Event type:

In person

Date & time:

21 May 2024, 18:30 – 21:00

Social Media in History: Alumni Event

UCL History invites members of our alumni community, staff and current students to this roundtable discussion on Social Media in History.

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Social Media in History: Alumni Event

Watch History Alumni Roundtable 2024: Social Media in History on YouTube.
Dr Benet Salway

Senior lecturer in Roman History

UCL

Benet Salway's broad area of interest is the Roman world from the late republic until late antiquity. The particular focuses of his research are later Roman history, Greek and Roman epigraphy and onomastics, Roman law, and travel and geography in the Graeco-Roman world. He teaches undergraduate courses on the Roman Empire and the Roman Army, and postgraduate courses on Latin Epigraphy and aspects of late antiquity.

Dr Antonio Sennis

Associate Professor of Medieval History

UCL

Antonio Sennis is Associate Professor of Medieval History. He is a cultural historian whose main focus is Western Europe in the period 800-1200. He has worked on: space and memory as ideological tools in medieval Europe; the relationship between power and territory in early medieval Western Europe; the medieval Papacy; monastic lordships in medieval Italy; medieval monasteries and their chronicles; the memory of origins and the construction of identities in European monastic institutions. Antonio is currently studying the development of concepts of fame and reputation in medieval Europe.

Antonio is now the Head of Department for UCL History (2023- ).

Dr Rebecca Jennings

Lecturer in Modern History

UCL

Rebecca teaches on the history of gender and sexuality in modern Britain. Her research focuses on twentieth-century British and Australian lesbian history and she is the author of Tomboys and Bachelor Girls: A lesbian history of post-war Britain (2007); A Lesbian History of Britain: Love and sex between women since 1500 (2007); and Unnamed Desires: A Sydney lesbian history (2015). Rebecca is currently completing a monograph arising from her Australian Research Council-funded research into 'Lesbian Practices of Intimacy in Britain and Australia, 1945-2010', which traces lesbian relationship models and parenting practices in post-war Britain and Australia.

Further information

Ticketing

Open

Cost

Free

Open to

UCL staff

Availability

Yes

Organiser

Queenie Lee

q.lee@ucl.ac.uk