen as a solution to achieving a sustainable energy transition and battling the climate crisis, it is more important than ever to study what the risks of using water for nuclear power production are. However, the technologies that manage all that water (and steam) have not enjoyed much attention from historians. Therefore, my PhD research project ‘Streams, Steams, and Steels’ aims to study the governance of risk of these crucial reactor components and materials by national and international actors from a historical perspective. Relying on archival sources from the U.S., Sweden, France, and multiple international organisations, as well as interviews, this dissertation attempts to write a new, longue durée history of nuclear safety, going back to the origins of water and steam risk management. In such a history, it becomes clear that a hybrid nuclear safety regime was shaped between the 1950s and 1980s – by a multitude of ‘nuclear’ and ‘non-nuclear’ actors – which was the result of a confrontation between older ‘non-nuclear’ steam safety regimes and newer ‘nuclear’ risk prevention measures.
Short Bio:
Siegfried Evens specialises in the history of risk and disaster. He is currently a PhD candidate at the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) in Stockholm. In his PhD thesis entitled Streams, Steams, and Steels: The Governance of ‘Nuclear’ and ‘Non-Nuclear’ Risks, he researches the history of nuclear safety governance with a focus on water and cooling systems. His project is a part of the ERC-funded NUCLEARWATERS-project, under the supervision of Per Högselius, which attempts to rewrite the history of nuclear energy with a focus on water.
Recent publications: Evens, Siegfried. «Les risques de refroidissment : l’eau comme frontière spatiale et temporelle de l’énergie nucléaire ». In: Enquêter dans le nucléaire. Rennes : Presses Universitaires de Rennes. 2022; (with Lindström, Kati et al.) “How Should History of Technology Be Written? Some Lessons from an Ongoing Research Project on the Global History of Nuclear Energy”. Technikgeschichte 88 (2021); “The Seeds of a European Risk Society: Marcinelle and the European Coal and Steel Community”. European Review of History 28, nr. 3 (2021); “A Complicated Way of Boiling Water: Nuclear Safety in Water History”. Water History 12 (2020).

Thursday, 05.05.2022 Nicole Rehnberg (Santa Barbara):
Racializing Redwoods: Staging “Big Trees” at the Second International Exhibition of Eugenics
Abstract
In this talk, I explore the exhibition that followed the Second International Congress of Eugenics held at the American Museum of Natural History in 1921 and how organizers used “Big Trees” (Coast Redwoods and Giant Sequoias) as a symbol, method, and data to showcase and promote eugenic agenda. Genealogists and life scientists have used trees as a symbol of life and connections changing over time, as well as a methodological tool to make sense and order of life. Eugenicists were no exception. Harry H. Laughlin and his assistant Alice M. Hellmer continued this practice and created the “Eugenics Tree” image in 1919, to assist in writing an article. The image featured “allied sciences” at the root of the tree, which showed how different disciplines naturally come together to create eugenics. Laughlin, head of the exhibition’s committee, used the image and its organizing logic to create the exhibition’s theme, “Eugenics and Allied Sciences,” and the organization of its 131 displays. One of the displays materialized the symbol and the method of trees by presenting research using Big Tree rings as data that proved climatic changes due to immigration created civilization decline. I argue that the use of Big Trees as symbol, method, and data at the Second International Exhibition of Eugenics illustrates how eugenics and conservation worked in tandem, not just contemporaneously, controlling landscapes and human bodies and, at times, used the same methods to do so.
Short Bio:
Nicky Rehnberg is an environmental public historian and doctoral candidate at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Her dissertation, “White Roots, Redwoods: Racializing German and US Conservation, 1920-1945” examines how Coast Redwoods and Giant Sequoias were used transnationally as an object of racial science and a tool of white nationalism and white supremacy in the early twentieth century. It investigates how conservationists conflated forest and racial management in Germany and the US and shows the connections between conservation and eugenics, as it was literally displayed in natural history museums and public parks in Germany and the US. She is also a part of UCSB’s and California State Parks’ program History and Relevancy, in which she researches, writes, and creates programming on California history for the public.

