Public Lectures 2011

Page 1

Winter/spring 2011

www.hull.ac.uk

2369~Public Lectures booklet 2011~Mel

Public lectures


Information

All lectures are free except where otherwise stated.

Access for disabled visitors Most areas of the University campuses are accessible. Reserved parking bays may be arranged. Please discuss your requirements in advance by calling 01482 466326.

Parking and travel Hull Campus Parking on campus is free after 6 pm. Scarborough Campus Parking is free after 5.15 pm. If you arrive for an event starting before this time please report to reception for a permit.

Mailing list To join our mailing list and be updated about events, please email k.slater@hull.ac.uk or call 01482 466326.

Disclaimer The information in this booklet is subject to change and review. Every effort is made to ensure details are accurate at time of publication but the University of Hull cannot accept liability for errors or omissions.

The Spring 2011 Arts Programme is out now Don’t miss out on this spring’s one-stop guide featuring all of the University’s arts and cultural offerings, including drama productions, concerts, exhibitions and literary events.

Podcasts of public lectures To receive your free copy of the Arts Programme please email iHull (Institute for Creativity and Innovation) at ihull@hull.ac.uk or call 01482 462045.

Front cover © iStockphoto.com/GiorgioMagini Colourful ceramic mosaic by Gaudì, Barcelona


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Public lectures/seminars/events Centre for Security Studies Classical Association, Hull and District Branch East Riding Archaeological Society Engineering lectures Ferens Fine Art Public Lectures Hull and District Theological Society Hull Geological Society Inaugural lectures Jay Appleton Biennial Public Lecture Mary Wollstonecraft Lecture Music research seminars Centre for British Politics – Norton Lecture Physical Sciences seminars Reading the Vulnerable Body seminar series Shakespeare Lecture Venn Lecture Victorian Lecture Wilberforce Institute (WISE) public lectures Religious services Public lectures at Scarborough

7 8 9 10 12 14 15 17 20 21 22 23 24 25 27 28 29 30 31 32

Campus maps

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Further information

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Contents

At a glance

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Key Lectures Seminars Religious services 1

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At a glance

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Date

Event

Venue

27 Jan

WISE public lecture: ‘The Key to India’: Southern Africa, Troop Movements and Britain’s Indian Ocean World, 1795–1820

WISE, Oriel Chambers, 27 High Street, Hull, HU1 1NE

Start time

Enquiries

Page

4.30 pm

01482 305176

30

3 Feb

Ferens Fine Art Lecture: El Greco: The Greek of Toledo

Middleton Hall, Hull Campus

6 pm

01482 464577

12

15 Feb

Centre for Security Studies: The Death of Counter-Insurgency

Council Room, Venn Building, Hull Campus

5.30 pm

01482 462071

7

7 Feb

Inaugural lecture: More Malignant than Cancer – The Great Medical Success Story of the Last 30 Years

Middleton Hall, Hull Campus

6 pm

01482 466326

17

7 Feb

Centre for British Politics – Norton Lecture: The Politics of England

Council Chamber, Venn Building, Hull Campus

6 pm

01482 465800

23

8 Feb

Music research seminar: Timbre in (Popular) Music

Larkin Building, L201, Hull Campus

4.15 pm

a.binns@hull.ac.uk

22

16 Feb

Hull and District Theological Society: Decoding the Florentine Frescoes: Hidden Religious Meanings in the Church of San Lorenzo

Seminar Room, Graduate School, Hull Campus

7.30 pm

01482 466548

14

16 Feb

Physical Sciences seminar: Bio-inspired Materials for Biosensing and Regenerative Medicine

Lecture Theatre A, Department of Chemistry, Hull Campus

4.15 pm

01482 465027

24

16 Feb

Reading the Vulnerable Body: Life and Temporality in Sickness Care

Dearne Meeting Room, Dearne Building, Hull Campus

5.15 pm

01482 46????

