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SUMMARY:Archival Fragments\, Experimental Modes in Oxford - Sara Johnson (
 UC San Diego)\, Sarah Knott (Oxford)
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20260312T160000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20260312T171500Z
UID:https://new.talks.ox.ac.uk/talks/id/456d3780-76cd-487c-a880-c9e9ab0deb
 50/
DESCRIPTION:This week brings together members of WGQ (perhaps the MSt coho
 rt in particular) and participants in the Archival Fragments\, Experimenta
 l Modes Collective\, reflecting on what we have learned methodologically\,
  conceptually and theoretically across the series.\n\n*Contributors/Respon
 dents:* Archival Fragments\, Experimental Modes\nSara Johnson (UC San Dieg
 o\, and AFEM) will be here in person.\n\nSpeakers:\nSara Johnson (UC San D
 iego)\, Sarah Knott (Oxford)
LOCATION:St John's College (North Lecture Room)\, St Giles OX1 3JP
TZID:Europe/London
URL:https://new.talks.ox.ac.uk/talks/id/456d3780-76cd-487c-a880-c9e9ab0deb
 50/
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DESCRIPTION:Talk:Archival Fragments\, Experimental Modes in Oxford - Sara 
 Johnson (UC San Diego)\, Sarah Knott (Oxford)
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BEGIN:VEVENT
SUMMARY:Glut - Anthea Butler (University of Pennsylvania\, and Koch Histor
 y Centre)\, Catherine Sloan (Oxford)
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20260226T114500Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20260226T130000Z
UID:https://new.talks.ox.ac.uk/talks/id/da98da05-25c1-4d26-a482-0545c3fec9
 33/
DESCRIPTION:Historian of Victorian childhood *Catherine Sloan* investigate
 s what she does with boredom: how as the reader of a mass of Victorian mag
 azines she has sat with the problem of repetitive sources\, and developed 
 new techniques of interpretation. \n\n*Anthea Butler* is a historian of tw
 entieth-century race\, power and religion. She asks what we can learn from
  when there is a glut of archival material about women’s activities arou
 nd reproduction\, but historians focus unduly on white women and the right
  to the exclusion of work on the left. How do we weigh where to place our 
 attention?\n\n*Respondents:*\n\nMeryem Kalayci (Oxford)\nTehila Sasson (Ox
 ford)\nEmily Cousens (Northeastern University\, London)\n\nSpeakers:\nAnth
 ea Butler (University of Pennsylvania\, and Koch History Centre)\, Catheri
 ne Sloan (Oxford)
LOCATION:St John's College (North Lecture Room)\, St Giles OX1 3JP
TZID:Europe/London
URL:https://new.talks.ox.ac.uk/talks/id/da98da05-25c1-4d26-a482-0545c3fec9
 33/
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DESCRIPTION:Talk:Glut - Anthea Butler (University of Pennsylvania\, and Ko
 ch History Centre)\, Catherine Sloan (Oxford)
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BEGIN:VEVENT
SUMMARY:Remnants (in collaboration with the Rothermere American Institute)
  - Regina Kunzel (Yale)
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20260210T160000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20260210T173000Z
UID:https://new.talks.ox.ac.uk/talks/id/5fea4a22-c852-41fa-b98c-faf549121f
 d8/
DESCRIPTION:Drawing on a collection of previously unexamined case files fr
 om St. Elizabeth’s Hospital\, In the Shadow of Diagnosis explores the en
 counter between psychiatry and queer and gender-variant people in the mid-
 to late-twentieth-century United States.\n\n*Respondents:*\n\nSusanne Schm
 idt (University of Basle / WGQ)\nGrace Whorrall-Campbell (Oxford)\nElla Ca
 stanier (Oxford)\n\nSpeakers:\nRegina Kunzel (Yale)
LOCATION:Rothermere American Institute (Large Seminar Room)\, 1A South Par
 ks Road OX1 3UB
TZID:Europe/London
