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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Blackfriars Priory &amp; Studium
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20220408T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20220408T170000
DTSTAMP:20260503T214803
CREATED:20220404T123555Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220404T123702Z
UID:9118-1649433600-1649437200@www.blackfriars.org.uk
SUMMARY:Song of the Female Textile Workers\, Past\, Present and the Future
DESCRIPTION:U.K.-China Performance and the Creative Economy\n\n\n\nSong of the Female Textile Workers works with U.K.-China digital arts partners to create a filmed version of a mixed reality performance to test U.K.-China digital theatre compatibility and audience connectivity. This performance takes the audience through 100 years of China’s socioeconomic transformation via the love\, passion\, and experiences of three generations of Chinese women\, set against an individual historical background. Following the pre-1949 rise of the textile industry and Yueju emerging as China’s first female working class art form\, Mao Zedong’s era and Yueju’s nationwide expansion to the new millennium textile industry transformed art clusters\, and Yueju evolved into China’s second largest and most popular opera whilst remaining the cultural symbol of China’s female working class. In this talk\, Haili Ma will discuss this project and the Chinese tradition of the all-female Yueju opera style. \n\nThis event is part of the China and the West: Cultural Dialogues series\, sponsored by Georgetown University’s Future of the Humanities Project (a partnership with Campion Hall\, Oxford\, and Blackfriars Hall\, Oxford) in cooperation with the Society for Anglo-Chinese Understanding in London. \nFeatured\nHaili Ma is Reader in Performance and Creative Economy at the School of Performance and Cultural Industries\, University of Leeds. Dr. Ma’s research focuses on the artistic evolution of intangible cultural heritage in the digital era and their contribution to sustainable socio-economic development. Trained in traditional Chinese opera from her early teens\, Ma was a member of the Shanghai Luwan All-female Yueju Company\, before coming to the United Kingdom in 1997 where she pursued her academic career. She is the author of Urban Politics and Cultural Capital: The Case of Chinese Opera (2015) and Understanding CCI through Chinese ICH (forthcoming). \nMichael Scott (moderator) is Fellow and Senior Dean at Blackfriars Hall\, Oxford. He is also senior adviser to the president of Georgetown University and leads the Future of the Humanities Project. He has previously served as pro vice chancellor at De Montfort University\, Leicester\, and was the founding vice chancellor of Wrexham Glyndwr University. His books include studies in Shakespeare and his contemporaries and in twentieth century theatre. He has been a fellow and visiting professor at two Chinese universities and published a book on King Arthur with the Foreign Research and Teaching Press in Beijing.
URL:https://www.blackfriars.org.uk/event/song-of-the-female-textile-workers-past-present-and-the-future/
CATEGORIES:Las Casas Institute
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20220411T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20220411T170000
DTSTAMP:20260503T214803
CREATED:20220114T090647Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220304T104450Z
UID:8734-1649692800-1649696400@www.blackfriars.org.uk
SUMMARY:The Media
DESCRIPTION:This event is part of the ongoing event series Free Speech at the Crossroads: International Dialogues. These events are sponsored by the Free Speech Project (Georgetown University)\, the Las Casas Institute and Campion Hall\, hosted by Georgetown University on Zoom. \nConvenors: Michael Scott and Sanford J Ungar\, Georgetown University \n  \n 
URL:https://www.blackfriars.org.uk/event/the-media/
CATEGORIES:Las Casas Institute
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20220426T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20220426T170000
