Catherine Hall (born 1946 in Kettering) is a British feministhistorian. Since 2009 she has been Professor of Modern British Social and Cultural History at University College London. Her work explores the interrelation between metropole and colony in an attempt to rewrite the narrative of certain aspects of 'British history' in the mid nineteenth century empire period.
Catherine Hall: "Racial Capitalism: What’s in a Name?"
Racial capitalism has become a widely used term – but how should we define it and what specific forms does it take? Recorded on April 20, 2022, this talk by esteemed historian Catherine Hall focused on 18th-century Jamaica and the ways in which two separate sets of practices – racisms and capitalism – intersected to form a system embedded in both the metropolitan and the colonial states.
Catherine Hall is Emerita Professor of History and Chair of the Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slavery at University College London. Her recent work has focused on the relation between Britain and its empire: Civilising Subjects (2002), Macaulay and Son (2012) and Hall et al, Legacies of British Slave-ownership (2014). Between 2009-2015 she was the Principal Investigator on the ESRC/AHRC ...
published: 22 Apr 2022
"Towards a New Past: the Legacies of British Slave-ownership" by Professor Catherine Hall
Public lecture delivered by Professor Catherine Hall (UCL History) on the 27th of February to mark the launch of the LBS (Legacies of British Slave-ownership) encyclopaedia - the first public resource of its kind. Vice-Provost Professor David Price introduced the lecture and it was followed by an introduction to the encyclopaedia from Dr Nick Draper and Dr Keith McClelland.
Search the encyclopaedia - www.ucl.ac.uk/lbs
Many thanks to everyone who came to this lecture - the Gustave Tuck was absolutely packed! And for those who couldn't make it, we hope you enjoy this video.
There has been considerable media coverage of this ESRC & AHRC funded research project with over 65 newspaper articles appearing worldwide - from Slovakia to China, Hungary to India, Mexico to New Zealand.
published: 08 Mar 2013
Creating Photographic Opportunity | Catherine Hall | Talks at Google
Award winning photographer Catherine Hall talks at Google about "Generating Photographic Opportunities.
published: 07 Jun 2012
Keith Jeffery Lecture: Professor Catherine Hall – "Whose Histories Now"
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Queen’s University Belfast is a UK Russell Group university based in Belfast, Northern Ireland and here you will find out what Queen’s University Belfast can do for you, whether you want to know about one of hundreds of courses, what our students think about living and studying at Queen...
published: 06 Jan 2020
The Colonial Legacy Conference - Catherine Hall
Lecture by Prof. Catherine Hall: "Legacies of Colonial Slavery: the British case," with response by Dr. Dienke Hondius. The Colonial Legacy Conference, 21 June 2013, Utrecht.
What is this lecture about?
This presentation will draw on the work of the project on Legacies of British Slave Ownership which has been based in the History Department at University College London since 2009. The project is focused on the significance of slave ownership as one of the ways in which the fruits of the slave trade and slavery were transmitted to Britain and contributed to the development of a modern industrial capitalist society. A group of wealthy absentee owners, West Indians proprietors as they were called, based in the metropole, were able to invest the profits from their plantations in a variety of...
published: 23 Oct 2013
Catherine Hall, in memoria
Caty integrante de la Banda bordemar desde 1990 al 2011.
Tema Aurora.
published: 03 Apr 2011
Catherine Hall Interview
An interview with Catherine Hall, author of The Proof Of Love
published: 17 May 2011
reDefine with Tamara Lackey Episode 121 : Catherine Hall
We sit down in New York City with Catherine Hall, editorial and wedding photographer - and the host of TWiT Photo. Catherine shares some outstanding tips and experiences, including a very personal one that really opened her eyes up to the impact of good photography. And listen in to the very end, as she leaves us with possibly one of the best ever quotes from a guest on reDefine.
Related product:
Dot Line Hands-Free Video Stabilizer for DSLR and Camcorders
http://www.adorama.com/CZHFVDS.html
Racial capitalism has become a widely used term – but how should we define it and what specific forms does it take? Recorded on April 20, 2022, this talk by est...
Racial capitalism has become a widely used term – but how should we define it and what specific forms does it take? Recorded on April 20, 2022, this talk by esteemed historian Catherine Hall focused on 18th-century Jamaica and the ways in which two separate sets of practices – racisms and capitalism – intersected to form a system embedded in both the metropolitan and the colonial states.
Catherine Hall is Emerita Professor of History and Chair of the Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slavery at University College London. Her recent work has focused on the relation between Britain and its empire: Civilising Subjects (2002), Macaulay and Son (2012) and Hall et al, Legacies of British Slave-ownership (2014). Between 2009-2015 she was the Principal Investigator on the ESRC/AHRC project "Legacies of British Slave-ownership," which seeks to put slavery back into British history. Her new book will be Edward Long and Lucky Valley: Racial Capitalism and the History of Jamaica.
