Research-focused universities launch collaborative to give voice to critical research SOAS is part of ResearchPlus - a new national collaborative with nine leading research-focused universities
Ancientness, Myth, and Sonic Imagination: Making Persian Music Legible in Israel In this talk Edoardo Marcarini will discuss how, through the mobilisation of a discourse of ancientness, Persian music has gained legitimacy in Israel.
Inaugural Lecture Series: Professor Julia Sallabank In this inaugural lecture, Professor Julia Sallabank will be presenting 'Language revitalisation and reclamation: theorising processes and ideologies' .
'Heat on the Mind' This panel explores the intersection of two, usually siloed, global crises: climate and mental health, around the connecting thread of heat.
Explore the Africa Collection at the SOAS Library In honour of Black History Month, SOAS Library selected a few books on African art, history, politics, and culture to read.
Specter of Acoustic Internationalism: 'Voice of Malayan Revolution' in China, 1969–1981 Ling Zhang traces the Voice of Malayan Revolution as an experiment in 'acoustic internationalism'—a sonic network that transcended divides to sustain solidarity amid Cold War fragmentation.
SOAS Centre for Sustainable Finance Delivers Capacity Building on the Economics and Finance of Climate Change Adaptation for Ministry of Finance in the Caribbean The Resilience and Adaptation Mainstreaming Program (RAMP) convened practitioner training course on the economics and finance of climate change adaptation in Jamaica in collaboration with the Inter-American Development Bank and the University of the West Indies’ Fiscal Research Centre.
Urdu Shayari Masterclass: Women and Urdu Poetry From Mah Laqa Chanda to Zehra Nigah Join us for our next masterclass on Urdu poetry, run by Urdu Culture London and SOAS. This time we will be exploring works by a range of women, from the eighteenth century through to the present.
The Location of Transnational Postcolonialism in Afrodiasporic Novels Join us for a Centre for Pan African Studies seminar exploring how contemporary Afrodiasporic fiction reimagines identity, history, and belonging through a transnational lens.