Friday 19th November
Conflict
1.30 Welcome – Marilyn Palmer and Sarah Tarlow
1.55 Sefryn Penrose and Paul Trickett, Peds versus pods: conflict and the M32
2.20 John Schofield and Emily Morrissey, Conflict and the construction of memory: towards a respectable archaeology of Strait Street, Valletta (Malta)
2.45-3.15 Tea break
3.15 Sarah Cross, When London walked in terror: murder sites as heritage
3.40 Zoe Crossland, Laying claim to bodies: exhumation, disappearance and archaeological practice
4.05 Dan Windwood, Land-ownership in English and Australian mining communities
4.30-5.00 Tea break
5.00 Audrey Horning, Archaeology, Conflict, and Contemporary Identity in the North of Ireland: Implications for theory and practice in Irish historical archaeology
5.25 Dean Saitta, Class Conflict in the American West: Archaeology of the Ludlow Massacre, 1914
5.50 Matthew Johnson, Vernacular architecture as a statement of resistance
6.15 Discussion
6.50 Finish
Saturday 20th November
Reform
9.30 Welcome
9.35 Kirsty Owen, The reformed elect: wealth, death and sanctity in post-reformation Gloucestershire
10.00 Jeff Oliver, Maps, landscapes and the making of polite society in Colonial British Columbia
10.25 Sarah Croucher “A race between the Cross and the Crescent”: conflicting reform in nineteenth-century East Africa
10.50 Tadhg O’Keeffe, A garden of laws: towards an archaeology of the Irish industrial schools
11.15-11.45 Tea break
11.45 Sarah Tarlow, The gaze and the glaze: why industrially-produced window glass is
Interesting
12.10 Duncan Sayer, Expressions of Religious Crises and group Identity: A Study of 19th Century Methodist Gravestones
12.35 Richard Benjamin, How the reform and future development of British archaeology can affect Black British identity and aid social inclusion –
1.00-2.15 Lunch
2.15 Stephanie Koerner, Iconoclasm as a ‘cultural system1: implications for challenges facing historical archaeologies of’Reform1
2.40 Richard Thomas, Whatever happened to the Agricultural Revolution?
3.05 Mike Pearson and Lotta Svinhufvud, Our house…
3.45 Discussion
4.30 Vice Chancellor’s Wine Reception
Charles Wilson Building Belvoir City Lounge (second floor)
5.30 Keynote papers:
Ethics, engagement and scholarship in die contemporary world – a view from the edge – Professor Martin Hall
Matters of Conflict: Archaeology and Anthropology of the First World War – Dr Nicholas Saunders
6.50 Finish.
Sunday 21st November
Industrialising Society
9.25 Welcome
9.30 Martin Locock, Constructing capitalism: speculation and social relations in the building industry, 1700-1850
9.55 Paul Courtney, Urbanism and the neo-Colonial economy: Monmouthshire before the industrial revolution
10.20 Joan Unwin, Was it “Made in Sheffield”? The identification and interpretation of cutlery and edge tool finds
10.55-11.25 Tea break
11.25 Mike Nevell, The origins of industrialisation and the Manchester methodology: the roles of the lord, freeholder and tenant in Tameside during industrialisation
11.50 Dan Hicks, Industrial/ exotic encounters at Clifton Zoological Gardens, Bristol
12.15 Marilyn Palmer, Has ‘Industrial Archaeology1 had its day?
12.40 Discussion and close