Breaking Down Barriers
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Track Listing
| Regenia Gagnier / Why Interdisciplinarity? | 0:12:08 | 128kbps | 44100 | 11.12 MB | |
| Professor Gagnier will be giving this introductory talk entitled ‘Why Interdisciplinarity?‘ on Monday 19th October, to introduce the 2009 Compass Interdisciplinary Virtual Conference.
The books of Regenia Gagnier have shaped the study of Victorian and modern culture with highly influential work on decadence, aesthetics and aestheticism, lifewriting and subjectivity, economics, individualism, and globalization. Idylls of the Marketplace: Oscar Wilde and the Victorian Public (Stanford, 1986) considered the role of the artist in market society. Subjectivities: A History of Self-Representation in Britain 1832-1920 (Oxford, 1991) analyzed the relationship of social class and gender to literary form. The Insatiability of Human Wants: Economics and Aesthetics in Market Society (Chicago, 2000) traced the moment when aesthetics and economics shifted from substantive to formal models and production to consumption. She has just completed Individualism, Decadence, and Globalization (forthcoming Palgrave 2010), and her current research is on the global circulation of the literatures of liberalism. Gagnier is Editor in Chief of Literature Compass and Professor of English at the University of Exeter, and Director of Exeter Interdisciplinary Institute (EII).
Join the largest meeting of minds in the social sciences and humanities keywords: Virtual Conference, literature, sociology, geography, history, science, social sciences, humanities, interdicsiplinarity | |||||
| Roger Griffin / The Rainbow Bridge | 0:28:34 | 128kbps | 44100 | 26.17 MB | |
| Professor Griffin will be giving this keynote lecture entitled ‘‘The Rainbow Bridge’: Reflections on Interdisciplinarity in the Cybernetic Age‘ on Monday 19th October.
Roger Griffin is Professor in Modern History at Oxford Brookes University (UK) where he gives courses on fascism, modernism, and terrorism, and has written on a wide range of political, cultural, and socio-psychological phenomena relating to generic fascism and right-wing extremism. His more than 100 publications include the two monographs The Nature of Fascism (Pinter, 1991), Modernism and Fascism. The Sense of a Beginning under Mussolini and Hitler (Palgrave, 2007), and the collection of essays A Fascist Century (Palgrave, 2008). He also edited the anthologies of primary and secondary sources Fascism (OUP, 1995), International Fascism. Theories, Causes and the New Consensus (Arnold, 1998); and (with Matthew Feldman) the 5 volumes of Critical Concepts in Political Science: Fascism (Routledge, 2003). He is now working on the volume Modernism and Terrorism for his series Modernism and… (Palgrave). His two main contributions to comparative studies of extremist ideologies lie first in his exploration of the central role of the myth of imminent palingenesis as a universal component of the social imaginary of revolutionaries (including fascist ones) of every cultural background, religious or secular, anywhere in the world, and second in his investigation of the way this myth is the hallmark of a modernist reaction to the ‘nomocidal’ conditions of globalizing and secularizing modernity
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| David Crystal / Language Death: a Problem for All | 0:26:43 | 32kbps0 | 44100 | 61.19 MB | |
| Professor Crystal will be giving his keynote lecture entitled ‘Language Death’ on Tuesday 20th October
David Crystal works from his home in Holyhead, North Wales, as a writer, editor, lecturer, and broadcaster, and is Honorary Professor of Linguistics at the University of Bangor. He read English at University College London, specialised in English language studies, did some research there at the Survey of English Usage under Randolph Quirk, then joined academic life as a lecturer in linguistics, first at Bangor, then at Reading, where he was professor linguistics from 1975 to 1984. His research has been mainly in English language studies, in such fields as intonation and stylistics, and in the application of linguistics to religious, educational, clinical, and electronic contexts. keywords: | |||||
| Mark Macklin / Floodplain Catastrophes and Climate Change | 0:20:37 | 128kbps | 44100 | 18.88 MB | |
