Events
Upcoming Events
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2024
Tuesday, October 29, 2024, 5 PM (In Person)
"Reconciliation Is Not revenge, or, What is the Sound Made by a Roaring Mouse?"
Lecture by award-winning visual contemporary artist, author, and professional speaker
Location: Center for British & Irish Studies Room, Norlin Library (M549), 鶹ѰBoulder (campus map)
Reception 4:30 - 5:00 pm.
In 1867 Canada was formally established through a Constitution as a nation state within the British Empire. In 2024, for the first time in history, a government adhered to the Canadian Constitutional dictate and formally withdrew sovereign claims to Crown title over Indigenous territories. Why, after 157 years and without a single gunshot, would a small Indigenous Nation secure such a unique victory? This talk will be an examination of applied strategies, and will also examine these strategies through the lens of the artworks: how does scale at both mural and at the page provide opportunities to examine distortion and sovereignty? How, practically, does the sovereignty of page scale counteract control over the Ethnomythic? This talk will offer the argument that in times of collapse, the page-scale narrative can alter the mural/monumental scale.
Free and open to the public.
Wednesday, October 16, 2024, 5 - 6 pm (online)
Information Session on the Graduate Grants offered by the the Center for British & Irish Studies
Featured speakers:
- Catherine Labio, Associate Professor of English and Director of the Center for British & Irish Studies
- Hannah Blanning (English), Ogilvy Travel Fellowship Recipient (2024)
- Sarah Brown (Political Science), Conference Travel Grant Recipient (2024)
- Edem Dotse (Critical Media Practices), Ogilvy Travel Fellowship Recipient (2024)
- Wesley Leffingwell (Music), Conference Travel Grant Recipient (2024)
Thursday, February 29, 2024, 11 am MST, 6 pm GMT (Online)
Nic Watts & Sakina Karimjee on Toussaint Louverture: The Story of the Only Successful Slave Revolt in History
UK-based artists Nic Watts andSakina Karimjee discuss their acclaimed graphic novel adaptation of CLR James’s play on the Haitian Revolution and its leader, Toussaint Louverture: The Story of the Only Successful Slave Revolt in History (Verso, 2023).
Free and open to the public.
This event is co-sponsored by the 18th- & 19th-Century Studies Network.
Thursday, 15 February, 2024, 7 pm, 鶹ѰBoulder Main Campus (In Person)
"The Jane Austen Playlist: Music and Prose of Jane Austen," Recital-Presentation by Laura Klein
This lecture and recital will explore music in Austen’s life, including works from one of her handwritten music manuscripts and a recently discovered volume of music inscribed with her signature. It will also uncover fascinating connections between her music and her best-loved novels.
Bio: Laura Klein, M.M., NCTM, pianist, educator, and musicologist, is a PhD precandidate in Musicology at 鶹ѰBoulder, where her focus is on the music in the Austen Family Music Books. She has performed in the US, Canada, Austria, the Czech Republic, and the United Kingdom in venues such as Avery Fisher Hall, Carnegie Hall, Wiener Musikverein, Boettcher Concert Hall, and Jane Austen’s House as a Reimagine Resident.
This event is sponsored by the Center for British & Irish Studies, the 18th- & 19th-Century Studies Network, and the Department of Musicology, College of Music.
2019
The Precinct of St. Paul's in Early Modern London
Professor Roze Hentschell, Colorado State University
Thursday 14 November, 2019
Time: 5:00 PM
British and Irish Studies Room (M549), 5th floor Norlin Library
Professor Hentschellis the author ofThe Culture of Cloth in Early Modern England: Textual Constructions of a National Identity(Ashgate, 2008) andhas recently completed a monograph entitled"St Paul's Cathedral Precinct in Early Modern Literature and Culture: Spatial Practices," which is under contract with Oxford University Press.
