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The Quo Vadis Festival of the Arts and Humanities

06 June 2022鈥09 June 2022, 11:00 am鈥3:00 pm

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The four-day festival, convened by the Faculty of Arts and Humanities, co-hosted by the 香港六合彩中特网 Institute of Advanced Studies and supported by the EI, will celebrate the Arts and Humanities in the modern world. The broad range of events include a roundtable with the Ambassadors of Europe; screening of four documentaries on contemporary London; and a workshop on research Impact and sustainability.

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

All | 香港六合彩中特网 staff | 香港六合彩中特网 students | 香港六合彩中特网 alumni

Availability

Yes

Cost

Free

Organiser

Stephen Hart and Florian Mussgnug

This year鈥檚 Quo Vadis Festival of the Arts and Humanities addresses the function of values in our world, whether they are the political values of human dignity, freedom, equality and solidarity in the Roundtable with the Ambassadors of Europe, the value of art for wellbeing,听 or the struggle against inequality and climate change (Wasteland, and Between Two Futures; 7 June). We look at the role that research plays in the elucidation of moral and historical values (Sigils and Fire; 7 June; Research Ethics, 8 June; Research Impact, 8 June), the changing role of languages and classics in the modern world, while celebrating how documentaries are able to interrogate everyday human values (Four Documentaries; Marc Isaacs, The Filmmaker鈥檚 House), thereby bringing us closer to an answer to Debra Castillo鈥檚 question: how do we promote a more human humanities?听

Programme

Monday 6 June 2022

11:00-12:30: Roundtable on 鈥淟anguage鈥 at 香港六合彩中特网, followed by a Q&A and debate (IAS Common Ground)

A roundtable on 鈥淟anguage鈥 at 香港六合彩中特网, consisting of a discussion with experts from various departments across 香港六合彩中特网. The aim of this roundtable is to think through the ways in which 香港六合彩中特网 linguists can come together in order to produce a dynamic transformation in our understanding of the human ability to speak, read, interact and communicate through language. Could we move ahead on the research and methodology pioneered by The Survey of English Usage, founded in 1959 by Lord Randolph Quirk, which gathers samples of naturally-occurring language for the purposes of description and analysis? Could we also draw on the expertise we have in 115 languages at 香港六合彩中特网 ranging from Akkadian to Zulu, in order to work closely with a number of different language communities across London to create new mappings of how Londoners communicate in the 21st century? 听Panel members are: (Linguistics), (Linguistics), (English), Dr Jelena Celic (SSEES), Professor Kearsey Cormier (DCAL), Professor Geraldine Horan (SELCS), Professor Vieri Samek-Lodovici听(SELCS) and Professor Kristen Kreider (The Slade School of Fine Art).

Zoom link:听

13:00鈥14:00: A&H Book Launch I (IAS Common Ground)

This book launch will feature books published by A&H staff between June 2021 and June 2022 (including John Mullan, Emma; Dennis Duncan, Index, A History of; Maria Chiara D鈥橝rgenio, Indigenous Plots in Twenty-First Century Latin American Cinema)

16:30-18:00: The Value of Arts and Humanities to Health and Wellbeing Research听 (IAS Common Ground)

Roundtable on the Arts, Health and Wellbeing, chaired by and Stephen Hart, consisting of 10-minute presentations by A&H Health/Well-being Research Fellows, followed by a panel discussion and Q&A. Presentations will be delivered by Leo Doulton, Leah Sidi, Thomas Kador, Hannah Sercombe and Sylvie McGowan. For more details on the projects, see below.

Leo Doulton, 鈥淢an & God - A Kodachrome Musical (Subtitle: exploring historic treatment of dementia through musical theatre)鈥

Director, writer, and game designer Leo Doulton studied History at University College London and Opera Making at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, and he has been working with Professor Michael Berkowitz (香港六合彩中特网 Hebrew and Jewish Studies) on a range of outreach projects, including Theatre in the Theresienstadt Ghetto (director), The Tsar Wants His Photograph Taken (director/translator), and Man & God (director/writer). Their collaboration on The Tsar Wants His Photograph Taken contributed significantly to the work's Scottish premiere by Scottish Opera in 2021, which used Leo's translation and drew on Michael's research.

Leah Sidi, 鈥淣oMad: Creating a discussion about theatre and homelessness鈥

Dr Leah Sidi is a Lecturer in Health Humanities at 香港六合彩中特网. Her research focus is on contemporary theatre and mental health, with a special focus on feminist theatre and psychoanalysis. She is currently recipient of an ISSF Wellcome Trust Award, researching feminist conceptions of community care.听 Leah has published in Performance Research and is a regular contributor to the Institute for Medical Humanities鈥 The Polyphony. Her book, Sarah Kane鈥檚 Theatre of Psychic Life, will be published by Methuen Drama in 2023.

