Wednesday, 27 June 2012

Bulletin

History Lab Bulletin 25 June 2012
Dear all,
See below for projects and events that may be of interest to History Lab members.
In this issue:
  • Next in History Lab
  • Event
  • Studentships
  • PhD thesis prize
  • Call for papers
  • Summer school
  • Conference
  • Job opportunity
________________________________________________
Next in History Lab:
  • Seminar: Katie East (Royal Holloway) - Historia Magistra Vitae: John Toland, the life of Cicero and the value of history, Thursday 28 June, 17:30 – 19:30, Gordon Room (Room 34), Senate House
    For more information, see: http://www.history.ac.uk/historylab
______________________________________________
Event
  • Regency Society Weekend, 12-14 October 2012.
    The Prince Regent loved Brighton and left his mark - not only with the Royal Pavilion but on life in general. What was society like at that time? How did ordinary people live? What did "the seaside" mean? What was the Prince Regent's cultural legacy? What did people eat and wear? What was the enduring impact of the Regency on the life and buildings of Brighton and Hove? This weekend is designed for both the knowledgeable and the interested to celebrate the bicentenary of the first full year of the Regency. Sir Simon Jenkins opens the proceedings, with Dan Cruickshank following on with The Year 1812. At iconic Brighton venues, including the Brighton Pavilion and the historic Old Ship Hotel, 20 experts will explore many aspects of life at the time. Confirmed contributors to the weekend include: Dr Sue Berry, Allan Brodie, Professor Fred Gray, Professor Tim Hitchcock, Lucy Inglis, Neil Burton, Professor Gavin Henderson, Dr Steven Parissien, Professor Jonathan Woodham, Jackie Marsh-Hobbs, David Beevers, Alexandra Loske, Nick Tyson, Geoffrey Mead, Professor David Robson, Lucy Adlington, Ivan Day.
______________________________________________
Studentships
  • The School of Geography at Queen Mary, University of London is delighted
    to announce seven fully-funded AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Award

    studentships to commence in October 2012. The deadline for receipt of

    applications is 4pm, 29 June 2012. For further information and how to

    apply, see:
______________________________________________
PhD thesis prize
______________________________________________
Call for papers
  • Interdisciplinary Nineteenth-Century Culture Forum, University of Oxford.
    “Sex lies at the root of life, and we can never learn to reverence life until we know how to understand sex.” Havelock Ellis, Studies in the Psychology of Sex, 1897, Vol. 1, xxx.


    The Victorian period is still too often identified with prudish attitudes towards sex and sexuality in the modern popular imagination. Despite the work of Michel Foucault, whose groundbreaking History of Sexuality challenged the ‘repressive hypothesis’ of Victorian sexual lives by revealing the pervasiveness of discourse about sex in institutional, scientific, artistic, and philosophical thought, frank discussions of sexual identity remain primarily associated with the development of psychoanalysis in the twentieth century. We invite papers that address the theme of Autumn term’s seminar series, “Sex and the Nineteenth Century”, from scholars in all disciplines, at all stages of study. The seminar series will complement events including films, reading group sessions, and visits to museums and art galleries that engage with the idea of sex as a fundamental aspect of nineteenth-century culture, life, and values. Potential paper topics might include, but are not limited to:
    Prostitution/the ‘fallen woman’
    Contraception

    Pornography

    Dress and undress

    Same-sex relations

    Hysteria

    Fetishism

    Visual and material cultures of sex

    Erotica

    Erotic fiction/journalism

    Medicine and/or psychiatry

    Criminology

    The institutionalisation of sexual behaviour, including changes to the law

    Marriage, honeymoon, divorce

    Abstracts of no more than 250 words in length should be sent to
    nineteenthcenturyculture@hotmail.co.uk by 1 September 2012. We will endeavour to reply to you as soon as possible upon receipt of your abstract.
______________________________________________
Summer school
______________________________________________
Conference
______________________________________________
Job opportunity
  • Postgraduate Programme Tutor
    V&A/RCA History of Design and Material Culture

    Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Europe and Beyond

    Research Department, V&A

    £29,646-£35,633


--
Regards,

The History Lab team.