This talk was co-sponsored by UC Berkeley Social Science Matrix, Department of Geography, Center for British Studies, Critical Theory Program, Institute for the Study of Societal Issues, and Department of History.
Racial capitalism has become a widely used term – but how should we define it and what specific forms does it take? Recorded on April 20, 2022, this talk by esteemed historian Catherine Hall focused on 18th-century Jamaica and the ways in which two separate sets of practices – racisms and capitalism – intersected to form a system embedded in both the metropolitan and the colonial states.
Catherine Hall is Emerita Professor of History and Chair of the Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slavery at University College London. Her recent work has focused on the relation between Britain and its empire: Civilising Subjects (2002), Macaulay and Son (2012) and Hall et al, Legacies of British Slave-ownership (2014). Between 2009-2015 she was the Principal Investigator on the ESRC/AHRC project "Legacies of British Slave-ownership," which seeks to put slavery back into British history. Her new book will be Edward Long and Lucky Valley: Racial Capitalism and the History of Jamaica.
This talk was co-sponsored by UC Berkeley Social Science Matrix, Department of Geography, Center for British Studies, Critical Theory Program, Institute for the Study of Societal Issues, and Department of History.
Public lecture delivered by Professor Catherine Hall (UCL History) on the 27th of February to mark the launch of the LBS (Legacies of British Slave-ownership) e...
Public lecture delivered by Professor Catherine Hall (UCL History) on the 27th of February to mark the launch of the LBS (Legacies of British Slave-ownership) encyclopaedia - the first public resource of its kind. Vice-Provost Professor David Price introduced the lecture and it was followed by an introduction to the encyclopaedia from Dr Nick Draper and Dr Keith McClelland.
Search the encyclopaedia - www.ucl.ac.uk/lbs
Many thanks to everyone who came to this lecture - the Gustave Tuck was absolutely packed! And for those who couldn't make it, we hope you enjoy this video.
There has been considerable media coverage of this ESRC & AHRC funded research project with over 65 newspaper articles appearing worldwide - from Slovakia to China, Hungary to India, Mexico to New Zealand.
Public lecture delivered by Professor Catherine Hall (UCL History) on the 27th of February to mark the launch of the LBS (Legacies of British Slave-ownership) encyclopaedia - the first public resource of its kind. Vice-Provost Professor David Price introduced the lecture and it was followed by an introduction to the encyclopaedia from Dr Nick Draper and Dr Keith McClelland.
Search the encyclopaedia - www.ucl.ac.uk/lbs
Many thanks to everyone who came to this lecture - the Gustave Tuck was absolutely packed! And for those who couldn't make it, we hope you enjoy this video.
There has been considerable media coverage of this ESRC & AHRC funded research project with over 65 newspaper articles appearing worldwide - from Slovakia to China, Hungary to India, Mexico to New Zealand.
Subscribe NOW to Queen’s University Belfast: http://bit.ly/1Y24vux
MORE from Queen’s University Belfast:
Like Queen’s University Belfast: https://www.faceb...
Subscribe NOW to Queen’s University Belfast: http://bit.ly/1Y24vux
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Like Queen’s University Belfast: https://www.facebook.com/QUBelfast
Follow Queen’s University Belfast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/QUBelfast
Follow Queen’s University Belfast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/QUBelfast
To find out about our courses: http://www.qub.ac.uk/home/StudyatQueens/CourseFinder/
To find out about our research: http://www.qub.ac.uk/home/ResearchandEnterprise/
Queen’s University Belfast is a UK Russell Group university based in Belfast, Northern Ireland and here you will find out what Queen’s University Belfast can do for you, whether you want to know about one of hundreds of courses, what our students think about living and studying at Queen’s and in Belfast, and how our researchers are creating impact around the world.
http://qub.ac.uk/
Subscribe NOW to Queen’s University Belfast: http://bit.ly/1Y24vux
MORE from Queen’s University Belfast:
Like Queen’s University Belfast: https://www.facebook.com/QUBelfast
Follow Queen’s University Belfast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/QUBelfast
Follow Queen’s University Belfast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/QUBelfast
To find out about our courses: http://www.qub.ac.uk/home/StudyatQueens/CourseFinder/
To find out about our research: http://www.qub.ac.uk/home/ResearchandEnterprise/
Queen’s University Belfast is a UK Russell Group university based in Belfast, Northern Ireland and here you will find out what Queen’s University Belfast can do for you, whether you want to know about one of hundreds of courses, what our students think about living and studying at Queen’s and in Belfast, and how our researchers are creating impact around the world.
http://qub.ac.uk/
Lecture by Prof. Catherine Hall: "Legacies of Colonial Slavery: the British case," with response by Dr. Dienke Hondius. The Colonial Legacy Conference, 21 June ...
