Events in 2024
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Phon & Phon B Sawicka-Stępińska on /s/-weakening in Guayaquil Spanish
The Department of Contemporary English Language (DoCELu) is happy to announce a Phon&Phon meeting. Brygida Sawicka-Stępińska (Institute of Romance Studies of the Faculty of Modern Languages and Literatures) Me como las eses hasta en la sopa (I eat my esses even in the soup). Sociolinguistic dimensions of /s/-weakening in Guayaquil ...
23.01.202423.01 -
CLiP Meeting - Jan 18. - 18:30 - room 339
Canadian Literature in Perspective (CLiP) Reading Group invites everyone to our first meeting in 2024! On January 18, we are going to discuss Old Babes in the Wood - the latest collection of short stories by Margaret Atwood. Join us on Jan. 18, 6:30 pm in room 339 (Coll. Heliodori). ...
18.01.202418.01 -
Book Lovers Among Students Meeting in January
We invite everyone to the next meeting of Book Lovers Among Students (BLASt), the scholarly meeting group for American literature and culture. Mr. Piotr Matczak will deliver a talk entitled "The highway in Joan Didion's Play It As It Lays: a spatial reading of the novel". We'll discuss Play It ...
17.01.2024 - 17.01.2024starts 17.01ends 17.01 -
The art of/in writing historical fiction: A meeting with Vikramajit Ram
The Department of English and Irish Literature, and Literary Linguistics warmly invites you to take part in:The art of/in writing historical fiction: A meeting with author Vikramajit RamWednesday, 17th January 20241:15 PM in room 214Vikramajit Ram is a novelist and non-fiction writer based in Bangalore. A graduate of the National ...
17.01.202417.01 -
Culture Vulture meeting: Meet WA Foreign Students
Culture Vultures has the pleasure of inviting everybody to a meeting with foreign students studying in WA.Let us celebrate and explore their cultures.Let us listen to what the students say about Poland.Let us ask them questions about their countries and about Poland.LET US HAVE FUN!January 17, 11:30 a.m.room 235Moderator: dr ...
17.01.2024 - 17.01.2024starts 17.01ends 17.01 -
IAS Invited Lecture, “Colonial orthographies and their contemporary consequences: Focus on North American Englishes” by Prof. Carol Percy (University of Toronto)
The Department of the History of the English Language invites everybody to the fourth on-line lecture in the series Sociolinguistic Aspects of Historical Orthography, organised within the framework of the AMU Institute of Advances Studies in Social Sciences and Humanities programme. On Wednesday 10 January at 1.15 p.m our guest ...
10.01.202410.01