Departmental news
'Following Living Things and Still Lifes in a Global World': introducing panel #1
In this post, Camilo Uribe Botta and Cheng He introduce the first panel for their conference on 'Following Living Things and Still Lifes in a Global World'. It includes four papers on different materials, which show each presenter’s way of approaching the ‘mobility’ of things and conceiving materials. This panel opens with two methodological discussions about objects and their meanings, followed by two discussions about the main ‘things’ of concern in this conference: plants and animals, as an opening to the following panels.
Interview with Helen Cowie, keynote for 'Following Living Things and Still Lifes in a Global World'
Professor Helen Cowie (University of York)is the keynote speaker for the 'Following Living Things and Still Lifes in a Global World' conference. Here, she talks with conference organisers Camilo Uribe Botta and Cheng He about her reseach on the history of animals.
Writing about web page https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/arts/hrc/confs/flt/
Call For Papers - The Supernatural: Sites of Suffering in the Pre-Modern World
A one-day interdisciplinary conference to be held 14th May 2022
Keynote Speaker: Professor Diane Purkiss
Call For Papers - Following Living Things and Still Lifes in a Global World
A one-day interdisciplinary conference to be held on Saturday 12th February 2022, University of Warwick
Keynote Speaker: Professor Helen Cowie, Professor of Early Modern History, University of York
Latest blog by Hannah Dennett and Liz Egan - Introducing our Keynote Speaker Dr Kate Smith
As the day of the conference draws near, we are delighted to introduce our keynote speaker Dr Kate Smith and hear more about her work and thoughts on the themes of the conference. Kate Smith is a Senior Lecturer in Eighteenth-Century History at the University of Birmingham. She completed her PhD at the University of Warwick in 2010, followed by a fellowship at the University of Milwaukee. She was a Research Fellow on the Leverhulme Trust-funded East India Company at Home 1757-1857 project before joining the University of Birmingham in 2014.
Latest blog by Hannah Dennett and Liz Egan - Introducing our Panels
Writing about web page https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/arts/hrc/confs/ceim/ahie_prov_prog_18.01.21.pdf
We are very excited to reveal the programme for the At Home in Empire conference, to be held on 13th March 2021. You can register to attend this one-day interdisciplinary conference HERE. We were overwhelmed by the number of fascinating responses to our Call for Papers and deciding on the final programme was one of the most difficult tasks of conference-planning to date. The panels, which vary across different spaces and periods, cover a range of topics related to the home, intimacy, and mobility, and we hope to see as many people as possible in March to hear these fascinating papers.
Latest blog by Hannah Dennett and Liz Egan - Top Tips for Conference Planning
In the third blog accompanying the At Home In Empire: Colonial Experiences of Intimacy and Mobility conference, Hannah Dennett and Liz Egan share their experience of planning a conference.
Latest blog by Hannah Dennett - Intimacy and Mobility in Empire: Black Experiences and the Metropole
In the second blog accompanying the At Home In Empire: Colonial Experiences of Intimacy and Mobility conference, Hannah Dennett examines how the records of the Foundling Hospital can highlight black experiences of intimacy and mobility in eighteenth-century London.
Latest blog by Liz Egan - At Home in Empire? Whiteness and Jamaica in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
To accompany the At Home in Empire: Colonial Experiences of Intimacy and Mobility conference, HRC doctoral fellows Hannah Dennett and Liz Egan will be writing a blog reflecting on their own research, the themes of the conference, and the practicalities of putting together an interdisciplinary event. In the first part of this series, Liz explores how the themes of home and mobility interact with her PhD research ‘Constructing and Challenging Creole Whiteness in Jamaica, 1865-1938’.