25

16 Feb

East Riding Archaeological Society: The Monastic Estates of the Gilbertine Priory of Watton, East Yorkshire

S1, Wilberforce Building, Hull Campus

7.30 pm

01482 465543

9

17 Feb

WISE public lecture: The Hobgoblins of the Middle Passage: The Cape and the Transatlantic Slave Trade

WISE, Oriel Chambers, 27 High Street, Hull, HU1 1NE

4.30 pm

01482 305176

30

17 Feb

Hull Geological Society: The Chalk and Climate Change: The Greenhouse Connection

Department of Geography, Hull Campus

7.30 pm

01482 346784

15

17 Feb

Ferens Fine Art Lecture: Velasquez

Middleton Hall, Hull Campus

6 pm

01482 464577

12

17 Feb

Ferens Fine Art Lecture: title tbc

Middleton Hall, Hull Campus

6 pm

01482 464577

12

17 Feb

Classical Association: The Ship of State

Danish Church, Osborne Street, Hull, HU1 2PN

7.30 pm

01482 470119

8

21 Feb

The Mary Wollstonecraft Lecture: Professor Luce IrigarayThe Ethical Gesture towards the Other

Allam Lecture Theatre, Esk Building, Hull Campus

6 pm

01482 465995

21

21 Feb

Inaugural lecture: ‘What Will I Do if It Doesn’t Work?’ – Consumers, Cross-Border Shopping and the Law

Middleton Hall, Hull Campus

6 pm

01482 466326

18

22 Feb

Music research seminar: Jazz in Paris

Larkin Building, L201, Hull Campus

4.15 pm

a.binns@hull.ac.uk

22

24 Feb

Ferens Fine Art Lecture: Salvador Dali's Metamorphosis of Narcissus

Middleton Hall, Hull Campus

6 pm

01482 464577

12

3 March

Ferens Fine Art Lecture: Spanish Cinema

Middleton Hall, Hull Campus

6 pm

01482 464577

12

4 March

Music research seminar: Mahler’s Fourth Symphony in Performance

Larkin Building, L201, Hull Campus

3 pm

a.binns@hull.ac.uk

22

8 March

Founder’s Day Service

University Chapel, Middleton Hall, Hull Campus

6 pm

01482 466326

31

9 March

Reading the Vulnerable Body: Neurophenomenology: First-Person Experiences of Changed Bodies and Body Image after Cancer or Trauma

Dearne Meeting Room, Dearne Building, Hull Campus

5.15 pm

01482 46????

25 3


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Date

Event

Venue

Start time

Enquiries

Page

10 March

Classical Association: Tacitus and Varieties of Nationalism in Reformation Germany

Lecture Room, Graduate School, Hull Campus

7.30 pm

01482 470119

8

15 March

Music research seminar: Patrick Hadley’s Symphonic Ballad The Trees So High: The Idea of the Folk Song Symphony in Early-20th-Century British Music

Larkin Building, L201, Hull Campus

4.15 pm

a.binns@hull.ac.uk

22

15 March

Engineering lecture: Amendment to the 17th Edition Wiring Regulations

Department of Engineering, Robert Blackburn Building, Hull Campus

7 pm

01482 465818

10

16 March

Reading the Vulnerable Body: Reading and Health

Dearne Meeting Room, Dearne Building, Hull Campus

5.15 pm

01482 465618

26

16 March

East Riding Archaeological Society: Death Brought Us Together: Urns, Cooking Pots and the Early Anglo-Saxon Cremation Cemeteries of North Lincolnshire

S1, Wilberforce Building, Hull Campus

7.30 pm

01482 465543

9

17 March

Hull Geological Society: Presidential Address by Stuart Jones and the AGM

Department of Geography, Hull Campus

7.30 pm

01482 346784

15

23 March

Jay Appleton Biennial Public Lecture: The Art of Landscape

Leslie Downs Lecture Theatre, Ferens Building, Hull Campus

6.15 pm

01482 465352

20

24 March

WISE public lecture: Where’s the Harm in That? – Immigration Enforcement, Trafficking and the Protection of Migrants’ Rights

WISE, Oriel Chambers, 27 High Street, Hull, HU1 1NE

4.30 pm

01482 305176

30

25 March

Annual Victorian Lecture: The Late-Victorian ‘New Man’ and the Millennial ‘Neo-Man’

Lindsey Suite, Staff House, Hull Campus

6 pm

a.heilmann@hull.ac.uk

29

28 March

Annual Venn Lecture: Making and Hearing Sound

Middleton Hall, Hull Campus

6 pm

01482 465128

28

30 March

Reading the Vulnerable Body: The Lived Body: A Medical Topic?

Dearne Meeting Room, Dearne Building, Hull Campus

5.15 pm

01482 46????

26

31 March

Engineering lecture: The Design and Testing of the Neptune Proteus Tidal Stream Power Device

Department of Engineering, Robert Blackburn Building, Hull Campus

7 pm

01482 465654

10

4 April

Inaugural lecture: How Special was the Anglo-American ‘Special Relationship’ in the Middle East, 1945–72?

