On Saturday 28th June I will be participating in the French Slavery Study Day hosted by University of Stirling. Here are some more details about the event:
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University of Stirling, Saturday 28 June 2008
Interested colleagues and postgraduates are invited to a study day on the French Slave Trade and its Aftermath. The event is free (this includes lunch), but advanced registration is essential. For registration and any other enquiries, please contact:
Bill Marshall
Professor of Comparative Literary and Cultural Studies
School of Languages, Cultures and Religions
Pathfoot Building
University of Stirling
Stirling FK9 4LA
Scotland, UK.
Email: w.j.marshall@stir.ac.uk
Programme:
The sessions will take place in Room C1/C2 in the Pathfoot Building, University of Stirling,
Presentations will last for 30 minutes followed by 15 minutes of discussion.
Tea and coffee are available from about 10.15.
10.45 Welcome and opening remarks
Chaired by Bill Marshall:
11.00 Nick Nesbitt (University of Aberdeen): “Slavery, Populist Reason, and the Atlantic Enlightenment in the Haitian Revolution”.
11.45 Peter Hallward (Middlesex University): “Self-Emancipation and Political Will”.
12.30 LUNCH
Chaired by Charles Forsdick (University of Liverpool):
1.30 Susan Castillo (King’s College London): “The Caribbean Gothic: Victor Séjour and George Washington Cable”.
2.15 Lorna Milne (University of St Andrews): “The Curse of Slavery in Contemporary Antillean Fiction”.
3.0 TEA & COFFEE
Chaired by David Murphy (University of Stirling):
3.30 Dominic Thomas (University of California at Los Angeles):
“The Global Circulation of Bodies: Immigration, National Identity and
Co-Development”.
4.15 Richard Watts (Tulane University): “The Myth of the Ecological Slave”.
5.00 CLOSE