Conference: Homing In In brief Title - Homing In (14th Biennial Conference of the Association for Low Countries Studies in the UK and Ireland) Organisers - The Association for Low Countries Studies (ALCS) About the conference Our world is constructed around the reality and the concept of home. After a pandemic in which home gained new prominence, we would like to home in on understanding, remembering, (re)creating, searching for, (re)finding, (re)discovering, challenging, celebrating, home as an idea(l) and as a physical place. Home is the story of who we are and such a deeply familiar place that it is almost impossible to see it with the eyes of an outsider. We are steeped into home as an idea, a concept, an ideal expressed through objects and representations. The conference is organised by the Association for Low Countries Studies. Take me to the ALCS website Keynote speakers The four keynote lectures are free and open to the public. Please book your tickets for the lectures through Eventbrite. Scotland and the Dutch Republic in the Early Modern Period: friends, partners, colleagues Esther Mijers (University of Edinburgh), Sunday 10 July 2022 at 5:15 to 6:15pm Book your ticket on Eventbrite Homing the Dutch Jan Willem Duyvendak (NIAS-KNAW and University of Amsterdam), Monday 11 July 2022 at 9:30 to 10:30am Book your ticket on Eventbrite Decolonising Home and Belonging Olivia Umurerwa Rutazibwa (London School of Economics), Monday 11 July 2022 at 5 to 6pm Book your ticket on Eventbrite Finding Home between Socialist Internationalism and White Privilege Malgorzata Drwal (Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań), Tuesday 12 July 2022 at 10 to 11:30am Book your ticket on Eventbrite Jul 10 2022 00.00 - Jul 12 2022 23.59 Conference: Homing In For the 14th ALCS Biennial Conference, an in-person event at the University of Edinburgh, we would like to home in on home in a Low Countries context. 50 George Square Edinburgh EH8 9JU
Conference: Homing In In brief Title - Homing In (14th Biennial Conference of the Association for Low Countries Studies in the UK and Ireland) Organisers - The Association for Low Countries Studies (ALCS) About the conference Our world is constructed around the reality and the concept of home. After a pandemic in which home gained new prominence, we would like to home in on understanding, remembering, (re)creating, searching for, (re)finding, (re)discovering, challenging, celebrating, home as an idea(l) and as a physical place. Home is the story of who we are and such a deeply familiar place that it is almost impossible to see it with the eyes of an outsider. We are steeped into home as an idea, a concept, an ideal expressed through objects and representations. The conference is organised by the Association for Low Countries Studies. Take me to the ALCS website Keynote speakers The four keynote lectures are free and open to the public. Please book your tickets for the lectures through Eventbrite. Scotland and the Dutch Republic in the Early Modern Period: friends, partners, colleagues Esther Mijers (University of Edinburgh), Sunday 10 July 2022 at 5:15 to 6:15pm Book your ticket on Eventbrite Homing the Dutch Jan Willem Duyvendak (NIAS-KNAW and University of Amsterdam), Monday 11 July 2022 at 9:30 to 10:30am Book your ticket on Eventbrite Decolonising Home and Belonging Olivia Umurerwa Rutazibwa (London School of Economics), Monday 11 July 2022 at 5 to 6pm Book your ticket on Eventbrite Finding Home between Socialist Internationalism and White Privilege Malgorzata Drwal (Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań), Tuesday 12 July 2022 at 10 to 11:30am Book your ticket on Eventbrite Jul 10 2022 00.00 - Jul 12 2022 23.59 Conference: Homing In For the 14th ALCS Biennial Conference, an in-person event at the University of Edinburgh, we would like to home in on home in a Low Countries context. 50 George Square Edinburgh EH8 9JU
Jul 10 2022 00.00 - Jul 12 2022 23.59 Conference: Homing In For the 14th ALCS Biennial Conference, an in-person event at the University of Edinburgh, we would like to home in on home in a Low Countries context.