Medical Prognosis in the Middle Ages

in Academic Service - Upcoming by on May 26th, 2012

 

Event Date: 26 May 2012
Royal Holloway, University of London
11 Bedford Sq
London WC1E 6DP

The Department of History Royal Holloway University of London presents:

Medical Prognosis in the Middle Ages

This is the first gathering of this kind of experts on medieval medical prognosis. While scholarly work has been carried out on certain examples of the wide range of medical prognostics extant from the Middle Ages, there has to date been no gathering of experts in the field, nor any focused collection of papers devoted to this topic.

Medical prognostics ranged from high-end, learned methods, such as the Hippocratic-Galenic ‘Signs of Death’, astrological predictions, uroscopy and sphygmology (pulse-reading), to ‘occult’ practices, such as divination (the interpretation of signs) and ritual magic, through to ‘popular’ experiments, such as the practice of throwing a piece of lard at a dog and working out the fate of the patient depending on the dog’s reaction. Therefore, prognosis was far from the territory of the educated physician alone. It was carried out by people from a broad range of social backgrounds.

As well as being experts in the field, the speakers chosen for the day work on a broad range of topics and all are expert in the relevant manuscripts. The keynote speaker, Charles Burnett of the Warburg Institute, has worked on a vast array of Latin, Greek and Arabic prognostic devices, most notably astrology and divination; Linda Erhsam Voigts of the University of Missouri is an expert in Middle English scientific texts and will present on Bernard de Gordon’s De prognosticatione; Peter Jones of Trinity College, Cambridge will give a paper on fifteenth-century practitioners’ use of prognostics; Tess Tavormina, Professor of English at Michigan State University, who has published widely on medicine in medieval English literature, will present on the prognostic content of Middle English uroscopies;  Sandor Chardonnens, who has worked on Anglo-Saxon prognostics, will turn his attention to the use of late medieval English astrological manuscripts; and Luke Demaitre of the University of Virginia, who has researched many aspects of medieval medicine, including learned prognosis, will present on Bernard de Gordon’s translation of a geomantic treatise.

As well as these eminent speakers, Sophie Page and Bill MacLehose, both of UCL, will chair two of the day’s panels. Sophie works on magic, astrology and natural philosophy, and Bill on medieval medicine. Their contribution to the day will be invaluable.

The two organisers will also be involved in presenting on the day – Jo Edge will give a paper on her PhD research into The Sphere of Life and Death in late medieval England, and Peregrine Horden will offer closing remarks

Programme:

10.00         Welcome and registration

10.30    Keynote address:

Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute) – Medical and Astrological Prognosis in Abu Ma’shar

11.15        Tea and coffee

11.30    Panel 1: Astrology

László Sándor Chardonnens (Radboud University Nijmegen) – The Sygne of Man with Pottes’ and other Zodiacal Names in the Vernacular in Medieval English Medicine

Glen M. Cooper (Brigham Young University) – The Possibility of a Scientific Medical Prognosis: Medicine and Astrology in Four Medieval Thinkers

12.30        Lunch

1.30    Panel 2: Uroscopy

Laurence Moulinier-Brogi (University Lumière Lyon 2) – William the Englishman’s De urina non visa and its fortune

Tess Tavormina (Michigan State University) – Prognosis v. Diagnosis in Middle English Uroscopic Texts

2.30    Panel 3: Divination

Jo Edge (RHUL) – The medical context of the Sphere of Life and Death in late medieval England

Luke Demaitre (University of Virginia)  – Archanum de reductione geomancie ad orbem: Another Side of Bernard de Gordon?

3.30    Tea and coffee

3.45    Panel 4: Prognosis and the English Medical Practitioner

Linda Voigts (University of Missouri-Kansas City) – Bernard of Gordon’s schort & profitable tretis vpon Þe pronostikis: A useful survey of ways to predict the outcome of illness

Peter Murray Jones (King’s College Cambridge) – Practitioners and Prognosis in the Later Middle Ages

4.45    Round table

5.30    Drinks reception

 

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Seeing and Being Seen: Postcolonial Visual Culture and Performance

in Academic Service - Upcoming by on May 25th, 2012

Event Date: 25 May 2012
MY120 Avenue Campus
University of Northampton
NN2 6JD

Seeing and Being Seen: Postcolonial Visual Culture and Performance

The University of Northampton is proud to present an exciting day of postcolonial performance, poetry and visual culture at Avenue Campus, School of the Arts.

