Monthly Archives: June 2019

English Language and Linguistics Research Day

English Language and Linguistics Research Day

The Centre for Language and Linguistics and the Department of English Language and Linguistics are organising a Research Day on Friday 14 June 2019. During this annual event, members of staff and postgraduate students will present their work in progress projects.

The event will be an opportunity for speakers to receive feedback from experts in all different branches of linguistics and related disciplines, as well as testing new ideas and discussing new collaborations. The event also includes an invited speaker, Dr Jonathan Kasstan, who graduated with a BA in French in 2009 and a PhD in Linguistics in 2017, and is currently a lecturer and Leverhulme-funded researcher at the University of Westminster.

The full programme is below:

10.00 – 11.00: Jonathan Kasstan (Westminster): On the systematicity of variability in language obsolescence

11.00 – 11.30: Break

11.30 – 12.00: David Hornsby: When is a language not a language? The case of Picard

12.00 – 12.30: Heidi Colthup: Walking Simulator Video Games – A New Digital Storytelling Artefact – Transportation, not flow

12:30 – 13:00: Tamara Rathcke: When language hits the beat

13.00 – 14.30: Lunch

14.30 – 15.00: Isabella Reichl: Dissecting conflict: a multi-level approach to refusal negotiations

15.00 – 15.30: Dan Wang: Culture-specific metaphors in the Chinese housing crisis discourse

15.30 – 16.00: Eleni Kapogianni: The pragmatics of deception

Cuba

Cuba ‘exceeded all expectations’ for Hispanic Studies students

Four final-year Hispanic Studies students spent three weeks in Havana during the Easter vacation on a work placement thanks to funding from the Faculty of Humanities Mobility Fund and the generosity of John Washington, a donor to the University.

Two students worked at the University of Havana teaching English, and two worked as translators for the cultural journal La Jiribilla. Dr William Rowlandson, Senior Lecturer in Hispanic Studies, said: ‘The placements offered cross-cultural engagement and skills exchange, and the students benefited from immersed language practice in context, increased spoken fluency, broadening of cultural horizons, and the development of specific skills including teaching, presenting and translation.’

Carla Biondi commented: “Within the first day, [Cuba] had exceeded all my expectations. I suddenly understood what I’d always been told: ‘Cuba has to be seen, it can’t be described’”.

João Martins Pereira said: “As an aspiring teacher, the experience proved to me that it is still possible to learn and teach incredible lessons even if the only resources to hand are passion, dedication, a chalkboard and a slightly outdated textbook. During the placement, we gave presentations on the UK education system, British stereotypes, and even an amusing quiz on the English language and British culture. At the end of the placement, we gave the students some England football team branded wristbands and some keyrings kindly donated by Kent Union. Overall, it was an amazing experience which I would not hesitate to do again if I had the chance.”

Stephen Hockley described the experience as: “…fantastic and so rich. To have been the recipient of an internship that took me across the world and into the suburbs of Havana is always going to be a cool thing. I’m extremely grateful for the opportunity.”

Rudimental, Rochester Castle

Special discount for Rudimental (Sound System) concert

Rudimental (Sound System) with special guests Example and Mahalia will be performing on Wednesday, 10 July at the Rochester #CastleConcerts.

Rudimental will be performing a DJ set with live vocals and brass with:

  • Mark Crown playing the trumpet
  • Taurean Antonie Chagar playing the saxophone
  • Morgan Connie Smith and Bridget Amofah on vocals

Tickets are just £35 (down from £48.50).  Whether you’re a full or part-time student, or member of staff, simply select the student option at the checkout!  And please tell your friends.

Get your tickets now via Medway Tickets Live.

For more information, see the Castle Concerts webpages.

 

Paul March-Russell

Paul March-Russell speaks on humanity, animal identities and the eerie

Dr Paul March Russell, Lecturer in the Department of Comparative Literature, gave a keynote address at the Borders, Intersections and Identity in the Contemporary Short Story in English conference at the University of Santiago de Compostela in May.

Paul’s topic was Daisy Johnson’s short story collection, Fen, which he explored in terms of the borderlines between human and animal identities, especially between the blurred lines between human and natural activity in the East Anglian landscape.

Paul also gave another keynote address titled ‘On the Threshold of Sexual Difference: Re-Gendering the Eerie in Daisy Johnson’s Fen’ at the Current Research in Specualtive Fiction conference in Liverpool on Thursday 6 June. Here, Paul continued to explore Johnson’s work while also discussing his preliminary researches into New Wave science fiction and the Decadent imagination.

