Join us on Friday afternoons 1-2.30pm (UK) for all things early modern!
This semester we have another fantastic lineup of speakers for our ‘NEMN Seminar Series‘ (see full schedule below) and as if that wasn’t enough we also have 3 exciting new ‘Works in Progress‘ sessions (more details to come) …
All events will take place on Zoom and the links will be sent to attendees in advance. Register for our seminars via Eventbrite.
Our events all take place during work hours to try and ensure they are more accessible. We opted to schedule them around lunchtime so grab your lunch, sign in and enjoy a whole host of exciting new early modern research!
However, we do appreciate that work schedules and/or time zones might make it difficult to attend from time to time and so we will record the papers ( only the sessions where the speaker has given permission.)
Recording details: We ask that all attendees register via Eventbrite and we will then provide a closed link to the recording via email to anyone who has registered and this will be available to watch for 2 weeks.
SEMESTER 2 SCHEDULE:
11th February: Abel Alves, Ball State University | The Monkey’s Jug and the Elephant’s Caldron: Abandon and Restraint in the Sixteenth-Century Iberian Imperial World
25th February: Lia Costiner, Harvard University | New Digital Techniques for the Study of Italian Renaissance Art
11th March: David Wilson, University of Strathclyde | Controlling the Littoral: Contact, Conflict, and Collaboration in Coastal Spaces across the Atlantic and Indian Oceans
25th March: Early Modern Works in Progress | Session 1
8th April: Early Modern Works in Progress | Session 2 **
29th April: Peggy Brunache, University of Glasgow | Reading against the Grain: A Practice of Theory-building, Black agency, and the Archives of Slavery
13th May: Elizabeth Ewan, University of Guelph | Women, Words and Deeds in Early Modern Scottish Towns: Examining Interpersonal Assault
27th May: Early Modern Works in Progress | Session 3
10th June: Laura Sangha, University of Exeter | Cultural History, Methodology and Popular Protestantism in England’s Long Reformation **
** please note the date changes. Laura Sangha will now give a paper on 10th June and one further works-in-progress session has been scheduled for 8th April.
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