Tampilkan postingan dengan label Simon Gikandi. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Simon Gikandi. Tampilkan semua postingan

Jumat, 31 Oktober 2014

A Successful Residency: Simon Gikandi

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This week marked the completion of another visiting residency for GW English, sponsored by the Wang Endowment.  Simon Gikandi, Professor of English at Princeton University and editor of PMLA, and author (most recently) of the critically-acclaimed Slavery and the Culture of Taste (Princeton UP, 2011) was with us from October 26-October 31.

The residency included visits to our two Critical Methods courses (a course required for all majors), an extended seminar with graduate students and faculty (in which we discussed Slavery and the Culture of Taste and several PMLA essays), and our first-ever undergraduate seminar with a Wang Distinguished Professor-in-Residence (in which students discussed Nigerian writer Sefi Atta's story "Yahoo Yahoo" with Professor Gikandi).  Most importantly, on Tuesday, October 28, Professor Gikandi delivered the annual GW Distinguished Lecture in Literary and Cultural Studies to a packed house in the Mavin Center.  The lecture, which was also sponsored by GW's Africana Studies Program, was titled "Archives without Subjects, Subjects without Archives"; the talk used poetry from across three centuries, as well as a wide range of sources, including records of the deaths of enslaved Africans during the Middle Passage, to identify corporeal traces of subjectivity in what Professor Gikandi termed the "crypt" of slavery's objectifying record.

Archives without Subjects, Subjects without Archives
Photo: Professor David Mitchell

Simon Gikandi with GW English Faculty
Daniel DeWispelare, Jennifer James, Kavita Daiya,
and other audience members
Photo Provided By: Professor Kavita Daiya

This visiting residency was created through a gift by Albert Wang and his family that has, since 2009, supported professors such as Edward P. Jones (now a member of the GW English Department), José Esteban Muñoz, J. Jack Halberstam, and Michael Bérubé.  The gift from the Wang family is one of the largest philanthropic commitments to GW's Columbian College of Arts and Sciences' Department of English.

Senin, 13 Oktober 2014

RSVP Today: Simon Gikandi's Oct. 30 Undergraduate Seminar

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For the first time since the creation of the English Department’s mini-residency, the Wang Distinguished Professor will give a seminar just for undergraduates!


Simon Gikandi, 2014-15
Wang Distinguished Professor
This year’s Wang Distinguished Professor, Simon Gikandi will be leading this special event on October 30 at 2:15 PM in Rome Hall 771.

A specialist in the literature of the African diaspora, Gikandi is currently a Professor of English at Princeton University and is also an editor of PMLA, the journal of the Modern Language Association of America. He has published several books and articles and his recent book Slavery and the Culture of Taste has won the Melbern Glasscock Center for Humanities Research Award; the Melville Herskovits Award for the most important scholarly work in African studies; and the James Russell Lowell Prize for an outstanding scholarly work by a member of the Modern Languages Association.

For the seminar, Gikandi has chosen a long, short story written by the Nigerian writer Sefi Atta, entitled, “Yahoo, Yahoo.” Atta was born in Nigeria in 1964 and graduated from Birmingham University in England. Besides her writing, Atta is also the founder of the Lagos-based production company Atta Girl. This company supports her program Care to Read, which is dedicated to earning funds for charities through literary readings. Her short stories have been published in journals such as Los Angeles ReviewMississippi Review and World Literature Today.

Gikandi's seminar will cover the
novella, "Yahoo, Yahoo," by
Nigerian writer Sefi Yatta
“Yahoo, Yahoo,” along with much of Atta’s work, highlights the problems and challenges that confront the African continent. Students that want to participate in the seminar will need to read the story beforehand and be prepared to engage in discussion.

If you’re interested in participating in this seminar, please RSVP by e-mailing Professor Robert McRuer, Chair, the Department of English at: mcruer@gwu.edu. Once you’ve registered, Professor McRuer will forward you the reading for this event.   

The Wang residency was created through a gift by Albert Wang and his family that has, since 2009, supported residencies by professors such as Edward P. Jones (now a member of the GW English department), José Esteban Muñoz, J. Jack Halberstam, and Michael Bérubé. The gift from the Wang family is currently one of the largest philanthropic commitments to GW Columbian College of Arts and Sciences’ Department of English.

Senin, 22 September 2014

Stay in the GW English Loop: October Events

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September was a whirlwind of a month, complete with starting new classes and welcoming new members to the GW English community.

The English department hosted and participated in a number of exciting events in September, including Brando Skyhorse's first reading, Amy Bloom's reading and the Dean's Scholars in Shakespeare Annual lecture. It was great seeing so many new and familiar faces at all of these events and we hope to continue seeing GW students, faculty and staff at our events this October!

This page will serve as a one-stop shop for all upcoming GW English events in October, as well as local events that might be of interest to English students. Throughout the month this page will be regularly updated with event details, so be sure to check here for all of your GW English Event needs!

You can even print out a calendar of all the October events by clicking here.
   