Thomas Kador, Hannah Sercombe, and Sylvie McGowan, 鈥淧laces of learning as places for wellbeing: (re)positioning the role of creative health education鈥

Thomas Kador is Lecturer in Creative Health at 香港六合彩中特网 Arts & Sciences and jointly leads the MASc Creative Health programme. Hannah Sercombe and Sylvie McGowan are students on the new MASc Creative Health programme.

Zoom link:听

18:30-20:00: Professor Debra Castillo (Cornell University), 鈥淭he Scholar as Human鈥 (online, by zoom)

Workshop convened by Professor Debra Castillo, the Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellow, Emerson Hinchliff Chair of Hispanic Studies, and Professor of Comparative Literature at Cornell University. She will be discussing her recent book, The Scholar as Human, a free e-book recently published by Cornell University, which is available for download here:

The听 workshop will focus on two related themes, 鈥楾he Scholar as Human鈥 and 鈥極pen Access鈥. 听

In Part I, 鈥楾he Scholar as Human鈥, Professor Castillo will be focussing on the post-theory, post profound budget cut climate we now live in. It is an environment in which humanists are more than ever questioning the last one hundred years of increasing specialization that put humanists in the academy, and turned the arts and performance into increasingly professional careers. The question is no longer, or not only, do the humanities have to be useful? We are now asking: what and how are some of the ways that the humanities are currently collaborating with and supporting communities outside those defined by our professional practice?听听 What are the literacies we need to cultivate, celebrate, and share?听 How are meanings created and policed? Who is invited to the dialogue, and who is left out? How do competing politics and public philosophies shape and inform our identities, purposes, and practices as scholars?听 How does engagement expand the topics and scope of inquiry in our work?听 What kinds of conversations among the physical sciences, social sciences, and the humanities are necessary or enabled by these projects?听 What distinctive things do arts and humanities have to offer to the work of engagement?听 In short, how do we promote a more human humanities?

In Part II, Professor Castillo will be听 focussing on the related theme of 鈥極pen Access鈥.听 She will be drawing on several experiences both in book and journal publishing, and touch on the questions that always arise鈥攕uch as how is open access in the humanities financed (we know how it is financed in the STEM fields鈥攇rants).听 Some touchstones are:

Hathi Trust:

Cornell Open:

Lever Press:

SUNY open access repository:

Latin American Research Commons:

Latin American Literary Review:

Zoom link:听

Tuesday 7 June 2022

11:00鈥12:30: Sigils and Fire: Speculative Captions of Colonial Worlds (IAS Common Ground)

A seminar based on the exhibition, "Sigils and Fire: Speculative Captions of Colonial Worlds", curated by Mataio Austin Dean (IAS Visiting Research Fellow) and Lydia Gibson (ESRC Postdoctoral Fellow, Anthropology), and held in the space outside the Lecture theatre G22 in 香港六合彩中特网, followed by a panel discussion of the interplay between field research and film in this project.

Zoom link:听

12:00鈥13:00: Nicola Baldwin, 鈥淭he City Dionysia鈥: Staged Reading of听Wasteland Wasteland (IAS Forum)

An Academic, a Cleaner and a Student walk into a prize-winning building on the night before its prestigious opening; stranded by strike, student sit-in and rising flood, LOU, ROSA and JESS must cooperate to escape.听Meanwhile THE PLAY attempts to interpret unfolding events... What does zero waste mean, applied to people? How can we outlaw single-use plastic while making workers disposable? Why do we find it easier to talk about Waste than global inequality that drives it? A work-in-progress reading of听奥补蝉迟别濒补苍诲,听a new drama by playwright Nicola Baldwin (IAS Visiting Fellow), written for her 香港六合彩中特网 Creative Fellowship collaboration (鈥淭he City Dionysia: Narrating Wasteland in Urban Life鈥)听飞颈迟丑听Dr Pushpa Arabindoo, Associate Professor in the Department of Geography and co-director of 香港六合彩中特网 Urban Laboratory,听in response to the IAS and Urban Lab joint theme of 鈥榃aste鈥. Performed by听Rebecca Crankshaw, Jimena Larraguivel, Tara Kearney, Shreya Patel. With discussion.