URL:https://new.talks.ox.ac.uk/talks/id/5fea4a22-c852-41fa-b98c-faf549121f
 d8/
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DESCRIPTION:Talk:Remnants (in collaboration with the Rothermere American I
 nstitute) - Regina Kunzel (Yale)
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BEGIN:VEVENT
SUMMARY:Dearth - Meleisa Ono-George (Oxford)\, Alice Rio (Oxford)
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20260129T123000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20260129T134500Z
UID:https://new.talks.ox.ac.uk/talks/id/95d34775-7e19-4d01-959b-dfe1e8a058
 52/
DESCRIPTION:*Meleisa Ono-George* is writing a public-facing book entitled 
 _My Name is Amelia Newsham: Science\, Art and the Making of Race_. To do s
 o\, she uses the sparse source material of an enslaved woman’s life to w
 eave an intimate and nuanced history of race in eighteenth-century Britain
 .\n\n*Alice Rio_ is writing a general narrative history of early medieval 
 Europe told via the experiences of a handful of migrant women\, or women w
 ho were in one way or another bearers of a minority culture within their h
 ousehold. Her main methodological problem is dearth of sources about (and 
 near-absence of sources written by) women for this period\, and how not to
  end up just talking about men instead. She wants to argue this problem al
 so presents unexpected opportunities.\n\n*Respondents:*\n\nEmily West (Oxf
 ord)\nSimple Rajrah (Oxford)\nSofia Sanabria de Felipe (Oxford)\n\nSpeaker
 s:\nMeleisa Ono-George (Oxford)\, Alice Rio (Oxford)
LOCATION:St John's College (North Lecture Room)\, St Giles OX1 3JP
TZID:Europe/London
URL:https://new.talks.ox.ac.uk/talks/id/95d34775-7e19-4d01-959b-dfe1e8a058
 52/
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DESCRIPTION:Talk:Dearth - Meleisa Ono-George (Oxford)\, Alice Rio (Oxford)
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BEGIN:VEVENT
SUMMARY:CGIS Workshop: Gender History and the Worlds of Care   - Erin Magl
 aque (Sheffield)
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20211202T123000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20211202T140000Z
UID:https://new.talks.ox.ac.uk/talks/id/dd4cd6c5-dbf4-4288-a5dc-05d6a92bed
 75/
DESCRIPTION:This workshop will begin with a talk from Erin Maglaque (Sheff
 ield) on gender and the family in early modern Italy.  Dr Maglaque’s lat
 est article\, ‘Care Work and the Family in Catholic Reformation Tuscany
 ’\, examines the care work undertaken by wet-nurses employed at Florence
 ’s foundling hospital and reflects upon the assumptions made by historia
 ns and feminist economists on the commercialisation and measurements of wo
 men’s work.  \n \nFollowing a Q+A\, we will then open the floor to discu
 ss the role of care work in histories of gender\, the family\, labour\, as
  well as our own positionality in these histories. How can we speak about 
 care work and the academy\, and the tensions within and between them?  \n 
  \nThis event follows on the Postgraduate Symposium: Gender History and th
 e Worlds of Care  (13 October 2021) which was co-organized by the Centre f
 or Gender History\, University of Glasgow (coordinator)\; the Centre for G
 ender\, Identity and Subjectivity\, Oxford University\; the Centre for Gen
 der and Women’s Studies\, Sabanci University\; and the Centre for Resear
 ch on Culture and Gender\, Ghent University. \nSpeakers:\nErin Maglaque (S
 heffield)
LOCATION:Online via Zoom
TZID:Europe/London
URL:https://new.talks.ox.ac.uk/talks/id/dd4cd6c5-dbf4-4288-a5dc-05d6a92bed
 75/
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DESCRIPTION:Talk:CGIS Workshop: Gender History and the Worlds of Care   - 
 Erin Maglaque (Sheffield)
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