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SUMMARY:Global Networks of Violence Symposium  - Speaker to be confirmed
DTSTART:20150925T080000Z
DTEND:20150925T163000Z
UID:TALK61009@talks.cam.ac.uk
CONTACT:Kate Bruce-Lockhart
DESCRIPTION:Register here: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/global-networks-
 of-violence-symposium-tickets-18507884581\n\nFeaturing keynote speaker Dr.
  Deana Heath\, University of Liverpool: "Hidden from History: Sexual viole
 nce against men"\n\nWith the recent ‘global turn’ in historical studie
 s\, historians are finding new insights into the interconnectedness of our
  world through a variety of themes\, such as migration\, trade\, communica
 tion\, intelligence and technology. Violence\, especially in the form of w
 arfare\, remains one of the most powerful global connectors. As historian 
 David A. Bell argues\, ‘Military conquest\, of the sort undertaken by Ge
 rmany and Japan in World War II\, is the most direct form of “global con
 nection” imaginable\,’ yet it is often overlooked in studies of global
  history. One must only study World War I\, World War II or the Cold War t
 o understand the ways in which violence creates networks across nationalit
 ies and spaces. However\, war is not the only form through which violence 
 can serve as a connector: indeed\, daily forms of violence\, such as flogg
 ing\, created shared corporal experiences amongst colonized populations an
 d generated intense debates amongst administrators. Terrorist networks rep
 resent another form of global violence that occupy the attention of schola
 rs and policymakers alike. This symposium aims to bring together graduate 
 students and historians for a collective inquiry into the nature\, forms a
 nd consequences of global networks of violence. The symposium will take pl
 ace at the University of Cambridge on Friday\, September 25th.\n\nSchedule
 \n\nAll events take place in the Junior Parlour\, Trinity College\, Univer
 sity of Cambridge\n\nRegistration and check-in at 9:00am\n\n10:00am: Panel
  1\, Networks of War\n\nSpeaker 1: Tim Gray\, Faculty of History\, Univers
 ity of Cambridge\, “Clubmen and peaceable armies: The Anglo-Welsh experi
 ence of civil war 1645-48” (10:00-10:20)\n\nSpeaker 2: Fraser Raeburn\, 
 University of Edinburgh\, “Re-examining the Mobilisation of British volu
 nteers in the Spanish Civil War (1936-9).”\n (10:20-10:40)\n\nDiscussion
 : 10:40-11:00\n\n\n11:05am: Panel 2\, Violence and the City\n\nSpeaker 1: 
 Xu Chong\, History Centre\, Sciences Po\, “Coping with Nationalism and t
 he Imperial Order: Public Protests and Repressions in Shanghai\, 1917-1921
 ”  (11:05-11:25)\n\nSpeaker 2: Gruia Badescu\, Centre for Urban Conflict
 s Research\, University of Cambridge\, “New Wars: Networks of Structural
  Violence in Reconstructing Belgrade and Sarajevo”  (11:25-11:45)\n\nDis
 cussion: 11:45-12:05\n\n12:05 Lunch\n\n1:10pm: Panel 3\, Violence in Colon
 ial Spaces\n\nSpeaker 1:  Daniel Neary\, Faculty of History\, University o
 f Cambridge\, “State violence against Religious Communities in the Empir
 e of Justinian\,” (1:10-1:30)\n\n\nSpeaker 2: Bennett Collins\, School o
 f International Relations\, University of St.Andrews\, “The Papal Genoci
 de: Examining the Ongoing Impact of the Doctrine of Christian Discovery on
  Indigenous Peoples in North America” (1:30-1:50)\n\nSpeaker 3: Alistair
  McClure\, Faculty of History\, University of Cambridge\, “Connecting th
 e quotidian to the spectacular: the reintroduction of corporal violence in
  India\,” (1:50-2:10)\n\nDiscussion: 2:10-2:30\n\n2:30pm: Panel 4\, Terr
 orist Networks\n\nSpeaker 1: Cathrin Ruppe\, Irish Studies at the Universi
 té de Haute-Bretagne II\, “Inherited Victimisation? Collective Memories
  of Irish Americans and the Support for the IRA” (2:30-2:50)\n\nSpeaker 
 2: Judith Jacob\, Department of International History\, London School of E
 conomics\, “Breaking Up is Hard to Do: Continuity with the Indonesian Ji
 hadist Movement”  (2:50-3:10)\n\nDiscussion: 3:10-3:30\n\n3:30-4:00pm: T
 ea Break\n\n4:00pm: Keynote speaker\n\nDr. Deana Heath\, University of Liv
 erpool\, "Hidden from History: Sexual violence against men" 4:00-5:30\n\n5
 :30pm: Thank you and closing\n
LOCATION:Junior Parlour\, Trinity College 
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