Web: www.history.ac.uk/historylab

Email: ihrhistorylab@googlemail.com

Blog: http://the-history-lab.blogspot.com

Post: History Lab, The Institute of Historical Research, Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU

Monday, 11 June 2012

Bulletin

History Lab Bulletin 11 June 2012
Dear all,
See below for projects and events that may be of interest to History Lab members.
In this issue:
  • Next in History Lab
  • Scholarship scheme
  • Workshop
  • Job opportunity
  • Lecture
  • Studentship
________________________________________________
Next in History Lab:

    History Lab Conference 2012:
    Agency, 13-14 June 2012, Bloomsbury Room (Room G35)
    KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
    Professor David d'Avray FBA (UCL)

    Professor Catherine Hall (UCL)

    Professor Christian List (LSE)


    Provisional Programme:
    Wednesday 13th June:
    10.00: Registration
    11.00 – 12.30: Key-note Panel , Bloomsbury Room [G35] , Chair: Guy Beckett (Birkbeck College, London)
    Professor David d’Avray FBA (University College London), Professor Catherine Hall (University College London) and Professor Christian List (London School of Economics)
    12.30 – 13.30: Lunch
    13.30 – 15.00: Parallel Panel Session 1
    Session 1A, Bloomsbury Room [G35]: Protest and Unrest
    Chair: TBC
    Mary G. Chaktsiris (Queen’s University, Kingston [Canada]/Birkbeck College, London [UK]): ‘There Have Been No Anti-Greek Riots in Any National Sense in Toronto’: Civil Unrest and Enemy Aliens in Toronto, Canada, 1918.
    Rachel Oppenheimer (Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh [US]): ‘That Was Hardly Pleasurable’: Politically Motivated Prison Protest in Northern Ireland and the United States, 1969-1985.
    Oliver Wilkinson (Lancaster University): Getting Out, Getting Even and Getting On: POW Uses of Resistance during the First World War
    Session 1B, Bedford Room [G37]: German Intellectual History
    Chair: Chris Knowles (King’s College, London [UK])
    Michael Dylan Rogers (University of Cambridge [UK]): Fascism and the Corruption of Instrumentality: Walter Benjamin and Ernst Jünger on the Problem of Agency in an Era of Total War.
    Rebecca Wennberg (Royal Holloway, London [UK]): Unstructuring Belief: ‘Doctrinal Incorrectness’ as a Form of Agency in the Third Reich.
    15.00 – 15.30: Tea & Coffee
    15:30 – 17.00: Parallel Panel Session 2
    Session 2A, Bloomsbury Room [G35]: Material Culture
    Chair: TBC
    Julia Webb (Queen Mary, London [UK]): Consumers, Goldsmiths and the Law: Commissioning Crystal Plate in the 1550s.
    Bridget Millmore (University of Brighton [UK]): ‘Love the Giver & Keep This For His Sake’: Love Tokens Produced BY Convicts Transported During the Eighteenth Century.
    Anna Vaughn Kett (University of Brighton [UK]): Wearing Anti-Slavery Activism: British Quaker Women and Free Labour Cotton Dress in the 1850s.
    Session 2B, Bedford Room [G37]: History and Journalism
    Chair: Mara Sankey (University College London)
    Chiara Tedaldi (Government of Ireland CARA Postdoctoral Mobility Fellow in the Humanities and Social Sciences, University College Dublin [Ireland]/Universidad de Zaragoza [Spain]): Collective Agency in the Age of ‘Memory Legislation’: The Influence of Spain’s Memorial Associations in Shaping the National Debate on Ley de Memoria Histórica.
    Jessica Hammet (University of Cambridge [UK]): The Communication of Historical Memory: Journalistic and Individual Narratives of the Second World War During the 70th Anniversary of the London Blitz.
    18.00: Wine Reception Room S349
