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21 October 2024 | Story André Damons | Photo Supplied
Prof Helene Strauss
Prof Helene Strauss, a distinguished professor in the Department of English at the University of the Free State (UFS), will be joining the Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Study (STIAS) as an individual fellow.

Prof Helene Strauss, a distinguished professor in the Department of English at the University of the Free State (UFS), has been selected for an individual fellowship at the Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Study (STIAS) for 2025.

Prof Strauss, who was awarded the prestigious 2022 UFS Book Prize for Distinguished Scholarship during the annual UFS Research Awards last year, says she feels lucky to be given this opportunity. She will be in residence at STIAS for the period 14 July to 12 December. 

“I am especially looking forward to joining the 2025 cohort of STIAS fellows and to spending quality time with peers from across the disciplinary spectrum. I have heard only good things about this experience,” she says.

According to the STIAS website, the institute invests in experts who work across disciplinary borders to tackle issues ranging from health equity to complexity theory, the effects of race to quantum information. STIAS was established to provide a “creative space for the mind”, a fellowship programme that would advance cross-disciplinary research at the highest level. Modelled on similar institutes internationally, STIAS is the first of its kind in Africa.

Reprioritising academic quality

Researchers and intellectuals selected for individual fellowships are invited to join “a cohort of leading thinkers in a creative space for the mind”.

“STIAS offers researchers an invaluable opportunity to step away from the ongoing clutter of teaching and administrative work. I appreciate their invitation to fellows to de-prioritise ‘quantitative performance measures while reprioritising academic quality as characterised by communication, curiosity, surprise, discovery, and societal relevance’ during their STIAS residency.”

Prof Strauss says: “I will be working on a book titled Phytospheric Justice”, whose research is about the symbiotic atmospheric pathways that connect plant and human breath. “I am interested in how literary and other creative cultural texts might open pathways towards ‘decolonial air conditioning’ (Hsuan Hsu) and the restoring – and re-storying – of human-plant kinship relations.

“In short,” Prof Strauss continues, “my book will consider how novelists, poets, artists, botanists and environmental activists across a range of global sites chart alternatives to breath-depleting atmospherics. I am curious especially about how creative cultural workers in contexts with overlapping histories of colonisation, deforestation and extractive violence imagine post-smog futures and advance the flourishing of multi-species breath.”

According to Prof Vasu Reddy, Deputy Vice-Chancellor of Research and Internationalisation at the UFS, this fellowship is not only a confirmation that Professor Strauss’s scholarship is deemed important and cutting-edge, but with this award, Prof Strauss also represents the interests of all UFS faculty in seeking out the best ways for us to support researchers as they exploit their curiosity, create their own research agendas, seek funding and other resources, and translate their work into relevant outcomes. “The STIAS fellowship is an honour befitting the work she has done and plans to undertake. It makes not just the Faculty of Humanities, but the entire university proud of this formidable recognition,” says Prof Reddy.

News Archive

British piano duo perform at Odeion
2016-10-19

Description: British piano duo  Tags: British piano duo

David Nettle and Richard Markham, better known
as Nettle and Markham, will be performing in the
Odeion on 20 October 2016.
Photo: Supplied

The Odeion School of Music (OSM) at the University of the Free State (UFS) will be hosting one of the world’s foremost piano duos. Nettle and Markham perform in the main concert halls of Europe and with major British orchestras such as the London Philharmonic, the RPO, the CBSO, and the ECO as well as other international orchestras. They also participate in major international festivals such as the Bath, Harrogate, Berlin, Schleswig-Holstein, and BBC Proms.

The British duo have been delighting audiences throughout the musical world for nearly forty years and will perform at the Odeion on the UFS Bloemfontein Campus on 20 October 2016. David Nettle and Richard Markham are considered one of the most entertaining and musically satisfying partnerships performing today.

"We have not heard here until now a piano duo of such exceptional quality. The understanding of the music by both partners is so good that you cannot distinguish by hearing which of them picks up the musical theme. At the same time it is playing full of colour and spontaneous musicality, stirring and ravishing," Vecemi Praha said.

Nettle and Markham's varied recital and concerto repertoire encompasses not only standard works, but also their own distinctive transcriptions. Their highly praised recordings reflect the range of styles they are known to assimilate effortlessly, from Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring to Sir Malcolm Arnold’s Concertos for two pianos.

In addition to their regular concert schedule, recent seasons have seen them devoting large amounts of time to preparing new recordings - the complete four-hand works of Schumann and Saint-Saëns being the first in a series of projects designed to keep them busy from now until their 40th anniversary seasons in 2017 and 2018.

Event:
Nettle and Markham – two pianos
Date: 20 October 2016
Time: 19:30
Place: Odeion (Bloemfontein Campus)
Cost: R130 (adults), R90 (pensioners), R70 (UFS staff members), R50 (students and learners), R50 (group booking of 10+). Tickets available at Computicket.

For more information contact Ninette Pretorius at +27 51 401 2504.

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