May
04
2022
OSI
We would like to inform you that the deadline for submitting abstracts for the OSI 2022, originally scheduled for 30 April 2022, has been extended by two weeks and the new deadline is 15 May 2022.
Head over to our Application page for more info!
Apr
12
2022
OSI
We are happy to introduce Nora Slonimsky as a member of the OSI 2022 faculty!! She is the Gardiner Assistant Professor of History at Iona College, where she serves as Director of the Institute for Thomas Paine Studies.
Nora studies the history of communication and book history, political economy, and legal culture, with a particular focus on intellectual property, while her work at the Institute for Thomas Paine Studies is concerned largely with public and digital history. Her research offers new and exciting perspectives central to the interdisciplinary format of the Osnabrück Summer Institute. She will convene a workshop with Cristina S. Martinez on the intersection of intellectual property, copyright and cultural production.
Nora’s in-progress book, The Engine of Free Expression: Copyrighting the State in Early America is forthcoming with the University of Pennsylvania Press and won the Society for the History of the Early American Republic (SHEAR) prize for best manuscript. This project, along with other research in the digital humanities, is supported by the Huntington Library, the Library Company of Philadelphia, the New-York Historical Society, and the America Antiquarian Society, among others. She is also co-editing an open-access volume with Cornell University Press, “American Revolutions in the Digital Age.” Nora serves as the Social Media Editor for the Journal of the Early Republic and the reviews editor for SHARP News. You can follow her on twitter @NoraSlonimsky or check out her website, www.hamiltonsolo.com.
Apr
06
2022
OSI
We are happy to announce Cristina S. Martinez as a member of the faculty of the OSI 2022! Cristina teaches in the Department of Visual Arts at the University of Ottawa; she holds a PhD in Art History and Law from Birkbeck College, University of London, and completed a two-year Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Toronto.
Cristina participated in OSI in 2014. Since then, she has been a regular member of the OSI faculty, joining us year after year in Osnabrück. Her work focuses on art and visual culture from the eighteenth century to the present, and she is particularly interested in graphic satire, the history of copyright law and the use of appropriation strategies in modern and contemporary art. She has presented her work at the Paul Mellon Centre for Study in British Art, Yale Law School’s library, the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, the Hunterian Art Gallery in Glasgow, and before the Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts (VLA) in New York. She has also been invited to present her research at conferences elsewhere in France, the UK, Italy, Switzerland and Australia. Cristina will convene a workshop with Nora Slonimsky on questions of intellectual property, copyright and cultural production.
Cristina is currently completing her manuscript Art, Law and Order: The Legal Life of Artists in Eighteenth-century Britain which is to be published by Manchester University Press, and is co-editor for the forthcoming collection Female Printmakers, Printsellers and Publishers in the Eighteenth Century: The Imprint of Women in Graphic Media, 1735-1830 (under contract with Cambridge University Press). She received the prestigious Association of Print Scholars Publication Grant in recognition of this project. Continue Reading »
Mar
28
2022
OSI
Since 2009, the OSI has successfully encouraged and promoted the interdisciplinary study and research of the interrelations between law and culture, based on the idea that the extended cultural study of the law will foster profitable scholarly exchange and dialogue between legal studies and the humanities. We are committed more than ever to build on and continue these efforts, especially in the face of the current challenges to democratic and open societies.
The Institute will offer a combination of thematic workshop sessions, small group seminars and a final conference for up to 20 international participants (doctoral, post-doctoral and advanced M.A. – see below for eligibility). The introductory workshop will address the range and potential of interdisciplinary studies and approaches in the field of law and the humanities. The remaining thematic sessions and small group seminars will focus on key issues and debates in current cultural legal studies which touch on questions of property, ownership, appropriation etc
The main objective of the OSI is to encourage scholarly exchange across disciplines and the critical debate of current research projects as well as work in progress. Participants will have the opportunity to present and discuss their own work both within the larger group and in individual sessions with members of the OSI faculty. The program will be concluded with a two day conference on the topic of the institute with invited speakers and panel sessions.
Mar
25
2022
OSI
We are pleased to officially announce the call for applications for the 8th International Osnabrück Summer Institute (OSI), No Trespassing? Property/Theory between the Disciplines, that will take place July 16 to 24, 2022. Hosted by the Institute of English and American Studies (IfAA), the Summer Institute seeks to promote and examine the interdisciplinary study and research of law and culture.
Applicants should submit:
- An application form.
- A statement of purpose.
- A curriculum vitae.
Both PhD students and post-docs interested in taking part in the OSI should submit their applications by April 30, 2022.
Information on eligibility, the application process and fees are available on our application page. Questions about the OSI may be directed at the Summer Institute Coordinators via email: lawandculture@uos.de.