MMLL at the Ƶ Festival of Ideas
We are excited to share the 2024 line-up of MMLL events at the upcoming Ƶ Festival. This year we will have seven events happening across 14th, 17th, 19th and 26th March.
The Ƶ Festival is an annual interdisciplinary programme of events covering all aspects of world-leading research happening at the Ƶ. There will be more than 350 events and activities across the Festival themes of: Society, Health, Environment and Discovery. We are thrilled to be a part of this festival and for the opportunity to share with you the research and expertise of our academics.
Please click on the title of an event to access more details and booking information.
When: Thursday 14th March, 4:00-5:30pm
Where: : Lady Mitchell Hall, Sidgwick Avenue, CB3 9DA (https://map.cam.ac.uk/Lady+Mitchell+Hall#52.200854,0.108993,18)
Featuring ProfIoanna Sitaridou (Ƶ), DrŽeljko Jovanović (INALCO, Paris) and Prof.Andrés Enrique Arias (Universitat de les Illes Balears), this talk will exploreDjudeo-espanyol,a Romance languagespoken by the descendants of those Jews that left the various kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula in the aftermath of the persecutions (see, for instance, Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella of Castile’s shameful Edict of Exile in 1492), expulsions and forced conversions that took place in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.
Expelled Jews found shelter in the Ottoman Empire, which was looking to expand commercial activities at the time. Many Jews settled in the buoyant Byzantine city of Thessaloniki (Salonica), which later became known as “Jerusalem of the Balkans”. However, the linguistic history of this community is neither unified nor well-documented. This talk will set out to reconstruct the socio-linguistic world of these communities in 16th C. Thessaloniki.
To join in online, please use the following detailsto attend:
Meeting ID: 935 7643 2934
Passcode: 269318
When: Thursday 14th March, 6:00-7:00pm
Where: Little hall, Sidgwick Avenue, CB3 9DA https://map.cam.ac.uk/Little+Hall#52.200896,0.109859,18
Dr Martin Ruehl will lead an interactive seminar involving a short presentation followed by a discussion.
Most people consider Nietzsche an apolitical thinker. His concern, they believe, is with culture, not the state, and with the great individual leading an authentic, self-determined life far removed from society. The aim of this lecture is to revise this perception and to present Nietzsche as a philosopher almost obsessively preoccupied with social issues: the creation and maintenance of community values, education, class difference and distinctions, strife and revolution as well as authority and order.
When: Sunday 17th March, 11:00am-12:00pm
Where: SG1, Alison Richard Building, 7 West Road, CB3 9DP
Professor Robert Gordon will set out to explore the enigma of luck, examining the hybrid forms it has taken on in the modern imaginationand modern storytelling, whether in books, films or television. Ranging from Pinocchio to Casablanca to Philip K. Dick, and much else besides, the talk lays out the uses and meanings of the language of luck, and uncovers some of the patterns and motifs of luck that govern it and that we use to decipher the world around us.
Where:SG1, Alison Richard Building, 7 West Road, CB3 9DP
When: Sunday 17th March, 1:30pm-2:30pm
Dr Vivien KogutLessa de Sá will explore the Tupi ibirapema and its changing cultural and material value: from deadly weapon, to token of cannibalism, to symbol of dangerous femininity, to online sales item.How can objects like the ibirapema throw light on early cultural exchanges between Europe and the New World? How do they convey the expectations, projections and fears permeating such cultural encounters? And, finally, what meaning to they have for us today?
Where:SG1, Alison Richard Building, 7 West Road, CB3 9DP
When:Sunday 17th March, 3:00-4:00pm
Dr Carlos Fonseca will be in conversation with Parvathy Salil to discuss the overlap between his work as a novelist and an academic. Salil and Fonseca will discuss his latest novel,Austral(MacLehose, 2023), as well as his previous two novelsNatural HistoryandColonel Lágrimas.
Where:SG1, Alison Richard Building, 7 West Road, CB3 9DP
When:Sunday 17th March, 5:00-6:00pm
Dr James Womack will be focusing on the work of three very different poets:the sixth-century Latin elegist Maximian, the cult Spanish poète maudit Leopoldo María Panero (1948-2014), and the contemporary memoirist Manuel Vilas (born 1962). What unites them is the way their work looks in uncompromising detail at how desire outruns performance, and the fragility that underlies even the most apparently macho statements.
Where:Faculty of Divinity, Lecture Theatre 2, 25 West Road, CB3 9EF
When:Tuesday 19th March, 5:00-6:00pm
Dr Irene Fabry-Tehranchi and Sophie Dubillot will examine a selection of the Liberation Collection at Ƶ University Library, which consists of about 3,300 books in French on the Second World War, the Occupation and the Liberation. They will share a selection of illustrated works as well as humorous drawings representing struggles such as restrictions, housing issues, and missing family members, in an ideologically divided country in dire need of reconstruction.
Read more about this event in this by the University Library.
Where:SG1, Alison Richard Building, 7 West Road, CB3 9DP
When:Tuesday 19th March, 6:30-7:30pm
Professor Martin Crowley will give a talk on the surprising and widespread politics of opacity. In modern liberal democracies, access to social and political inclusion is granted on the basisof recognition by the state as a valid political participant. For some citizens, however, this recognition comes at too high a price. The talk will discuss activist movements in contemporary France which have adopted practices of opacity - modes of presence which do not rely on recognition by others in order to be socially and politically effective - as alternative forms of action.
Where: Frankopan Hall, West Court, Jesus College, CB5 8BQ
When: 26th March, 19:30 - 20:45
Join theandas prizewinning author Shida Bazyar discusses how novels take their characters and their readers on journeys across cultural contexts.