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Subject:

BARS: Thomas Pennant and Enlightenment Networks - Updated Schedule

From:

Neil Ramsey <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Neil Ramsey <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Wed, 2 Sep 2015 08:12:05 +0100

Content-Type:

multipart/mixed

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text/plain (78 lines) , Thomas Pennant and Enlightenment Networks Schedule.pdf (78 lines)

Thomas Pennant and Enlightenment Networks
 
A One-Day Research Workshop, Saturday 12th September, University of Glasgow
 
Location: School of Critical Studies, Room 202, 4 University Gardens
 
Conveners: Prof Nigel Leask (University of Glasgow) and Dr Mary-Ann Constantine (CAWCS, University of Wales, Aberystwyth)
 
Registration for non-speakers £10 (£5 concessions) 
 
You can register at the workshop, but space is limited, so please contact Alex Deans ([log in to unmask]) if you wish to attend.
 
The Workshop is Part of the four year AHRC-funded research project Curious Travellers: Thomas Pennant and the Welsh and Scottish Tour, 1760-1820 [log in to unmask] based jointly in CAWCS, University of Wales, Aberystwyth, and the School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow.
  
By the time of his Scottish (1769 and 1772) and Welsh (1773) tours, Thomas Pennant was known as a naturalist and the author of British Zoology (1761-66) and Synopsis of Quadrupeds (1771). He had also established a national and international network of learned correspondents, including Sir Joseph Banks, Carl Linnaeus, Peter Simon Pallas, Gronovius, Gilbert White of Selbourne, and Richard Gough. Pennant’s tours are representative of his omnivorous style and interdisciplinary range: he was a renowned antiquarian and a competent historian, art critic and agriculturalist as well as a naturalist.  Perhaps for this reason, although frequently cited as witness or authority in other studies, especially on the natural and social history of Scotland and Wales, his texts have rarely been addressed in their own right. Pennant’s ambition was to combine the personal authority of the informed traveller’s eye with the encyclopaedic protocols of enlightenment knowledge making, and his correspondence reveals the extent to which his travel books were based on a laborious process of data collection both ‘in the field’, and at his Flintshire home at Downing. Pennant was also the first domestic traveller to provide extensive visual documentation of his tours, commissioning (or offering patronage) to artists like Paul Sandby, Charles Cordiner, and most famously, his ‘servant artist’ Moses Griffith. The workshop will address Pennant’s Enlightenment networks, with a special focus on natural history and antiquarianism, topographical drawing, and epistolary culture.


Schedule
 
9.30 am
Tea/Coffee and Registration, Room 202, 4 University Gardens
 
10 – 10.15 am 
Welcome and Introduction (Nigel Leask and Mary-Ann Constantine)
 
10.30 am – 12.30 pm
Session 1: Topography and Visual Culture
 
Murdo Macdonald, ‘Pennant and Charles Cordiner: The significance of the visual’
 
John Bonehill, Views of the estate in Thomas Pennant’s Tour of Scotland: 
picturing ‘His Lordship’s policy’
 
 
Ailsa Hutton, ‘Pennant and Moses Griffith’
 
12.30 – 1.30 pm 
Lunch Break
 
1.30 – 3.00 pm 
Session 2: Cultures of Epistolarity
 
Miranda Lewis, 'Early Modern Letters Online: Networking the Republic of Letters'
 
Curious Travellers  RAs, “Communicative Dispositions’: The Correspondence of Thomas Pennant
 
 
3.00 – 3.30 pm 
Tea/Coffee
 
3.30 – 5.30 pm 
Session 3: Natural History and Antiquities 
 
Dominik Huenniger, ‘Collections, Fish Markets, and Mines: Johann Christian Fabricius’ Travels and the Making of Natural History’
 
Andrew Prescott, ‘The British Networks of Grímur Jónsson Thorkelín’
 
Donald William Stewart, ‘Pennant and Rev. Donald MacQueen of Kilmuir’
 
6.15 pm 
Dinner for Speakers

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