Vergangene Termine

  • 2022-07-19T00:00:00+02:00
  • 2022-07-19T23:59:59+02:00
Juli 19 Dienstag

19.07.2022

Das Projekt "Home-Office und Wohlbefinden " unter der Leitung von Dr. Johanna Hartung führt am 19. Juli 2022 einen Workshop zum Thema 'Forschen mit Instagram-Daten: Werkstattbericht zu Möglichkeiten & Schwierigkeiten von Ansätzen der Computational Social Sciences' (durchgeführt von Dr. Lisa Merten, Hanna Immler M.A. und Philipp Kessling M.A., Hans-Bredow-Institut) durch, zu der alle Interessierten herzlich eingeladen sind. Bei weiteren Fragen zu der Veranstaltung können Sie sich gerne an die Projektleitung oder Frau Johanna Tix wenden.

  • 2022-07-13T18:00:00+02:00
  • 2022-07-13T20:00:00+02:00
Juli 13 Mittwoch

13.07.2022 von 18:00 bis 20:00

Full Title: ‘Hi folks, Boris Johnson here, taking a moment to wish you all a merry little Christmas’: The discursive construction of ordinariness in political discourses’ (Prof. Dr. Anita Fetzer, Universität Augsburg) Part of the lecture series and collaborative interdisciplinary research project "Democratisation and Power Structures".

  • 2022-07-11T12:15:00+02:00
  • 2022-07-11T13:45:00+02:00
Juli 11 Montag

11.07.2022 von 12:15 bis 13:45

"Clarifying the concept and evaluating the evidence (invoked by philosophers)" (Dr. Uwe Peters) Zoom link: https://uni-bonn.zoom.us/j/69810017849?pwd=OTV5eTcvMWFBOUh2MDBwTFFCdW9zQT09 ID: 698 1001 7849 Password: 764216

  • 2022-07-07T00:00:00+02:00
  • 2022-07-09T23:59:59+02:00
Juli 7 Donnerstag

07.07.2022 bis 09.07.2022

Tagung (07.-09. Juli 2022): 'What Does Theology Do, Actually? Part III - The Unity of the Church and ist Histories' To speak of “challenges” is not an arbitrary choice of words. “WDTD3: The Unity of the Church and its Histories” seeks to engage the seemingly irresolvable tension between the idea of a universal church and the particularity of Christian traditions from historical perspectives. In so doing, challenges arising from this tension related to confessional identity, belonging and acceptance take center stage. Building on the WDTD Project’s interest in the confessional and cultural diversity of approaches to work in the theological disciplines, WDTD3 will consider how the work of the History of Christianity or Church History is evolving as the participants and actors doing this work engage their field interculturally and in conversation with issues of contemporary global concern.

  • 2022-07-06T18:00:00+02:00
  • 2022-07-06T20:00:00+02:00
Juli 6 Mittwoch

06.07.2022 von 18:00 bis 20:00

Full Title: "Audiovisual representations of the Chinese minority in the US: A diachronical approach" (Prof. Dr. Francesca Santulli, University of Venice) Part of the lecture series and collaborative interdisciplinary research project "Democratisation and Power Structures". The ability of cinema to shape individual and public imagery has long been discussed across disciplines (Fluck 2003; Gallese & Guerra 2020), and it is especially complex when power relations among different ethno-linguistic groups are at stake. On the one hand, when a majority group represents a minority, it is common to have representations that can be defined as ethnotypes, a fictional rationalisation of difference (van Doorslaer et al. 2016). On the other hand, when the members of a minority reclaim representativity and become involved in the creative process of filmmaking, their challenge would be to cater to both majority and minority expectations (Morrison 1992).

  • 2022-07-04T12:15:00+02:00
  • 2022-07-04T13:45:00+02:00
Juli 4 Montag

04.07.2022 von 12:15 bis 13:45

Full Title: “Multi-modal evaluation of epilepsy patients using computational methods” (Dr. Theodor Rüber) Zoom link: https://uni-bonn.zoom.us/j/69810017849?pwd=OTV5eTcvMWFBOUh2MDBwTFFCdW9zQT09 ID: 698 1001 7849 Password: 764216

  • 2022-06-29T18:00:00+02:00
  • 2022-06-29T20:00:00+02:00
Juni 29 Mittwoch

29.06.2022 von 18:00 bis 20:00

"(White) identity politics and the contemporary US culture wars" (PD Dr. Simone Knewitz) Part of the lecture series and collaborative interdisciplinary research project "Democratisation and Power Structures". This talk will trace the “career” of the term “critical race theory” and the discourse it has generated to shed light on how the power of language is deployed within the culture wars around identity politics in the United States. It highlights “critical race theory” as a paradigmatic example of a larger conservative strategy to appropriate and reframe concepts of the political left in order to secure power. Situating the debate on “critical race theory” within the contemporary discourse on racism in the US, the presentation seeks to raise the question of why this strategy is successful and whether it exposes flaws in progressive ideas about race and (anti-)racism.

  • 2022-06-27T18:00:00+02:00
  • 2022-06-27T23:59:59+02:00
Juni 27 Montag

27.06.2022 ab 18:00 Uhr

'Risk in Banking - Automated Decision-Making' (Martin Slowik) Registration required via http://open-econ.org/events – first come, first served! Restricted places.

  • 2022-06-27T12:15:00+02:00
  • 2022-06-27T13:45:00+02:00
Juni 27 Montag

27.06.2022 von 12:15 bis 13:45

(Dr. Sergio Genovesi and Dr. Julia Mönig) Zoom link: https://uni-bonn.zoom.us/j/69810017849?pwd=OTV5eTcvMWFBOUh2MDBwTFFCdW9zQT09 ID: 698 1001 7849 Password: 764216

  • 2022-06-22T18:00:00+02:00
  • 2022-06-22T20:00:00+02:00
Juni 22 Mittwoch

22.06.2022 von 18:00 bis 20:00

Full Titel: ‘On democratization and change in institutional power discourse‘ (PD Dr. Elisabeth Reber) Part of the lecture series "Democratisation and Power Structures". Democratization has been described as the “reduction of overt markers of power asymmetry” (Fairclough 1992: 98). Reber (2021) has studied how practices of quoting serve to (de)construct power at Prime Minister’s Questions (PMQs), a parliamentary session with the Prime Minister at the British House of Commons, and how these practices have changed between 1978-2013. The aims of this paper are twofold: 1) I show how changing practices of quoting at PMQs can be related to democratization and argue that democratization may be linked to personalization. 2) Looking at another type of institutional discourse, I present first steps into a new project on United States Supreme Court Opinions, which explores how power asymmetries are created from the early 20th century to today through linguistic and discursive practices.

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