Showing posts with label Modern Languages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Modern Languages. Show all posts

Wednesday, 8 March 2017

International Women's Day - profiles

To mark International Women's Day, we asked some of our leading female academics what inspires them and what advice they would give to women and young girls looking to pursue a career in academia…

Rebecca Sweetman, Professor of Ancient History and Archaeology, School of Classics


To hear Rebecca speaking about her research click here.
Rebecca graduated with a degree from University College Dublin in Archaeology and Classics. She spent a year on the excavation circuit and then started her PhD on Roman and Early Christian Mosaics of Crete at the University of Nottingham, spending most of her time in Athens and Crete. After a series of temporary jobs at the BSA (including Knossos Curator and Archivist Rebecca became Assistant Director of the BSA before coming to St Andrews as a lecturer in Ancient History and Archaeology in 2003.

What was your childhood ambition? 
I have wanted to be an archaeologist from as early as I can remember. There was a short-lived phase of wanting to be a vet but digging in the dirt was clearly more appealing than digging anywhere else….

What inspired you to get involved in *specialist subject*? 
I grew up surrounded by archaeology. My father is an archaeologist and we spent our school holidays on site in some form. When I went to university I was lucky enough to be able to spend my summers on archaeological projects in Ireland and Greece. Before I actually began working there, I hadn’t even considered working in Greece; I assumed incorrectly that it was for a privileged few. However, while working there I met a number of inspiring archaeologists from all sorts of backgrounds who made it clear, by their example, that a career in Greek archaeology is possible. The nature of archaeological fieldwork means that you get to know your colleagues really well, and there is a great natural sense of mentorship in the discipline. As an undergraduate student, a combination of my father and the people I worked for on fieldwork quietly encouraged and demonstrated the potential for following a career that you really enjoyed. As a postgraduate student working in Athens, I was inspired by fellow students, colleagues and visiting researchers to think broadly and see the wider views of the research I was involved in. While in Athens, the wonderful library ladies were a constant source of advice and inspiration and since coming to St Andrews I have been supported and encouraged by colleagues and leaders in my field. That so many people have given their time and guidance so generously and thoughtfully is hugely inspiring.

Who is your female icon? 
Traditionally women have been rather left out of the history of archaeology. At the turn of the century it was famously difficult for them to be taken seriously as field directors… it was believed that they were better suited for jobs such as dealing with pottery, archives or libraries. Archaeologists such as Kathleen Kenyon (excavator at Jericho) and Harriet Boyd-Hawes (excavator at Gournia, Crete) paved the way for women to be taken seriously as project directors. While the majority are still men, the more female site directors there are, the more women are encouraged to aspire to these roles. In the last few decades archaeology has seen the rise of some awesome women; in my field, Sue Alcock (Professor of Classical Archaeology and Classics at Michigan and leader in survey archaeology), Mary Beard (Professor of Classics at Cambridge), Sue Black (Professor of Anatomy and Forensic Anthropology at Dundee) and Cathy Morgan (Professor of Classics and Archaeology at Oxford and previously director of the British School of Archaeology) have set new agendas, methods and standards in the discipline and in doing so are an inspiration for a whole new generation of women in archaeology and classics. Importantly, these women have been important role models in terms of making archaeology and classics accessible and attractive to a wide audience.

What is the most rewarding part of your job? 
Fieldwork, research and chatting with colleagues is always fun and inspiring. However, I love to teach and it is particularly rewarding when our students carry on with careers or postgraduate work connected with archaeology. So much of archaeology is about gaining experience and I try to support our students in their endeavours to gain excavation, museum, archive placements. A decade ago I set up an honours module to take students to Greece which involves teaching and presentations at around 30 sites and museums. Students work hard on this module which is quite research focused and the value they get from the module is hugely motivating! Students say how what they have learned in class really falls into place having visited the sites. Every year we have a few students who are so inspired by being on site that they change their degrees to focus on archaeology; many students go on to do postgraduate work in archaeology and all have a fantastic time!

