Tidligere arrangementer - Side 21
Hvordan har kunnskap om sesonger formet urbant liv i middelalderbyen Oslo? Hva ble dyrket? Når på året bygde man? Hvordan organiserte man seg i henhold til sesongmessig variasjon?
Henrik Wehmeier is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Hamburg. On Friday March 3rd (not Thursday this time) he will present the interdisciplinary research project "Poetry in the Digital Age".
In this lecture, Matthew Fuller (Goldsmiths University) will discuss "investigative aesthetics", or the role of sensing and sense-making in investigative practices in art, journalism and law.
The Emergence of the Modern United States, 1896-1929
Hva leste vi under pandemien? Hva gjorde det med oss at vi plutselig ikke lenger beveget oss rundt i samfunnet og i stedet ble sittende hjemme?
Christine Jeanneret avholder sin prøveforelesning for stillingen som førsteamanuensis i musikkhistorie.
Hvorfor skal hat være beskyttet av ytringsfriheten? Og hvem er det egentlig som slipper til med sitt sinne?
The whale is held to have great symbolic meaning, as an environmental emblem, as food, as tourist attraction, and more. In Andenes, Vesterålen, two anthropologists, Britt Kramvig and Sadie Hale talk about their search for different kinds of whales and the particular ways that the whale-as-symbol is contested in this place.
In this talk, Agnieszka Kałdonek-Crnjaković (Assistant Professor, University of Warsaw) will discuss the effect of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) on additional language learning considering theoretical assumptions and her recent research findings.
Hege Randi Tørressen will visit the Centre for Ibsen Studies to talk about her profession as a dramaturg at the National Theatre. This industry talk will be informative and provide a unique perspective about the National Theatre. There will be a Q&A session afterwards. Light refreshments will be served.
Dette er MultiLings arrangement i anledning den internasjonale morsmålsdagen 2023. Arrangementet er gratis og åpent for alle.
Prof. Julian Caskel, from Folkwang University of the Arts, will speak at RITMO's Seminar Series.
Visa A. J. Kurki (University of Helsinki) will present his article 'Can nature hold rights?: It's not as easy as you think'
How does visualization – of music in general and rhythm in particular – contribute to the analysis of music and musical performance? What are the challenges and advantages of new digital technology when it comes to such visualization? And what kind of consequences – aesthetical, epistemological, ontological – follow from this approach?
How can we investigate how hominins sculpted ecologies and gain better understandings of the evolution of landscape responses to human predation and subsistence?
Reading Armenian History as a Socially Symbolic Act
Nicholas S.M. Matheou (University of Edinburgh)
Paulo Ricardo Berton (Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil) holds a guest lecture in our course "Ibsen og det moderne drama".
Juan Christian Pellicer (University of Oslo)
This lecture will address Taiwan’s relations with mainland China and Taiwan’s domestic developments since 1949.
Associate professor Aaron Hess and professor Jens Kjeldsen will give a seminar to the Text & Rhetoric Research Seminar, on a theme of great importance to rhetorical studies as well as to life in general: ethos.
Associate professor Aaron Hess will give a seminar to the Text & Rhetoric Research Seminar, on the theme «participatory approaches to rhetoric».
Master Christopher James Masterman at the Department of Philosophy, Classics, History of Art and Ideas will defend his dissertation Ways of Talking about Worlds: Papers on the Metaphysics and Logic of Modality for the degree of philosophiae doctor (PhD).
Hva vet vi om de kvinnelige krigerne i vikingtiden? Og hvordan påvirker vår egen tid vår forståelse av kjønnsroller i fortiden?
What’s in a ‘verb’? Is there some lexical content which marks a word as a ‘verb’ or ‘noun’, or even a single level of analysis at which we could define them? Evidence from multiple fields of linguistics suggests not.
A guest lecture by Juan Cruz Forgnone (University of Buenos Aires)