Lecture by Prof. Catherine Hall: "Legacies of Colonial Slavery: the British case," with response by Dr. Dienke Hondius. The Colonial Legacy Conference, 21 June 2013, Utrecht.
What is this lecture about?
This presentation will draw on the work of the project on Legacies of British Slave Ownership which has been based in the History Department at University College London since 2009. The project is focused on the significance of slave ownership as one of the ways in which the fruits of the slave trade and slavery were transmitted to Britain and contributed to the development of a modern industrial capitalist society. A group of wealthy absentee owners, West Indians proprietors as they were called, based in the metropole, were able to invest the profits from their plantations in a variety of different ways -- in merchant banking and shipping, in railways and insurance, in country houses and collections of art, and in imperial enterprises. They influenced the terms of emancipation, protected the interests of West Indian planters and merchants for two decades after the abolition of slavery, and contributed to the ways in which race was reconfigured once the figure of 'the African' could no longer be defined by enslavement. These legacies -- economic, political and cultural -- need to be documented and remembered."
The Colonial Legacy Conference was organised by the Centre for the Humanities at Utrecht University as one of the Treaty of Utrecht commemoration events on 21-22 June 2013. More information available at: http://cfhutrecht2013.com/.
Lecture by Prof. Catherine Hall: "Legacies of Colonial Slavery: the British case," with response by Dr. Dienke Hondius. The Colonial Legacy Conference, 21 June 2013, Utrecht.
What is this lecture about?
This presentation will draw on the work of the project on Legacies of British Slave Ownership which has been based in the History Department at University College London since 2009. The project is focused on the significance of slave ownership as one of the ways in which the fruits of the slave trade and slavery were transmitted to Britain and contributed to the development of a modern industrial capitalist society. A group of wealthy absentee owners, West Indians proprietors as they were called, based in the metropole, were able to invest the profits from their plantations in a variety of different ways -- in merchant banking and shipping, in railways and insurance, in country houses and collections of art, and in imperial enterprises. They influenced the terms of emancipation, protected the interests of West Indian planters and merchants for two decades after the abolition of slavery, and contributed to the ways in which race was reconfigured once the figure of 'the African' could no longer be defined by enslavement. These legacies -- economic, political and cultural -- need to be documented and remembered."
The Colonial Legacy Conference was organised by the Centre for the Humanities at Utrecht University as one of the Treaty of Utrecht commemoration events on 21-22 June 2013. More information available at: http://cfhutrecht2013.com/.
We sit down in New York City with Catherine Hall, editorial and wedding photographer - and the host of TWiT Photo. Catherine shares some outstanding tips and e...
We sit down in New York City with Catherine Hall, editorial and wedding photographer - and the host of TWiT Photo. Catherine shares some outstanding tips and experiences, including a very personal one that really opened her eyes up to the impact of good photography. And listen in to the very end, as she leaves us with possibly one of the best ever quotes from a guest on reDefine.
Related product:
Dot Line Hands-Free Video Stabilizer for DSLR and Camcorders
http://www.adorama.com/CZHFVDS.html
We sit down in New York City with Catherine Hall, editorial and wedding photographer - and the host of TWiT Photo. Catherine shares some outstanding tips and experiences, including a very personal one that really opened her eyes up to the impact of good photography. And listen in to the very end, as she leaves us with possibly one of the best ever quotes from a guest on reDefine.
Related product:
Dot Line Hands-Free Video Stabilizer for DSLR and Camcorders
http://www.adorama.com/CZHFVDS.html
Racial capitalism has become a widely used term – but how should we define it and what specific forms does it take? Recorded on April 20, 2022, this talk by esteemed historian Catherine Hall focused on 18th-century Jamaica and the ways in which two separate sets of practices – racisms and capitalism – intersected to form a system embedded in both the metropolitan and the colonial states.
Catherine Hall is Emerita Professor of History and Chair of the Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slavery at University College London. Her recent work has focused on the relation between Britain and its empire: Civilising Subjects (2002), Macaulay and Son (2012) and Hall et al, Legacies of British Slave-ownership (2014). Between 2009-2015 she was the Principal Investigator on the ESRC/AHRC project "Legacies of British Slave-ownership," which seeks to put slavery back into British history. Her new book will be Edward Long and Lucky Valley: Racial Capitalism and the History of Jamaica.
This talk was co-sponsored by UC Berkeley Social Science Matrix, Department of Geography, Center for British Studies, Critical Theory Program, Institute for the Study of Societal Issues, and Department of History.