The Seeing and Being Seen: Postcolonial Visual Culture and Performance Symposium will be convening at 10:30 am and starting at 11:00am, the day will begin with the unique opportunity of hearing Karthika Naїr and Slam poet Polarbear discussing their innovative and prestigious 2012 Laurence Olivier award winning dance production, ‘Desh’ before moving on to a presentation by performance artists, Dr Mark James Hamilton and Rosanna Raymond.

Themes relating to postcolonial cinema, theatre and visual culture will also be addressed by among others, Professors Dominic Alessio and Patrick Williams as well as by exciting upcoming scholars, Arifani Moyo (Royal Holloway, University of London) and Anna Maria Everding (University of Northampton).

The day will end on an upbeat note with Polarbear performing a selection of his Slam Poetry.

Programme:

10:30 – 11:00

Arrival and Coffee

11:00 – 12:00

Kathrika Nair and Polarbear - The Many Languages of Desh

12:00 – 1:00

Dr Mark Hamilton and Rosanna Raymond – X-ova: Artifacts, Embodiment and Sensual Spaces

1:00 – 2:00

Lunch

2:00 – 3:30

Arifani Moyo – Place Imaging in South African Dance-Musical Theatre

Professor Dominic Alessio (co-author Kristen Meredith) – Decolonising James Cameron’s Pandora: Imperial history and Science fiction

Anna Maria Everding – Cinema Beyond Hollywood: Postcolonial Cinema Revisited

3.30 – 3.50

Tea and Coffee

3.50 – 4.45

Professor Patrick WilliamsPerforming Hope: The Films of Flora Gomes

4.45 – 5.15

Slam Poetry
Polarbear

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Understanding Equality

in Academic Service - Upcoming by on May 25th, 2012

Event Date: 25 May 2012
Senate House
Room S349
University of London
Malet Street
London WC1E 7HU

The Institute of Philosophy presents

Understanding Equality

PROGRAMME:

10.00 Registration

10.15 Joseph Raz (Columbia & King’s College London) – Equality: Political not Philosophical

11.45 Coffee

12.00 Veronique Munoz-Darde (UCL & Berkeley) – All the Fun in the Fair: The Elusive Case of Equality

1.30 Lunch (own arrangements)

2.30 Niko Kolodny (Berkeley) – Rule Over None: Social Equality and the Value of Democracy

4.00 Tea

4.30-6.00 Sam Scheffler (NYU) – The Practice of Equality

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Marina Warner – What’s Hecuba to him?: Terror, pity and the matter of Troy (from Homer to Alice Oswald)

in Academic Service - Upcoming by on May 23rd, 2012

Event Date: 23 May 2012
Windsor Building WIN 1-04
Royal Holloway
Egham, Surrey
TW20 0EX

 

The Humanities and Arts Research Centre (HARC) at
 Royal Holloway University of London presents:

What’s Hecuba to him?: Terror, pity and the matter of Troy (from Homer to Alice Oswald)

Professor Marina Warner (Essex) – What’s Hecuba to him?: Terror, pity and the matter of Troy (from Homer to Alice Oswald)

When the First Player dissolves in tears as he recites scenes from the fall of Troy, Hamlet exclaims at the intensity of the actor’s identification, by contrast with his own frozen feelings and incapacity. Hecuba’s tragedy becomes the emblem of empathy, produced more intensely by dramatic representation than by real life.
Recent, near obsessive returns to the Iliad and the matter of Troy, refract current conflicts, and these renderings and revisionings act upon the emotions and attitudes of the spectator and the reader. Marina Warner will explore the way this return to the most ancient war in literature, especially in the work of women writers and artists, makes a claim for the function of art and realigns the question of catharsis.

Marina Warner is Professor in the Department of Literature, Film and Theatre Studies at the University of Essex, and currently visiting professor at NYU Abu Dhabi. She is a writer of fiction, criticism and history, and her many publications include studies of art, myths, symbols and fairy tales, as well as novels and short stories. She is the author of (among others): Alone of All Her Sex: The Myth and the Cult of the Virgin Mary (1976) a provocative and highly influential study of Roman Catholic adoration of the Virgin Mary; Monuments & Maidens: The Allegory of the Female Form (1985); Managing Monsters: Six Myths of Our Time (Reith Lectures) (1994); No Go the Bogey-man: Scaring, Lulling and Making Mock (1998), a study of the male terror figure from ancient myth and folklore to modern obsessions; Signs & Wonders: Essays on Literature and Culture (2003); and Phantasmagoria (2006), which traces the ways in which ‘the spirit’ has been represented across different mediums, from waxworks to cinema. Professor Warner was elected a Fellow of the (2006), which traces the ways in which ‘the spirit’ has been represented across different mediums, from waxworks to cinema. Professor Warner was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature| in 1984 and of the British Academy in 2005. In 2008 she was awarded a CBE for services to literature, and is currently President of the British Comparative Literature Association. Her most recent book, Stranger Magic: Charmed States & The Arabian Nights, published by Chatto & Windus in 2011, is a groundbreaking study that shows how magic helped to create the modern world, and how it is still deeply inscribed in the way we think today.