Middleton Hall, Hull Campus

6 pm

01482 466326

19

5 April

Annual Shakespeare Lecture: No Holds Bard: Empathy and Cruelty in Directing Shakespeare’s Comedies

The Lindsey Suite, Staff House, Hull Campus

6 pm

01482 465309

27

20 April

East Riding Archaeological Society: Curses, Collapsed Walls and Lost Churches: Recent Work in Roman and Medieval Leicester

S1, Wilberforce Building, Hull Campus

7.30 pm

01482 465543

9

4 May

Reading the Vulnerable Body: Neurasthenia, Masculinity and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome in the Late 19th Century

Dearne Meeting Room, Dearne Building, Hull Campus

5.15 pm

01482 46????

26

10 May

Engineering lecture: Project Icarus – Space Plane

Department of Engineering, Robert Blackburn Building, Hull Campus

7 pm

01482 465818

11

25 May

Hull and District Theological Society: Institutional Religion in a Non-institutional Age

Seminar Room, Graduate School, Hull Campus

8 pm

01482 466548

14

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Monday 15 February 2011 Council Room, Venn Building, Hull Campus, 5.30 pm Professor Clive Jones, Professor of International Studies and Middle East Studies, University of Leeds Further information c.kennedy-pipe@hull.ac.uk: 01482 462071

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Centre for Security Studies

The Death of Counter-Insurgency

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The Ship of State Thursday 17 February 2011 Danish Church, Osborne Street, Hull, HU1 2PN, 7.30 pm Joint lecture with the Hull Branch of the Historical Association Dr Roger Brock, University of Leeds Roger Brock has written widely on Greek history and literature and is at present working on a book on Greek Political Imagery from Homer to Aristotle.

Tacitus and Varieties of Nationalism in Reformation Germany Thursday 10 March 2011 Lecture Room, Graduate School, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm

The Monastic Estates of the Gilbertine Priory of Watton, East Yorkshire Wednesday 16 February 2011 S1, Wilberforce Building, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm Mike Stephenson, Worcester College of Technology

Death Brought Us Together: Urns, Cooking Pots and the Early Anglo-Saxon Cremation Cemeteries of North Lincolnshire Wednesday 16 March 2011 S1, Wilberforce Building, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm Joint lecture with the Roman Society Gareth Perry, University of SheďŹƒeld

David Bagchi, University of Hull David Bagchi is a Senior Lecturer in Ecclesiastical History at the University of Hull, specialising in the history and thought of the Reformation. He is currently working on books about the concept of heresy in the Reformation period and the media revolution in early modern Europe. Further information Margaret Nicholson: 17 Sycamore Court, Park Grove, Hull, HU5 2UL, m.nicholson@hull.ac.uk, 01482 470119

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Curses, Collapsed Walls and Lost Churches: Recent Work in Roman and Medieval Leicester Wednesday 20 April 2011 S1, Wilberforce Building, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm (AGM followed by lecture) Dr Nick Cooper, University of Leicester Archaeological Services Further information Helen Fenwick: h.fenwick@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465543

East Riding Archaeological Society

Classical Association

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Engineering lectures

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Amendment to the 17th Edition Wiring Regulations (BS7671: 2008) Tuesday 15 March 2011 Department of Engineering, Robert Blackburn Building, Hull Campus, 7 pm The BS7671 (17th Edition) wiring regulations were originally issued back in 2008, and the first amendment to the regulations is now due for publication in July 2011. In this lecture, Mark Coles, a senior engineer from the Institute of Engineering and Technology, will discuss the technical aspects of this first amendment. Further information Dr Philip Rubini, Department of Engineering: p.a.rubini@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465818 Sponsored by the Institute of Engineering and Technology

The Design and Testing of the Neptune Proteus Tidal Stream Power Device Thursday 31 March 2011 Department of Engineering, Robert Blackburn Building, Hull Campus, 7 pm Professor Jack Hardisty will give an introduction to the background and future of the Neptune Proteus Tidal Stream Power Device. Alternative energy sources for electricity generation are at the forefront of governmental policy. In the UK the Government has committed us to meeting a target of 10% of energy generation from renewable sources by 2010 and 20% by 2020 (DTI, July 2006). Much of this renewable energy so far has been derived from wind power since the technology is now well advanced and proven. Marine renewable energy is available in the waves and tidal currents of the coastal water around our shores. It is clean and accessible with the right technology. Neptune Renewable Energy Ltd (NREL) is currently developing two second-generation, commercially focused technologies to exploit both tidal and wave resources. These are the Neptune Proteus Tidal Stream Power Device and the Neptune Triton, a shallow water-wave power device.