Zoom link:听

13:15鈥15:00: "Between Two Futures": Jessie Greengrass on Literature in the Anthropocene (IAS Common Ground)

Is anxiety the only possible response to the unfolding climate emergency? Can literature point towards other experiences and emotions: furious defiance, utopian longing, an intimate desire to care about small, close things? In this event, award-winning novelist Jessie Greengrass will read from her work, including her latest novel,听The High House听(2021), and will speak about climate activism and the arts, in conversation with Dr Lara Choksey (English) and Prof.听Florian听Mussgnug (School of European Languages, Culture and Society). This event is part of the "Writers of the Anthropocene" series, hosted by听香港六合彩中特网 Anthropocene, and in support of the 香港六合彩中特网 Sustainable Development Goals Initiative.听

15:30鈥17:45 The Values of Europe: A Roundtable with the Ambassadors of Europe听(Christopher Ingold Building, XLG2, Chemistry Auditorium)

A roundtable chaired by Professor Geraint Rees (Vice Provost Research, Innovation and Global Engagement, 香港六合彩中特网)

The Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (2012) states in its opening paragraph the following: 鈥淐onscious of its spiritual and moral heritage, the Union is founded on the indivisible, universal values of human dignity, freedom, equality and solidarity; it is based on the principles of democracy and the rule of law鈥. In 2022, in direct contrast to these values, we seem to be living in a world in which war 鈥 or the threat of war 鈥撎 is openly used to de-stabilize democracy, a world in which disinformation and fake news are used to undermine human dignity and freedom, a world in which energy, natural resources and food are weaponized in order to break down solidarity and the rule of law. It is clear that Brexit, the Covid-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine have had their role to play in the birth of some of these tensions in the modern world, but what is also clear is that we are at a turning-point in the history of Europe鈥檚 role in the world, and thus we propose that it is timely to hold a debate on 鈥淭he Values of Europe鈥.听

15:30-15:35: 听听 Welcome by Professor Geraint Rees (FMedSci), Vice Provost Research, Innovation and Global Engagement, 香港六合彩中特网

15:35-15:45: 听听 The Swedish Ambassador, Her Excellency

15:45-15:55: 听听 The Spanish Ambassador, His Excellency

15:55-16:05:听听听 The Dutch Ambassador, His Excellency

16:05-16:15: 听听 The Czech Ambassador, Her Excellency (pre-recorded presentation)

16:15-16:25: 听听 The Austrian Ambassador, His Excellency

16:25-16:35: 听听 The Polish Ambassador, His Excellency

16:35-16:45: 听听 The Italian Ambassador, His Excellency (pre-recorded presentation)

16:45-17:15: 听听 Q&A co-ordinated by Professor Stephen M. Hart

17:15-17:45: 听听 Reception

Zoom link:听

Wednesday 8 June 2022

11:30鈥12:30: Research Ethics and the Arts and Humanities (IAS Common Ground)

This roundtable will be looking at some of the inconsistencies that emerge when we begin to think through the interplay between the discourse of research ethics and that of the arts and humanities. Is it acceptable, for example, that in the eyes of Research Ethics, literary criticism and artistic activity are 鈥渘ot research鈥? Should we adopt a new category of 鈥渘o risk鈥 to go alongside the traditional categories of 鈥渓ow risk鈥, 鈥渕edium risk鈥 and 鈥渉igh risk鈥? Questions such as these will be addressed by Professor Cheryl Thomas (Laws), Professor James Wilson (Philosophy), Sonu Shamdasani (Health Humanities; SELCS) and Professor Andrew Flinn (Information Studies) in a roundtable chaired by Professor Stephen Hart (SELCS). 听

Zoom link:听

13:00鈥14:00: A&H Book Launch II (IAS Common Ground)

This book launch will feature books published by A&H staff between June 2021 and June 2022 (including Mar铆a E. Lpez, Gender Violence in Twenty-first-century Latin American Women鈥檚 Writing; Florian Mussgnug, Mathelinda Nabugodi, Thea Petrou (eds), Thinking Through Relation: Encounters in Creative Critical Writing (Oxford: Peter Lang, 2021); Anneleen Masschelein, Florian Mussgnug, Jennifer Rushworth (eds), 听Mediating Vulnerability: Comparative Approaches and Questions of Genre (London: 香港六合彩中特网 Press, 2022); Gesine Manuwald, Cicero鈥檚 Post reditum; 听Emily Baker, Nazism, The Second World War and the Holocaust in Contemporary Latin American Fiction; Sebastian Coxon, Beards and Texts: Images of Masculinity in Medieval German Literature; and Heinrich Bebel, Facetiae: Jokes and Funny Stories from the Sixteenth Century (edition-translation); James Wilson, Philosophy for Public Health and Public Policy)

