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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20211028T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20211028T180000
DTSTAMP:20260502T060109
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UID:22442-1635440400-1635444000@research.reading.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Visualising the Database: Early Modern Women’s Complaint Poetry Index
DESCRIPTION:The Centre for Book Cultures and Publishing (CBCP) is pleased to host this talk by Michelle O’Callaghan and Jake Arthur introducing the new online database of Early Modern Women’s Complaint Poetry \nThis online event is free and open to all. Please register your interest to receive the Zoom link here: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/181636629047 \nMichelle O’Callaghan is Professor of Early Modern Literature at the University of Reading. Her most recent book Crafting Poetry Anthologies in Renaissance England: Early Modern Cultures of Recreation (Cambridge\, 2020) builds on her digital edition\, Verse Miscellanies Online\, co-edited with Alice Eardley\, and is a study of the craft of making printed poetry anthologies published in the second half of the sixteenth century in England\, showing how these anthologies helped to shape recreational cultures within the nation’s households\, drawing men and women together from across the social classes. \nJake Arthur is a DPhil candidate and Clarendon Scholar at Oxford University. His thesis examines early modern women’s work in translation and paraphrase and seeks to reclaim the expressive and intellectual possibilities of ‘derivative’ works. The preliminary title of the thesis is ‘“The stuffe not ours”: the work of derivation in women’s writing\, 1560–c.1664’. In collaboration with Sarah C. E. Ross\, he is co-editor of the poetry section of the forthcoming Palgrave Encyclopaedia of Early Modern Women’s Writing. With Rosalind Smith\, he has co-authored a chapter in Early Modern Women and Complaint: Gender\, Form and Politics (2020) which considers the implications of digital resources for the traditional first-line index in relation to early modern women’s complaint poetry. He works as a researcher on the ARC funded project Marginalia and the Early Modern Woman Writer\, and on the ARC and Marsden funded project\, Woe is She: Early Modern Women and the Poetry of Complaint.
URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/research-blog/event/visualising-the-database-early-modern-womens-complaint-poetry-index/
LOCATION:Online event
CATEGORIES:Heritage & Creativity
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20211028T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20211028T181500
DTSTAMP:20260502T060109
CREATED:20211020T104236Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211020T104236Z
UID:22502-1635444000-1635444900@research.reading.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Executive Freedom in Descartes
DESCRIPTION:Sir Anthony Kenny: Executive Freedom in Descartes  \nPhilosophy Department Cottingham Lecture \nSir Anthony Kenny was born in Liverpool in 1931 and was educated at Upholland College and the Pontifical Gregorian University. He was ordained priest in 1955 but returned to the lay state in 1963. Since then he has lived in Oxford. From 1963 to 1989 he was at Balliol College\, Oxford\, first as Fellow and Tutor in Philosophy\, and then as Master of the College. Subsequently he became Warden of Rhodes House\, President of the British Academy\, and Chair of the Board of the British Library. He is the author of some forty books on philosophy and history\, including the four volume New History of Western Philosophy published by Oxford University Press. \nThe Inaugural Cottingham Lecture is the first in an annual lecture series in honour of John Cottingham\, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the University of Reading. Professor Cottingham was for many years Head of Department and then Director of Research and Graduate Studies in the Department. He has published over thirty books on early-modern philosophy\, moral philosophy and the philosophy of religion. From 1993-2012 he was editor of the journal Ratio. He is an Honorary Fellow of St John’s College\, Oxford. \n 
URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/research-blog/event/executive-freedom-in-descartes/
LOCATION:Online event
CATEGORIES:Heritage & Creativity
ORGANIZER;CN="Professor%20David%20Oderberg":MAILTO:d.s.oderberg@reading.ac.uk
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