Tidligere arrangementer - Side 26
Professor Tecumseh Fitch will give a seminar lecture on "Hierarchy in Rhythmic Cognition" as part of the RITMO Seminar Series.
Professor Mark Katz from University of North Carolina will give a seminar lecture on "Hip Hop Turntablism and the Limits of Rhytmic Complexity"
Lecture by Tommaso Milani, professor of multilingualism at the University of Gothenburg
Professor Karin Kukkonen from ILOS University of Oslo will give a seminar lecture on "The Multiple Speeds of Literary Narrative".
In this RITMO Seminar Series Associate Professor Werner Goebl (University of Music and Performing Arts, Vienna) will give a seminar lecture on "Understanding shaped time in music".
A conference on the perception of music and speech as part of the ‘Perceiving Representations’ project. In particular, we are interested in whether there are interesting similarities between the perception of these two auditory phenomena, and in gathering together specialists who are working on each to foster fruitful discussions and novel insights.
Professor Robert T. Knight will give an open lecture as part of the conference RITMO Largo. In collaboration with Forum for Consciousness Research.
Get to know all the exciting research being carried out by RITMO's PhDs and Postdocs.
RITMO has been fully operational for one year, and we are eager to show and tell about what we have been doing so far. Welcome to RITMO Largo, our annual conference!
Friday seminar with Associate Professor Þóra Pétursdóttir, IAKH, UiO
Fredagsseminar med førsteamanuensis Þóra Pétursdóttir, IAKH, UiO
Professor Barbara Tillmann (Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, Auditory Cognition and Psychoacoustics Team) will give a seminar lecture on "Influence of rhythmic auditory stimulation on subsequent language processing"
On June 17, 2019, the ILLREP research group will be hosting a one-day interdisciplinary seminar featuring multiple speakers from the University of Oslo and beyond. The keynote lecture will be delivered by Susan Schweik, Professor of English at UC Berkeley and author of works including The Ugly Laws: Disability in Public (2009).
There are new challenges for research integrity and there is great change in the way that research is being conducted.
We are very pleased to announce a guest lecture by Tamar Herzig, Associate Professor of Early Moderne European History at Tel Aviv University. The lecture is open for everyone
Professor Georgina Born (Oxford, UK) will give a seminar lecture on Time, the Social, and the Material, as they mediate musical genre.
Workshop during the GLOW conference: Generative Linguistics beyond Language: Shared Modules for Rhythm, Narration and Emotion across Domains.
In my talk, I will reflect the perspective and results of the research project and network 'kakanien revisited' as a contribution of an exemplary field of area studies in cultural research.
In a first step, I will describe all the tools the group has adapted from postcolonial studies: the subversion of the relation between centre and periphery, heterogeneity and identity, the relation between culture and power, the narrative of culture and civilisation, gender aspects, the construction of the 'own' other. In a second part, I will discuss the differences between post-colonialism and post-imperialism, also with regard to the process of nation building. Finally, I will refer to the imperial traces in Austrian literature of the 20th century, e.g. in Roth, Canetti, Musil, Broch, Zweig and others.
Reference: Wolfgang Müller-Funk: The Architecture of Modern Culture. Towards a narrative theory of culture. Boston-Berlin 2012.
Jessie Fillerup, Associate Professor of Music at the University of Richmond and research fellow at the Aarhus Institute of Advanced Studies, will give a seminar lecture entitled " Musical Temporality in Theatrical Magic Shows".
Lecture by Till Dembeck, University of Luxembourg
Samuel Mehr, Research Associate in the Department of Psychology at Harvard University, will give a seminar lecture entitled "Origins and Functions of Music in Infancy".
Lecture by Erika Mihálycsa (Babeș-Bolyai University, Cluj)