In October 2017, I returned to the UCD School of Art History for a postdoctoral fellowship funded by the Irish Research Council. As well as a return to my ‘alma mater’, this was also a return to academia: after finishing my PhD at Trinity College, I spent two and a half years working at the ESB Centre for the Study of Irish Art at the National Gallery of Ireland. The transition from gallery to university has been undoubtedly eased by also being a Resident Scholar at the UCD Humanities Institute. This collegial working space, shared with a cohort of fellow postdocs, doctoral students, visiting researchers and staff members, provides a crucial research environment, where the rare commodities of space and time are made available. The intellectually stimulating atmosphere of the HI has been further enhanced by the series of seminars and lectures programmed throughout the academic year, showing the importance of humanities research to many contemporary issues, including migration, ethics, and technological development.
As my fellowship focuses solely on research, the chief markers of the end-of-term (the close of the teaching year and summer exams) have, in many ways, been absent from my day-to-day life. In the summer months, the UCD campus seems to noticeably exhale: buildings empty, queues shorten, and emails about seminars, lectures, and workshops lessen. The easing of pace is hard not to notice, and with the nice weather outside lunches and ice-cream breaks have become more frequent! As other contributors to this blog have said, academic summers are filled with conferences, field-work, research, writing, and this has also been the case for me. Since May, I have completed some minor revisions and resubmitted a journal article which will be published in the next few weeks, drafted a book proposal, and continued to work on the introduction and chapter that I will submit with this to publishers at the end of the summer. With colleagues from the SouthHem project in UCD, I also co-organized an enjoyable two-day conference here in the HI. Titled ‘Settler Social Identities: Rational Recreation in the Long Nineteenth Century’, the papers covered diverse topics and geographies, from libraries and reading groups in Ottawa, Irish villages at industrial exhibitions in America, and cultural patronage in nineteenth-century Melbourne. Funded by a grant from the HI and UCD College of Arts and Humanities, this was a wonderful opportunity to exchange ideas with colleagues from across different disciplines. An integral part of academic life is funding applications, and that has been a major part of my summer. There’s also much to look forward to before term resumes, including a visit to Rome for the European Association of Urban History Conference, where I will present part of my research on Walter Osborne’s paintings of Dublin.
Published: 7 Aug 2018 Categories: The Busy Season