19th Century Studies Unit Guest Lecture Series: Dr. Brian Murray (King’s College, London): The Journeys of ‘Kalulu’ and Saleh Bin Osman: African Travellers in the Imperial Archive
Events — Public Seminar Online22 February 2021, 16:30
Brian Murray: The Journeys of ‘Kalulu’ and Saleh Bin Osman: African Travellers in the Imperial Archive
This talk is the second in our series this semester. It will take place on MS Teams and a link will be sent to everyone who registers. Please indicate below if you would like to receive invitations for the other talks in the series.
RSVP by Sunday Feb 21st
Bio:
Brian Murray studied at Trinity College Dublin and Oxford before completing his PhD at King’s in 2011. From 2012 to 2015, Brian was Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Cambridge, where he worked with ten other scholars on a collaborative European Research Council project ‘The Bible and Antiquity in Nineteenth Century Culture’. He returned to King’s as Lecturer in Nineteenth-Century Literature in 2015.
Event contact: elizabeth.ludlow@aru.ac.uk
Where to next?
Back to events scheduleWhere now
Showcase
Recent work by our recent graduates
This is dummy text. It is intended to be read but have no meaning. As a simulation of actual copy, using ordinary words with normal letter frequencies, it cannot deceive eye or brain. Dummy settings which use.
See recent workCampus
Take all look around our facilities
This is dummy text. It is intended to be read but have no meaning. As a simulation of actual copy, using ordinary words with normal letter frequencies, it cannot deceive eye or brain. Dummy settings which use.
ExplorePeople
Staff, student and Alumni
This is dummy text. It is intended to be read but have no meaning. As a simulation of actual copy, using ordinary words with normal letter frequencies, it cannot deceive eye or brain. Dummy settings which use.
Meet everyoneEvents
See what happens in Cambridge
This is dummy text. It is intended to be read but have no meaning. As a simulation of actual copy, using ordinary words with normal letter frequencies, it cannot deceive eye or brain. Dummy settings which use.
See what's happening