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Free public lectures by Vice-Chancellor’s Visitors |
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10 July 2012
Free public lectures by Vice-Chancellor’s Distinguished Visitors
The University of Auckland’s Faculty of Arts is this month hosting four Vice-Chancellor’s Distinguished Visitors who will each deliver a free, one hour public lecture.
The Distinguished Visitors’ public lectures will be held at The University of Auckland’s Lecture Theatre 220, Arts 1. (Entrance between 14 and 16 Symonds Street, the corner of Symonds and Grafton or from the Business School car park across the forecourt to the Drama Studio). Bookings are not required.
Rousseau and Reading in the French
Revolution
Tuesday 17 July, from 7pm
Peder Sather
Professor of History, Carla Hesse, from the University of
California, Berkeley, will give a lecture on Rousseau and
Reading in the French Revolution. Professor Hesse is a
leading cultural historian of 18th century France and the
French Revolution. Her publications have explored topics
such as revolutionary print culture, gendered authorship and
the cultural work of law.
Reading Nuns in East Anglia:
The Legendary of Female Saints in CUL, Add. MS 2604 and its
Backstory
Wednesday 18 July, from 6pm
Professor
Virginia Blanton from the University of Missouri – Kansas
City, will give a lecture on Reading Nuns in East Anglia:
The Legendary of Female Saints in CUL, Add. MS 2604 and its
Backstory. Professor Blanton’s research focuses on
medieval hagiography and religious ritual, as well as on the
representations of women in religious culture.
The work
of the dead
Thursday 19 July, from 7pm
Helen
Fawcett Distinguished Professor Thomas W.Laquer from the
University of California, Berkeley, will give a talk that is
part of a forthcoming book examining the relationship
between death and modernity. This project is motivated by a
question that lies at the core of what it is to be human:
‘what work do the dead do in making
civilsation?’
‘How long is it to Lammas-tide?':
Circumstances in Romeo and Juliet.
Thursday 26 July,
from 6.30pm
2012 Alice Griffin Shakespeare Fellow,
Professor Lorna Hutson, from the University of St
Andrew’s, will discuss ‘How long is it to Lammas-tide?':
Circumstances in Romeo and Juliet. Professor Hutson’s
interests are in the rhetorical bases of Renaissance
literature and in the relationship between literary form and
the formal aspects of non-literary
culture.
ENDS
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