Strathnaver Conference: 4-6 September 2014 (original) (raw)

By Drawing We Unframe Scotland’s Community Heritage Conference

Journal of Contemporary Archaeology, 2020

This illustrated essay discusses the creative practice of ‘live drawing’ at an annual conference which brings together Scotland’s community heritage practitioners. It discusses the application of drawing as documentation whilst people are giving talks about their projects, and critically explores the use of drawing as a ‘way of seeing’ events that are tied to the past. It develops the idea that the format of the conferences, just like the composition and content of the illustrations, applies framing devices that contain and constrain our creativity, but that can also enable imaginary opportunities when considering the past in the present.

'Celebrating Scotland's 20th century heritage', Context 118, 2011 03

Context , 2011

Recording and communicating understanding of Scotland’s historic environment are central to the work of the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland (RCAHMS) and of Historic Scotland. Recent years have witnessed a number of parallel initiatives that celebrate Scotland’s rich and varied contribution throughout the 20th century, alongside a series of thematic studies aimed at strengthening statutory protection.

Celtic Conference Programme 2016.pdf

The 9th Celtic Conference in Classics, University College Dublin, 22 - 25 June 2016 Organisers: Douglas Cairns, Anton Powell, Alan Ross, Alexander Thein

J R Baldwin, Exploring Scotland's Heritage: Lothian and the Borders , RCAHMS, 196pp., Edinburgh, 1985, £6.95

Glasgow Archaeological Journal, 1985

A quality of many festschrifts, apart, of course, from honouring the persons to whom they are dedicated, is that studies of certain regions or topics are produced which might not otherwise have been attempted. This is not to suggest that all such studies are necessarily positive contributions, but there is

CALL FOR PAPERS The Culture of Literature and Language in Medieval and Renaissance Scotland

Work in the field of medieval and early modern Scottish literature and language presented at this series of triennial conferences and elsewhere has made visible what can now confidently be called an Older Scots literary culture. From the 14 th to the 17 th century, a literature in Scots grew as an articulation of identity and nation (the key topics of the last two conferences). Language played a vital role in this, too, through interaction of Scots with other languages (Gaelic, Latin, English, French), translation, and a profound interest in language as a phenomenon in itself. The study of Older Scots literature as a discipline is now at a point where many smaller-scale studies and a few key monographs allow informed suggestions towards interrelated cultural narratives, making careful connections both synchronically and within a longue durée perspective and with interdisciplinary impact on the academic level as well as opening out to a wider public. Within this context, the conference seeks to provide a platform not only for further detailed studies of individual texts and authors but also for discussions on how these details may add up to more than the sum of their parts. Therefore, papers on any aspect of the culture of literature and language in medieval and Renaissance Scotland or related interdisciplinary areas (some suggestions below) and including theoretical approaches are warmly welcomed; but we particularly invite delegates to consider contacting other interested parties and submit paper proposals that can be combined as a session of related papers. Papers should not be more than 20 minutes. Please send a 300‐word max. abstract and a very brief CV to the conference organisers at scotmedren2017@glasgow.ac.uk. Deadline for submission of abstracts is 3 October 2016. You can find out more about this series of conferences on the ICMRSLL website at http:// www.icmrsll.org/ which will be populated with more details on the 2017 conference in due course. We will also use www.facebook.com/ScotMedRen2017 and www.twitter.com/ScotMedRen to keep in touch and circulate news, and bring colleagues into contact with one another.

The Banal Daily Drudge : Telling Stories in Scotland Author ( s )

2009

_______________________________________________________ eSharp is an international online journal for postgraduate research in the arts, humanities, social sciences and education. Based at the University of Glasgow and run by graduate students, it aims to provide a critical but supportive entry to academic publishing for emerging academics, including postgraduates and recent postdoctoral students.

POETRY OFTEN LIKES TO GO OFFROAD: Robert Crawford Interviewed by Jiří Flajšar and Pavlína Flajšarová

A long interview with professor Robert Crawford (University of St Andrews), Scottish poet and scholar. About literature, poetry, Robert Burns, T. S. Eliot, St Andrews, and Scottish independence. Biblio entry of the interview is here below Flajšar, Jiří, and Pavlína Flajšarová. “Poetry Often Likes To Go Offroad: Robert Crawford Interviewed by Jiří Flajšar and Pavlína Flajšarová.“ In: Cultural Studies Alive: Conversations with Inkultus Scholars, by Jiří Flajšar and Pavlína Flajšarová. Olomouc: Univerzita Palackého v Olomouci, 2015. 7-40. ISBN 978-80-244-4763-6.

Cultural Interactions atthe Edinburgh Festivals, c1947-1971

Arts & International Affairs, 2017

She has interests in a range of areas of modern social and cultural history, in both Scotland and in Britain more widely, and has published a number of articles and chapters on the arts in the 1960s, Glasgow youth gangs, the policing of youth in postwar Britain, historical pageants in twentieth century Britain, and on oral history, as both theory and method. She is currently working on a history of the Glasgow Mayfests (1983-1997) and a cultural biography of the Scottish poet, musician, and playwright Tom McGrath.