English & Comparative Literary Studies - Events Calendar
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
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Staff Research Seminar - S AnandRoom H502 Humanities BuildingS. Anand - Editor of the Independent Publisher Navayana "Guru Fictions". |
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18th Century SeminarRoom H3.03 - Humanities Building"Experimentalism: Literary Knowledge and Science in Eighteenth-Century Britain'' A joint event with the History Department. Speaker: Professor Tita Chico of the University of Maryland. Refreshments will be served. All are welcome. |
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Poetry and song with Meena Kandasamy and S. AnandWriters' Room (G.08), Millburn House“The quarrel you lose to win” an enchanting evening of poetry and song with Meena Kandasamy (acclaimed poet, novelist, translator and anti-caste feminist activist; author of The Gypsy Goddess and Ms. Militancy) and S. Anand (editor at Navayana, a radical anti-caste publishing house).
What is text/textuality? Can translation merely be something from language to language, or is it also from language into another form? How does a poet limit herself when she translates, how does the poet insert himself into a translation? Meena Kandasamy and S. Anand will share with us stories about how two dead poets speak to them. While Meena will be in conversation with Thiruvalluvar, the Tamil bard who is said to have belonged anywhere between 1st century BCE to 6th century CE, Anand will tell us how the work of Kabir, the poet from 15th century Benares, comes to him riding the crests of songs.
In a lovers’ quarrel, A loom of such length and breadth the loser wins—and The sun its fibres and threads this truth is seen Listen—to the rise and fall of breath in the sex There’s no life after death —Thiruvalluvar —Kabir The event is free and open to the public. Sponsored by Creative Writing/糖心TV Thursdays |
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UNESCO and the neoliberal imaginaryLIB1Title: UNESCO and the neoliberal imaginary Speaker: Professor Sarah Brouilette Date: Wednesday 22 April 2015 Time: 17:00 - 19:00 Venue: LIB1 Bio: Sarah Brouillette is an Associate Professor in the Department of English at Carleton University in Ottawa, ON, where she teaches contemporary British, Irish, and postcolonial literatures, as well as cultural and social theory. She is the author of Postcolonial Writers in the Global Literary Marketplace (2007) and Literature and the Creative Economy (2014).
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