Sussex Festival of Ideas take part in Brighton Festival 2023!
Posted on behalf of: School of Media, Arts and Humanities
Last updated: Friday, 28 April 2023
The School of Media, Arts and Humanities' Sussex Festival of Ideas is taking part in a variety of events for this year's Brighton Festival!
Brighton Festival is the largest curated annual arts festival in England. A celebration of music, theatre, dance, circus, art, film, literature, debate, outdoor and community events, Brighton Festival takes place in familiar and unusual locations across Brighton & Hove and further afield for three weeks every May.
The Sussex Festival of Ideas is a dynamic and engaging programme of talks, events and activities. For this year's Brighton Festival our academics and alumni will be hosting a variety of events. Take a look at what's going on:
Acoustic Ecologies: Mapping the Climate Emergency
Saturday 6 May, 1pm - 2.30pm
To mark Flock’s Sleeping Tree installation at Brighton Dome over the opening weekend of the festival, we bring together a panel of speakers, including Dr Alice Eldridge from University of Sussex, to open up and frame the theme of acoustic ecologies.
The Live Archive hosted by Erin James
Monday 8 May, 7pm - 8.30pm
Join Erin James and special guests for a radical reimagining of archival research through poetry and performance. Challenging assumptions about what an ‘academic event’ might look like, and who it can include, The Live Archive seeks out new and exciting possibilities for the future of decolonising education and academia. Expect the unexpected!
Organised by Sussex University and The Stuart Hall Foundation.
Gardens, Botany and Histories of (De)Colonialism
Thursday 11 May, 6.30pm - 8pm
Taking the Royal Pavilion and Garden as their starting point, Rob Boyle, Head Gardener at Royal Pavilion Garden, and Prof Vinita Damodaran, Director of Centre for World Environmental History at University of Sussex, explore the remarkable relationships between botany and colonialism.
Organised by University of Sussex and The Royal Pavilion and Museums Trust.
Music for Girls
Saturday 27 May,1pm - 3.30pm
What does it mean for girls to come together and talk music? Do women have different kinds of relationships to music than men? Join a panel of artists, writers and listeners for an afternoon of conversation and activities exploring collective music histories and lost memorabilia, hosted by the University of Sussex’s Music for Girls project. Expect nostalgia, mixtapes, and songs!
Further information: https://www.sussex.ac.uk/schools/media-arts-humanities/festival-of-ideas/