DTSTAMP:20260503T214803
CREATED:20220420T132504Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220420T132504Z
UID:9150-1650988800-1650992400@www.blackfriars.org.uk
SUMMARY:“Enlighten the Eye of My Mind”: Anselm of Canterbury at the Limits of Imagination
DESCRIPTION:The Christian Literary Imagination Series\n \nContinuing from the previous academic year\, over the course of the 2021-22 academic year the Future of the Humanities Project is sponsoring a series of webinars on the Christian literary imagination in collaboration with Blackfriars Hall\, University of Oxford. The ‘Christian Literary Imagination Series’ will explore the role and function of the arts and humanities in the development of the individual and society. \nThe hour-long virtual events will be followed by a Q & As chaired by Professor Michael Scott and Rev Fr Joseph Simmons SJ. These events are free and hosted on Zoom by Georgetown University. \nAnselm of Canterbury (1033-1109)\, the celebrated philosopher-theologian\, monk\, abbot\, and archbishop of Canterbury\, is most famous for his groundbreaking works of theological speculation. Anselm’s bold application of the tools of reason to fundamental questions of Christian faith\, present throughout his authorial career\, resulted in the first philosophical proof for the existence of God in the medieval Latin West. Yet Anselm also had a determined interest in the interior landscape of the human soul—his deathbed regret was that he had not lived long enough to write a book about it. \nWhile the word “imagination” (imaginatio) occurs only a handful of times in his corpus\, Anselm’s works are punctuated with references to the “eye of the soul” or the “eye of the mind.” The notion that humans possess the capacity for inner perception—an interior space for visual and conceptual creativity—is central to his theological program. Dr. Rachel Cresswell’s presentation will examine Anselm’s idea of the “eye of the mind” in all its ambiguity\, particularly in the powers and pitfalls of its capacity for image-creation. In rhetorically underscoring the force of the theological imagination\, Anselm uses that very force to delineate its limitations\, and to negotiate the far-reaches of the mind’s eye in perceiving a God who dwells in unapproachable light. \nFeatured\nDr. Rachel Cresswell is departmental lecturer in ecclesiastical history at the Faculty of Theology and Religion\, University of Oxford\, and a senior member of Christchurch\, Oxford. She also holds a junior research fellowship at Blackfriars\, Oxford. Rachel specializes in the history of Christianity in the medieval Latin West\, focusing particularly on the reception of the Bible in eleventh- and twelfth-century monastic authors. Her doctoral project\, now being prepared for publication\, investigated the role of scripture in the thought and writings of Anselm of Canterbury (1033-1109). Her current research aims to use the scriptural and liturgical motifs in Anselm’s writings as a framework for an historically-contextualized rearticulation of his controversial theory of atonement. \nRev. Joseph Simmons\, S.J.\, (moderator) is an American Catholic priest currently writing his doctoral thesis at Campion Hall\, Oxford\, under the supervision of Professor Graham Ward. He is exploring the Christian imagination and the fertile place where belief and unbelief touch in the fiction of Virginia Woolf and Marilynne Robinson. Simmons previously studied theology at Boston College and the Harvard Divinity School. His Licentiate in Sacred Theology thesis\, “Via Literaria: Marilynne Robinson’s Theology Through a Literary Imagination\,” explored the convergence of literary and Christian imaginations. \nMichael Scott (moderator) is senior dean\, fellow of Blackfriars Hall\, Oxford\, college adviser for postgraduate students\, and a member of the Las Casas Institute. He also serves as senior adviser to the president of Georgetown University. Scott previously was the pro-vice-chancellor at De Montfort University and founding vice-chancellor of Wrexham Glyndwr University.
