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Previous events - Page 5

Time and place: , On Zoom; please request connection details by email to: david.burke@imv.uio.no

We wish to invite you to an open midway assessment for our PhD fellow in musicology, Kristina Socanski Celik.

To comment on the candidate's work, we have invited Robert Sholl, Professor of Music at the University of West London.

Time and place: , PAM 425

THIS SEMINAR IS FULLY BOOKED

PhD workshop with Professor Iver B. Neumann.

Time:

Thesis seminar/text development

Time and place: , Zoom and PAM 389. Click here to sign up for online attendance.

We want to invite you to an open evaluation with our PhD-fellow in Religious Study Hanne Amanda Trangerud. To comment on the candidates work, we have invited Professor Winnifred Sullivan, from Indiana University Bloomington, USA

Time and place: , On Zoom; please request connection details by email to: david.burke@imv.uio.no

We wish to invite you to an open midway assessment for our PhD fellow in musicology, James Tomlinson.

To comment on the candidate's work, we have invited Peter M. Lefferts, Professor of Music History emeritus at University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

Time and place: , GM 452

This PhD course will focus on important topics related to understanding sexual violence, sexist ideology, rape myths, and their relation to epistemic injustices. The lecturer is Dr. Hilkje Hänel.

Time and place: , Professorboligen (Thursday) and Georg Sverderups House (Friday)

Research ethics and methods are intimately connected. The Norwegian Research School in History (NRSH) invites supervisors at our member institutions to a two-day workshop in Oslo in March 2023. Research in history shall take place in accordance with legal rules and ethical norms. This responsibility lies with the early career researcher, their supervisors and the institutions that employ them. What lies in the supervisor’s responsibility and how do we deal with ethical dilemmas when supervising master students and PhD fellows in history?

Time and place: , Georg Sverdrups hus, Undervisningsrom 3

THIS SEMINAR IS FULLY BOOKED.

Text development seminar in literature organized by Associate Professor Geir Uvsløkk at ILOS. The text development seminar is a compulsory component of the PhD programme.

Time and place: , Nasjonalbiblioteket, Oslo

What does the digital shift mean for historians? This workshop explores some of the key methodological questions historians encounter when we start using digital tools to answer historical questions. It will also provide training in using digital source materials.

Time and place: , University of Oslo

This PhD course grabs the bull by the horns and challenges participants to seriously engage with theory (ideas/principles to explain a practice or account for a situation) and method (planned procedure to pursue knowledge), and highlights the connections between them. We also discuss ethical problems in historical research. This is a 5 ECTS course.

Time and place: , GMH 452

PhD fellow Biu Huntington-Rainey will present an overview of their research on innovation and acquisition at the syntax-pragmatics interface.

Time and place: , Blindern, Henrik Wergelands hus, MultiLing Meeting Room (421)

The 2023 Winter School focuses on bi/multilingual families as a complex and dynamic space whose norms are informed both by family-internal factors and home-external affordances, including technological developments supporting digital communication, and constraints.

Time and place: , Seminarrom 360, P. A. Munchs hus and online

This seminar will explore the ways in which Latin America and Spain have imagined, interpreted, written and translated China during the first decades of the past century.

Time and place: , Room 389, P. A. Munchs hus

THIS SEMINAR IS FULLY BOOKED. 

Text development seminar in area studies organized by Professor Ljiljana Saric at ILOS. The text development seminar is a compulsory component of the PhD programme. 

Time and place: , Zoom

How to write a high-quality PhD dissertation in history? In small groups, students present and discuss their own PhD writing with peers and faculty. The joint module focus on preventing, managing and, hopefully, breaking the writer's block. 

Time and place: , PAM 389 and Zoom

We want to invite you to an open evaluation with our PhD-fellow in Science Fiction (SF) Studies Marta Tveit. To comment on the candidates work, we have invited Associate Professor Magalí Armillas-Tiseyra, from Department of Comparative Literature at the Pennsylvania State University, USA

Time and place: , Room 435

On inaugural seminars, PhD fellows at the IMK present and get feedback on their project description.

Time and place: , Room 435

On inaugural seminars, PhD fellows at the IMK present and get feedback on their project description.

Time and place: , Zoom and PAM 389

We want to invite you to an open evaluation with our PhD-fellow in Science Fiction (SF) Studies Patrick Brock. To comment on the candidates work, we have invited Professor Dale Knickerbocker, from East Carolina University, USA

Time and place: , PAM 389 and Zoom

We want to invite you to an open evaluation with our PhD-fellow in China Studies Lu Chen. To comment on the candidates work, we have invited Associate Professor Anders Sybrandt Hansen from Aarhus University.

Time and place: , PAM seminar room 6

This course in research dissemination and outreach teaches the possibilities and demands of disseminating research to a general, non-academic audience. It provides hands-on writing skills, starting from the course participants' PhD projects and discipline, as well as academic reflection on news and current affairs media as arenas for research dissemination.

Time and place: , Room 418

On inaugural seminars, PhD fellows at the IMK present and get feedback on their project description.

Time and place: , IMK, Room 435

This talk is cancelled and will be rescheduled for Spring 2023.

This is a recurring thematic meeting (IMK PhD fellows only) about publishing strategies and strategic use of publishing for profile building and academic career.

Time and place: , Salen, ZEB Building

The concept of genre is embedded in human culture, and categories of speech, writing, images, and sound shape the way we understand the world. Recent developments within digital media technologies across literature, music, and media culture have changed the production, distribution, and categorisation of cultural practices.

This seminar explores the meaning and functions of genre within and across cultural spheres and seeks to foster cross-disciplinary discussion about the ways that digital media have changed, rearticulated, or newly shaped formations of genre.

The seminar is open for all doctoral candidates.

Time and place: , Postponed to February 2023. TBA

We want to invite you to an open evaluation with our PhD-fellow in China Studies Wei Wu. To comment on the candidates work, we have invited Professor emeritus Rajeswary Brown from Royal Holloway College, London