CfP: Experiences of the Great War in Africa

5th Great War in Africa Association and 3rd International Network for the Study of the Great War in Africa

Venue: The National Archives, Kew, London
Dates: 3 and 4 May 2016
Deadline for Call for Papers submission: 31 January 2016

1916 was a significant year in the Great War. In Europe it was the year of the Somme and Gallipoli. In Africa it was the year of Salaita and the British allied invasion into German East Africa, the loss of Cameroon to the Allies and the subsequent use of West African forces in East Africa. South African forces detoured via Egypt en route to the Somme and in Ethiopia Menelik was deposed. It therefore seems fitting to explore how those living in Africa experienced the war, both in their own land and elsewhere.

Abstracts and proposals of up to 300 words as well as a short biography should be sent to: greatwarinafrica2014@gmail.com. This email should also be used for any enquiries related to the conference.

Poster submissions must be in English. They should include a 1 page abstract and a draft of the final poster. Please prepare your poster in either portrait or landscape format with the following dimensions: 82cm x 102cm.

Conference fee for the two days: £70 (£35 for one)

Further information here.

History of War seminar series, Hilary Term 2016

All events take place on Wednesdays 5.15, Wharton Room, All Souls College
Except the meeting on 17 February at 2.30, Wharton Room, All Souls College

All welcome!

Week 1 – 20 January
Robert Johnson (Oxford) – The Great War in the Middle East: A Strategic Perspective

Week 4 – 10 February
Frederick C. Schneid (High Point, NC) – Imperial Identities at War: the Battle of Solferino

Week 5 – 17 February (NB 2.30pm, Wharton Room, All Souls College)
Brian McAllister Linn (Texas A&M University) – The American Way of War

Week 6 – 24 February
Yasmin Khan (Oxford) – The Raj at War: India 1939-45

Week 8 – 9 March
Nick Stargardt (Oxford) – The Perils of Patriotism: What were Germans fighting for in World War II?

Convenors
Erica.charters@history.ox.ac.uk
Adrian.gregory@history.ox.ac.uk
Peter.wilson@history.ox.ac.uk

Bodleian Library Visiting Fellowships

The Bodleian Libraries are now accepting applications for Visiting Fellowships to be taken up during academic year 2016-17.

Fellowships support periods of research in the Special Collections of the Bodleian Libraries. Fellows are hosted in the Visiting Scholars’ Centre at the Weston Library, where they join a lively research environment.

Details of the fellowship terms and application process can be found on our Fellowships webpage.

For six of the named fellowships, the deadline for applications is Monday, 14 December 2015:
Humfrey Wanley Fellowships
Sassoon Visiting Fellowships
Bahari Visiting Fellowships in the Persian Arts of the Book
Byrne-Bussey Marconi Fellowships in the History of Science & Communications
David Walker Memorial Fellowships in Early Modern History
Albi Rosenthal Visiting Fellowships in Music

A new fellowship is now announced, with the deadline of Friday, 29 January 2016:
The Carr-Thomas-Ovenden Visiting Fellowship in English Literature

A list of current visiting fellows in academic year 2015-16 can be found here.

For further information, please e-mail Dr Michelle Chew at: fellowships@bodleian.ox.ac.uk.

New Book on Ethics and Literature of the Great War

A new book on the First World War, Etica e letteratura della Grande Guerra: rappresentazioni della crisi (Ethics and Literature of the Great War. Representations of the Crisis) (Napoli, Marchese editore), edited by Patrizia Piredda and Gianluca Cinelli has just been published.

For further information, see here.

Seminar: Protectionism, the Ottawa accords, and British interwar trade: some preliminary findings

Oxford Centre for Global History: Seminar

Global and Imperial History Seminar
Week 8: Fri 4 December, 5pm – Colin Matthew Room, History Faculty, George St

Kevin O’Rourke (Oxford), ‘Protectionism, the Ottawa accords, and British interwar trade: some preliminary findings’

Followed by drinks 6.30-8pm in the Common Room. All welcome.

CfP: Borders and Beyond in the Middle East since 1914: Legacies, Changes, Continuities

York St John University, York, UK
17-18 June 2016 (associated social and cultural events on 16th and 19th June)

Keynote Speakers include Priya Satia (Stanford University); more to be confirmed.

This international interdisciplinary conference will examine the effects of World War 1 and the post-war settlement in the Middle East, especially those which are still felt today e.g. state borders, migrations, secular and religious ideologies and movements, and struggles over power. The centenary of the 1916 “Sykes-Picot agreement”, which fed into the post-1918 politics of the region, provides a prompt to reflect on these themes, but does not limit the range of topics for discussion.

With its associated exhibitions and cultural events, the conference will provide a timely opportunity to re-examine the history of this period from many different perspectives and consider the extent of its consequences for the present, and implications for the future. It will also be an opportunity for scholarly work on the Middle East over the last century to be heard and discussed by a wider audience, and for participants to share non-academic as well as academic perspectives on past, present and future in the Middle East.

The conference will encourage the exploration of:
* issues such as gender politics, oil, imperialism, borders, mandates and state formation, local, national, and international elites, and local, national and communal histories of the region
* the impact of early twentieth century developments on subsequent histories and perceptions of ethnic, religious, social and communal diversity in the region
* cultural, political, and ideological aspects of these topics within and beyond the Middle East.
* histories and/or contemporary experiences of York/Yorkshire connections with the Middle East

Potential contributions to the conference may thus come from many disciplines; these might include geography, cartography, ethnography/anthropology, political science, war and peace studies, international relations, archaeology, science and/or engineering, religious and philosophical studies, the arts, cultural, media, and literary studies, statistics.

The conference will include both plenary sessions and panels. All sessions will be designed to give ample time to discuss presentations with a common theme. Proposals for papers or other forms of presentation are invited from all disciplines and areas. Selected papers will be considered for inclusion in an edited volume of conference proceedings.

Paper proposals should be for presentations of no more than 15 minutes; we are happy to consider proposals for contributions in other formats. Panel proposals should be for 2/3papers dealing with common themes.

Proposals, which should provide [1] a title, [2] an abstract of no more than 250 words, [3] the proposer’s name and contact details, should be sent to i.horwood@yorksj.ac.uk by Friday 23 January 2016 at latest. Proposers will be informed of decisions about their proposal by early March.

Further details about the conference, including registration fees, concessions, etc. will be available shortly.

Organising committee: John Bibby, Joanna de Groot, Ian Horwood

Sponsors: York St John University; Institute for the Public Understanding of the Past, History Department, University of York; also associated with the York Festival of Ideas.

Talk: Military Occupation, International Law, and the End of the 19th Century Conception of War

The Long Nineteenth Century Graduate Seminar

30 November 2015, 11:10 (Monday, 8th week, Michaelmas 2015)
MacGregor Room, Oriel College

Speaker: Jonathan Gumz (Department of History, University of Birmingham)

Booking required?: Not required
Audience: Members of the University only