"Addiction in the Archives"
Rebecca Lemon, University of Southern California
POSTPONED
British and Irish Studies Room (M549), 5th floor Norlin Library
Professor Lemon is the author ofAddiction and Devotion in Early Modern England(Pennsylvania, 2018),King Richard III: Language and Writing(Arden, 2018) andTreason by Words: Literature, Law and Rebellion in Shakespeare's England(Cornell, 2006)
"The Wall in the North (of England) or Shakespeare and 'The Office of Wall'"
- Professor Adam N. McKeown, Tulane University
- Tuesday2 April at 5:00 pm
- British and Irish Studies Room (M549), 5th floor Norlin Library
- Professor McKeown is the author ofFortifications and its Discontents from Shakespeare to Milton: Trouble in the Walled City(Routledge, 2019) andEnglish Mercuries: Soldier Poets in the Age of Shakespeare(Vanderbilt, 2009)
2018
New Histories for the Age of Shakespeare
- Many leading historians present thei research onrecent developments in the history of Elizabeth I and James VI and I.
- November 17, 2018
- download conference program here
"The Political Education of Young William Shakespeare"
- Glyn Parry, Professor of History, Roehampton University
- November 16, 2018
"Justice and Political Society in David Hume's Second Enquiry"
- Ryan Patrick Hanley, Mellon Distinguished ProfessorofPolitical Science, Marquette University
- March 1, 2018
2017
"Brexit andthe Future of the EU"
- FeaturedProfessor Robery Geyer, University of Lancaster
- Center for British and Irish Studies, Norlin Library M549
- Wednesday, September 13, 2017
2016
Shakespeare's First Folio, on Tour from the Folger Shakespeare Library
- 鶹ѰArt Museum
- August 9-31, 2016
2012
The Rake's Progress - Stravinsky, Hogarth, Hockney, Auden, and Kallman: A Multidisciplinary Conference
- Keynote:- “The Tapering Perspectival Vice of Hockney’s Bedlam”
- October 26-27, 2012
Related Events:
Hockney andHogarth: Selections from the 鶹ѰArt Museum's Collection of British Art
- September 7 - October 27, 2012
- 鶹ѰArt Museum
- Curated by Lisa Tamiris Becker, Director, 鶹ѰArt Museum and Catherine Labio, Associate Professor of English, 鶹Ѱ
Lecture by Frédéric Ogée
- Professor of English Studies at the Université Paris-Diderot (Paris 7), France, and a world-renowned expert on William Hogarth
- September 20, 2012
鶹ѰOpera:The Rake's Progress
- an opera in English by Igor Stravinsky, libretto by W. H. Auden and Chester Kallman
- October 26 and 28, 2012
2010
"Writing About Ireland"
- A free talk by author Frank Delaney
- September 29, 2010
The Next English Renaissance: New Directions in Early Modern Literary Criticism
- September 24, 2010
The Tudors Conference
- Keynote Speaker Michael Hirst, creator of the Shotwime seriesThe Tudorsand screenwriter forElizabethandElizabeth: The Golden Age
- February 3-4, 2010
Fifth Annual CBIS Gathering of Scholars: "Britain and India"
- January 22, 2010
2009
"Circular Referral and Alterity: The Three Ladies in Coriolanus and What They Can Tell Us"
- Yasunari Takada, Chair of the Department of Cultural Representations and visiting scholar at Yale as a guest of their Alumni Association, University of Tokyo
- November 16, 2009
"Fictional Settlements: Footnotes, Metalepsis, Imperial Design"
- Elaine Freedgood, Department of English, New York University
- November 13, 2009
"On the Promise of Peace: Kant's Wartime and the Tremulous Body of Philosophy"
- David Clark, Department of English and Cultural Studies, McMaster University
- September 4, 2009
2008
Internationally Renowned Visiting Scholars (Fall 2008)
- Dr. Professor Christoph Bode (Department of English, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München)
"The Discursive Subject in British Romanticism" - Dr. Nicholas Roe (School of English, University of St. Andrews, Scotland)
"John Keats, Benjamin Haydon and the Elgin Marbles"
Fourth Annual CBIS Gathering of Scholars: "Fashion Thoughts"
- Fall 2008
"Charlotte Smith, William Wordsworth, and the Lyrical Ballads of 1797-1798"
- Jacqueline Labbe, Department of English and Comparative Literary Studies, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK
- Fall 2008
2007
Third Annual CBIS Gathering of Scholars: "Questions of Affect: Emotion and Sensation"
- Fall 2007
Comparative Literature Graduate Student Conference
- February 23-34, 2007
2006
Second Annual CBIS Gathering of Scholars: "The Future of Romanticism"
- Summer 2006
2005
First Annual CBIS Gathering of Scholars: "Two Centuries of Things"
- Fall 2005