What advice would you give to females and young girls who may be interested in pursuing a career in your field?
Archaeology is a great career and one doesn’t need to have a beard to be an archaeologist. If you are interested and inspired by it, it is possible to have a good and rewarding career in archaeology no matter what your background or future aspirations. Talk to lots of people about their experiences, get advice and collect lots of different skills along the way.

Catherine O’Leary, Reader in Spanish, School of Modern Languages


Catherine studied International Marketing and Languages at Dublin City University before going on to complete a PhD in Spanish literature at University College Dublin. She lectured at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth from 2000 until moving to St Andrews in 2013. She is currently Head of the Department of Spanish and Associate Dean of Arts and Divinity. Her research focuses on four main areas: contemporary Spanish theatre, censorship, gender and identity, and exile and cultural memory.

What was your childhood ambition? 
I didn’t have a clear goal – my ambitions changed over time. When I was very young, I wanted to solve mysteries; I later dreamt of being a writer, an artist, a lawyer… I guess that some of this fed into my work, which involves writing, examining censorship legislation, and sometimes even detective work in archives!

What inspired you to get involved in Spanish? 
I wasn’t sure what I wanted to do when I finished school. I seriously considered going to Art college; I thought about law; I was attracted to English and History, but persuaded by the trendiness of ‘marketing’ at the time, I opted for a course that involved business and languages. I enjoyed, but was not inspired by, business studies and – crucially - was disappointed to find that the language element was mostly non-literary. I stayed the course, had a fantastic year abroad in Spain and realised that I loved both literature and university life. This path eventually led me to literary studies and to a PhD in Spanish, although my business background is surprisingly useful at times.

Who is your female icon?
Mary Robinson, former Irish President. She is an inspirational figure and was a game-changer in terms of Irish politics and in Irish social life.

What is the most rewarding part of your job?
It’s hard to pick any one thing. One of the joys of the job is the fact that it is multifaceted. I love teaching and am genuinely interested both in what students have to say and in having my own thinking challenged: I am always learning too. I love getting stuck into a research project, be it on literary reflections of gender, memory and exile or on theatre censorship, and considering what that can tell us about society and humanity. I even mostly like the administrative side of things and learning how this institution works. It’s a privilege to work in an environment where I am encouraged to develop several different skillsets, where I can read literature and call it my job, and where I meet and engage with (mostly) intelligent people all day.

What advice would you give to females and young girls who may be interested in pursuing a career in your field?
Go for it! But be aware that there is luck involved, as well as lots of hard work. Speak to those who are already in the field and attend seminars and talks if you can – don't assume that they are only for staff or postgraduates.

Monday, 27 June 2016

'New Generation Thinker 2016' winners! Dr Victoria Donovan and Anindya Raychaudhuri

Congratulations to Dr Anindya Raychaudhuri, School of English, and Dr Victoria Donovan, School of Modern Languages two early career researchers from St Andrews (out of 10 total!) who have been chosen as New Generation Thinkers 2016!

BBC Radio 3 and the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) have unveiled the 10 academics who will be turning their research into television and radio programmes on the BBC. The New Generation Thinkers scheme 2016 is a nationwide search for the brightest minds who have the potential to share their cutting edge academic ideas through broadcasting. After a four-month selection process involving a series of day-long workshops at the BBC in Salford and London, the final 10 were chosen by a panel of BBC Radio 3 and BBC Arts producers, and the Arts and Humanities Research Council. The scheme has been a successful first step for many academics, with previous thinkers going on to appear across television and radio.


Dr Anindya Raychaudhuri is working on the way nostalgia is used by diasporic communities to create imaginary and real homes. He has written about the Spanish Civil War and the India/Pakistan partition and the cultural legacies of these wars. He co-hosts a podcast show, State of the Theory, and explores the issues raised by his research in stand-up comedy.
 