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Olivia Vazquez-Medina – Strolling through London in Contemporary Mexican literature: Margo Glantz and Fernando del Paso

in Academic Service - Upcoming by on May 23rd, 2012

Event Date 9 May 2012
Arts Building ABG24
Royal Holloway University of London

 

School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures

presents

‘The Flâneur’

Research Seminars in Comparative Literature and Culture
2011-12

 

Seminar 6

Dr Olivia Vazquez-Medina (SMLLC, RHUL):  Strolling through London in Contemporary Mexican literature: Margo Glantz and Fernando del Paso

 

<<back to seminar series page>>

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Speculating on Slums

in Academic Service - Upcoming by on May 22nd, 2012

......

Event Date 22 – 23 May 2012
Royal Holloway University of London
11 Bedford Sq
London WC1E 6DP

The Department of Geography at Royal Holloway University of London presents:

Speculating on Slums

 

....

This two day workshop in May 2012 in Bedford Square, London will examine the role played by global financial investments in land markets and globalised networks of capital in slums of developing countries.  It questions some of the underlying assumptions through which informal housing in the global South has been understood, gives insights into new emerging forms of marginality, highlights contradictory, complex tensions that emerge for donors, governments, and NGOs in relation to the urban poor.  The workshop draws together interdisciplinary intellectual debates, key conceptual, political and policy lessons which will enable a new research agenda for work in informal housing in the global South.  Leading academic scholars working on informal housing issues and NGO practitioners will be the main selective participants in the workshop.

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PROGRAMME FOR WORKSHOP

DAY ONE  -  Tuesday May 22nd

Registration: 8.45am onwards

Session 1: (9.30-11am) Rent Theory

Anne Haila, University of Helsinki
Rent theory and property rights theory: two approaches to the global enclosure movement

Eric Clarke and Anders Lund Hansen, Lund University
Financialization, rescaling rent gaps and land grabbing

Coffee Break (11-11.30am)

Session 2: (11.30- 1pm) Perspectives from the South

Sue Parnell, University of Cape Town
Understanding pathways for formalisation of slum markets

David Satterthwaite, International Institute for Environment and Development IIED
Some notes about the housing sub-markets used by those with limited incomes in urban areas in Africa, Asia and Latin America

Sunil Kumar, London School of Economics
Tbc

Lunch Break (1-2.30pm)

Session 3: (2.30 – 4.00pm) NGO Perspectives

Pippa Scott Consultant
Sanitation and Security of Tenure

Timeyin Uwejamomere, Senior Policy Analyst (Urban), WaterAid
Water for the urban poor: Supporting utilities to invest in pro-poor extensions

Lucy Stevens, Practical Action, International Co-ordinator, Access to Services Programme
Tbc

4.30-5.30 End of day discussions

6:30pm Dinner at TAS, 22 Bloomsbury Street, London WC1B 3QJ

DAY TWO – Wednesday May 23rd

Session 4: (9:30-11am) – Rent Theory

Louis Moreno, University College London
The Urban Rent-Seeking Question: commercial real estate, financial intermediation and collective consumption in British cities.

Michael Edwards, University College London
Some things we can do with rent

Coffee Break (11-11.30am)

Session 5: (11.30-1pm) – Displacement

Radha D’Souza, University of Westminster
Coming a Full Circle? Neo-liberalism, the ‘Land Question’ and the Vanishing Imagination of the Law

Pushpa Arabindoo, Department of Geography, University College London
The spatial (il)logic of slum resettlement sites in Chennai

Shaun Smith, Royal Holloway, University of London
Ideologies and Nature in the Phenomenon of Evictions

Lunch Break (1-2pm)

Session 6: (2-3:30pm) Concluding Session

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Branka Arsic and David Wills

in Academic Service - Upcoming by on May 22nd, 2012

 

Event Date: 22 May 2012
Swedenborg Hall
20-21 Bloomsbury Way,
London, WC1A 2TH

THE LONDON GRADUATE SCHOOL
Presents

Dr Branka Arsic (SUNY Albany) – Memorial Life: Thoreau, Freud and Benjamin on Nature in Mourning

Professor David Wills (SUNY Albany) – Bloodless Coup: Love in the Heart of Technology

Branka Arsic specialises in nineteenth-century literature and culture, and early American literature. She is the author of On Leaving: A Reading in Emerson (Harvard UP, 2010), and a book on Melville entitled Passive Constitutions or 7½ Times Bartleby (StanfordUP, 2007). She has co-edited (with Cary Wolfe) a collection of essays on Emerson, entitled The Other Emerson: New Approaches, Divergent Paths (University of Minnesota Press, 2010).

