Events
- Word and Image: Early Modern Treasures from the UCL Collections
- Centre for Early Modern Exchanges: Launch Conference
- Cultures of Surveillance - Conference
- Inspector Sangiorgi and the Sicilian mafia, 1875-1877
- Inaugural Lecture - Chronis Tzedakis
- Inaugural Lecture - Gesine Manuwald
- Inaugural Lecture - Imran Rasul
- Inaugural Lecture - Jennifer Robinson
- Inaugural Lecture - Frederic J. Schwartz
- Inaugural Lecture - Albert Weale
- Inaugural Lecture - Claire Warwick
- Inaugural Lecture - Ada Rapoport-Albert
- Inaugural Lecture - Helen Hackett
- Inaugural Lecture - Philippe Marlière
- Inaugural Lecture - Miriam Leonard
- Time-travels in literature and politics
- Displacing Persephone: Epic between Worlds
- Making Space
- Art by Animals comes to London
- Generation X Reflects: British – German Encounters
- Language, Identity and Multiculturalism Colloquium
Cultures of Surveillance - Conference
15 September 2011
29 September - 1 October
Open to the general public
The Film Studies Space: The Centre for the Cultural History of the Moving Image
De Young Lecture Theatre and Anatomy Theatre
Medical Sciences and Anatomy Building, UCL, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT

Keynote Lectures:
- Professor Tom Gunning, University of Chicago (Thursday, 6 p.m.)
- Professor Simon Cole, University of California, Irvine (Friday, 1:30p.m.)
We are being watched.
The amazing part is that we are no longer
even surprised by this.
The culture of surveillance increasingly surrounds us in Europe where omnipresent CCTV cameras remind us that nothing escapes the invisible gaze of those behind the lens.
At UCL, we have long been surveyed by
our founder, Jeremy Bentham, who sits in a wooden case in the lobby and peers
from glass eyes and a wax head: his own ‘icon’ body signals that he not only
knew what surveillance meant but named it through his invention of the
Panopticon. That imaginary device, which Bentham proposed would “help reform
morals, preserve health, invigorate industry, diffuse instruction, and lighten
public burdens,” continues to be a resonant touchstone for questions about the
way governments and private agencies keep watch over our interests – and theirs.
This conference, held where Bentham goes on watching both literally and metaphorically, proposes to explore, broadly, the interdisciplinary frameworks for understanding modern surveillance and, particularly, how surveillance practices intersect with visual technologies and histories of culture.
Registration is now open.
The provisional programme is also available online.
For further information, contact - deadobjects@gmail.com
Follow us on Twitter at @cultofsurv .
and on Facebook (Cultures of Surveillance).
This conference is sponsored by
UCL Graduate School, UCL FIGS, UCL SELCS, and UCL Research Challenges
