Print

Print


Dear All

This is to let you know about the annual HistoryLab conference being held
at the IHR on 11 and 12 June 2014. The annual IHR History Lab conference
brings together postgraduate students and early-career researchers to
discuss and present their research on a common theme, acting as a showcase.
Please see the call for papers attached, and copied below.

Best wishes, Stef


*CFP IHR History Lab Conference 2014 **INNOVATION*

Institute of Historical Research, London, 11-12 June 2014


Throughout history there have been innovations, be it in terms of industry,
technology, science or medicine. There have been innovations related to
regimes of thought, ways of seeing and modes of understanding. Conversely
there have also been instances where innovation has been rejected, refused
and rebuffed, with communities and societies adhering to traditional forms
of living. Furthermore, with the march of innovation also came the end of
things, such as ways of living, forms of education, modes of production and
belief and understanding. Innovation has also led to an increase in
methodologies, theories and cross-disciplinary approaches in scholarship.
How have these assisted, or constrained, researchers, such as the digital
turn in humanities and moves towards multi- and inter-disciplinarity?


The conference seeks to discuss and exchange ideas regarding innovation and
correspondingly the lack of innovation, and resistance to innovation. How
have innovations been regarded contemporaneously, by academics, and what
have been the wider ramifications, influences and impacts of innovation?


We invite proposals for 20-minute papers, or panels of three speakers, from
postgraduate students and early-career researchers.

Please submit proposals of 300 words to: [log in to unmask]
by *28th February 2014*.



Papers may cover and explore the theme of Innovation in topics including,
but not limited to, the following areas:



·   Social, cultural, political mobility.

·   Religious movements and practices.

·   Medicine, psychiatry, psychology and health sciences.

·   Philosophical regimes of thought.

·   Administration and bureaucracy.

·   Industry and urbanization.

·   Politics, protest and resistance.

·   Technology and science.

·   Architecture and the built environment.

·   Education, welfare, public health and sanitation.

·   Agriculture, landscapes and gardens.

·   Family, society and popular culture.

·   Labour, business and industrial relations.

·   Crime, policing, surveillance and the law.

·   Crown, court culture, estates and nobility.

·   Scholarship, methodologies and interdisciplinarity.