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NREL has built a full-scale Proteus Demonstrator which was brought to the Humber in July 2010. Upon successful completion of trials with the Demonstrator, the world’s first tidal stream power array, consisting of advanced NP1500s, will be built and deployed during 2011–12. Further information Andrew Smith, Engineering Innovation Institute: a.j.smith@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465654 Sponsored by the Institute of Mechanical Engineers and the Institute of Marine Engineering, Science and Technology

Project Icarus – Space Plane Tuesday 10 May 2011 Department of Engineering, Robert Blackburn Building, Hull Campus, 7 pm Project Daedalus was a landmark theoretical engineering study to design an interstellar probe undertaken in the 1970s. The study was carried out by a volunteer group of members of the British Interplanetary Society (BIS), and their final design was a twostage vehicle that used inertial confinement fusion engines to reach its selected destination, Barnard’s Star. Over three decades later, the opportunity has been taken to revisit this unique design study. Project Icarus is a Tau Zero Foundation initiative in collaboration with the BIS and sets out to design a successor interstellar spacecraft, using current or near-future technology and with other terms of reference similar to those of Project Daedalus. Robert Swinney, BSc, MSc, MIET, CEng, will introduce Project Icarus and provide the latest technical details and an overview of the programme. Further information Dr Philip Rubini, Department of Engineering: p.a.rubini@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465818 Sponsored by the Institute of Engineering and Technology

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Ferens Fine Art Lectures

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A Celebration of Spanish Art and Culture El Greco: The Greek of Toledo 3 February 2011 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6 pm Xavier Bray, National Gallery, London

Velasquez 17 February 2011 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6 pm Dawson Carr from the National Gallery

Title to be confirmed 17 February 2011 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6 pm Details to be confirmed

Salvador Dali's Metamorphosis of Narcissus 24 February 2011 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6 pm Professor David Lomas, University of Manchester

Spanish Cinema 3 March 2011 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6 pm Sarah Wright, University of London Further information Pat Du Boulay: pat.duboulay@hyms.ac.uk, 01482 464577

©iStockphoto.com/lowball-jack

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Decoding the Florentine Frescoes: Hidden Religious Meanings in the Church of San Lorenzo

The Chalk and Climate Change: The Greenhouse Connection

Wednesday 16 February 2011 Seminar Room, Graduate School, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm

Thursday 17 February 2011 Department of Geography, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm

Dr Patrick Preston, retired Lecturer in Theology and Religious Studies, University of Chichester

Dr Mark Woods, British Geological Survey

For the last ten years of his life, the painter Jacopo Pontormo (1494–1557) worked in Florence’s San Lorenzo church on a series of frescoes on the subject of the Last Judgment. The result shocked both the artistic and the theological establishment of Counter-Reformation Florence. By the mid 18th century, the frescoes had been destroyed. In this lecture Dr Preston, a historian of religious art, will attempt to unravel the mysteries of Pontormo’s frescoes from contemporary sources, and to discover the religious vision that motivated the man.

Presidential Address

Institutional Religion in a Non-institutional Age

Thursday 17 March 2011 Department of Geography, Hull Campus, 7.30 pm Address by Stuart Jones and the Annual General Meeting Further information Mike Horne: secretary@hullgeolsoc.org.uk, 01482 346784 Website: www.hullgeolsoc.org.uk

Hull Geological Society

Hull and District Theological Society

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Wednesday 25 May 2011 Seminar Room, Graduate School, Hull Campus, 8 pm (preceded by the Society’s AGM at 7.30 pm) Revd Greg Hoyland, Director of the Centre for Religion in Society, University of York St John We live in a society in which traditional patterns of social activity are changing fast. Voluntary associations such as political parties have been losing members in recent years; rural pubs and working-men’s clubs are struggling to survive. The internet is creating virtual communities of people who may never meet in real life. What does this mean for traditional religious institutions – will they have to adapt or die? In this lecture, Greg Hoyland will consider the problem in relation to community identity. He has written on Anglican denominational identity in the city of York, and is the co-editor of Peace and Reconciliation: In Search of a Shared Identity (2008). Further information Dr David Bagchi, Department of History: d.v.bagchi@hull.ac.uk, 01482 466548

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Monday 7 February 2011 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus Professor Andrew L Clark, Professor of Clinical Cardiology and Honorary Consultant Cardiologist, Castle Hill Hospital Heart failure is the single commonest medical cause of hospitalisation in the United Kingdom. Its prognosis is worse than for most forms of cancer. Despite this bleak outlook, enormous strides have been made in the management of heart failure, leading to an approximate doubling of life expectancy, and for some patients remission of their condition.

