November 2019

Professor David Tandy: 'Slavery, honour and ideology in Homer'

Event date: 
Friday 6 December 2019
Location: 
Teviot Lecture Theatre, Doorway 5

Fri Dec 6, 2019

5.30pm

Teviot Lecture Theatre, Doorway 5

Professor David Tandy: 'Slavery, honour and ideology in Homer'

 

Professor David Tandy (Leeds) explores the dynamics of slavery and honour in Homer, and how the realities of production in early Greece interlocked with ideas about honour and social interaction.

[Department of Classics Slavery and Honour in Ancient Greece project]

Dr Joanna Fox (Anglia Ruskin University): The neoliberal university: mental ill-health in social work education.

Event date: 
Wednesday 20 November 2019 to Thursday 21 November 2019
Time: 
15:00
Location: 
Martin Hall, New College

Dr Joanna Fox (Anglia Ruskin University): The neoliberal university: mental ill-health in social work education.

Free registration https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/the-neoliberal-university-mental-ill-health-in-social-work-education-tickets-71253672653        

[Social Work]

Cristina Valdés (University of Oviedo) Translating Multimedia/Modal Advertising

Event date: 
Thursday 21 November 2019 to Friday 22 November 2019
Time: 
17:00
Location: 
G.05, 50 George Square

Cristina Valdés (University of Oviedo): Translating Multimedia/Modal Advertising

[Translation Studies]

Abstract

Firstly, in this seminar I will introduce the main topic of advertising and promotional translation, focusing on the translation of audiovisual and promotional web material and drawing some attention on why advertising material is translated, with regard to marketing and communication issues or cultural ones.

David Kaufman(Edinburgh): Work-in-progress paper - 'The “One Guilty Nation” Myth: Edith Durham, R.W. Seton-Watson and a footnote in the history of the outbreak of the First World War’

Event date: 
Friday 22 November 2019 to Saturday 23 November 2019
Time: 
13:00

1-2pm, G.10, Doorway 4, Old Medical School

David Kaufman(Edinburgh): Work-in-progress paper - 'The “One Guilty Nation” Myth: Edith Durham, R.W. Seton-Watson and a footnote in the history of the outbreak of the First World War’

Political History Research Group seminars