Carmel,
No need to register - just come along. Look forward to seeing you.
Rosemary
----- Original Message -----
From: "Carmel McCaffrey" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2005 1:51 PM
Subject: Re: whai events
> I am going to be in Dublin on June 18th - how do I sign up for the
> afternoon conference?
>
> Carmel McCaffrey
>
> Rosemary Raughter wrote:
>
> >See below details of forthcoming Women's History Association events:
> >afternoon conference and reception on 18 June 2005 at Newman House,
Dublin
> >and annual conference, 18-19 November 2005 at UCC.
> >
> >Symposium and reception in celebration of Mary O'Dowd, A History of Women
in
> >Ireland, 1500-1800, Pearson Longman, 2005-04-30
> >
> >Saturday, 18 June, Boston College Dublin Campus, 86 St. Stephen's Green,
> >Dublin 2
> >
> >3pm - 5pm
> >
> >Chair: Professor Christine Meek (TCD)
> >
> >Dr Phil Kilroy
> >Lady Anne Conway, 1631-1679: Neo-Platonism and Heremeticism in Cambridge,
> >Lisburn and Ragley Hall
> >
> >Dr Marian Lyons (St Patrick's College, Drumcondra)
> >The plight of widows and orphans of Jacobite soldiers in Paris and St
> >Germain-en-Laye in the 1720s
> >
> >Rosemary Raughter
> >'Let heart and pen flow together, to the glory of God': faith, activism
and
> >family in the journal of Elizabeth Bennis, 1764-79
> >
> >
> >5pm - 7pm
> >Reception.
> >Speaker: Dr Margaret MacCurtain
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >Women's History Association of Ireland
> >Annual Conference 2005
> >
> >Public and Private Voices:
> >Irish Women's Personal Writings in Historical Perspective
> >
> >
> >NUI Cork, 18 -19 November 2005
> >
> >Call for Papers
> >
> >This Conference will explore Irish women's personal writings (such as
> >diaries, letters, memoirs and autobiographies, both published and
> >unpublished) as a rich source for understanding the mental, social and
> >political worlds of Irish and Irish-based women from the medieval to the
> >modern period. This kind of writing ranges from unpublished spiritual
> >diaries of religious women to the published and widely read memoirs of
> >notorious women, such as Mrs Leeson, a Dublin brothel-keeper of the
> >eighteenth century. In other words, it spans the purely private and
> >contemplative to the openly public and self-justificatory, with many
points
> >in between.
> >
> >Proposals for papers on any aspect of the Conference theme are welcome.
> >Proposals (200 word max), together with a brief CV, should be sent to Dr
> >Clare O'Halloran, Dept of History, NUI Cork, Cork by 31 July 2005. It is
> >intended to publish a select number of the papers from the Conference.
> >
> >.
> >
> >
> >
>
>
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