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2020-21 Workshop CFP

Call for Papers: 20th and 21st Century Cultures Workshop 2020-21

Workshop Coordinators: Zachary Hope and Zoe Hughes

Faculty Sponsors: Adrienne Brown and Maud Ellmann

The 20th and 21st Century Cultures Workshop is seeking papers that engage with 20th- and 21st-century cultural and aesthetic objects for presentation in the 2020-2021 academic year. While the workshop is open to a range of disciplinary approaches, it is primarily organized around conceptual questions specific to this historical period. Given that our period encompasses the contemporary, we feel uniquely equipped and responsible for facilitating discussions that address the current events with which our thought (and so also our research) is preoccupied. We know that the coming year will not be business as usual. Rather than pretending otherwise, we hope to center discussions about race, institutional violence, global precarity, new austerity, resistance, and more, and to raise questions about research and pedagogical practice.

Of course, this mandate does not invalidate, nor make us less interested in, research on other areas, fields, histories, or points in 20th- or 21st-century time. We encourage you to apply if you are working on anything that has a stake in our historical period, however you define it in your work. The workshop is conducted in English, but we welcome submissions from scholars working in all national, cultural, and geographic contexts. In past years, discussions have centered on:

  • Modernism and its strengths/weaknesses/alternatives
  • The difficulty of interpreting the contemporary
  • Colonialism and its afterlives
  • Histories of the disciplines and other knowledge formations
  • The changing position of the arts in relation to mass culture

As in years past, the workshop will provide a venue for participants to discuss academic work from graduate students, early career researchers, and invited faculty, including papers for academic publication, dissertation or book chapters, and conference presentations. We understand that, in the midst of the COVID crisis, many of our colleagues are imagining non-academic futures for their writing. For this reason, we want to encourage the proposal of para-academic projects in addition to formal research.

This Fall, the workshop will meet on alternate Mondays from 3:00 to 4:20 pm on Zoom. Links will be distributed to our listserv a week before the meeting; they will also be available on our website. Proposals should include a provisional title, an indication of the project type (dissertation chapter, conference presentation, etc.), a short description of the content and/or argument (this can but does not have to be a formal paper abstract), and the quarter in which you would prefer to present.

Please email your proposals to Zach Hope (zhope@uchicago.edu) and Zoe Hughes (zbhughes@uchicago.edu) by September 1st, 2020. In the interim, do not hesitate to be in touch with questions or concerns. We look forward to hearing from you and hopefully seeing you in Fall!

2020-21 Workshop Schedule

Spring 2021

May 31, 2021: Timothy Gutmann (Lecturer and PhD, Divinity, University of Chicago):“Specters of Liberalism: Prospects for Postcolonialism and the Left.” Respondent: Christopher Taylor (Associate Professor, English, University of Chicago). #marxism #liberalism #postcolonialism #modernity

May 17, 2021: Taylor Lowe (PhD Candidate, Anthropology, University of Chicago): “The Designification of Representation: Drawing Lines between Graft & Craft in the Architecture of Thailand’s Interregna.” Respondent: Rebecca Zorach (Mary Jane Crowe Professor in Art and Art History, Northwestern University). #designpolitics #cosmopolitics #designactivism #thaipolitics #whatshappeninginthailand

May, 2021: Jordan Pruett (PhD Candidate, English, University of Chicago):“The Mass Market Hardcover: A Quantitative Literary History”Respondent: Hoyt Long (Associate Professor, East Asian Languages and Civilizations, University of Chicago). #bestsellers #data #culturalanalytics #bookhistory

April 19, 2021: Anna Gatdula (PhD Candidate, Music History and Theory, University of Chicago): “Einstein on the Beach and the Nuclear Event.” Respondent: Jessica Hurley (Assistant Professor, English, George Mason University). #opera #nuclearage #EinsteinontheBeach #PhilipGlass #RobertWilson

April 5, 2021: Kenyatta Forbes to discuss Trading Races with Patrick Jagoda (Professor of English, University of Chicago) and Ashlyn Sparrow (Learning Director and Lead Game Designer at the University of Chicago’s Game Changer Chicago Design Lab, Creative Director at Resilient Game Studio).

Winter 2021

March 9, 2021: Jed Esty (Vartan Gregorian Professor of English, University of Pennsylvania): “Against Declinism.” Respondent: Maud Ellmann (Randy L. & Melvin R. Berlin Professor of the Development of the Novel in English, University of Chicago). This event was part of the remote symposium Spectacles of Decline, which may be of interest to our members. For more information, visit www.spectaclesofdecline.com.

