European Studies Center

Synonyms: 
CWES
ESC

European Crisis?

Presenter: 
Richard Wainwright, Visiting Professor, University of Pittsburgh School of Law
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Mon, 02/18/2013 - 17:00

As a part of the Jean Monnet Lecture on European Union Law, Professor Wainwright’s lecture will center on the economic and political problems that currently face the European Union, and will examine a possible scenario for recovery. On the economic front, EU countries are faced with high indebtedness, high unemployment, and low growth. Politically, Eurozone countries are committed to closer economic union, while the present United Kingdom government is seeding a renegotiation of its treaty ties with the EU—with the possibility that it might exit if the renegotiation is unsuccessful.

Cost: 
Free unless attending for PA CLE Board Credit.
Contact Phone: 
412-648-7023
Contact Email: 
cile@pitt.edu

The Subaltern, Again and Again

Presenter: 
Gayatri Spivak (Columbia)
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Wed, 02/20/2013 - 17:00

Professor Spivak’s talk (and Q&A) will engage with some of the key issues confronting the western historical and intellectual tradition, especially as they relate to post-colonialism and gender.

Location: 
Cathedral of Learning, Room 602
Contact Person: 
Arjuna Parakrama
Contact Email: 
arjuna@pitt.edu

Faculty Seminar: Science, Culture, and the Human after World War II

Presenter: 
Priscilla Wald (Duke)
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Repeats every day until Fri May 03 2013.
Mon, 04/29/2013 - 11:00 to 13:00
Tue, 04/30/2013 - 11:00 to 13:00
Wed, 05/01/2013 - 11:00 to 13:00
Thu, 05/02/2013 - 11:00 to 13:00
Fri, 05/03/2013 - 11:00 to 13:00

Science, Culture, and the Human after World War II

Location: 
Cathedral of Learning, Room 602
Contact Person: 
Ms. Tory Konecny
Contact Email: 
vad16@pitt.edu

Print, Piety, and the Rise of Early Modern Vernacular

Presenter: 
John King (Ohio State University)
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Tue, 04/02/2013 - 12:30 to 14:00

Our work on this topic seeks to bridge the divide between medieval and early modern studies by taking a long view of three questions surrounding particular uses of vernacular languages and broader processes of vernacularization in this period: How did changes in technologies of communication, such as the rise of letterpress printing, intersect with the uses of vernacular languages? How were the structures of "vernacular theology" transfigured during the period leading up to and following the Protestant Reformation and Catholic Counter-Reformation?

Location: 
Cathedral of Learning, Room 602
Contact Person: 
Jennifer Waldron (English)
Contact Email: 
jwaldron@pitt.edu

Medieval Song from Head to Tail

Presenter: 
ANNA ZAYARUZNAYA (Princeton)
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Fri, 03/22/2013 - 16:00

From the heads and tails of individual notes to the foreheads and feet of song stanzas, medieval musical writings are replete with body parts. Sometimes the terms are used by convention, or in the service of simple mnemonics. But in other cases, the reasons for acts of musical anthropomorphization are less clear. Tracing the rhetoric of musical animation from the treatises into the realm of musica practica can give us fresh insight into some of the best-known songs of the later middle ages.

Location: 
Music Building Room 132
Contact Person: 
Jennifer Waldron
Contact Email: 
jwaldron@pitt.edu

Shakespeare's Two Antonios: Language, Stage History, and the History of Sexuality

Presenter: 
MARIANNE NOVY (English)
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Mon, 02/18/2013 - 12:00

Shakespeare's plays Merchant of Venice and Twelfth Night both contain men named Antonio who speak of their love for another male character. Both Antonios remain single at the ends of their plays while both of the men they love marry women. Recent critics often see homosexual desire in the Antonios, and productions today often emphasize their exclusion from the comic community.

Location: 
Cathedral of Learning, Room 501G
Contact Person: 
Jennifer Waldron
Contact Email: 
jwaldron@pitt.edu

Scottish English: A Sociolinguistic Analysis of TH-fronting, social meaning and social identity

Presenter: 
Robert Lawson (Birmingham City University)
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Fri, 02/08/2013 - 15:00

As a relatively new phenomenon in the phonology of Scottish English, TH-fronting has surprised sociolinguists by its rapid spread in the urban heartlands of Scotland. While attempts have been made to understand and model the influence of lexical effects, media effects and frequency effects, far less understood is the role of social identity.

Location: 
Cathedral of Learning, Room G-8
Contact Person: 
Sally Kim
Contact Email: 
sjk70@pitt.edu

‘We Carried Your Secrets:’ One Man’s Experience of Reconciliation in Northern Ireland

Presenter: 
Jon McCourt, Peace Activist and Community Organizer
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Date: 
Mon, 02/18/2013 - 12:00 to 13:00

Jon McCourt has been a community Peace Activist and a member of the Peace and Reconciliation Group in the City of Derry/Londonderry, Northern Ireland for over 30 years. As a young man he went on the first Civil Rights March in Derry in October 1968. He has been actively engaged in almost every aspect of the conflict that arose as the result of that march. He was involved in the events that have come to be known as Bloody Sunday when British soldiers clashed with civil rights protestors January 30, 1972.

Location: 
4500 Posvar Hall
Cost: 
Free
Contact Person: 
Allyson Delnore
Contact Phone: 
412-624-5404
Contact Email: 
adelnore@pitt.edu

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