Dr Victoria Donovan is a cultural historian of Russia whose research explores local identities, heritage politics, and the cultural memory of the Soviet past in twenty-first century Russia. Her new project explores patriotic identity in Putin’s Russia. She is also working on a project that looks at the connections between mining communities in South Wales and Eastern Ukraine.

Tuesday, 27 May 2014

Pop Paolozzi! A series of prints based on the life and work of Edinburgh’s most renowned transnational artist

Transnationalizing Modern Languages: Mobility, Identity and Translation in Modern Italian Cultures

The Proctor, Professor Lorna Milne, will formally welcome pupils from Drummond Community High School, who produced artwork for this exhibition based on the work of Paolozzi.

Sir Eduardo Paolozzi (1924-2005) is one of the UK’s most outstanding modern artists. Born in Leith, the son of first generation Italian migrants, Paolozzi was interned in 1940 when Italy entered WW2. He later studied art in Edinburgh and London before moving to Paris. He established a reputation on a global scale as sculptor and major figure in the Pop Art movement.

The work that will be on display has been produced by S1 pupils at Drummond Community High School, Edinburgh, very close to where Paolozzi grew up. The pupils researched Paolozzi’s own transnational experience to produce prints expressive of both his Italian-Scots childhood and fascination with the modern, mechanical world. The eight prints in the exhibition were created by the artists at Edinburgh Printmakers, sponsored by SNIPEF (Scottish and Northern Ireland Plumbing Employers Association), whose main office is close to the school. The exhibition is the first public event of the AHRC-funded research project exploring Italian culture outside Italy in a transnational frame.

Today! 27 May, 12 - 1.30pm, Arts Lecture Theatre Foyer. All welcome!

Wednesday, 17 October 2012

Presigious funding for project on Arab cultural semantics

Dr Kirill Dmitriev of the School of Modern Languages has secured a prestigious ERC Starting Grant (2013-2017) to support his project entitled, 'Language-Philosophy-Culture: Arab Cultural Semantics in Tansition'. The project aims to study
  • the semantic development of the vocabulary of the Arabic language, 
  • philological discourses on the semantic changes in the language in the classical Arabic philological tradition (8th-10th centuries A.D.), and 
  • the impact of Arabic philology in the wider historical and cultural context of the Judaeo-Arab neo-classical heritage (12th-13th centuries A.D.) and Christian-Arab intellectual history on the eve of modernity (19th century A.D.). 

Wednesday, 25 July 2012

Conference: Emblems of Nationhood

Emblems of Nationhood: Britishness1707–1901 is a multi-disciplinary and truly international conference co-organised by postgraduate students from the Schools of Art History and Modern Languages, and recently graduated students from the School of English. It takes place between the 10th and 12th August in Schools 1–3, United Colleges Quadrangle.

Courtesy of the Lewis Walpole Library.
National identity is a central point of enquiry that is repeatedly called upon in contemporary social and political rhetoric. Our conference will address the roots of this theme by discussing depictions of Britain and Britishness in literature, philosophy, history, and art between the Act of Union in 1707 and the death of Queen Victoria in 1901. Over the course of this multidisciplinary conference, we aim to explore how expressions of nationalism have moulded both critical perspectives on national identity and their creative products.

In addition to our key speakers — Prof. Colin Kidd (Queen’s University Belfast), Dr Emma Major (University of York), Prof. Linda Colley (Princeton University), and Prof. Calum Colvin (University of Dundee) — we have attracted 65 speakers from around the world who will deliver papers discussing Britishness. The conference is also accompanied by an exhibition of artwork which is currently on display in the reception of Art History.

We have attracted significant funding from the following sources: the Paul MellonCentre for Studies in British Art, the Russell Trust, The University of the Highlands and the Islands, Capod, the Schools of Art History, History, English, and Modern Languages, the Scottish Society for Art History, the Society for French Studies, and the Royal Historical Society.



