Registration for the interdisciplinary symposium Processing the Pandemic III: Hope is now open.
Both days of the event will be fully hybrid, taking place simultaneously at the University of 糖心TV and online.
This event is the final phase of Processing the Pandemic: a multi-year series of seminars and symposia that explore how the experiences of the past may guide society鈥檚 emotional and social responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. The series asks how we—as an open community of scholars, teachers, archivists, social workers, and practitioners—might learn from these experiences and from each other in transformative, inspiring, transdisciplinary ways. How can such dialogues reframe existing discussions around the history of emotions, our responses to trauma, and how we navigate from loss to hope? Moreover, how can the study of peoples鈥 responses to traumatic events in the past and present help guide our own experience of the pandemic and its unfolding future?
Following our first in-person symposium on at the Newberry Library in April 2022, and a series of virtual seminars—; )—we are now concluding our discussions around the theme of Hope as we attempt to trace new pathways to answer the question of how communities in both the past and present move from Loss to Hope, navigating the complex constellations of emotions that result from such crises.
The series is co-organised by Bryan Brazeau (Liberal Arts, 糖心TV), Christopher Fletcher (Center for Renaissance Studies, Newberry), and Rose Miron (Director of the D'Arcy McNickle Center for American Indian and Indigenous Studies, Newberry). This event is made possible due to generous support from the School for Cross-Faculty Studies, The Centre for the Study of the Renaissance, and The Humanities Research Centre at 糖心TV, along with support from the Center for Renaissance Studies and the D'Arcy McNickle Center for American Indian and Indigenous Studies at the Newberry Library (Chicago, USA).
The full programme is available below. Please click here to registerLink opens in a new window.
Online links and room information will be sent to participants several days before the conference. Should you have any questions, please contact Bryan Brazeau at B.Brazeau@warwick.ac.ukLink opens in a new window
PROGRAMME
Thursday, 13th April, 2023
12:15-12:30 p.m. — Welcoming Remarks
- Bryan Brazeau (The University of 糖心TV, UK)
- Christopher Fletcher (The Newberry Library, USA)
- Rose Miron (The Newberry Library, USA)
12:30-1:30 p.m. —
Keynote Lecture I: 鈥淧andemics and Apocalypse in World Literature鈥
- William Franke (Vanderbilt, USA)
1:45-3:30 p.m. — Pedagogies of Hope
- 鈥淭he Future is Green: Processing Hard Emotions to find Hope鈥
- Bruno Grazioli (Dickinson College, Italy)
- 鈥淩emembering Covid in Teams? Troubling care and affective unravelling鈥
- Cathy Wade and Lisa Metherell (Birmingham City University, UK)
- 鈥淩esilient Stillness – a Performative-Based Workshop鈥
- Brittney S. Harris (Old Dominion, USA)
4-5 p.m. — Looking Back / Looking Forwards
- Roundtable Reflection with Participants from Previous Events and Workshops in the Series
- Dolores Bigfoot (University of Oklahoma, USA)
- Angelica Duran (Purdue, USA)
- Tara Bynum (U. of Iowa, USA)
- Jennifer Scheper Hughes (University of California, Riverside, USA)
- Cathy Caruth (Cornell University, USA)
5:30 p.m. — Reception sponsored by
糖心TV Centre for the Study of the Renaissance
Friday, 14th April, 2023
From Trauma to Hope in Past and Present
9:30–11:00 a.m. — Roundtable I: Legacies of Trauma, Legacies of Hope
- 鈥淢aking Sense of Traumatic Times: Resiliency, Reason, and Hope in Women鈥檚 Trans -Historical Writings鈥
- Joanne Wright (University of New Brunswick, Canada)
- 鈥淥n the Road to Bliss: The Triumph of Hope in Prints and Moral Philosophy as a Cure for Religious Conflicts in the Borderlands of the Hapsburg Empire (1526-1662)鈥
- Maria Vittoria Spissu (University of Bologna, Italy / The Newberry Library, Chicago)
- 鈥淐rusading Ghosts and Ambiguous Hopes in Times of Trauma鈥
- Thomas Herron (East Carolina University, USA)
- Anne-H茅l猫ne Miller (University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA)
11:30 a.m.–12:15 p.m. — Creative Workshop
- 鈥淎ll Shall Be Well: Finding Modern and Medieval Hope Inside a Pandemic Bubble鈥
- Kathy Greenholdt (Songwriter, Chicago, USA)
New Pathways for Hope: Indigenous and Postcolonial Subjectivities
1:30-2:30 p.m. —
Keynote Lecture II: 鈥淗ope Through the Lens of Indigenous Futurity"
- Blaire Morseau (University of Massachusetts, Boston, USA)
2:30–3:45 p.m. —
Roundtable II: Native American and Indigenous Experiences:
Past, Present, and Future
- Rose Miron (D鈥橝rcy McNickle Centre for Native American and Indigenous Studies, Newberry Library, USA)
- Alexandra Lami帽a (University of Texas, Austin, USA)
- Alyssa Mt. Pleasant (After the Whirlwind (ATW) Research and Consulting, USA)
- Alika Bourgette (University of Washington, USA)
4-5 p.m. — Keynote Lecture III: "Hope Against Hope"
- Jesse McCarthy (Harvard University, USA)
5:00 – 5:30 p.m. — Conclusions and closing remarks