February 22: Noah Hansen (PhD Candidate, English, University of Chicago): “Representing the (Semi-)Proletariat: Eric Walrond and the Problem of Caribbean Class Formation.” Respondent: Kaneesha Parsard (Assistant Professor, English, University of Chicago). #EricWalrond #SemiProletariat #CaribbeanLabor

February 15: Tiana Fischer (Doctoral Researcher, National University of Ireland): “Joyce’s Signs of the Soul: Towards a Theory of Mediation.” Respondent: Rory Hanlon (PhD Candidate, Philosophy, University of Chicago). #Joyce #Aristotle #mediation #esthetics #soul

February 8: Tomal Hossain (PhD Student, Music, University of Chicago): “‘Neither Bengali nor Burmese’: Interrogating Rohingya Identification through Tarana Song.” Respondent: Jim Sykes (Associate Professor, Music, University of Pennsylvania). #rohingyadiaposra #ethnonationalism #circuitlistening

January 25: Shirl Yang (PhD Candidate, English, University of Chicago): “Artless Art: Postmodern Loneliness and the Aesthetics of Sincerity.” Respondent: Steven Maye (Humanities Teaching Fellow, English, University of Chicago). #newsincerity #DIY #loneliness #commodityaesthetics #limitedcirculation

Autumn 2020

November 30: Robert Suits (PhD Student, History, University of Chicago): “Ecological Apocalypse Looks Like This.” Respondent: Evan Wisdom-Dawson (PhD Candidate, English, University of Chicago). #disaster, #climatechange, #socialcollapse

November 16: Marissa Fenley (PhD Candidate, English, University of Chicago): “Colored-In Feeling: the Protest Puppets of the Women’s Pentagon Action.” Respondents: Bill Hutchison (Postdoctoral Lecturer, MAPH, University of Chicago) and Michael Stablein Jr. (PhD Student, English, University of Chicago). #protestart #performancestudies #ecofeminism

November 2: Sophia Azeb (Assistant Professor, English, University of Chicago): “Translational Black Space in Claude McKay’s Marseille, or Noir is the New Black (Man).” Respondent: Noah Hansen (PhD Candidate, English, University of Chicago). #BlackStudies #ClaudeMcKay #AfroArab

October 19: Christopher Gortmaker (PhD Student, University of Chicago): “Mary Ellen Solt: Concretizing 1968.” Respondent: Deborah Nelson (Helen B. and Frank L. Sulzberger Professor of English and the College, University of Chicago). #concretism #protestart #1968

October 5: Harris Feinsod (Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literary Studies, Northwestern University): “The Red International of Seamen and Harborworkers: A Poetics of Strikes from the Kiel Mutiny to the West Coast Waterfront.” Respondent: Chris Taylor (Associate Professor of English, University of Chicago). #Poetry #BlueHumanities #Strikewaves

2019-20 Workshop Schedule

Spring Quarter

NOTE: due to coronavirus-related campus closures, all workshop meetings for the month of April have been cancelled. Pending further information, the workshop meetings in May might be rescheduled or held via an online platform such as Zoom. Please check back here later for updates.

May 4 – 4:30pm to 5:50pm, Rosenwald 405, Harris Heinsod, Associate Professor of English, Northwestern University

May 18 – 3:00pm to 4:20pm, Rosenwald 405, Sophia Azeb, Provost’s Postdoctoral Fellow in English, University of Chicago

June 1 – 3:00pm to 4:20pm, Rosenwald 405, Zachary Hope, Ph.D Candidate in English, University of Chicago

 

Winter Quarter

January 15 – 4:30 – 6:00pm, Logan 603 – Marissa Fenley, Ph.D Candidate in English at the University of Chicago

Respondent: Tina Post, Provost’s Postdoctoral Fellow in English, University of Chicago

“John W Cooper’s minstrel ventriloquism and the politics of the color-line barbershop”

This workshop is a collaboration with the TAPS workshop; please note the irregular time and location.

January 27 – 3:00pm to 4:20pm, Rosenwald 405 – Zoe Hughes, Ph.D Candidate in English, University of Chicago

Respondent: Jordan Pruett, Ph.D Student in English, University of Chicago

“Towards a Playful Reading Practice, or, Gaming at Finnegans Wake

February 17 – 4:30pm to 5:50pm, Rosenwald 405, Aarthi Vadde, Associate Professor of English, Duke University

“Universal Language Revisited: Communication, Computation, and the Icon-Novel”

Respondent: Patrick Jagoda, Professor of English and Cinema and Media Studies, University of Chicago

February 24 – 3:00pm to 4:20pm, Rosenwald 405, Upasana Dutta, Ph.D Candidate in English, University of Chicago

“‘The Play’s the Thing’: ‘Acting’ in Haider”

Respondent: Zachary Hope, Ph.D Candidate in English, University of Chicago

March 9 – 3:00pm to 4:20pm, Rosenwald 405, Laura Colaneri, Ph.D Candidate in Romance Languages and Literatures, University of Chicago

“The Haunted Southern Cone: Haunted Houses and the Ghosts of the Disappeared in Chile and Argentina”

Respondent: Kaneesha Parsard, Provost’s Postdoctoral Fellow in English, University of Chicago

 