| Professor Macklin will be giving his keynote lecture entitled ‘Floodplain Catastrophes and Climate Change: Lessons from the Rise and Fall of Riverine Societies’ on Thursday 22nd October
Mark Macklin’s research is located at the intersection of geomorphology, Quaternary science and archaeology. He has written papers in these areas for Antiquity, Catena, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, Geoarchaeology, Geological Society of America Bulletin, Geology, Geomorphology, Hydrological Processes, Journal of Archaeological Science, Journal of Quaternary Science, Progress in Physical Geography, Quaternary Research, Quaternary Science Reviews, The Holocene, and Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers. keywords: | |||||
| Peter Ludlow / Virtual Communities, Virtual Cultures, Virtual Governance | 0:24:29 | 128kbps | 44100 | 22.42 MB | |
| Professor Ludlow will be giving his keynote lecture entitled ‘Virtual Communities, Virtual Cultures, Virtual Governance’ on Monday 26th October
Peter Ludlow is Professor of Philosophy at Northwestern University. He has worked on a number of topics at the intersection of philosophy, linguistics, and cognitive science, and has also published a number of works on the emergence of community and governance in virtual worlds, including High Noon on the Electronic Frontier (MIT Press 1995) and Crypto Anarchy, Cyberstates, and Pirate Utopias (MIT Press, 2001). His most recent work, co-authored with Mark Wallace, is The Second Life Herald: the Virtual Tabloid that Witnessed the Dawn of the Metaverse (MIT Press 2007). keywords: | |||||
| Roy F. Baumeister / What is the Human Mind Designed for? | 0:21:35 | 128kbps | 44100 | 19.77 MB | |
| Professor Baumeister will be giving his keynote lecture entitled ‘What is the Human Mind Designed for?’ on Tuesday 27th October
Roy F. Baumeister is currently the Eppes Eminent Professor of Psychology and head of the social psychology graduate program at Florida State University. He grew up in Cleveland, the oldest child of a schoolteacher and an immigrant businessman. He received his Ph.D. in social psychology from Princeton in 1978 and did a postdoctoral fellowship in sociology at the University of California at Berkeley. He spent over two decades at Case Western Reserve University, where he eventually was the first to hold the Elsie Smith professorship. keywords: | |||||
| Eileen Joy / Reading Beowulf in the Ruins of Grozny | 0:18:21 | 128kbps | 44100 | 16.8 MB | |
| Professor Joy will be giving her keynote lecture entitled ‘Reading Beowulf in the Ruins of Grozny: Pre/modern, Post/human, and the Question of Being-Together’ on Thursday 29th October
Eileen Joy is Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies in English at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (PhD University of Tennessee, 2001), and her main interests are in Old English literature, cultural studies, embodied affectivities, and ethics. She has published articles and book chapters on: Beowulf, suicide terrorism, and Emmanuel Levinas; Tony Kushner’s play Homebody/Kabul and the Old English Ruin; historical artifacts and cultural memory; eros and the Old English legend The Seven Sleepers; the Anglo-Latin Wonders of the East and the 2002 massacre of Muslims in Gujarat, India; and the intellectual history of early modern bibliography. keywords: | |||||
| Michael Bradshaw / Why write a review paper and how to do it | 0:09:31 | 128kbps | 44100 | 8.72 MB | |
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| Kivmars Bowling / The Online Author’s Survival Guide | 0:12:29 | 128kbps | 44100 | 11.44 MB | |
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| Duane Wegener / 10 Things New Scholars should do to get published | 0:27:56 | 128kbps | 44100 | 25.59 MB | |
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| Vanessa Lafaye / The Secret to Online Publishing Success | 0:06:03 | 128kbps | 44100 | 5.55 MB | |
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| Devonya Havis / Teaching with Compass | 0:09:42 | 128kbps | 44100 | 8.89 MB | |
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| Catherine Sanderson / The Joys and Sorrows of Writing an Undergraduate Textbook | 0:09:38 | 128kbps | 44100 | 8.82 MB | |
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| Greg Maney / How to Survive the Review Process | 0:09:16 | 128kbps | 44100 | 8.5 MB | |
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