Inaugural lectures

More Malignant than Cancer – The Great Medical Success Story of the Last 30 Years

Professor Clark will explore the nature of heart failure and its pathophysiology, and show how modern therapy works. The next stage of heart failure care is going to focus on individualisation of care, and he will pay particular attention to the possibility that exercise therapy, and not rest (as commonly supposed), is beneficial. Further information Karen Slater: k.slater@hull.ac.uk, 01482 466326

©iStockphoto.com/IngramPublishing

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‘What Will I Do if It Doesn’t Work?’ – Consumers, Cross-Border Shopping and the Law

How Special Was the Anglo-American ‘Special Relationship’ in the Middle East, 1945–73?

Monday 21 February 2011 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6 pm

Monday 4 April 2011 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6 pm

Professor Christian Twigg-Flesner, Professor of Commercial Law

Professor Simon C Smith, Professor of International History

Consumers are no longer restricted to purchasing goods from their local high street, or even from traders within their own country. The internet has opened the door to cross-border shopping. Moreover, the EU is actively encouraging consumers to shop across borders and make full use of the internal market. Creating a suitable legal framework for consumers has proved to be a challenge. This lecture will critically evaluate past practice within the EU and consider alternatives for the future.

This lecture will examine the extent to which the much-vaunted Anglo-American ‘special relationship’ had relevance in and applicability to the Middle East region in the quarter-century following the Second World War.

Christian Twigg-Flesner read law and completed his doctorate at the University of Sheffield. He was appointed Professor of Commercial Law at Hull in September 2010, having joined the Law School as Lecturer in 2004 and having been successively promoted to Senior Lecturer (2005) and Reader (2008). He is also the Convenor of the Law School’s Trade and Commercial Law Centre. Before coming to Hull he lectured at Nottingham Trent University (1999–2002) and at the University of Sheffield (2002– 2004). He has written widely on European consumer and contract law. His most recent monograph is The Europeanisation of Contract Law (Routledge, 2008), and he edited the Cambridge Companion to EU Private Law (CUP, 2010). He is one of the editors of the interdisciplinary Journal of Consumer Policy and a member of the Acquis Group, a pan-European research network on EU private law. He is regularly consulted by the Law Commission and the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills. His current research and teaching interests include European and international consumer law, transnational commercial law and the sale of goods. Further information Karen Slater: k.slater@hull.ac.uk, 01482 466326

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Simon C Smith was brought up in Kent and studied at Royal Holloway, University of London. In 1989 he was awarded a first class degree and won the Derby/Bryce Prize for the best degree in the School of History, University of London. Having been granted a British Academy Major Studentship, he stayed on at Royal Holloway to read for a PhD. In 1992–93 he was a Scouloudi Research Fellow at the Institute of Historical Research. In 1994 he became a British Academy Postdoctoral Research Fellow, and he has lectured in the History Department at Hull since 1997. In 2008 he was promoted to Professor. Professor Smith’s publications include British Relations with the Malay Rulers from Decentralization to Malayan Independence, 1930–1957 (Oxford University Press, 1995); British Imperialism, 1750–1970 (Cambridge University Press, 1998; Korean translation, 2002); Kuwait, 1950–1965: Britain, the al-Sabah, and Oil (Oxford University Press, 1999); Britain’s Revival and Fall in the Gulf: Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, and the Trucial States, 1950–71 (RoutledgeCurzon, 2004); British Documents on End of Empire Project: Malta (The Stationery Office, 2006); and Reassessing Suez 1956: New Perspectives on the Crisis and Its Aftermath (Ashgate, 2008). He is currently working on a study of post-war Anglo-American relations in the Middle East which will be published by Routledge in 2011. Further information Karen Slater: k.slater@hull.ac.uk, 01482 466326

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The Art of Landscape

The Ethical Gesture towards the Other

Wednesday 23 March 2011 Leslie Downs Lecture Theatre, Ferens Building, Hull Campus, 6.15 pm

