Blog Archives

“Euro-colonial Bare Life and The Power of Life and Death”

19/04/2011 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm – A Talk by Professor Mary Nyquist Mary Nyquist teaches in the English Dept., the Literary Studies Program, and the Institute of Women and Gender Studies at the University of Toronto. Nyquist has published influential studies of Milton and other early modern writers, including most recently an article on George Buchanan’s Jephthes in Comparative Literature and one […]

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Colloquium on The Medieval and Early Modern Mediterranean:

18/04/2011 @ 9:00 am – 5:00 pm – Keynote Address  “Mediterranean Culture and Conveniencia: Disentangling the Paradoxes of Premodern Ethno-Religious Plurality”  Brian Catlos Department of History, University of California-Santa Cruz Department of Religious Studies, University of Colorado at Boulder   Program available online at medieval.utoronto.ca  If you have an accessibility or accommodation need for this event, please contact the Centre for Medieval Studies medieval.studies@utoronto.ca […]

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What’s Queer about Queer Theory?

01/04/2011 – 01/04/2010 @ 5:00 pm – Transverse, the Comparative Literature graduate student journal at the University of Toronto is very pleased to announce a call for submissions for our Spring/Summer 2011 issue, “What’s Queer about Queer Theory?” We are interested in original academic articles, poetry, artwork and fiction.  Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick (1950-2009) was one of the great theorists of queer theory. […]

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TRANSNATIONAL FUTURES Shifting Borders and the Dynamics of Diaspora

25/03/2011 – 26/03/2011 @ 12:00 pm – Diaspora studies can be fixated on the past.  Themes such as nostalgia, memory, loss, and longing loom large in the field.  What changes as we turn our attention to the future? This two-day conference is dedicated to exploring the futures of diaspora; of the nation-state (and other defined territories); of the people located within, without, […]

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“Brecht and Greek Tragedy: a test case in Comparative Methodology”

24/03/2011 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm – A Public Lecture by Professor Martin Revermann . …. Martin Revermann is a professor of Classics and Drama at the University of Toronto. He has published extensively on Greek comedy and tragedy and their implications for genre in later literature. This event is organized by the Centre for Comparative Literature.

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Iconoclasm: The Breaking and Making of Images

17/03/2011 – 19/03/2011 @ 9:00 am – 5:00 pm – Taking place from March 17-19, 2011, Iconoclasm is the 22nd annual international conference organized by the graduate students of the Centre for Comparative Literature at the University of Toronto. More info…

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The Dynamics of Global Change Collaborative PhD program is pleased to announce two inaugural seminars in its series “Shaping the Global Conversation.”

11/03/2011 @ 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm – Imagining Corruption in Chinese Primetime Television   Ruoyun Bai Assistant Professor of Media Studies Department of Humanities Comparative Literature Cinema Studies Institute University of Toronto Co-sponsored by the Asian Institute  As the market reform deepened in the post-1992 years, official corruption in China has undergone an exponential growth and become a top source of dissatisfaction for […]

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Professor Carol Mavor’s 2nd lecture

10/03/2011 @ 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm – Second Lecture, Thursday March 10, 5:30, Jackman Humanities Centre, Room 100:“Blue is a Color Where it is Hard to Find Anything Missing: the Aran Islands, Venice, the Cyanotype and Agnes Varda’s Le Bonheur.” It might be easier To fail–with Land in Sight– Than gain–My Blue Peninsula– To perish–of Delight– Emily Dickinson, c. 1862 Through the […]

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Professor Carol Mavor’s second lecture: “Blue is a Color Where it is Hard to Find Anything Missing: the Aran Islands, Venice, the Cyanotype and Agnes Varda’s Le Bonheur.”

10/03/2011 @ 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm – It might be easier To fail–with Land in Sight– Than gain–My Blue Peninsula– To perish–of Delight– Emily Dickinson, c. 1862 Through the landscape of the island (whether it be geographical or conceptual, like More’s Utopia), this blue lecture will focus on the Aran Islands, Fortuny’s Venice (a city of 117 islands), Mann’s Death in Venice, […]

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Public Lectures by Carol Mavor

09/03/2011 @ 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm – First Lecture, Wednesday March 9, 5:30, Jackman Humanities Centre, Room 100:“Blue is the Color of Impossible Mourning: a Bower, a Sweet and a Crystal” Through the “Kernel” of psychoanalyst Nicolas Abraham, this blue lecture will focus on Proust’s La Prisonnière, Akerman’s La Captive, the Australian Bowerbird, Kieslowski’s Bleu and Hiorn’s Seizure. The lecture will be […]

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