    19.30: Conference Dinner , Location TBC [Probably Pizza Express]
    ***
    Thursday 14th June
    10.00 – 11.15: Parallel Panel Session 3
    Session 3A, Bloomsbury Room [G35]: Women in the Middle Ages
    Chair: Julia Webb (Queen Mary, London [UK])
    Laura Wood (Royal Holloway, London [UK]): ‘The Ring and Mantle’: A Means of Agency for Medieval Women.
    Christopher Nicholson (University College London, School of Slavonic and East European Studies [UK]): Female Inheritance in Later Medieval Bohemia.
    Session 3B, Gordon Room [G34]: British Politics in the 1960s and 1970s
    Chair: TBC
    Jack Saunders (University College London [UK]): How to Kill an Act of Parliament: Dockers in the 1960s and 1970s.
    Adrian Williamson (University of Cambridge [UK]): ‘Reversing the Trend’: Keith Joseph and the Remaking of British Conservatism, 1974 – 1979.
    11.15 – 11.45: Tea & Coffee
    11.45 – 13.00: Parallel Panel Session 4
    Session 4A, Bloomsbury Room [G35]: Office Holding in Early-Modern Sweden, 1550-1650
    Chair: Christopher Nicholson (University College London, School of Slavonic and East European Studies [UK])
    Piia Einonen (University of Jyväskylä [Finland]): The Ethos and Morality of Agency: Urban Office Holders during the Formation of the Swedish State (c. 1550-1650).
    Ulla Koskinen (University of Tampere [Finland]): The Culture of Agency among Noble Office Holders in Late Sixteenth-Century Finland.
    Session 4B, Gordon Room [G34]: Imposing Education in Nineteenth-century Russia
    Chair: TBC
    Bartley Rock (University College London, School of Slavonic and East European Studies [UK]): Aleksandr Novikov and Moral Education in Late Imperial Rural Russia
    Richard Morgan (University College London, School of Slavonic and East European Studies [UK]): Rearing Agents: Petr Kropotkin and Integral Education
    13.00 – 14.00: Lunch
    14.00 – 15.30: Parallel Panel Session 5
    Session 5A, Bloomsbury Room [G35]: Welfare
    Chair: TBC
    Claudia Soares (University of Manchester [UK]): The Agency of the Poor: Collaboration and Conflict Between Poor Dependants and the Waifs and Strays Society, 1881-1914.
    Rik Vercammen (Free University, Brussels [Belgium]): ‘Vagrants’ and ‘Beggars in the Belgian State Benevolent Colonies (Rijksweldadigheidskolonies): Writing Pleading Letters, 1890 – 1930.
    Jennifer Craig-Norton (University of Southampton [UK]): Struggling for Agency: Child Refugees after the Kindertransport.
    Session 5B, Gordon Room [G34]: Gender in Modern Britain
    Chair: TBC
    Nancy Bruseker (University of Liverpool [UK]): ‘I do hope you will forgive the liberty, but...’: Vesta Tilley's fans and their correspondence.
    Elaine Titcombe (The University of the West of England, Bristol [UK]): The Language of Agency at the Greenham Common Women’s Peace Camp.
    Matt Cooper (Queen Mary, London [UK]): Structure and Human Agency in Understanding the Development of Policy Relating to the Family in Britain in the 1960s.
    15.30 – 16.00: Tea & Coffee
    16.00 – 17.30: Panel Session 6
    Session 6A, Bloomsbury Room [G35]: Agency in the History of Charity and Voluntarism
    Chair: TBC
    George Campbell Gosling (Oxford Brookes University [UK]): Agency and Social Control in the History of Charity.
    Sarah Flew (Open University [UK]): Money and Agency in Nineteenth-Century Philanthropy.
    Chris Moores (University of Birmingham [UK]): Human Rights, NGOs and Test Case Strategies.
    18.00: History Lab Social - Come and join us and continue any conference discussions informally over a glass of wine. See below for more details.
    ***