GW Events

October 2: Reception for Creative Writing Majors and Minors
Location: Lenthall House
Time: 5-7pm

October 6: Susan Nussbaum Reading (Part of Private Bodies, Public Encounters: Disability Comes of Age at GWU)
Location: Marvin Center 309
Time: 7-9pm

October 8: Nick Ripatrazone: Open Lecture via Skype (Part of PEN/Faulkner Program)
Location: Rome Hall 771
Time: 5:30-7:00pm

October 15: Jose Dalisay Reading
Location: Honors Townhouse
Time: 7:30-9pm

October 16: Yaki Setton and Sergio Waisman Reading
Location: Marvin Center 413-414
Time: 5-6:30pm

October 20: Leroy Moore and Patty Berne: Film Screening of Sins Invalid (Part of Private Bodies, Public Encounters: Disability Comes of Age at GWU)
Location: Marvin Center Amphitheatre
Time: 7-9pm

October 27: Simon Gikandi seminar for Faculty and Graduate Students
Location: Rome Hall 771
Time: 3:30pm-6 pm

October 28: Disability Takes on the Arts: Film Screening with David Mitchell and Sharon Snyder
Location: Marvin Center 304
Time: 12-1pm

October 28: Simon Gikandi, "Archives without Subjects," Wang Distinguished Lecture in Literary and Cultural Studies
Location: Marvin Center 402-404
Time: 5:30-6:30pm

October 30: Simon Gikandi Undergraduate Seminar
Location: Rome Hall 771
Time: 2-3:30pm

Local Events

October 17: Ann Beattie and Virginia Quarterly Review Writers' Reading (Part of PEN/Faulkner program)
Location: Lutheran Church of the Reformation, 212 East Capitol St NE, Washington, DC, 20003
Time: 7:30pm 
Additional Details:  Students with a valid ID have the opportunity to reserve tickets for PEN/Faulkner reading events for $11 by calling the Folger box office at 202-544-7077 and asking for a "student discount." Additionally, an hour before each event, students can come to the Folger Box Office and purchase tickets for $7.50 with a valid student ID. More details about the event can be found here.

October 25-26: The Ghost of DC Past
Location: Dance Place, 3225 8th Street NE, Washington, DC 20017 
Time: October 25 at 8pm, October 26 at 7pm
Additional Details: This event features performances by accomplished spoken word artists including Silvana Straw. $15 tickets are available for college students. Contact (202) 269-1600 for information about tickets and visit Dance Place's website for additional details regarding the event.


Sabtu, 20 September 2014

Simon Gikandi in Residence with GW English as Wang Distinguished Professor

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Professor Simon Gikandi


Simon Gikandi's 2011
Slavery and the Culture of Taste
From October 26-31, GW's English Department is pleased to host Professor Simon Gikandi as this year's Wang Distinguished Professor-in-Residence.  Simon Gikandi is Robert Schirmer Professor of English at Princeton University and editor of PMLA, the official journal of the Modern Languages Association (MLA).

He is the author of many books and articles including Writing in Limbo: Modernism and Caribbean Literature and Maps of Englishness: Writing Identity in the Culture of Colonialism. His latest book, Slavery and the Culture of Taste (Princeton University Press, Spring 2011) was co-winner of the James Russell Lowell Prize for an outstanding scholarly work by a member of the MLA and the Melville Herskovits Award awarded by the African Studies Association for the most important scholarly work in African studies. The book won the 14th Annual Susanne M. Glasscock Humanities Book Prize for Interdisciplinary Scholarship sponsored by Melbern Glasscock Center for Humanities Research, Texas A&M University, and was a Choice Outstanding Academic Book for 2012.


Professor Gikandi is editor
of PMLA
This visiting residency was created through a gift by Albert Wang and his family that has, since 2009, supported professors such as Edward P. Jones (now a member of the GW English Department), José Esteban Muñoz, J. Jack Halberstam, and Michael Bérubé.  The gift from the Wang family is one of the largest philanthropic commitments to GW's Columbian College of Arts and Sciences' Department of English.

Gikandi Residency Schedule of Events (events are free and open to the public)

Monday, October 27, 3:30-6 PM, Rome Hall 771:

Seminar for Students and Faculty with Simon Gikandi.  Readings for this event are available, although seating is limited.  Please RSVP to Robert McRuer at rmcruer@gwu.edu to be placed on the list for this seminar.

Tuesday, October 28, 5:30 PM, Marvin Center 301:

GW Distinguished Lecture in Literary and Cultural Studies: "Archives without Subjects."

Caught in the middle of the so-called crisis in the humanities, literary scholarship has sought to justify its projects by making an archival turn. This turn to the archive has been conceived as a way of reclaiming cultural authority by energizing the politics of reading at what appears to be its diminishing point. The lecture takes off from a famous statement by Jacques Derrida in Archive Fever: “Can one imagine an archive without foundation, without substrate, without substance, without subjectile?” But it asks a different set of questions: What happens when reading comes face to face with an archive without subjects—the void in which the enslaved, the subalterns, the untouchable, and the voiceless dwell? How do we go about reading texts that notate linguistic prohibition and cultural interdiction? What happens when we work in textual sites defined by silence?

This year's Distinguished Lecture in Literary and Cultural Studies is co-sponsored by Africana Studies.

Thursday, October 30, 2:15-3:15 PM, Rome Hall 771:

Seminar for Undergraduate Students with Simon Gikandi. All undergraduate students are welcome at this event, although seating is limited.  Please RSVP to Robert McRuer at rmcruer@gwu.edu to be placed on the list for this seminar.
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