14:30-16:00: Classics in the Modern World (IAS Common Ground)

This roundtable on 鈥楥lassics in the Modern World鈥 will discuss what 鈥楥lassics鈥 means today, how the understanding and teaching of the subject has evolved, in what ways the study of the subject can still be relevant today and can help with navigating the modern world as well as how it relates to other subjects. The conversation will thus touch on key questions related to the relevance and 鈥榓pplicability鈥 of academic study in today's world. Participants engaging with the subject from a variety of angles will offer their views. Panel members: Gesine Manuwald (Greek and Latin), Fiachra Mac G贸r谩in (Greek and Latin), Valentina Arena (History), Chris Stamatakis (English), Ffion Smith (Greek and Latin), Melissa Pires Da Silva (Greek and Latin).

Zoom link:听

17:00鈥18:00: Screening of four Documentaries on contemporary London (IAS Forum)

The screening of four 8-minute Documentaries on contemporary London, directed by 香港六合彩中特网 MA Film Studies students, followed by a Q&A and discussion

Invisible Pockets (2022; dir. Chenfei Huang, Di Wu and Qi Wu)

Lao She in London (2022; dir. Yuchong Mao, Chuxian Gan and Xiaoyue Zhang)

Foodbank (2002; dir. Jiatong Tu, Cheng Shang, Xiang Li and Huan Li)

How (Not) to be Lonely in London (2002; dir. Maria Zurita Muzquiz; Wenxin Cai and Chang Liu)

Zoom link:听

18:30-20:45: Marc Isaacs, The Filmmaker鈥檚 House (IAS Forum)

Screening of Marc Isaacs鈥檚 recent film, The Filmmaker鈥檚 House, followed by a Q&A with the director (Marc Isaacs, interviewed by Stephen Hart)

When the Filmmaker is told his next film must be about crime, sex or celebrity to get funded, he takes matters into his own hands and begins shooting in his home with a cast of characters connected to his own life. Two English builders, employed to replace the garden fence, temporarily remove the barrier between the house and a Pakistani neighbour. A homeless Slovakian man charms the Filmmaker's Colombian cleaner to let him in and tests everyone's ideas of boundaries and hospitality.

Zoom link:听

Thursday 9 June 2022

11:00鈥12:30: 8 films on A&H Research, curated by Florian Mussgnug听(Foster Court 235)

The screening of eight 3-minute films showcasing the variety of research projects currently underway in the Faculty of Arts and Humanities 鈥 on social care, classical antiquity in cinema, Henry James, art education in Kenya, subtitling in Netflix, Palestinian statelessness, public policy in Russia and Ukraine, and shaping NHS policy 鈥 followed by a Q&A and debate on the ways in which research has impact in the modern-day world

/arts-humanities/research/ref-2021

13:00-15:00: Research Impact and Sustainability (Malet Place Engineering Building, 1.20)

This workshop will consist of a 45-minute presentation by Dr Jennifer Edmond, Trinity College Dublin on 鈥淩esearch Impact and Sustainability鈥, followed by 10-minute presentations by a selection of the A&H Impact Fellows 2022 on their findings, and concluding with a wrap-up on lessons learned. The following Impact Fellows will be presenting on their work:

Dr Ranjita Dhital (Interdisciplinary Health Studies) (in-person)

Dr Adam Crymble (Digital Humanities) (in-person)

Dr Antonis Bikakis (Department of Information Studies) (remotely)

Professor Maria Wyke (Department of Greek and Latin) (remotely)

Dr Jennifer Edmond鈥檚 research career has been diverse and highly transdisciplinary and has a particular focus on the impact of technology on the arts and humanities, leading a number of successful, large-scale, funded research projects, including CENDARI (FP7), Europeana Cloud (FP7), PARTHENOS (H2020), and PROVIDE DH (CHIST-ERA). This body of research explores how we support the 'digital turn' for humanists, respecting their strong tradition of qualitative methods and cultural sources. Currently she is finding very fruitful ground in the exploration of how understanding the intersection of technology with the study of the humanities provides new insight into social challenges, in particular as pertains to the use of information and communication technologies. This was the focus of the SPECTRESS Network (FP7) and the KPLEX project (H2020), as well as a number of initiatives currently in application stage. In her presentation she will be focussing on 鈥淩esearch Impact and Sustainability鈥

Zoom link:听

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