    To register please email us at
    historylab2012@gmail.com with (i) your name and (ii) your affiliation as you want them to appear on your name badge, and (iii) whether you wish to be included in the booking for the conference dinner. The conference fee is £15. The fee should be paid upon arrival at the conference and includes lunches, tea/coffee and the wine reception. If you have any questions regarding any an aspect of the conference then please do not hesitate to contact us at historylab2012@gmail.com.

    History Lab Summer Social:
    You are warmly invited to come and join us for a drink to celebrate the end of the year. Food will also be available, and everyone will receive a free drink upon arrival.
    14 June, 18:00 at the Queen's Larder, 1 Queen's Square, WC1N 3AR:
  • Seminar: Hannah Scally (Darwin College, Cambridge) 'Conceptualising market expansion in Victorian Britain: The commercial traveller as an economic character', Thursday 21 June, 17:30 – 19:30, Holden Room (103), Senate House
  • Seminar: Katie East (Royal Holloway) - Historia Magistra Vitae: John Toland, the life of Cicero and the value of history, Thursday 28 June, 17:30 – 19:30, Gordon Room (Room 34), Senate House
    For more information, see: http://www.history.ac.uk/historylab
_________________________________________________
Scholarship scheme

  • Social Media Knowledge Exchange Scholarship Scheme
    Call for Proposals: Deadline 25 June 2012
    The SMKE Scholarship scheme will provide funding of up to £1,000 for ten knowledge exchange projects to run in academic year 2012-13. SMKE Scholars must be postgraduate students or early career researchers in the Arts and Humanities in any of the five participating institutions.
    What is SMKE?
    Communication through social media is becoming part of the fabric of everyday life for millions of people. A wide variety of public and private institutions use social media to share their goals and policies with the public, attract people to participate in activities they organise, and engage in dialogue with the users of their services. The AHRC Social Media Knowledge Exchange (SMKE) is a collaborative project that aims to give early career researchers in the Arts and Humanities opportunities for knowledge exchange with social media practitioners in academia, museums, archives and libraries, and the voluntary sector. We understand 'social media' to mean online communication channels which allow the users of the service to create and exchange content with each other as well as with the channel owner.

    Through a scholarship scheme, workshops and a conference, the Social Media Knowledge Exchange will help postgraduate students and early career researchers to develop skills to build their networks, reputation and esteem as researchers at a point when this is critically important to their careers, and provide them with structured opportunities to learn about social media practice outside their own discipline and institution, and in a wide variety of sectors beyond academia.
    The project is led by the University of Cambridge Digital Humanities Network (CDHN) and the Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities (CRASSH), in partnership with the Centre of Governance and Human Rights (CGHR). Partner institutions and contact details are as follows:
    Who are we?
    Anne Alexander, Digital Humanities Network and Sharath Srinivasan, Centre of Governance and Human Rights, University of Cambridge, Simon Mahony, Centre for Digital Studies, UCL, Jane Winters, Institute of Historical Research, School of Advanced Study, University of London, Anne Alexander and Simon Tanner, Department of Digital Humanities, King's College London, Ann Gow, Humanities Advanced Technology Information Institute, University of Glasgow
    For more details on the application and themes which each institution is developing, please see: http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/page/1097/smke-scholarship-scheme.htm
    For any queries relating specifically to the online application procedure please email: smke@crassh.cam.ac.uk
______________________________________________
Workshop
______________________________________________
Job opportunity
  • The Wolfsonian–Florida International University, a museum and research center located in South Beach, is seeking a highly motivated Academic Programs Manager. The Wolfsonian–FIU promotes the examination of modern material culture to enhance the understanding and appreciation of objects as agents and reflections of social, political, and technological change. The institution focuses on its extraordinary collection of North American and European decorative, propaganda, and fine arts of the 1885–1945 period, donated to Florida International University in 1997 by Mitchell Wolfson, Jr. The museum’s exhibitions, publications and programs serve local, national, and international audiences.
  •  
______________________________________________
Lecture
       
  • The Early Modern Society at Birkbeck College invites you to a lecture by Professor Diane Purkiss ( University of Oxford), 'Are Shakespeare's Witches Really Domestic?', Friday 22 June at 6.30 pm, Birkbeck, Malet Street Building, Room B36, followed by the society's end of year party in Room BO4
    Professor Purkiss’s research interests embrace the history of food in England; the dissolution of the English monasteries; witches, wizards, fairies and ghosts; the English Civil War; Shakespeare and other Renaissance drama; Milton; women's writing; Classical Greek influences on Renaissance literature; historiography and theorisations of history; psychoanalysis; popular culture; feminism and feminist theory; folktales and folklore; writing for children in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

    Her recent publications include, The dissolution of the English monasteries (HarperCollins, 2010), A History of Food in England (HarperCollins, 2008), Shakespeare and the Supernatural (Routledge/Taylor Francis, 2008), The English Civil War: A People's History (HarperCollins, 2006).