Monday 21 February 2011 Allam Lecture Theatre, Esk Building, Hull Campus, 6 pm

Professor Stephen Daniels, FBA, University of Nottingham Stephen Daniels is one of the world’s leading thinkers on landscape. He was trained and works as a human geographer and is a key figure in that discipline – not least for his roles as a pioneer of the ‘new cultural geography’ and as a pivotal voice of the humanities tradition within geography. In 2011 he will also serve as Chair of the Annual Royal Geographical Society – Institute of British Geographers Conference. Yet his highly regarded books and articles also extend his influence into the realms of history, art history and landscape studies. This interdisciplinary reach was recognised with his appointment as Programme Director for the recent AHRC Landscape and Environment Programme, and he is currently the recipient of an AHRC Impact Fellowship. Further information Dr David Atkinson, Department of Geography: david.atkinson@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465352

PROFESSOR LUCE IRIGARAY This year’s Mary Wollstonecraft Lecture celebrates 25 years of Gender Studies at the University of Hull. Luce Irigaray is currently the most famous feminist writer in the world. She is an interdisciplinary thinker who works between philosophy, psychoanalysis and linguistics. She was originally a student of the famous analyst Jacques Lacan. Her critiques of the exclusion of women from both philosophy and psychoanalytic theory have earned her recognition as a leading feminist theorist and Continental philosopher. Irigaray’s writings not only provide a revolutionary rereading of the history of philosophy but also address urgent contemporary questions of political and social violence, cultural conflict and environmental degradation. ‘Sexual difference’, she says, ‘is probably the issue in our time which could be our “salvation” if we thought it through.’ In this lecture she considers how the ethics of sexual difference can be extended to other categories of social difference. Further information Kathleen Lennon, Department of Humanities: k.lennon@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465995

Mary Wollstonecraft Lecture

Jay Appleton Biennial Public Lecture

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Sponsored by the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, the Centre for Gender Studies, the Department of Humanities and the Department of Modern Languages

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Timbre in (Popular) Music

The Politics of England

Tuesday 8 February 2011 Larkin Building, L201, Hull Campus, 4.15 pm

Monday 7 February 2011 Council Chamber, Venn Building, Hull Campus, 6 pm

Dr Mark Slater, University of Hull

Professor Arthur Aughey, University of Ulster

Jazz in Paris Tuesday 22 February 2011 Larkin Building, L201, Hull Campus, 4.15 pm Dr Andy Fry, King’s College, London

Mahler’s Fourth Symphony in Performance Friday 4 March 2011 Larkin Building, L201, Hull Campus, 3 pm Professor Paul Banks, Royal College of Music

Patrick Hadley’s Symphonic Ballad The Trees So High: The Idea of the Folk Song Symphony in Early-20thCentury British Music Tuesday 15 March 2011 Larkin Building, L201, Hull Campus, 4.15 pm Dr Roland Dee, University of Hull Further information Dr Alexander Binns: a.binns@hull.ac.uk

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Professor Aughey is a Leverhulme Fellow engaged in research on English political identity and is a Senior Fellow of the Centre for British Politics in the Department of Politics and International Studies. Further information Sophie Appleton, Department of Politics and International Studies: s.appleton@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465800

Centre for British Politics – Norton Lecture

Music research seminars

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Bio-inspired Materials for Biosensing and Regenerative Medicine Wednesday 16 February 2011 Department of Chemistry, Lecture Theatre A, Hull Campus, 4.15 pm Professor Molly Stevens, Department of Materials, Imperial College, London Molly Stevens is a Professor of Biomedical Materials and Regenerative Medicine at Imperial. Her research group is focused on both high-quality fundamental science and translation for human health. Research in regenerative medicine includes the directed differentiation of stem cells, the design of novel bioactive scaffolds and new approaches towards tissue regeneration of human bone and vital organs such as liver and pancreas. In the field of nanotechnology the group creates new dynamic nanomaterials, biosensors and drug delivery systems. Professor Stevens’s academic excellence is internationally recognised. In 2010 she was named by The Times as one of the top ten scientists under the age of 40. In the same year she received the Polymer International–IUPAC award for creativity in polymer science, the Rosenhain Medal and the Norman Heatley Prize for interdisciplinary research from the Royal Society of Cemistry. Further information Dr Nicole Pamme: n.pamme@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465027

