Recently in Events Category
As part of the English Department's Spring Lecture Series, Rey Chow will be presenting "Translator, Traitor; Translator, Mourner (or, Dreaming of Intercultural Equivalence)" on Thursday, March 27th at 5:30pm in Tuttleman 101.Rey Chow is the Andrew W. Mellon Professor of the Humanities at Brown University, where she teaches in the Departments of Comparative Literature and Modern Culture and Media. She is the author of seven books, including The Protestant Ethnic and the Spirit of Capitalism (Columbia UP, 2002), The Age of the World Target: Self-Referentiality in War, Theory, and Comparative Work (Duke UP, 2006), and Sentimental Fabulations, Contemporary Chinese Films: Attachment in the Age of Global Visibility, (Columbia UP, 2007), and over seventy articles. Her work has been widely translated and anthologized.
A pre-talk reception will take place from 4:00-5:00pm in 821 Anderson Hall.
Canadian poet Lisa Robertson will visit Temple as part of the Poets & Writers Series.Robertson's books of poetry include The Men: A Lyric Book, XEclogue, Debbie: An Epic, The Weather, and Rousseau's Boat. She writes essays and collaborative texts for the visual arts, and these have been collected in the book Occasional Works and Seven Walks from the Office for Soft Architecture.
Robertson has taught or held residencies at many universities, including Naropa’s Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics. After 4 years living in
The event is free, open to the public, and will take place on Thursday, March 20th, 8:00pm, Temple University Center City Campus (TUCC), 1515 Market Street, room 222.
Egan's most recent novel, The Keep, was a national bestseller and a New York Times Notable Book for 2006. Other works include Look at Me, which was a finalist for the National Book Award in 2001, The Invisible Circus, which became a movie starring Cameron Diaz, and Emerald City and Other Stories. She has published short fiction in The New Yorker, Harper's, Zoetrope and Ploughshares, among others, and her journalism appears frequently in The New York Times Magazine.
The event is free, open to the public, and will take place on Thursday, March 6th, 8:00pm, Temple University Center City Campus (TUCC), 1515 Market Street, room 222.
As part of the English Department's Spring Lecture Series, Edlie Wong will be presenting "Freedom with a Vengeance: Slavery, Kinship, and the Legal Culture of
Travel" this Wednesday, February 27th at 4:00 pm in 1123 Anderson Hall.
Wong's talk charts the legal controversies over slaves brought to the states north of Mason Dixon after Massachusetts Chief Justice Lemuel Shaw's landmark ruling in the case of the slave girl Med in 1836. Drawing upon a largely unexplored archive of freedom suits and reading them against the literature of abolitionism, this talk offers a more critically and historically embedded understanding of the freedom celebrated in the fugitive slave narrative. It explores material that had been largely left out of the anti-slavery story: the cases brought by abolitionists to free slaves who had traveled with their masters into free jurisdictions. Freedom suits reveal the contradictory logic by which abolitionists disregarded the slaves' express desires to remain with their masters, and in many cases argued for the very sorts of separations from kin that usually figured so large on abolitionist attacks on slavery. These readings in law and literature thus present a critical alternative to the abolitionist plotting of freedom and the criminal agency of fugitive flight as they give expression to a politics and poetics of theft.
Edlie Wong is Assistant Professor of English at Rutgers University and recent Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at the Penn Humanities Forum. This talk is drawn from her current book project, Fugitive and Foreigner: Cultures of Travel in the Black Atlantic, 1820-1861.
SAMUEL R. DELANY is a critic and novelist, with essays and interviews collected in seven volumes, the most recent three of which are "Silent Interviews" (1994), "Longer Views" (1996) and "Shorter Views" (1999).
His award winning autobiography "The Motion of Light
in Water" (1988) and his novel "Hogg" (1995) were returned to
print in 2004. His novel "Phallos" was reviewed in the Village Voice
as "a lapidary, digital-age Pale Fire, tonally redolent of Valery's
Epilinos." His other fictions include "The Mad Man" (1995), and
"Atlantis: Three Tales" (1993). A multiple winner of both Hugo and
Nebula Awards, Mr. Delany is also a recipient of the Pilgrim Award for
outstanding scholarship in science fiction studies, and a winner of the William
Whitehead Memorial Award for a lifetime's contribution to Lesbian and Gay
Literature. His scholarly interests include Walter Pater and the Oxford
aesthetic movement and its influence on high modernism, as well as questions of
race, gender, queer studies, and literary theory. After eleven years as a
comparative literature professor at the University of Massachusetts at
ADRIAN KHACTU's work has been published or is forthcoming
in the Atlantic Monthly, Carve, Heritage, and In/Vision (or HOOT! as those in
the know pronounce it). He has won the Richard Moyer Prize in Fiction and the
Ezra Pound Prize in Literary Translation, as well as fellowships
Among the winners of the 2008 Stonewall Book Awards and currently nominated for a 2008 Lambda Literary Award, Dark Reflections follows the troubled career of Arnold Hawley, a gay, African American poet wrestling with obscurity while eking out a meager living in New York's East Village.
Delany, writer of epic science fiction and postmodern theory to autobiography, is Professor of English and Creative Writing at Temple University.
The program is open to the community and will take place on Tuesday, February 12th at 2:00pm in the Paley Library Lecture Hall. Refreshments will be provided.
We hope to see you there!
The Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia recently honored Temple University station WRTI for its accomplishments as a home for broadcasters wishing to learn the craft for the past 60 years. Until the 1980s, WRTI was a student station. Now a non-profit, member-supported public radio station, WRTI is a broadcast service of Temple University and operates as a professional classical and jazz radio station.
To learn more, read the entire story.
The TU Libraries' Special Collections Department is sponsoring a showcase of its Science Fiction Collection on Wednesday, January 30th at 4:00pm in the Special Collections Reading Room of Paley Library. Join a discussion about science fiction and its rise as a significant genre movement in pulps, books, and fanzines from the 19th century through today.
Morris is an interdisciplinary poet who has worked extensively as a sound artist, writer and multimedia performer. Her installations have been presented at the Whitney Biennial and the Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning. She holds an MFA in poetry from Hunter College and a PhD in Performance Studies from New York University.
The recipient of numerous awards for poetry and performance, Dr. Morris is currently Visiting Professor of English at Temple University and the CPCW Fellow in Poetics and Poetic Practice at the University of Pennsylvania.
The events is open to the public and will take place on Wednesday, January 30th at 3:00pm in Gladfelter 914 (Weigley Seminar Room).
Papers or projects, in any format, completed for a Temple University for-credit course in Summer 2007, Fall 2007, or Spring 2008 semesters may be submitted. The deadline for submissions is Thursday, April 10, 2008.
Winners will be selected by a committee of faculty and librarians. Up to three grand prizes will be awarded. Winning research projects will receive a $1,000 cash prize and will be displayed online and in the library.