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  • August 1st, 2016

    ‘The Scene of the Skin: Psychic Envelopes and Double Sensations’, Henriette Steiner and Kristin Veel (eds), Negotiating (In)visibilities, (Peter Lang, 2015).

    ‘Fuggles: An Autumn Draft’, Peg Rawes, Stephen Loo and Tim Matthews (eds) Poetic Biopolitical Practices in the Arts and Humanities (London: I B Tauris, 2016).

    ‘X Marks the Spot that Will Have Been’, John Hendrix and Lorens Holm (eds) Architecture and the Unconscious (London: Routledge, 2016).

    August 1st, 2016

    Joanne Bristol, Interspecies spaces: écriture féline
    Funded by Canadian Arts and Humanities scholarship, (2010–6).

    Polly Gould, No More Elsewhere (no corrections)
    Funded by an AHRC Doctoral Award.
    http://www.pollygould.co.uk/Welcome_.html
    https://www.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk/architecture/programmes/mphil-phd-studentwork/polly-gould

    Alex Zambelli, Scandalous Artefacts (no corrections)
    https://www.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk/architecture/programmes/mphil-phd-studentwork/alessandro-zambelli-2

    David Roberts, Make Public (no corrections)
    Funded by a UCL Graduate School Scholarship
    https://www.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk/architecture/programmes/mphil-phd-studentwork/david-roberts
    http://www.davidjamesroberts.com/
    http://www.balfrontower.org

    August 1st, 2016

    Practising Ethics: Positionally, Spatiality and Subjectivity in Dialogue

    12 October 2015

    https://www.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk/architecture/events/practising-ethics-positionally-spatiality-dialogue

    In this symposium speakers will consider how ethics is practiced from the perspective of positionality, spatiality and subjectivity in dialogue. Universities tend to have clear guidelines on the ethical procedures involved in gaining informed consent when interviewing subjects, but these often do not consider the subjective experiences and emotional effects of gathering verbal and visual materials. Geography, psychoanalysis, ethnography/anthropology, political science, architectural design and the visual/performing arts offer a more nuanced and conceptual understanding of the possible spatial, cultural and political settings involved in conversing. Drawing on their own experiences as students, supervisors, practitioners and researchers, speakers will draw out questions around the spatial positions we take up when speaking and listening, how these are informed by the psychic structures of subject-object relations and the power dynamics around seeing/being seen, speaking/being heard, and variations according to practice and discipline.

    Speakers include: Dr Lesley Caldwell (UCL Italian), Professor Ger Duijzings (Regensburg University), Dr Sophie Handler (University of Manchester), Dr Mohamad Hafeda (Leeds Beckett University), Dr Sharon Kivland (Sheffield Hallam University), Professor Jan Kubik (Director of the School for Slavonic and Eastern European Studies, UCL), Cecilie Sachs Olsen (Queen Mary), Professor Steve Pile (Open University), Dr Linda Sandino (University of the Arts London/V&A).

    This seminar is co-funded by The Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment and the AHRC-funded LAHP (London Arts and Humanities Partnership), and is part of an LAHP series for PhD students taking place in autumn 2015 entitled ‘Practising Ethics’ co-funded by LAHP and the UCL ESRC DTC.