Hybrid Event: W. H. Hudson and wildlife activism (8 November 16:30 GMT)

Come and join us in this event free for all members of the Hispanic-Anglosphere network and organized by the Modern History Research Centre at the University of Winchester (UK):

Date: Wednesday 8 November 2023 16:30-18:00

Location:  St. Alphege Building 202, King Alfred quarter, University of Winchester and on Teams  / Book your tickets HERE

Hampshire Days (1903): wildlife & rural activism from the Hispanic-Anglosphere

Speakers: Dr Graciela Iglesias-Rogers (University of Winchester) and Conor Mark Jameson (author)

This year marks the 120-anniversary of the publication of a book hailed as a ‘highly influential rural classic’. It was penned by William Henry Hudson (1841-1922), the wildlife activist considered to be the world’s first literary environmentalist. Born and brought up in Argentina, he put foot on England aged 33 to become a leading advocate for the preservation of both South American and British wildlife and cultures. He was a councillor and founding father of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB). In this event organized by the Modern History Research Centre (MHRC), Dr Graciela Iglesias-Rogers will argue that Hampshire Days is not a bucolic account of a by-gone era, but a rallying-call to defend biodiversity and rural heritage shaped by Hudson’s experiences in the Hispanic world – and with strong echoes in the present day. It is the work of an undeclared feminist and a trailblazer respected and admired equally by scientists (ex. Charles Darwin, Alfred Russell Wallace) and writers (Joseph Conrad, Ezra Pound, Ernest Hemingway) and even by creatives in Hollywood. The argument will be presented in conversation with Conor Mark Jameson, a veteran of the RSPB and author of the recently Finding W. H. Hudson: The Writer Who Came to Britain to Save the Birds (London: Pelagic Publishing, 2023) already praised by The Wall Street Journal for being a ‘creative blend of detective work and narrative intuition’ as well as an ‘impeccably researched book’.  

Dr Graciela Iglesias-Rogers is Senior Lecturer in Modern European and Global Hispanic History at the University of Winchester and principal investigator of the international research network The Hispanic Anglosphere: Transnational networks and global communities (18th – 20th centuries) funded by Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) and running in partnership with the National Trust-Tyntesfield and the Centre of American Studies of the Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez. She is also leading convener of the Modern History Research Centre (MHRC). 

Conor Mark Jameson has written for The Guardian, BBC Wildlife, The Ecologist, New Statesman, Africa Geographic, NZ Wilderness, British Birds, Birdwatch and Birdwatching magazines and has been a scriptwriter for the BBC Natural History Unit. He is a columnist and feature writer for the RSPB magazine and has worked in conservation for 20 years, in the UK and abroad. 

Everybody is welcome. Book your tickets HERE (including for accessing the Teams link).  

Tickets are FREE for all members of the University of Winchester (please register with your university email address), MHRC subscribers (information on how to subscribe HERE) and members of the Hispanic-Anglosphere network. Otherwise, Individual entry cost £6 and £3 for concession. 

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One Comment on “Hybrid Event: W. H. Hudson and wildlife activism (8 November 16:30 GMT)

  1. Pingback: “Hampshire Days (1903)”: wildlife activism…” – Recording now available | The Hispanic-Anglosphere ...