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This is a composite calendar page template pulling in feeds from events calendars in department and research centre sites. It is purely used as a tool to collect the event details before filtering through to a publicly-visible calendar filter page template. To remove or add a feed to this composite calendar, please contact the IT Services Web Team (webteam at warwick dot ac dot uk).

Wednesday, November 02, 2022

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ESRC Festival of Social Science

Runs from Saturday, October 22 to Thursday, November 10.

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Arts Faculty Study Cafe

At each Study Café an academic will be on hand to provide support and guidance with assessments, read excerpts of your work, help you to understand feedback and be a mock audience for presentations. You can also find out where to go for more specialist support, such as academic writing, digital proficiency or employability skills.

Join us at any time during the day by emailing Sarah.L.E.McCourt@warwick.ac.uk

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Research Seminar: 'Queering the Pitch?' Male Survivors and Conflict-Related Sexual Violence
R2.41 and MS Teams

Wednesday 2 November 2022, 12:45-1:45 pm, Room R2.41 (Ramphal Building) and online on MS Teams

Professor Chris Dolan from the Global Sustainable Development Department will be giving a talk about the multiple ways in which the phenomenon of sexual violence against men - and the realities experienced by the survivors produced by that violence – destabilise established understandings of how such violence works, who is victimized by it, and how and why it needs to be tackled. It then looks at how this destabilisation in turn challenges us to reconsider core assumptions about the relationship between data and intervention.

All Warwick staff, students, and alumni are welcome to attend. Register for the event.Link opens in a new window 

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Research Seminar: 'Queering the Pitch?' Male Survivors and Conflict-Related Sexual Violence
R2.41 and online via Teams

Research Seminar: 'Queering the Pitch?' Male Survivors and Conflict-Related Sexual Violence

Professor Chris Dolan from the Global Sustainable Development Department will be giving a talk about the multiple ways in which the phenomenon of sexual violence against men - and the realities experienced by the survivors produced by that violence – destabilise established understandings of how such violence works, who is victimized by it, and how and why it needs to be tackled. It then looks at how this destabilisation in turn challenges us to reconsider core assumptions about the relationship between data and intervention.

All Warwick staff, students, and alumni are welcome to attend. Register for the event.Link opens in a new window 

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Research Seminar: 'Queering the Pitch?' Male Survivors and Conflict-related Sexual Violence
Room R2.41 (second floor of the Ramphal Building), University of Warwick and online on MS Teams.
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Classics and Ancient History, Work in Progress Seminar. Alison Cooley: “Writings on the Wall from 1586 to the present day”
FAB 5.01
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Warwick Seminar for Interdisciplinary French Studies: Sophie Fuggle (NTU), ‘Toxic island ecologies: the multiple lives of an island called “Mother”’
Teams - see webpage ('More information') for link

France’s largest (overseas) department, French Guiana, is often misunderstood with multiple confusions existing around its location, size and topography. In the Anglo-American imaginary it is frequently conflated with Devil’s Island, the smallest of the Salvation Islands where Alfred Dreyfus was exiled for five years. Shortly before election to the presidency in 2017, Emmanuel Macron made the faux-pas of referring to the territory as ‘une île’. Nevertheless, French Guiana is framed by the multiple islands situated along its coastline and on the Oyapock and Maroni rivers which act as borders between neighbouring Brazil and Suriname. This paper considers the relationship of French Guiana as land mass and geopolitical space to its islands. The focus will be on a lesser-known island or islet, Ilet la Mère, the largest of the Iles de Remire located about 11km from Cayenne. The different phases of Ilet la Mère’s colonial and postcolonial histories will be set out with a view to demonstrating how the island plays an integral role in the ongoing perception and administration of French Guiana as colonial outpost and underexploited natural resource. A central thread will be the concept of ‘toxicity’ which, at different points in the island’s history, assumes a literal and metaphorical sense. The paper will draw on existing work on island studies and environmental humanities including, notably, the work of Elizabeth DeLoughrey and Malcolm Ferdinand’s Une Ecologie décoloniale.

Sophie Fuggle is Associate Professor of Postcolonial Studies and Cultural Heritage at Nottingham Trent University. She is author of Foucault/Paul: Subjects of Power (Palgrave, 2013) and is currently completing a monograph (under contract with Liverpool University Press) on the Camp des Milles memorial site. Her recent research also focuses on the cultural and ecological legacy of France’s overseas penal colonies and has been funded by the British Academy and AHRC. She has recently been awarded a British Academy small grant for a new project looking at the legacy of the Plan Vert and other post-war agricultural migration schemes in French Guiana.

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French Research Seminar - Sophie Fuggle (NTU)
Online

Wednesday 2nd November: Sophie Fuggle (NTU), ‘Toxic island ecologies: the multiple lives of an island called “Mother”’

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History Research seminar 'A slave mother and her sons: slavery and death in late nineteenth-century Century Brazil'
OC0.04

A slave mother and her sons: Slavery and Death in Late Nineteenth-Century Century Brazil

speaker: Maria Helena Machado (USP)

Discussant: Camillia Cowling

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History Research seminar, A Slave Mother and Her Children: Slavery and Death in late XIXth Century Brazil, Maria Helena Machado (USP)
OC0.04

speaker: Maria Helena Machado (USP)

chair: Laura Schwartz

discussant: Camillia Cowling

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Warwick Workshop for Interdisciplinary German Studies: Dr Yuliia Lysanets (Poltava State University), 'Metaphors and Metonymies in Medical Discourse as a Challenge for Cross-Cultural Communication'
FAB2.32

In cooperation with TTS. Please click here for the abstract.

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