Monday, November 18, 2013

Jesse Alemán delivers the Hutchins Lecture at UNC-Chapel Hill

On November 17, Dr. Jesse Alemán delivered the Hutchins Lecture at UNC-Chapel Hill’s Center for the Study of the American South. Named after James A. Hutchins, a UNC alumnus, and generously funded by the Hutchins Family Foundation, the Hutchins lecture series invites researchers to UNC to present their scholarship to mixed public and academic audiences as a way of fostering communication between faculty, students, and community members. Dr. Alemán was invited to present “Loreta Janeta Velazquez’s Civil Wars as a Cuban and a Confederate” after his research was featured in the PBS film, Rebel, and his edition of The Woman in Battle was required reading for an English doctoral seminar on the global south. Dr. Alemán’s lecture focused on how the Civil War serves as a backdrop for the “internal civil wars” between gender, sexual, linguistic, religious, and national identities that forge Velazquez’s emergence as a nineteenth-century US Latina.

http://south.unc.edu/category/hutchins-lectures/

JFK article in ABQ Journal

The JFK anniversary article by Deborah Baker is featured on the front page of the ABQ Journal Sunday 11/17/13 edition (including notes from Michelle Kells' interview with reporter Deborah Baker last week re: Viva Kennedy and the emergence of Latino vote).

This is a significant moment in Mexican American (pre-Chicano Movement) history.

Here's an article from Albuquerque Journal I thought you might like: http://www.abqjournal.com/302733/news/jfks-tragic-end-still-resonates-in-nm.html

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Daniel Worden speaks on “Neoliberal Style: Alex Haley, Hunter S. Thompson, and Countercultures”

UNM Department of English Language & Literature
invites you to the
Fall 2013 Colloquium Series

A talk by

Daniel Worden
Assistant Professor
UNM Department of English Language & Literature
American Literary Studies

“Neoliberal Style: Alex Haley, Hunter S. Thompson, and Countercultures”

In this talk, Daniel Worden will present work from his current book project, Cool Realism: The New Journalism and American Literary Culture. His talk will chart how the highly successful work of two New Journalists—Alex Haley and Hunter S. Thompson—articulates a view of the social world that can now, retrospectively, be described as neoliberalism.

Daniel Worden is an Assistant Professor of English at the University of New Mexico.  He is the author of Masculine Style: The American West and Literary Modernism, which received the Thomas J. Lyon Book Award in Western American Literary and Cultural Studies and was recently reissued in paperback. His work on American literature, comics, film, and television has appeared in a number of journals and edited volumes, including Criticism, Modern Fiction Studies, Southern Literary Journal, Twentieth-Century Literature, and The Comics of Chris Ware: Drawing is a Way of Thinking.

Please join us
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
12:30 p.m.
English Department Library
Humanities Building, Room 324

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Matt Hofer's Series: Recencies: Research and Recovery in Twentieth-Century American Poetics

The first two books of Matt Hofer's UNM Press series Recencies: Research and Recovery in Twentieth-Century American Poetics. Professor Hofer edited The Shoshoneans, which also boasts a fine new introduction by Simon Ortiz.

Monday, November 11, 2013

Summer Study in Germany -- Botany, Society & the Revolution in Taste

SUMMER STUDY IN GERMANY

(no knowledge of German required)

Botany, Society & the Revolution in Taste


Study abroad in Germany for 4 weeks (June 2 – 27, 2014):
•    Learn about the history of botany and its impact on medicine, horticulture, politics, and economics in Western Europe
•    Examine the botanic imagination of 18th & 19th century writers whose works transformed how we think about and act in relation to nature
•    Travel to Berlin, Weimar, and Düsseldorf to visit botanic gardens and explore Goethe’s world
•    Stay at a monastery “Nikolauskloster” and study at the historic castle “Schloss Dyck” and its famous landscape garden near Düsseldorf
•    Earn 6 UNM credits in 2 linked courses:  ENGL/COMP 330 and BIOL 402/502

Estimated program cost: $2,600-2,900 plus airfare, GEO application fee, insurance, and UNM summer tuition.  Summer scholarships available (Regents’ International Travel Grants, ISI Summer Scholarships).

For more information, and complete syllabi for all classes, visit the Wiki site
http://unmgermansummer2014.pbworks.com/ 
and/or contact:
•    Prof. Gary Harrison, English Department, garyh@unm.edu
•    Prof. Tim Lowrey, Biology Department, tlowrey@unm.edu
•    Prof. Christine Sauer, Associate ISI Director, sauer@unm.edu
•    Jazmin Knight, ISI Operations Specialist, jkknight@unm.edu

Course Description
ENGL 330/556, COMP 330: The Botanic Imagination: Goethe, Rousseau, Charlotte Smith (3 credits, cross-listed as INTS 410 and ARTH 429)
Taught by Gary Harrison, Professor of English & Presidential Teaching Fellow, garyh@unm.edu