Monday, 2 April 2012

Inaugural Lecture: Prof. Anne Fuchs

Professor Anne Fuchs of the School of Modern Languages, will deliver her Inaugural Lecture 'The Dreadful Wreckage of History: Cultural Memory and the Bombing of Dresden’ in School III, St Salvator’s Quadrangle on Wednesday, 11 April 2012 at 5.15 p.m. All are welcome.

Professor Fuchs’ fields of research span various aspects of the literatures and cultures of the German speaking countries from the late 18th century to the present day. Nationally and internationally, she is renowned for her work on German cultural memory since 1945. For a number of years, her research has been particularly concerned with 'German memory contests', i.e. a series of intensely fought public debates about German cultural identity in the aftermath of the Holocaust and World War II. Her latest monograph investigates these issues from an interdisciplinary perspective with reference to the local, national and global memory of the bombing of Dresden. She is author of five monographs, amongst them After the Dresden Bombing: Pathways of Memory, 1945 to the Present (2012), the award-winning Phantoms of War in Contemporary German Literature, Films and Discourse (2008, 2nd ed. 2010), Die Schmerzensspuren der Geschichte: Zur Poetik der Erinnerung in W. G. Sebalds Prosa (2004), and has co-edited nine volumes. Her latest research project concerns cultural responses to the experience of acceleration in the age of the World Wide Web. At St Andrews, she intends to build up a cross-disciplinary research network with colleagues from cognate disciplines to explore 'modes of temporality in the age of acceleration', the topic of her next book.

Thursday, 28 July 2011

After the Dresden Bombing

A new book by Professor Anne Fuchs of the School of Modern Languages, After the Dresden Bombing, addresses the long aftermath of the bombing of Dresden during World War II in the collective and cultural imagination from 1945 to the present. The book offers the first interdisciplinary study of why and how the destruction of Dresden has entered the global canon of a handful of historical moments that have been turned into abiding emblems of the violence of 20th century history. Pursuing a cultural-historical line of investigation, Fuchs traces forensically how a particular narrative about this event was circulated in 1945, and how it was then relayed, remediated and contested in the following decades across a wide range of genres and media, including rubble photography, rubble film, fine art, post-war architectural debates, newspaper coverage, fiction and poetry. By analysing the generation, transmission and transformation of Dresden as a local, national and global impact narrative, her book examines fundamental processes of cultural transmission that are of relevance far beyond this specific case study. In this way, it exemplifies a new mode of doing cultural history that interweaves the local and the global.

Fuchs' great contribution is to show how the terrible destruction of World War II created the compelling effects of 'the aftermath of history' in our time.” - Peter Fritzsche, University of Illinois, USA

Tuesday, 19 July 2011

Cape Colony historical find

Dr David Culpin, of the School of Modern Languages, in the Special Collections of the National Library of South Africa, in Cape Town where he found a very important book describing the shipwreck of a French vessel on the coast of southern Africa in 1829, and the survivors' 200 mile walk to safety. The book gives a rare account of encounters between Europeans and the indigenous Xhosa population as well as offering an eye-witness description of several towns in South Africa just a few years after their establishment. In addition, this account is the first book in French and the first travel narrative ever to have been published in Cape Colony. Following this discovery, Dr Culpin is working to produce modern critical editions of this text, in English and in French. The project is funded by the British Academy and the Carnegie Trust.

Friday, 21 January 2011

Spanish translation of biography published

Professor Will Fowler (Spanish/Modern Languages) gave talks in Mexico in October 2010 in conjunction with the book launch of the translation of his biography of six-times president General Santa Anna (1794-1876), published by the Universidad Veracruzana. The publication in Spanish of Fowler's interpretation of this highly controversial historical figure was originally published in 2007 by the University of Nebraska Press. Professor Fowler is pictured being interviewed for the Xalapa-based magazine, Universo.