URL:https://www.blackfriars.org.uk/event/enlighten-the-eye-of-my-mind-anselm-of-canterbury-at-the-limits-of-imagination/
CATEGORIES:Las Casas Institute
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20220427T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20220427T170000
DTSTAMP:20260503T214803
CREATED:20220430T153144Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220430T153539Z
UID:9206-1651071600-1651078800@www.blackfriars.org.uk
SUMMARY:Truth Reading Class: Martin Heidegger (Widening Horizons)
DESCRIPTION:As part of the Widening Horizons in Philosophical Theology project “Truth in Aquinas and the Theological Turn in Continental Philosophy“: a weekly reading class exploring truth in the Continental tradition\, held on Wednesdays at 3pm.  Co-Convened by Dr Oliver Keenan and Dr Daniel De Haan. Register by email at aquinas@bfriars.ox.ac.uk
URL:https://www.blackfriars.org.uk/event/truth-reading-class-martin-heidegger-widening-horizons/
CATEGORIES:The Aquinas Institute
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20220427T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20220427T180000
DTSTAMP:20260503T214803
CREATED:20220404T133519Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220405T195312Z
UID:9117-1651078800-1651082400@www.blackfriars.org.uk
SUMMARY:Dorothy Day: The Long Loneliness
DESCRIPTION:Discussion group\nWeekly online discussions on sections of Dorothy Day’s The Long Loneliness. \nDorothy Day is one of the most interesting Catholics of the 20th century. An American convert to Catholicism from radical socialism\, she founded the Catholic Worker movement\, which developed and practices a sort of Catholic anarchism. Her readily available autobiography\, The Long Loneliness\, is nicely written\, honest\, clear\, thought-provoking and not too long. We will read the book carefully\, and discuss everything from politics to liturgy\, from conversion to modern holiness. \nThe group will be led by Edward Hadas\, Research Fellow at Blackfriars Hall and author of Counsels of Imperfection: Thinking through Catholic Social Teaching\, and by James Bergida\, Junior Research Fellow at Blackfriars Hall and an Adjunct Professor of Political Science and Economics at Christendom College. \n  \nSchedule: \nWeek One (April 27): Introduction and All chapters from “Confession” through “Home” \nWeek Two (May 4): “Adolescence” through “Journalism” \nWeek Three (May 11): “The Masses” through “A Time for Searching” \nWeek Four (May 18): “Man Is Meant for Happiness” through “Love Overflows” \nWeek Five (May 25) “Jobs and Journeys” and “Peasants of the Pavements” \nWeek Six (June 1): “Paper\, People\, and Work” and “Labor” \nWeek Seven (June 8): “Community” through “Retreat” \nWeek Eight (June 15): “’War Is the Health of the State’” through “Postcript” \n  \nFree and open for all. Registration is required. \nFor more information: Contact Edward Hadas (edward.hadas@bfriars.ox.ac.uk) \n 
URL:https://www.blackfriars.org.uk/event/dorothy-day-the-long-loneliness/2022-04-27/
CATEGORIES:Las Casas Institute
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20220428T163000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20220428T180000
DTSTAMP:20260503T214803
CREATED:20220520T185553Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220801T135544Z
UID:9149-1651163400-1651168800@www.blackfriars.org.uk
SUMMARY:Christ and the Spirit
DESCRIPTION:Aquinas Seminar Series on ‘Aquinas on Christ’\n  \nThursday\, 28 April\nFr Dominic Legge OP (DHS): Christ and the Spirit \n  \nUpcoming seminars: \nThursday\, 5 May\nDr Eric Mabry (St. Mary’s Seminary and University): Mysterium Esse Christi: The Theological Hypothesis of Thomas Aquinas regarding the Supernatural Being of Jesus Christ \nThursday\, 12 May\nFr Dominic Ryan OP (Blackfriars): Christ’s being and Summa Theologiae 3a Q17 art. 2 \nThursday\, 19 May \nDr Rik Van Nieuwenhove (Durham): Sickness and Healing: Thomas Aquinas on Sin and Salvation \nThursday\, 26 May\nDr Rachel Cresswell (Oxford): Anselm and Aquinas on the Atonement \nTuesday\, 31 May\nProf Joseph Wawrykow (Notre Dame): The Work of the Cross \nThursday\, 2 June\nProf Michael Gorman (Catholic University of America): The Interaction of Philosophy and Theology in Aquinas’s Christology \nThursday\, 9 June \nDr Austin Stevenson (Cambridge): ‘Whatever is\, is one’: On Varieties of Accidental Union \nThursday\, 16 June\nDr Henk Schoot (Tilburg): Christ the Image of the Father: Aquinas and Others \n  \nThe seminars are held in the Aula of Blackfriars Hall\, except for 19 May and 9 June\, which are held in the Lecture Room of Campion Hall. \nRegistration is only required to attend via Zoom. Each event requires a separate registration. \n 
URL:https://www.blackfriars.org.uk/event/christ-and-the-spirit/
CATEGORIES:The Aquinas Institute
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