Dear all
This may be of some interest
Anne
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Symposium at Cambridge, January 9 2003
Date: Tue, 10 Dec 2002 16:41:12 -0700
From: Sam Otterstrom <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To: H-Net Network for Historical Geography
<[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
From: Gerry Kearns [[log in to unmask]]
Date sent:Tue 12/10/2002
Conceptions of Space in Historical and Cultural Geography
Department of Geography, University of Cambridge Thursday January 9 2003
The aim of this symposium is to explore how geographical concepts are
operationalised in historical research. To this end we have six papers
by
geographers and historians that take different readings of space as
their
theoretical point of departure. Each paper will be 40 minutes in
presentation with 20 minutes for discussion.
9.45 Gerry Kearns (Geography, Cambridge) 'The spaces of Joyce's Ulysses'
10.45 Coffee 11.00 Vanessa Harding (Birkbeck College) 'The space of the
dead in early modern London' 12.00 Eilidh Garrett (University of
Porstmouth) and Alice Reid (University of Cambridge), 'As others do
around
us: class, place and demography in England and Wales 1881-1921' 13.00
Buffet lunch 13.45 Miles Ogborn (Royal Holloway, University of London),
'Designs on the city: John Gwynn's plans for Georgian London' 14.45
Simon
Reid Henry (Geography, Cambridge) 'The spaces of development: socialism
and
globalisation in Cuba's biotechnology industry' 15.45 Tea 16.00 Daniel
Coetzee (University of Cambridge) 'Fighting for the soul of Scotland:
Contested space in Scottish recruiting, 1914-1916' 17.00 Concluding
discussion 17.30 Disperse
The symposium is free and is open to all interested scholars. It will
help
in the planning of coffee and wine if people would let us know that they
will be coming [email Gerry Kearns; [log in to unmask]; or Richard
Smith [log in to unmask]] but we will be pleased to see you even if you
have
not announced your intention of coming. It will be held in the
Department
of Geography, University of Cambridge. For a location map see -
http://www.cam.ac.uk/map/v3/drawmap.cgi?mp=down;xx=355;yy=258;mt=c
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