Fall Quarter 

October 14 – 3:00pm to 4:20pm, Classics 312 – Jim Hodge, Associate Professor of English and the Alice Kaplan Institute for the Humanities at Northwestern University

Respondent: Patrick Jagoda, Professor of English and Cinema and Media Studies at the University of Chicago

“Screwed: Anxiety and the Digital Ends of Anticipation”

October 28 – 3:00pm to 4:20pm, Classics 312 – Nicholas Baer, Collegiate Assistant Professor, University of Chicago

Respondent: Tom Gunning, Professor of Cinema and Media Studies at the University of Chicago

“Things As They Could Have Happened”

November 25 – 3:00pm to 4:20pm, Classics 312, Veerle Dierickx, Ph.D Candidate in Romance Languages and Literatures, University of Chicago

“The Figure of the Composer on the Eve of War: Romain Rolland and Music Crossing Borders”

December 2 – 3:00pm to 4:20pm, Classics 312, Joel Rhone, Ph.D Student in English, University of Chicago

Timothy Gutmann, May 31, 2021

The 20th & 21st Century Cultures Workshop is pleased to welcome:

 Timothy Gutmann

Lecturer and PhD, Divinity, University of Chicago

Specters of Liberalism: Prospects for Postcolonialism and the Left

Monday, May 31 from 3 pm-4:20pm on Zoom

with respondent Christopher Taylor (Associate Professor, English, University of Chicago)

Tim’s paper (to be read in advance) and Zoom meeting info can be found here. The paper is password-protected; please contact the workshop coordinators if you need access. If you join our subscriber list, you will receive passwords for upcoming events in our event announcement emails.

This event is free and open to the public. We are committed to making our workshop fully accessible to persons with disabilities. Please direct any questions and concerns to the workshop coordinator, Zachary Hope (zhope@uchicago.edu).

Taylor Lowe, May 17, 2021

The 20th & 21st Century Cultures Workshop is pleased to welcome:

 Taylor Lowe

PhD Candidate, Anthropology, University of Chicago

The Designification of Representation: Drawing Lines between Graft & Craft in the Architecture of Thailand’s Interregna

Monday, May 17 from 3 pm-4:20pm on Zoom

with respondent Rebecca Zorach (Mary Jane Crowe Professor in Art and Art History, Northwestern University)

Taylor’s paper (to be read in advance) and Zoom meeting info can be found here. The paper is password-protected; please contact the workshop coordinators if you need access. If you join our subscriber list, you will receive passwords for upcoming events in our event announcement emails.

This event is free and open to the public. We are committed to making our workshop fully accessible to persons with disabilities. Please direct any questions and concerns to the workshop coordinator, Zachary Hope (zhope@uchicago.edu).

Jordan Pruett, May 3, 2021

The 20th & 21st Century Cultures Workshop is pleased to welcome:

 Jordan Pruett

PhD Candidate, English, University of Chicago

The Mass Market Hardcover: A Quantitative Literary History

Monday, May 3 from 3 pm-4:20pm on Zoom

with respondent Hoyt Long (Associate Professor, East Asian Languages and Civilizations, University of Chicago)

Jordan’s paper (to be read in advance) and Zoom meeting info can be found here. The paper is password-protected; please contact the workshop coordinators if you need access. If you join our subscriber list, you will receive passwords for upcoming events in our event announcement emails.

This event is free and open to the public. We are committed to making our workshop fully accessible to persons with disabilities. Please direct any questions and concerns to the 20th and 21st Century Cultures Workshop coordinators, Zachary Hope (zhope@uchicago.edu) and Zoe Hughes (zbhughes@uchicago.edu).

Anna Gatdula Materials

Click here for Anna’s paper.

Zachary Hope is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

Topic: Anna Gatdula at 20th and 21st Century Cultures Workshop
Time: Apr 19, 2021 02:40 PM Central Time (US and Canada)

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Anna Gatdula, April 19, 2021

The 20th & 21st Century Cultures Workshop is pleased to welcome:

 Anna Gatdula

PhD Candidate, Music History and Theory, University of Chicago

Einstein on the Beach and the Nuclear Event

Monday, April 19 from 2:40pm-4:00pm on Zoom

(please note the slightly different time, as Anna’s workshop will begin and end 20 minutes earlier than usual)

with respondent Jessica Hurley (Assistant Professor, English, George Mason University)

(Note: Anna has kindly provided a cover letter that guides readers to the most important parts of her paper, and will allow you to come prepared to the workshop should you have as little as 15–20 minutes available in advance.)

Anna’s paper (to be read in advance) and Zoom meeting info can be found here. The paper is password-protected; please contact the workshop coordinators if you need access. If you join our subscriber list, you will receive passwords for upcoming events in our event announcement emails.

This event is free and open to the public. We are committed to making our workshop fully accessible to persons with disabilities. Please direct any questions and concerns to the 20th and 21st Century Cultures Workshop coordinators, Zachary Hope (zhope@uchicago.edu) and Zoe Hughes (zbhughes@uchicago.edu).