This first course in the Schloss Dyck program will examine the “botanical imagination” in Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s The Sorrows of Young Werther, Jean Jacques Rousseau’s Reveries of a Solitary Walker, and Charlotte Smith’s Beachy Head and Other Poems.  Examining the changing perspectives on landscape, gardens, and human sensibility in these three works, we will also discuss the way that the burgeoning discourse of botany in part shapes the literary and cultural imagination of these writers whose work marks a major transformation in the ways we think about and act in relationship to nature.  To that end, we will also read excerpts from a few important works on the aesthetics— of the sublime, the beautiful and the picturesque —by such writers as Joseph Addison, Edmund Burke, Immanuel Kant, Friedrich Schiller, and William Gilpin; as well as selected readings from a few recent scholarly articles on botany and romantic (and pre-romantic) literature.  Taking advantage of the park and gardens at Schloss Dyck, you will be encouraged to keep a “walking journal” to reflect upon your own experiences in the gardens and landscapes you encounter in your travels, as well as to write a critical and comparative analysis of the works we read during the program.  We will take field trips to the Goethe Museum at Schloss Jägerhoff and the Heinrich Heine Institute and Museum in Düsseldorf.  On a multi-day field trip to Weimar, we will visit the Goethe National Museum and tour Goethe’s cottage and gardens at Ilm Park; the palace at Weimar, which Duke Carl August redesigned in a neo-classical style under the guidance of Goethe; and Goethe’s residence on Frauenplan.

Requirements:  One six-page paper, a “walking journal,” and one 15-20 minute presentation.

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Erin Murrah-Mandril speaks on "Ghosts in the Archive: Recovering the Work of Adina De Zavala" Wednesday, Nov. 13, 12:00 noon

The Feminist Research Institute is proud to host the FRI Research Lecture Series:

"Ghosts in the Archive: Recovering the Work of Adina De Zavala"
Erin Murrah-Mandril, Department of English 

Wednesday, November 13, 12:00 – 1:00 
SUB Luminaria 

Should you have any questions, please feel free to contact us at femresin@unm.edu or visit us on the web at http://femresin.unm.edu.

Aeron Hunt's talk, “The Heir Apparent: Gender and the Transmission of Talent in Margaret Oliphant’s Hester,” Wednesday, Nov. 13, at 12:00 noon

UNM Department of English Language & Literature
invites you to the Fall 2013 Colloquium Series
A talk by
Aeron Hunt
Assistant Professor, British and Irish Literary Studies

“The Heir Apparent: Gender and the Transmission of Talent in Margaret Oliphant’s Hester”

Dr. Hunt’s EDC talk is drawn from her forthcoming book Personal Business: Character and Commerce in Victorian Literature and Culture, which explores the intersections of literature, economics, and commerce in Victorian Britain by turning attention to the embodied, interpersonal, and socially embedded interactions of everyday economic life. Drawing on a broad range of sources, Personal Business examines how the personal and its textual and performative form, character, represent a crucial mode of power within the Victorian economy. By placing representations of the personal in business by novelists such as Charles Dickens, George Eliot, Anthony Trollope, and Margaret Oliphant alongside nonliterary genres, Personal Business provides new ways to understand the history of the Victorian novel and its implication in the turbulent experience of nineteenth-century capitalism. In so doing, Personal Business presents a case for the continued value of interdisciplinary scholarship as a means to generate fresh insights in literary, historical, and cultural studies alike. This presentation will examine Margaret Oliphant’s novel Hester (1883) in light of the turn to scientific language to construct the personal in business, arguing that Oliphant’s attention to gender as she maps the vagaries of “hereditary talent” challenges readers to reevaluate contemporary narratives of business character.
  
Please join us 
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
12:00 p.m. 
English Department Lounge
Humanities Building, Second Floor

Monday, November 4, 2013

Julie Williams talks on "The Changing Landscape of a Peripatetic Philosopher: Health and Home in the Life of Mary MacLane" Monday, Nov. 4, at 12:00 noon




The Feminist Research Institute is proud to host the FRI Research Lecture Series:





"The Changing Landscape of a Peripatetic Philosopher: Health and Home in the Life of Mary MacLane"

Julie Williams, Department of English Language and Literature

Monday, November 4, 2013 from 12:00 - 1:00 PM

SUB Luminaria

http://femresin.unm.edu/events/2013/11/williams/

Should you have any questions, please feel free to contact us at femresin@unm.edu or visit us on the web at http://femresin.unm.edu.

Justin Brock speaks on "The Critical Voices From the Joyous Gard: the Homosocial and the Feminine in the Stanzaic Morte Arthure" Friday, Nov. 1, 12:00 noon

The Feminist Research Institute is proud to host the FRI Research Lecture Series:

"The Critical Voices From the Joyous Gard: the Homosocial and the Feminine in the Stanzaic Morte Arthure"
Justin Brock, PhD Student at the Univ. of Oregon and UNM Alumnus
Friday, November 1, 2013 from 12:00 - 1:00 PM
Mesa Vista 1104 (History Common Room)

Justin, as many of you know, was the FRI Graduate Assistant last year and is returning to UNM for this special presentation after graduating with his MA in English with a focus on Medieval Studies.  We are thrilled to welcome him back and we invite you to join us for this event.  We look forward to learning a great deal from his discussion.

Should you have any questions, please feel free to contact us at femresin@unm.edu or visit us on the web at http://femresin.unm.edu.