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Seminars
Fall Seminar Series Speakers Announced
The Stavros Niarchos Foundation Centre for Hellenic Studies is pleased to announce the return of the popular seminar series for the Spring semester. These public events will feature presentations by Hellenic Studies faculty, graduate students, and visiting scholars to the Centre.
Seminars will be held twice a month throughout the Fall 2018 semester and feature presentations on a range of Hellenic topics in the fields of Archaeology, Classics, Byzantine, Ottoman, and Modern Greek History, as well as Literary and Cultural Studies.
Campus: Burnaby
Room: Academic Quadrangle 6204
(unless otherwise stated)
Time: 2:30-4:00pm
This event is free, but seating is limited.
September 14th Dr. Julian Brooks (Douglas College)
"Mass Tourism, Mountains, and Movie Sets: A Brief Journey through Montenegro and the Drina Valley"
This presentation considers a recent journey along a trail fraught with bitter poverty, newfound wealth, scenic settings, and contested historical spaces. The journey begins amidst mass tourism in coastal Montenegro before moving inland to the burgeoning adventure tours along the Tara and Drina rivers. Next, it is down the river to Visegrad, Bosnia, home of the historic Bridge on the Drina and controversial Andricgrad. Finally, the trip proceeds to a unique eco-hostel in Uzice, Serbia.
September 28th Dr. Ozren Jungic
"Ideology and War in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 1992-95: Evidence from the Tribunal"
Dr Jungic will speak about archival research pertaining to the 1992-95 war in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Using the records of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, he discusses the decisions of top-level actors from the three belligerent sides and shows how ideology shaped their strategic approaches to the conflict and the peace negotiations.
October 12th Dr. Sadia Abbas (Rutgers University)
*please note that this seminar will take place in AQ6229
October 26th Dr. Alexander Grammatikos (Langara College)
"Mary Shelley and the Greek War of Independence"
In this presentation, I will discuss Mary Shelleys engagement with early nineteenth-century Greek politics and involvement with the British Philhellenic movement. Shelleys various responses to the Greek War of Independence will be analyzed in relation to her literary circle, which included her husband Percy Bysshe Shelley and their friend Lord Byron, arguably two of the most popular Philhellenes of the nineteenth century. Moreover, by focusing predominantly on Mary Shelleys 1826 novel The Last Man, my paper will analyze the trajectory of the authors own response to the Greek War of Independence, from, initially, idealistic (and perhaps, na簿ve) supporter of the war to astute examiner of the sociopolitical and cultural issues involved with Europes intervention in Greco-Ottoman warfare.
November 9th TBD
November 23rd TBD