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Homerton CIG Series 2015 - 2016
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Connecting Creativities, Interculturality and Gender through Practice: An innovative tapestry of talks and performances at Homerton College This series, hosted by Homerton and the Faculty, aims to bring new insights to often well-rehearsed and polarized debates from different fields and disciplines about what constitutes diverse creativities, how intercultural collaborations define us, and why gender constructions and relations matter. The focus of the series reflects on issues that are entangled and interface with our social, cultural, personal and professional lives. Inviting and welcoming all, this series is aimed primarily at undergraduate and graduate students and researchers, fellows and alumni, academics and teachers, artists and arts organisations, creative and cultural industry professionals and business organisations. It asks the question: How do we define and see the role of diverse creativities, interculturality and gender in our own fields of interest, specialist domains, work and life? These dimensions (of creativity, interculturality and gender) can be highlighted and enmeshed in very different ways for people in different contexts. If ‘practice’ represents the decision-making and subsequent actions by an artist, educator, researcher, employer, institution or creative practicing in business and design, how do creativities, interculturality and gender matter and/or form the basis for that practice? If you have a question about this list, please contact: Lucian Stephenson. If you have a question about a specific talk, click on that talk to find its organiser. 0 upcoming talks and 9 talks in the archive. Please see above for contact details for this list. |
Other listsEvolution Economics and Computer Science Talks Calais Migrant SolidarityOther talksThe evolution of photosynthetic efficiency Barnum, Bache and Poe: the forging of science in the Antebellum US “It’s like they’re speaking a different language!” Investigating an accidental resistance to school mathematics reform Coordination and inequalities in agglomeration payments: evidence from a laboratory experiment How language variation contributes to reading difficulties and “achievement gaps” Building cortical networks: from molecules to function LARMOR LECTURE - Exoplanets, on the hunt of Universal life Glucagon like peptide-1 receptor - a possible role for beta cell physiology in susceptibility to autoimmune diabetes Mathematical applications of little string theory CANCELLED - Mathematical methods in reacting flows: From spectral to Lyapunov analysis |