    The lecture and party are free for members, non-members £3.
______________________________________________
Studentship
  • Montague Burton Studentship – Jewish Culture and the First World War, University of Leeds
    Applicants are invited to apply for a studentship on an aspect of Jewish culture and/or Jewish art that relates to the First World War, its impact, memory or legacies. The proposed project should be situated in the areas of the arts, cultural and social history and/or memory studies and offer new insights into the experience and understanding of World War One from a Jewish perspective. International and comparative proposals as well as locally or regionally specific projects will be considered.
    Closing date: 15 August 2012


--
Regards,

The History Lab team.

Web: www.history.ac.uk/historylab

Email: ihrhistorylab@googlemail.com

Wednesday, 6 June 2012

Annual Postgrad Conference and Summer Social

    Dear all,
    See below for History Lab conference and summer social information.
    History Lab Conference 2012:
    Agency, 13-14 June 2012, Bloomsbury Room (Room G35)
    KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
    Professor David d'Avray FBA (UCL)

    Professor Catherine Hall (UCL)

    Professor Christian List (LSE)


    Provisional Programme:
    Wednesday 13th June:
    10.00: Registration
    11.00 – 12.30: Key-note Panel , Bloomsbury Room [G35] , Chair: Guy Beckett (Birkbeck College, London)
    Professor David d’Avray FBA (University College London), Professor Catherine Hall (University College London) and Professor Christian List (London School of Economics)
    12.30 – 13.30: Lunch
    13.30 – 15.00: Parallel Panel Session 1
    Session 1A, Bloomsbury Room [G35]: Protest and Unrest
    Chair: TBC
    Mary G. Chaktsiris (Queen’s University, Kingston [Canada]/Birkbeck College, London [UK]): ‘There Have Been No Anti-Greek Riots in Any National Sense in Toronto’: Civil Unrest and Enemy Aliens in Toronto, Canada, 1918.
    Rachel Oppenheimer (Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh [US]): ‘That Was Hardly Pleasurable’: Politically Motivated Prison Protest in Northern Ireland and the United States, 1969-1985.
    Oliver Wilkinson (Lancaster University): Getting Out, Getting Even and Getting On: POW Uses of Resistance during the First World War
    Session 1B, Bedford Room [G37]: German Intellectual History
    Chair: Chris Knowles (King’s College, London [UK])
    Michael Dylan Rogers (University of Cambridge [UK]): Fascism and the Corruption of Instrumentality: Walter Benjamin and Ernst Jünger on the Problem of Agency in an Era of Total War.
    Rebecca Wennberg (Royal Holloway, London [UK]): Unstructuring Belief: ‘Doctrinal Incorrectness’ as a Form of Agency in the Third Reich.
    15.00 – 15.30: Tea & Coffee
    15:30 – 17.00: Parallel Panel Session 2
    Session 2A, Bloomsbury Room [G35]: Material Culture
    Chair: TBC
    Julia Webb (Queen Mary, London [UK]): Consumers, Goldsmiths and the Law: Commissioning Crystal Plate in the 1550s.
    Bridget Millmore (University of Brighton [UK]): ‘Love the Giver & Keep This For His Sake’: Love Tokens Produced BY Convicts Transported During the Eighteenth Century.
    Anna Vaughn Kett (University of Brighton [UK]): Wearing Anti-Slavery Activism: British Quaker Women and Free Labour Cotton Dress in the 1850s.
    Session 2B, Bedford Room [G37]: History and Journalism
    Chair: Mara Sankey (University College London)
    Chiara Tedaldi (Government of Ireland CARA Postdoctoral Mobility Fellow in the Humanities and Social Sciences, University College Dublin [Ireland]/Universidad de Zaragoza [Spain]): Collective Agency in the Age of ‘Memory Legislation’: The Influence of Spain’s Memorial Associations in Shaping the National Debate on Ley de Memoria Histórica.
    Jessica Hammet (University of Cambridge [UK]): The Communication of Historical Memory: Journalistic and Individual Narratives of the Second World War During the 70th Anniversary of the London Blitz.
    18.00: Wine Reception Room S349
    19.30: Conference Dinner , Location TBC [Probably Pizza Express]
    ***
    Thursday 14th June
    10.00 – 11.15: Parallel Panel Session 3
    Session 3A, Bloomsbury Room [G35]: Women in the Middle Ages
    Chair: Julia Webb (Queen Mary, London [UK])