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An interdisciplinary seminar series looking at the lived experience of illness Life and Temporality in Sickness Care Wednesday 16 February 2011 Dearne Meeting Room, Dearne Building, Hull Campus, 5.15 pm Professor Ingunn Elstad, Department of Health and Caring Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Tromsø, Norway Ingunn Elstad’s interests lie between philosophy (Aristotle, phenomenology) and nursing (Nightingale). This paper explores how the temporal features of sickness may warrant temporal continuity of nursing. Three temporal characteristics of sickness are discussed: the immediacy of patients’ suffering, the basic continuity of life through sickness and health care, and the indeterminism and precariousness of sickness. The timing of nursing acts is discussed. The paper explores how sickness is part of the continuity of life and at the same time threatens this continuity.

Neurophenomenology: First-Person Experiences of Changed Bodies and Body Image after Cancer or Trauma

Reading the Vulnerable Body

Physical Sciences seminars

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Wednesday 9 March 2011 Dearne Meeting Room, Dearne Building, Hull Campus, 5.15 pm Dr Susan Peake, University of Melbourne (Visiting Research Fellow, University of Teesside) Susan Peake has both a Masters and a PhD in medical anthropology. Her current interest is in the social and neurological effects of amputation, including phantom pain and body image. She is developing a project looking at experiences of living with amputation and prosthetics and a methodology to include this ‘first-person’ experience.

Reading and Health Wednesday 16 March 2011 Dearne Meeting Room, Dearne Building, Hull Campus, 5.15 pm Dr Josie Billington, School of English, University of Liverpool Josie Billington has published on Victorian literary realism in the main – George Eliot, Elizabeth Gaskell and Leo Tolstoy. She is 24

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The Lived Body: A Medical Topic? Wednesday 30 March 2011 Dearne Meeting Room, Dearne Building, Hull Campus, 5.15 pm Dr Anna Luise Kirkengen Anna Luise Kirkengen has been in general practice in Oslo since 1975. She is a specialist in general medicine. In 1998 she gained her MD, successfully defending a dissertation entitled ‘The Embodiment of Sexual Boundary Violation in Childhood: A P.

Neurasthenia, Masculinity and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome in the Late 19th Century Wednesday 4 May 2011 Dearne Meeting Room, Dearne Building, Hull Campus, 5.15 pm

No Holds Bard: Empathy and Cruelty in Directing Shakespeare’s Comedies Tuesday 5 April 2011 Lindsey Suite, Staff House, Hull Campus, 6 pm Carl Heap Carl Heap is the Founding Artistic Director of the Medieval Players. He has adapted and directed versions of Pericles, Romeo and Juliet, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Macbeth and Twelfth Night for the National Theatre. Further information Paula Shaw, Department of English: p.shaw@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465309

Annual Shakespeare Lecture

currently writing a monograph on Elizabeth Barrett Browning. She is also also interested in the relationship of reading to mental health. She is collaborating with colleagues in medicine and health sciences on research projects examining the benefits of reading in respect of depression, dementia, neurological rehabilitation and personality disorder and is teaching literature modules for medical students.

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Dr Jane Thomas, Department of English, University of Hull Jane Thomas’s research spans the 19th and 20th centuries, with particular emphasis on the work of Thomas Hardy. She has also published on William Morris, Thomas Woolner, the interaction between literature and the visual arts, and Victorian women writers of the fin de siècle. Further information Kathleen Lennon, k.lennon@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465618 Sponsored by the Centre for Research into Embodied Subjectivity, the Department of Humanities, the Department of English and the Faculty of Health and Social Care

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Making and Hearing Sound Monday 28 March 2011 Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6pm Professor David Howard, Professor of Music Technology, University of York We are pleased to welcome David Howard to the University again, this time to present the 11th Venn Lecture and to tell us more about his work associated with the music industry. His lecture will consider how mathematics is linked to the process of making or synthesising sound acoustically and electronically, with an emphasis on sound generation for musical purposes. Efforts made when synthesising sound are really only useful if any subtle changes can be heard by us. The second part of the lecture will therefore focus on how we ourselves perceive sound. Both audio and visual illustrations will be provided throughout the session, with references audio illusions. Further information Dr Tim Scott, Centre for Mathematics: t.scott@hull.ac.uk, 01482 465128

