Seminar 1:
Dr Andy Hutcheson, 'Always the sun: Arminghall timber circle and henge’s relationship to the celestial and similar monuments, near and far.'
Thursday 16th April, 5.30pm
Earlham Hall 0.12
Seminar 2:
Philip Woods, “Travelling with intent to commit breaches of the peace”? The response of the authorities to scooter rallies in Great Yarmouth during the 1980s.
Thursday 30th April, 5.30pm
Earlham Hall 0.02
Seminar 3:
Dr Hannah Rose-Murray, “A Moral Map of the United States”: C19th Black Activism in East Anglia.
Thursday 7th May, 5.30pm
Earlham Hall 0.02
Seminar 4:
Thursday 21st May, 5.30pm
The Centre for East Anglian Studies (CEAS) has flourished as a focus for research and teaching which seeks to place the investigation of the region’s past in a comparative and international context from the North Sea and Eastern Europe to the eastern seaboard of America.
It also aims to address wider issues of community and regionality, attracting a steady stream of visiting scholars from nationally and internationally.
Since August 1996 the Centre has been fully integrated into the UEA School of History, and shares with it in the most recent Research Assessment Exercise. Yet, although its current enrolment of postgraduate students testifies to its vibrant research culture, the Centre has always been far more than a university department.
From the outset, CEAS has drawn heavily upon the enthusiastic support of members of the East Anglian community. Convinced that research remains sterile unless it can be communicated to the widest possible audience, the Centre looks outwards to the region and beyond, maintaining close and mutually beneficial connections with local societies, institutions and members of the public who share a common commitment to the life and work of the region.
Find out more: https://ceasuea.org.uk/
- Conference
- Lectures