Prof. Cornelie Usborne
Friday, 16 April 2010
10.00am Registration
10.30am Welcome by Andreas Gestrich, Director, German Historical Institute, and Cornelie Usborne, Roehampton University
10.45am – 1pm General reflections
1. Beat Kümin (History, Warwick), ‘The “spatial turn” from a historical perspective’
2. Linda McDowell (Human Geography, St John’s College, Oxford), ‘Space and place in geographical theory: from spatial differentiation to social relations’
3. Eliza Darling, (Anthropology, Goldsmith College, London), ‘The spatial turn that wasn't: class, anthropology, and the triumph of place over space’
1 – 2pm Lunch at the GHI
2 – 5pm Social Space
1. Matthew Johnson (Archaeology, Southampton), ‘Late Medieval Spaces, Early Modern Practices’
2. Gerd Schwerhoff (History, Technical University Dresden), ‘Public places in early modern towns’.
3. – 3.30 Tea break
3.Leif Jerram (Urban History, Manchester), ‘Space: A Useless Category of Historical Analysis?’ (with case studies from turn of the 20th-century Munich)
Conference Dinner
Saturday, 17 April 2010
10 – 10.30am coffee
10.30 – 12.45pm Workplace
1. Jeremy Goldberg (History, York), ‘“I have mor to doo then I doo may”: Problematising Labour, Space and Gender in later medieval England’
2. Amanda Flather (History, Essex), ‘Space, place and gender: the sexual and spatial division of labour in the early modern household’
3. Steven King (History, Leicester), ‘Work places and places of work: Labour market architecture and issues of space in Europe 1750-1870’
12.45-1.45pm Lunch at the GHI
1.45- 4pm Intimate Places
1. Felicity Riddy (English, York), ‘Space, intimacy and values in the late medieval English “bourgeois” home’
2. Sandra Cavallo (History, Royal Holloway), ‘Spaces for body-care and body services in the early modern Italian home’
3. Willem de Blėcourt (Historical Anthropology, Huizinga Institute, Amsterdam), ‘Over the Threshold: liminality, proximity & intimacy in twentieth-century witchcraft discourse’
4-4.30pm Tea
4.30 – 5.30pm Roundtable