    Laura Wood (Royal Holloway, London [UK]): ‘The Ring and Mantle’: A Means of Agency for Medieval Women.
    Christopher Nicholson (University College London, School of Slavonic and East European Studies [UK]): Female Inheritance in Later Medieval Bohemia.
    Session 3B, Gordon Room [G34]: British Politics in the 1960s and 1970s
    Chair: TBC
    Jack Saunders (University College London [UK]): How to Kill an Act of Parliament: Dockers in the 1960s and 1970s.
    Adrian Williamson (University of Cambridge [UK]): ‘Reversing the Trend’: Keith Joseph and the Remaking of British Conservatism, 1974 – 1979.
    11.15 – 11.45: Tea & Coffee
    11.45 – 13.00: Parallel Panel Session 4
    Session 4A, Bloomsbury Room [G35]: Office Holding in Early-Modern Sweden, 1550-1650
    Chair: Christopher Nicholson (University College London, School of Slavonic and East European Studies [UK])
    Piia Einonen (University of Jyväskylä [Finland]): The Ethos and Morality of Agency: Urban Office Holders during the Formation of the Swedish State (c. 1550-1650).
    Ulla Koskinen (University of Tampere [Finland]): The Culture of Agency among Noble Office Holders in Late Sixteenth-Century Finland.
    Session 4B, Gordon Room [G34]: Imposing Education in Nineteenth-century Russia
    Chair: TBC
    Bartley Rock (University College London, School of Slavonic and East European Studies [UK]): Aleksandr Novikov and Moral Education in Late Imperial Rural Russia
    Richard Morgan (University College London, School of Slavonic and East European Studies [UK]): Rearing Agents: Petr Kropotkin and Integral Education
    13.00 – 14.00: Lunch
    14.00 – 15.30: Parallel Panel Session 5
    Session 5A, Bloomsbury Room [G35]: Welfare
    Chair: TBC
    Claudia Soares (University of Manchester [UK]): The Agency of the Poor: Collaboration and Conflict Between Poor Dependants and the Waifs and Strays Society, 1881-1914.
    Rik Vercammen (Free University, Brussels [Belgium]): ‘Vagrants’ and ‘Beggars in the Belgian State Benevolent Colonies (Rijksweldadigheidskolonies): Writing Pleading Letters, 1890 – 1930.
    Jennifer Craig-Norton (University of Southampton [UK]): Struggling for Agency: Child Refugees after the Kindertransport.
    Session 5B, Gordon Room [G34]: Gender in Modern Britain
    Chair: TBC
    Nancy Bruseker (University of Liverpool [UK]): ‘I do hope you will forgive the liberty, but...’: Vesta Tilley's fans and their correspondence.
    Elaine Titcombe (The University of the West of England, Bristol [UK]): The Language of Agency at the Greenham Common Women’s Peace Camp.
    Matt Cooper (Queen Mary, London [UK]): Structure and Human Agency in Understanding the Development of Policy Relating to the Family in Britain in the 1960s.
    15.30 – 16.00: Tea & Coffee
    16.00 – 17.30: Panel Session 6
    Session 6A, Bloomsbury Room [G35]: Agency in the History of Charity and Voluntarism
    Chair: TBC
    George Campbell Gosling (Oxford Brookes University [UK]): Agency and Social Control in the History of Charity.
    Sarah Flew (Open University [UK]): Money and Agency in Nineteenth-Century Philanthropy.
    Chris Moores (University of Birmingham [UK]): Human Rights, NGOs and Test Case Strategies.
    18.00: History Lab Social - Come and join us and continue any conference discussions informally over a glass of wine. See below for more details.
    ***

    To register please email us at
    historylab2012@gmail.com with (i) your name and (ii) your affiliation as you want them to appear on your name badge, and (iii) whether you wish to be included in the booking for the conference dinner. The conference fee is £15. The fee should be paid upon arrival at the conference and includes lunches, tea/coffee and the wine reception. If you have any questions regarding any an aspect of the conference then please do not hesitate to contact us at historylab2012@gmail.com.

    History Lab Summer Social:
    You are warmly invited to come and join us for a drink to celebrate the end of the year. Food will also be available, and everyone will receive a free drink upon arrival.
    14 June, 18:00 at the Queen's Larder, 1 Queen's Square, WC1N 3AR:


--
Regards,

The History Lab team.

Web: www.history.ac.uk/historylab

Email: ihrhistorylab@googlemail.com