Monday (!), 13.06.2022 Gisela Hürlimann (Dresden):
Das raffinierte Tier. Zur Wirtschafts- und Technikgeschichte sogenannter Schlachtnebenprodukte /
Refined Animality. Processing Slaughter By-Products in the Industrial Age
In Kooperation mit dem Kolloquium des Fachgebiets Technikgeschichte der TU Berlin (Heike Weber)
Different time: 16-18 hrs, Room H 2038, Main building TU Berlin (Straße des 17. Juni 135, 10623 Berlin) and Online
Online-Login: https://tu-berlin.zoom.us/j/97539585492?pwd=UjRRMllYUnNoRTgyS05nSWRobXY3dz09; Meeting-ID: 975 3958 5492, Passwort: 99428074
Abstract:
In the fast growing cities of the late 19th century, the handling of slaughter waste became both an environmental challenge and a commercial chance. The newly constructed or reformed slaughterhouses were not only a site for the publicly regulated meat supply, but also part of the medical-hygienic and industrial complex. As such, they can be conceived as a trading zone for the afterlife of farm animals: for rendering their „biotrash“ (Naomi Pfeiffer 2010) into a polyvalent resource for industrial, scientific and pharmaceutical uses. Quentin Deluermoz and François Jarrige (2017) ascribed farm animals the capacity to offer a subtle technology for human-animal interaction, and a constant potential for perfection. This is, though, not only true for animal labor or animal products such as milk, eggs, manure – and meat. Rather, it also applies to the refinement and usage of slaugther by-products in the industrial age – an underexplored dimension in animal or commodity history as well as in the history of technology.
Short Bio:
Gisela Hürlimann is Professor for the History of Technology and for Economic History at the Technical University (TU) Dresden. Her current publications include Not Paying Taxes. Histories of Tax Avoidance, Evasion and Resistance, Routledge forthcoming 2022 (with K. Schönhärl and D. Rohde), Staging History: Anniversaries in European Institutions of Higher Learning from 1850 to the Present, De Gruyter 2022 (with A.F. Guhl) and Auf den Spuren des Nutztiers (traverse 2-2021, with A. Elsig et al.)  

Thursday, 23.06.2022 Janis Maximilian Meder (Berlin)
„Business changes the world”. Ecologically responsible business in the 1970s and 1980s

Das ökologisch verantwortungsbewusste Unternehmen der 1970er und 1980er Jahre
Abstract:
In dem Vortrag wird Janis M. Meders Dissertationsprojekt vorgestellt, das eine historische Perspektive die gesellschaftliche Verantwortung privatwirtschaftlicher Unternehmen einnimmt. Der Aktivismus und die Protestkultur der Umweltbewegung werden demnach als richtungsweisend für das Konstrukt des sogenannten ökologisch und sozial „verantwortungsbewussten“ Unternehmens der 1970er und 1980er Jahre angesehen. Es soll hierbei deutlich werden, inwieweit Unternehmen ökologische Ziele aufgriffen und in privatwirtschaftliche Strukturen integrierten. Im Zentrum steht die Frage, wie Entwürfe des vermeintlich alternativen, ökologisch motivierten Wirtschaftens durch kapitalistische, marktwirtschaftliche Logiken transformiert wurden. Die vergleichende Fallstudie untersucht folglich die Unternehmen The Body Shop (GB) und dm (BRD) als historische Akteur*innen, die bis heute zwischen Profitmaximierung und Umweltschutz agieren. Die Praxis der Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) und das privatwirtschaftliche Postulat der Nachhaltigkeit im 21. Jahrhundert werden als Folgen der untersuchten Prozesse interpretiert.

Kurzbiographie:
Janis Maximilian Meder ist Promotionsstudent an der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin (HU). 2021 hat er an der Freien Universität Berlin (FU) seinen Masterabschluss in Geschichte und Germanistik erhalten und schloss umgehend das Promotionsstudium der Geschichtswissenschaften an. Die Schwerpunkte seiner Arbeit bilden die transatlantische Geschichte Westeuropas, die Unternehmensgeschichte und die Umweltgeschichte.

Kontakt

meyer@zzf-potsdam.de
astrid.m.kirchhof@hu-berlin.de

https://zzf-potsdam.de/sites/default/files/veranstaltung/files/bbc-sommersemester-2022-hu-zzf.pdf

Contact Info: 

Astrid M. Kirchhof  Astrid.m.kirchhof@hu-berlin.de

Jan-Henrik Meyer meyer@zzf-potsdam.de

Contact Email: 

Τρίτη 20 Σεπτεμβρίου 2016

Units of Speech – ‘Words’ of Verbal Art, a multidisciplinary seminar-workshop 17–19 May 2017, Helsinki, Finland



