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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260627T101733Z
DTSTART;TZID=Pacific/Auckland:20120628T210000
DTEND;TZID=Pacific/Auckland:20120701T180000
SUMMARY:Interdisciplinarity in Medieval and Early Modern Research
UID:20260707T201729Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Pacific/Auckland
LOCATION:Dunedin\, New Zealand
DESCRIPTION:<p>Most research in medieval and early modern studies involves&nbsp\;interdisciplinary work. Whether it be historians working with&nbsp\;philosophers\, scholars of literature working with classicists or some&nbsp\;other combination\, research in these fields often requires one to&nbsp\;collaborate with and learn skills from scholars in cognate&nbsp\;disciplines. This workshop will bring together leading scholars with&nbsp\;extensive skills in interdisciplinary research in order to share their&nbsp\;skills and experience with postgraduate students and early career&nbsp\;researchers.<br><br>The Early Modern Thought Research Theme will be running the workshop&nbsp\;in conjunction with ANZAMEMS.&nbsp\; Bursaries are available for&nbsp\;postgraduates and for early career researchers.&nbsp\; Facilitating the&nbsp\;workshop will be Peter Marshall (Warwick)\, Peter Harrison&nbsp\;(Queensland)\, Stephen Clucas (Birkbeck College)\, and John Sutton&nbsp\;(Macquarie).</p>\n<p><strong>About the facilitators:</strong></p>\n<p>Peter Marshall\, Department of History\, University of Warwick&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Professor Marshall&rsquo\;s research interests are in aspects of religious&nbsp\;belief and practice in early modern Britain\, particularly the cultural&nbsp\;and political impact of the English Reformation.<br><br>Peter Harrison\, Centre for the History of European Discourses\,&nbsp\;University of Queensland</p>\n<p>Professor Harrison is currently editing his Gifford Lectures under the&nbsp\;working title of &lsquo\;Science\, Religion and Modernity&rsquo\; and is also working&nbsp\;on a project concerned with conceptions of progress in history and the&nbsp\;historical sciences.</p>\n<p>John Sutton\, Department of Cognitive Science\, Macquarie University&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Professor Sutton&rsquo\;s research focuses on the philosophy and sciences of&nbsp\;memory\, and covers two main areas: philosophy of psychology/cognitive&nbsp\;science\, and history of science.</p>\n<p>Stephen Clucas\, Department of English and Humanities\, Birkbeck&nbsp\;College\, University of London</p>\n<p>Dr Clucas is currently working with Timothy J. Raylor of Carleton College\, Minnesota on an edition of Thomas Hobbes's De corpore for the&nbsp\;Clarendon Edition of the Works of Thomas Hobbes.<br><strong></strong></p>\n<p><strong>Application</strong></p>\n<p>For application forms for the&nbsp\;workshop\, please visit the ANAMEMS site:<br>http://www.anzamems.arts.uwa.edu.au/pats</p>\n<p><strong>Contact</strong></p>\n<p>You can email inquiries to Michael Cop (michael.cop@otago.ac.nz) or&nbsp\;Peter Anstey (peter.anstey@otago.ac.nz).&nbsp\;For further information about EMTRT\, please visit our blog&nbsp\;(https://blogs.otago.ac.nz/emo/) or our website:</p>
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