David Wills has written widely on literary theory, especially the work of Jacques Derrida, film theory, and comparative literature. He has translated numerous texts by Jacques Derrida including The Gift of Death (Chicago UP, 1995) and The Animal That Therefore I Am (Fordham UP, 2008) and is the author of several books including Prosthesis (Stanford UP, 1995) and Dorsality: Thinking Back Through Technology and Politics (U of Minnesota Press, 2008).

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Paul Lawrence Rose – Wagner: Antisemitism in Music

in Academic Service - Upcoming by on May 22nd, 2012

Event Date: 22 May  2012
Room B36
Birkbeck Main Building
Birkbeck, University of London,
London WC1E 7HX

Making History: Archives, Artefacts and Interpreting the Past
lecture series in partnership with the Wiener Library

 Professor Paul Lawrence Rose (Mitrani Professor of Jewish Studies and Professor of European History, The Pennsylvania State University) – Wagner: -Antisemitism in Music

Defenders of Wagner insist that while he may have been antisemitic in his writings, most notoriously in his essay, Jewishness in Music, he never allowed antisemitism to contaminate his operas. In recent years this claim has come under scrutiny.  It has been shown that, dramatically, the plots of Wagner’s operas depict an antisemitic vision of the world – one subjected to a “Jewish” system of capitalism, finance, lovelessness, domination, war and power. Moreover, several of the characters can be shown to embody these “Jewish” traits in their language, behaviour and appearance, even if they are not defined formally as “Jews”. Currently, the cutting-edge of debate is over the idea that in a purely musical form Wagner has inserted antisemitism into his operas.

In this illustrated lecture, Professor Rose will explore these arguments, giving special attention to the thorniest problem, that of Wagner’s use of technical musical devices to impregnate his operas with antisemitism. Some of these devices would have been recognizable to the audiences of his time, others are more subtle and difficult to pinpoint even now. Video clips from Rheingold, Siegfried, Tristan, Meistersinger, and Parsifal will demonstrate how Wagner used techniques of parody and transformation to discredit the “Jewish music” of Meyerbeer and others.

Professor Rose is Director of the Center for Research on Antisemitism at The Pennsylvania State University. He is author of Wagner: Race and Revolution (Faber and Faber, 1992) and is currently writing a further book on Wagner, examining antisemitism and the parodies of Jewish music in his operas, due to be published in 2013.

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Michael Thompson – You and I

in Academic Service - Upcoming by on May 21st, 2012

Event Date: 21May 2012
Senate House
University of London
London WC1E 7HU

The Aristotelian Society presents:

Professor Michael Thompson (University of Pittsburgh) – You and I

Michael Thompson received his PhD in Philosophy at UCLA, where he was a student of Philippa Foot. He is a Professor at the University of Pittsburgh, and was formerly an Assistant Professor at UCLA. He is the author of Life and Action (Harvard University Press 2008, 2012; Suhrkamp 2011) and “What is it to Wrong Someone?” in Reason and Value, ed. Wallace et al. (O.U.P. 2006).

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The History of Pain without Lesion in the Mid to Late 19th Century West

in Academic Service - Upcoming by on May 19th, 2012

Event date: 19 May 2012

Room 416,  Birkbeck
University of London
Malet Street, Bloomsbury
London WC1E 7HX

The Birkbeck Pain Project & Birkbeck Institute for the Humanities present:

The History of Pain without Lesion in the Mid to Late 19th Century West

Organised by Visiting Fellow to the Birkbeck Pain Project Daniel S. Goldberg (East Carolina University, U.S.),

Much work in the history of medicine and science has touched on experiences of pain in the modern era. Yet little scholarship focuses on prevailing attitudes, practices, and beliefs among either lay or professional therapeutic communities regarding pain without lesion.

This workshop will help to fill the gap. We seek to generate discussion and exchange knowledge around the social, cultural, and medical influences of what we might now refer to as chronic pain sufferers.

Speakers

Dr Daniel S. Goldberg

Dr Andrew Hodgkiss (Consultant Liaison Psychiatrist)

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