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The Late-Victorian ‘New Man’ and the Millennial ‘Neo-Man’ Friday 25 March 2011 Lindsey Suite, Staff House, Hull Campus, 6 pm Professor Margaret D Stetz, University of Delaware Margaret Stetz is the Mae and Robert Carter Professor of Women’s Studies and Professor of Humanities at the University of Delaware. Her books include Facing the Late Victorians: Portraits of Writers and Artists from the Mark Samuels Lasner Collection (University of Delaware Press, 2007); Gender and the London Theatre, 1880–1920 (Rivendale Press, 2004); British Women’s Comic Fiction, 1890–1990 (Ashgate, 2001); a co-edited volume of essays (with Bonnie B C Oh) on military sexual slavery, Legacies of the Comfort Women of WWII (M. E. Sharpe, 2001); and a coedited volume of essays (with Cheryl A Wilson) on two Victorian women poets, Michael Field and Their World (Rivendale Press, 2007); as well as co-authored books (with Mark Samuels Lasner), such as England in the 1880s: Old Guard and Avant-Garde (University of Virginia Press, 1989) and England in the 1890s: Literary Publishing at the Bodley Head (Georgetown University Press, 1990), which combine book history with cultural history. Her next book will be Oscar Wilde, New Women, the Bodley Head and Beyond (Rivendale Press, forthcoming). She is also at work on a digitised edition of Fantasias (1898), a volume of short fiction by the Anglo-Irish feminist George Egerton (Mary Chavelita Dunne), for Rice University Press.

Annual Victorian Lecture

Annual Venn Lecture

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Professor Stetz has published more than a hundred essays and reviews about 19th- and 20th-century literature, film, publishing history, feminist pedagogy, politics, curatorial issues and other aspects of culture in journals and edited collections, and she has co-curated numerous exhibitions on gender, art and publishing history at venues such as the National Gallery of Art Library, Harvard University, the University of Virginia, Bryn Mawr College and the Grolier Club in New York City. Professor Stetz’s lecture will be followed, on Saturday 26 March, by a symposium on neo-Victorianism. Further information Professor Ann Heilmann: a.heilmann@hull.ac.uk

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‘The Key to India’: Southern Africa, Troop Movements and Britain’s Indian Ocean World, 1795–1820 Thursday 27 January 2011 WISE, Oriel Chambers, 27 High Street, Hull, HU1 1NE, 4.30 to 6 pm Dr John McsAleer, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich

The Hobgoblins of the Middle Passage: The Cape and the Transatlantic Slave Trade Thursday 17 February 2011 WISE, Oriel Chambers, 27 High Street, Hull, HU1 1NE, 4.30 to 6 pm

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The University of Hull Founder’s Day Service Tuesday 8 March 2011 University Chapel, Middleton Hall, Hull Campus, 6 pm Everyone is welcome. A buffet supper will be served in the Art Cafe foyer immediately after the service. Further information Karen Slater: k.slater@hull.ac.uk, 01482 466326

Religious services

Wilberforce Institute (WISE) public lectures

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Professor Patrick Harries, University of Basel

Where’s the Harm in That? – Immigration Enforcement, Trafficking and the Protection of Migrants’ Rights Thursday 24 March 2011 Hull Campus, 4.30 to 6 pm Dr Bridget Anderson, COMPAS, University of Oxford Further information sarah.carter@hull.ac.uk, 01482 305176 Please join us for tea or coffee from 4.15 pm.

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Scarborough Campus

D Disabled parking B Lounge cafe bar S Security

L Library C Canteen M Main entrance

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Student accommodation

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Student accommodation

Filey Road Annexe

Cayley Hall

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Reception

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University of Hull

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During the 2010/2011 academic year, the Scarborough Campus will host a series of public lectures. The lectures will be open to everyone and are free of charge. Details are available online at http://pocketcampus.scar.hull.ac.uk.

Open access & IT Help Desk (First oor)

Computer Centre

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Music techology annexe

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84 Filey Road

Public lectures at Scarborough

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Scarborough Campus

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Hull Campus

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Further information

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Future events Details of all public lectures should be forwarded to Karen Slater for inclusion in the next programme, which will be published in September 2011. Contact address: Karen Slater, Marketing and Communications, University of Hull, Hull, HU6 7RX, email k.slater@hull.ac.uk.

Further information If you would like to receive further copies of this booklet or your name and address included in the Public Lectures/Events mailing list, please contact Karen Slater Marketing and Communications University of Hull Hull, HU6 7RX 01482 466326 k.slater@hull.ac.uk

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