Public lecture delivered by Professor Catherine Hall (UCL History) on the 27th of February to mark the launch of the LBS (Legacies of British Slave-ownership) encyclopaedia - the first public resource of its kind. Vice-Provost Professor David Price introduced the lecture and it was followed by an introduction to the encyclopaedia from Dr Nick Draper and Dr Keith McClelland.
Search the encyclopaedia - www.ucl.ac.uk/lbs
Many thanks to everyone who came to this lecture - the Gustave Tuck was absolutely packed! And for those who couldn't make it, we hope you enjoy this video.
There has been considerable media coverage of this ESRC & AHRC funded research project with over 65 newspaper articles appearing worldwide - from Slovakia to China, Hungary to India, Mexico to New Zealand.
Subscribe NOW to Queen’s University Belfast: http://bit.ly/1Y24vux
MORE from Queen’s University Belfast:
Like Queen’s University Belfast: https://www.facebook.com/QUBelfast
Follow Queen’s University Belfast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/QUBelfast
Follow Queen’s University Belfast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/QUBelfast
To find out about our courses: http://www.qub.ac.uk/home/StudyatQueens/CourseFinder/
To find out about our research: http://www.qub.ac.uk/home/ResearchandEnterprise/
Queen’s University Belfast is a UK Russell Group university based in Belfast, Northern Ireland and here you will find out what Queen’s University Belfast can do for you, whether you want to know about one of hundreds of courses, what our students think about living and studying at Queen’s and in Belfast, and how our researchers are creating impact around the world.
http://qub.ac.uk/
Lecture by Prof. Catherine Hall: "Legacies of Colonial Slavery: the British case," with response by Dr. Dienke Hondius. The Colonial Legacy Conference, 21 June 2013, Utrecht.
What is this lecture about?
This presentation will draw on the work of the project on Legacies of British Slave Ownership which has been based in the History Department at University College London since 2009. The project is focused on the significance of slave ownership as one of the ways in which the fruits of the slave trade and slavery were transmitted to Britain and contributed to the development of a modern industrial capitalist society. A group of wealthy absentee owners, West Indians proprietors as they were called, based in the metropole, were able to invest the profits from their plantations in a variety of different ways -- in merchant banking and shipping, in railways and insurance, in country houses and collections of art, and in imperial enterprises. They influenced the terms of emancipation, protected the interests of West Indian planters and merchants for two decades after the abolition of slavery, and contributed to the ways in which race was reconfigured once the figure of 'the African' could no longer be defined by enslavement. These legacies -- economic, political and cultural -- need to be documented and remembered."
The Colonial Legacy Conference was organised by the Centre for the Humanities at Utrecht University as one of the Treaty of Utrecht commemoration events on 21-22 June 2013. More information available at: http://cfhutrecht2013.com/.
We sit down in New York City with Catherine Hall, editorial and wedding photographer - and the host of TWiT Photo. Catherine shares some outstanding tips and experiences, including a very personal one that really opened her eyes up to the impact of good photography. And listen in to the very end, as she leaves us with possibly one of the best ever quotes from a guest on reDefine.
Related product:
Dot Line Hands-Free Video Stabilizer for DSLR and Camcorders
http://www.adorama.com/CZHFVDS.html
Catherine Hall (born 1946 in Kettering) is a British feministhistorian. Since 2009 she has been Professor of Modern British Social and Cultural History at University College London. Her work explores the interrelation between metropole and colony in an attempt to rewrite the narrative of certain aspects of 'British history' in the mid nineteenth century empire period.
Of all the things a popular song can bring A permanent picture of hope is what I hate the most But now I'm happy when I'm told to discover There is no other Just this is beautiful This is beautiful It's oh so fanciful Empty head feels good Empty head feels good, yeah Just don't be too surprised if this permanent paradise Explodes some day in a permanent picture of pain Empty head feels good Empty head feels good Empty head feels good, yeah But a permanent picture of love...(no there's a thing) You feel you sing for something real I can tell you it's no deal so don't bother Whenever the fools surround me It's never enough to tell me This is beautiful This is beautiful It's oh so fanciful Empty head feels good Empty head feels good
The backlash comes as the track at the region's premier facility, the Montego BaySports Complex in CatherineHall, St James, is in need of repairs ... to travel as far as St Catherine for major meets.
During the jury inquest, which began on Monday at Leicester CityHall more than six years after the crash, senior coroner ProfessorCatherineMason heard a pen portrait written by the family of Khun Vichai ... He was a good man with a good heart ... ....
During the jury inquest, which began on Monday at Leicester CityHall more than six years after the crash, senior coroner ProfessorCatherineMason heard a pen portrait written by the family of Khun Vichai ... He was a good man with a good heart ... ....