“Both talks examined Daisy Johnson’s short story collection, Fen, in relation to Mark Fisher’s conceptualisation of the eerie,” Paul explains, “The first did so by looking at a series of ‘border crossings’ – geopolitically (the relationship of the Fenland periphery to the economic heartland of ‘Silicon Fen’), geologically (the deep time of the Fens), and ecologically (in the encounters between humans and other kinds of non-human life). The second drew on the last of these themes, and explored in more depth Derrida’s claim that human-animal encounters occur ‘on the threshold of sexual difference’ by examining the ways in which Johnson describes sexuality through the meetings between human, animal and non-organic life-forms.”

Online Expenses via Staff Connect is now LIVE!

As of midday on 12 June 2019 all professional services, academic and research staff are able to use Staff Connect to submit expense claims replacing the existing paper based solution.

If you need assistance with transitioning to the new system please contact the Payments Office at expenses@kent.ac.uk

The Staff Connect Expenses module allows for the submission of expense claims online and to attach scanned copies of receipts to the claim. The claim will then be forwarded, via the system, to an agreed Authoriser within your area, for approval. 

Once the claim has been approved it will be forwarded automatically for payment. Payments will be made on a fortnightly basis into the same bank account used for your salary payments.

Drop-in sessions

Drop-in sessions will be held in the period following the launch of the expenses module to allow anyone who wishes to attend for informal training, support and to answer any questions. Please find dates, times and room locations within Cornwallis South East Octagon below:

Wednesday 12 June all day – SE14

 Thursday 13 June 10.00-12.00 – SE20

 Tuesday 18 June 10.00-12.00 – SE20

 Wednesday 19 June 14.00-16.00 – SE14

 Monday 24 June 14.00-16.00 – SE14

 Friday 28 June 10.00-12.00 – SE20

 Medway Thursday 20 June 09.00-12:30 – G4-04

 Further help:

 If you have any questions about Staff Connect and the launch of this new module, there is guidance, including a frequently asked questions section, on the Staff Connect website. To find out more about using Staff Connect to make expense claims, please come to one of the demo and drop-in sessions available for all staff and line managers. There is a high level guide available in relation to the process for submission and approval. Please go to support to find out more. Online user guides are available.

Chris Deacy with Katy Hanrahan

Teeside, childhood memories and horses: Nostalgia podcast with Katy Hanrahan

In the latest episode of the Nostalgia podcast series, Dr Chris Deacy, Reader in Theology and Religious Studies in the Department of Religious Studies, speaks to Katy Hanrahan, who works in special needs education and attended the University of Wales, Lampeter.

Katy and Chris talk about Teeside, growing up against the backdrop of an industrial region whose heritage has now gone, being the first in her family to go to university, and Katy’s keenness from a young age to learn about people from different backgrounds. We also find out about what Katy’s perceptions were of returning to Teeside after spending three years in Lampeter and finding that nothing had changed. The conversation then turns to childhood memories and what she remembers doing. We discover that Katy has always been very animal-centred, including having a passion for looking after horses from a young age, as well as why her mother pushed her into something she could thrive at.

Moving Out?

We are holding collections for the new Kent Union Student FoodBank/FreeCycle (launching Sept 2019) at the following times across campus:

 Keynes Atrium – Thursday 13:00 – 15:00

 Rutherford N2.N3 – Thursday 12.30 – 15:00 and Friday 9:00 – 11:00

 Parkwood Student Hub – Friday 12:00 – 15:00 

If you have non-perishable foods such as canned food, dried pasta or cleaning products, pots, pans, cups, cutlery etc. then please don’t waste it, DONATE IT!

We can’t accept electricals or clothes. Clothes, however, can be donated across campus to the British Heart Foundation.

people sat on chairs looking at a screen which says "Accessibility in the Microsoft Product Suite"

Kent Digital Accessibility Conference

Over 200 delegates joined us from across the county and beyond for the first Kent Digital Accessibility Conference, which was held on Thursday 6 June at the University of Kent’s Canterbury campus.

The conference celebrated the partnership between the University of Kent and Kent Connects (an IT partnership of public sector organisations in Kent), who have been working together to improve digital inclusion and accessibility. The conference was organised as an opportunity to share information and resources with the wider community in the field of digital accessibility.

The conference consisted of talks from industry experts such as Microsoft, Government Digital Service, Kent County Council and University of Kent staff and students. The talks focused on their experience and advice to organisations in the region who need to meet their obligations under new Public Sector Digital Accessibility Regulations.

Many speakers highlighted the positive impact for all users when digital content is made truly accessible, whether they currently have a disability or not. The afternoon was dedicated to practical workshops to upskill attendees on Accessibility in Microsoft; Auditing for Accessibility; Legislation; Writing in plain English and describing visual content; and Tools for productivity.

Attendees commented that it was a pioneering event, and that the information shared addressed a real knowledge gap in the public sector, inspiring them to return to their institutions and put into practice improvements in their digital offering for greater inclusion.

For further information please see the accessibility webpages