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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for North East Labour History
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DTSTART:20210328T010000
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210504T173000
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SUMMARY:Durham University: Radical Histories panel discussion
DESCRIPTION:Radical Histories\, an online panel discussion as part of the History Now! series of public talks organised between the Durham University History Department and the Gala Theatre\, Durham\, takes place on Tuesday 4 May between 5.30 and 6.30pm. Register here – all welcome! \nHere’s the link on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/events/1051430605260613 \nRadical political movements today are often articulated via references to historic struggles in the past. Activists look to lost comrades and lost friends\, to generations of forebears that can offer powerful examples for the present. \nFinding friends in the past provides emotional sustenance and historic legitimacy for radical movements\, and uncovering radical pasts is a way of disrupting histories and narratives that insist on the marginalisation of certain stories. Study of these pasts can reveal the agency of ordinary people\, the brutality of elites\, and the victories achieved – as well as defeats suffered – by past radical movements. \nJohn Charlton\, Laura Forster\, and Theo Williams will discuss what radical history means to them in their work on labour history in the north east\, transnational political activism in the nineteenth century\, and Pan-Africanism and anti-imperialism. How might radical histories inform the radical movements of today? Can academic history be ‘radical’? What role do regional historical societies and community organisations play in preserving radical pasts? \nThe panellists will consider all of these questions and more as they explore the uses of radical history\, its limitations\, and its futures.
URL:https://nelh.net/event/durham-university-radical-histories-panel-discussion/
LOCATION:Facebook
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210504T190000
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SUMMARY:First Tuesday: Tosh Warwick will talk about Middlesbrough’s Steel Magnates in the Nineteenth and early Twentieth Centuries.
DESCRIPTION:Topic: Middlesbrough’s Steel Magnates\, Join Zoom Meeting \nhttps://us02web.zoom.us/j/88010819818?pwd=WnBEeitRVXgrQnN3MTNyTkp0d3lMZz09 \nMeeting ID: 880 1081 9818\nPasscode: 474174 \nThe history of modern Teesside has been inextricably linked to the industrialists that led the businesses\, shaped the communities and established new charitable and philanthropic initiatives at the heart of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century manufacturing district. \nIn this talk by Heritage Unlocked’s Dr Tosh Warwick\, he explores the role of the industrial\, urban elite in everyday life\, civic culture and manufacturing enterprises along the River Tees. \nFocusing on the Bell and Dorman families\, he reveals their role in a range of developments still part of the local area today\, including the Tees Transporter Bridge\, civic buildings and museums. \nDr Tosh Warwick joined Manchester Metropolitan University in January 2019 as Research Associate (Impact) in the History Research Centre. Tosh was previously Research Associate in Urban Studies at the University of Glasgow\, lectured at Huddersfield\, Leeds Beckett and Teesside Universities and held a number of roles in the heritage sector including as Heritage Development Officer at Middlesbrough Council where he contributed to a number of major Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) supported regeneration projects. \n 
URL:https://nelh.net/event/first-tuesday-tosh-warwick-will-talk-about-middlesbroughs-steel-magnates-in-the-nineteenth-and-early-twentieth-centuries/
LOCATION:Zoom
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