Formulaic language is a topic of rising interest across researchers in diverse but related disciplines, such as anthropology, folkloristics, linguistics, philology and semiotics. Despite employing different methods and materials, their findings are often complementary or even convergent. On the other hand, a critical mass of open, interdisciplinary dialogue has yet to occur.  Formula: Units of Speech – ‘Words’ of Verbal Art aims to bring different approaches to the formula into dialogue, and especially to bridge the divide between formula research on unmarked spoken or written discourse and that on forms of verbal art such as oral poetry. 
Approaches to the formula in the different fields have evolved to a great degree independently of one another.  At the same time, they seem to be moving toward convergence. Indeed, the rising approach in linguistics to a formulaic sequence as a morpheme-equivalent unit with a devoted entry in the mental lexicon can be seen as corresponding fully to the spreading approach to the formula in oral poetry as a vernacular ‘word’ of the registral lexicon corresponding to an integer of meaning.  The divide between these branches of research has developed from viewing oral poetry as distinct from language more generally, which has been bolstered by Classic Oral-Formulaic Theory’s definition of formula in terms of metrical positions of verse.  Although these views have been changing, increasingly looking at formulaic language in poetry as a universal linguistic phenomenon conditioned by a particular metrical or poetic form, the divide has persisted. 
Opening discussion across the diverse and complementary approaches and research materials has become increasingly important. Researchers of verbal art can benefit from views on formulaic language from the perspective of a general linguistic phenomenon while researchers of the general linguistic phenomenon can benefit from perspectives gained through verbal art, in which the formal constraints of poetic forms can make features of how formulaic language works and varies more salient or even empirically demonstrable. 
Opening dialogue across disciplines is always challenging.  To facilitate exchange, sufficient time is needed both to absorb new views and ideas and to negotiate across unfamiliar perspectives.  Formula is thus organized with a limited number of paper presentations, each of which is allotted a greater amount of time for open discussion.  Additional participants will also have the opportunity to present and discuss their work with poster presentations. 
Keynote speakers:
  • Professor Karl Reichl (University of Bonn)
  • Professor Alison Wray (Cardiff University)
We welcome proposals for papers and posters on topics including, but not limited to:
  • The operation of formulaic language in situated performance / language production
  • Semantics, indexicality and functions of formulas
  • Synchronic and/or diachronic variation and adaptation
  • Formulas across registers and languages
  • Cognitive aspects or implications of formulaic language
  • The symbiosis of language, meter and/or paralinguistic features
  • Equivalence and difference in formulaic language of verbal art and other discourse
If you are interested in participating in this event with a poster or paper presentation, please send a title and 500-word abstract along with your name, affiliation and link to your webpage to mr.frog@helsinki.fi by 15 October 2016.  Please specify whether you prefer to participate with a paper or poster presentation, noting that the structure of the event significantly limits the number of paper presentations.  Papers should be planned for 20 min presentation to be followed by discussion.  Working texts will be required by 3 April 2017 for circulation among participants in advance.
For more information, please visit our webpage http://blogs.helsinki.fi/form-ula/ .
Formula: Units of Speech – ‘Words’ of Verbal Art is organized by Folklore Studies, University of Helsinki, and the Finnish Literature Society.

We look forward to seeing you in Helsinki!

Τετάρτη 3 Ιουνίου 2015

Call for papers – Anthropology and Folklore. A one-day seminar organized jointly by the RAI and the Folklore Society



I apologize for the inconvenience: 8 October isn't right. The correct information is:
- 8 October 2015: David Shankland is giving a Folklore Society lecture at The Warburg Institute, Woburn Square, London WC1H 0AB: "Folklore and Religion in Republican Turkey: Thoughts from Çatalhöyük and the Konya Plain". Link: http://folklore-society.com/events/folklore-and-religion-in-republican-t...
- The joint FLS/RAI symposium is planned for 16 October, at the RAI at 50 Fitzroy Street, London. All welcome to attend! Link: http://folklore-society.com/events/folklore-and-anthropology-1.

Παρασκευή 29 Μαΐου 2015

Call for papers – Anthropology and Folklore. A one-day seminar organized jointly by the RAI and the Folklore Society


 
 

8th October 2015
 
The relationship between anthropology and folklore is one that has fascinated researchers for more than a century. In the years before the Great War, this was illustrated in concrete fashion by the very close links which obtained between the Folklore Society and the RAI, so much so that many members of Council were Fellows of both institutions, and for some years we even shared a building. Institutionally, a separation appears to have emerged during the twentieth century as anthropology professionalized, but the intellectual overlaps remain, all the more so in today’s flexible, multi-disciplinary environment.
 
On 8th October, our two societies will once again revisit this question. The Folklore Society will provide three speakers, and the RAI three. Any Fellow who would like to offer a paper in this connection is cordially invited to submit a brief abstract and title to admin@therai.org.uk.
 
It should be emphasised that the topic may be treated very broadly, both from the historical and disciplinary point of view. Possible references in this regard are: Gazin-Schwartz and Holtorf Archaeology and Folklore (Routledge 1999), or Marian W. Smith ‘The Importance of Folklore Studies to Anthropology (Folklore Vol 70, March 1959; 300-312). The Folklore Society has also sent a link to a recent special issue of their journal, devoted to this subject: http://explore.tandfonline.com/page/ah/rfol-vsi-2015-folkore-and-anthropolog