CfP: Postcolonial Studies Association Convention on Globalization
Postcolonial Studies Association Convention
School of Advanced Study, Senate House, University of London
18-20 September 2017
Postcolonial Studies Association Convention
School of Advanced Study, Senate House, University of London
18-20 September 2017
Offre d’allocation doctorale du Comité pour l’histoire de la Poste
Sujet : Les activités sociales à la Poste au XXe siècle
Argumentaire
Papers are sought for a conference at Oxford University on 8th September 2017 that will explore the lives and experiences of servants beyond their domestic workplaces. Domestic service, in its various forms, has long provided one of the most significant sources of employment for men, women and children around the world. Existing studies have successfully explored the servant experience in their place of work, yet contributions made by servants outside the home – to social, cultural, economic and political life – have been little explored.
Melbourne University’s School of Historical and Philosophical Studies is running a Public Seminar on “Social Movements, Archives and Memory” – Wednesday 8 February 2017, 1.30pm – 3.30pm. Arts West Building, Lectorial Room 156, North Wing, The University of Melbourne, Parkville.
Migration from the Middle East and North Africa to Europe has reached mass proportions in the last few years. This is only the most recent development in a long history of population movements into, out of and within the Continent. Beginning with the story of European migration to other parts of the world, the largest mass migration in history, that took on immense proportions in the nineteenth century, the lecture goes on to discuss the repeated experiences of forced population exchanges, flight, and "ethnic cleansing" in Europe in the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.
European Labour History Network (ELHN), Working Group "Workers, Labour and Labour History in Modern Central-East-Europe”
Modern British Studies at Birmingham invites proposals for panels showcasing new research on all aspects of British history from the 18th century to the present. At a moment when many of the core strands of modern society, culture, politics, and economics have been called into question, it is time to explore how we make sense of Britain’s past and the value of thinking historically in public life.
We will host our Second Conference 5-7 July 2017
In 2018, Scottish Literary Review will publish a special issue in relation to the Carnegie-funded project ‘The People’s Voice: Scottish Political Poetry, Song and the Franchise, 1832-1918’, guest-edited by Catriona MacDonald, Kirstie Blair and Michael Shaw. The special issue aims to widen the remit of this project beyond its primary focus on Reform and franchise verse, and to reflect more broadly on the connections between politics and poetry and song cultures, within Scotland and potentially beyond, in this period.
Invitation au
Colloque international de l’IRELP – 21 septembre 2017
Salle Léon Jouhaux – Annexe de la Bourse du Travail
67 rue Turbigo - 75003 Paris
« Libre Pensée et Libres Penseurs - Hier et aujourd’hui »
We wish to invite proposals for papers on a proposed panel ‘Carnival in Modern Europe, 1700-2000’ that we intend to submit to the organisers of the European Social Science History Conference (ESSHC) in Belfast, 4-7 April 2018. We aim to explore and interpret the transformation of carnival in the modernperiod and its varied function in different societies, and are particularly interested in issues of class and gender. Closing date for proposals: 31 March2017.
Steve Thompson (Aberystwyth University, Wales) - sdt@aber.ac.uk