All posts by zhope

Robert Suits, November 30, 2020

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

 Robert Suits

PhD Student, History, University of Chicago

Ecological Apocalypse Looks Like This

Monday, November 30 from 3:00pm-4:20pm on Zoom

with respondent  Evan Wisdom-Dawson (PhD Candidate, English, University of Chicago).

Robert’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).

Marissa Fenley, November 16, 2020

The 20th & 21st Century Cultures and Theater and Performance Studies Workshops are pleased to welcome:

 Marissa Fenley

PhD Candidate, English and Theater and Performance Studies, University of Chicago

Colored-in feeling: the Protest Puppets of the Women’s Pentagon Action

Monday, November 16 from 3:00pm-4:20pm on Zoom

with respondents  Bill Hutchison (Postdoctoral Lecturer, MAPH, University of Chicago) and Michael Stablein Jr. (PhD Student, English, University of Chicago)

Marissa’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).

Christopher Gortmaker, Oct 19, 2020

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

Christopher Gortmaker

PhD Student, English, University of Chicago

Mary Ellen Solt, Concretizing 1968

The essay takes up Mary Ellen Solt’s experimental performance poem The Peoplemover (1968), and interprets it in the context of Solt’s artist-scholar practice and the tumultuous political environment of the US in 1968. Although The Peoplemover is a major work and Solt one of the foremost proponents of Concrete poetry in the world, the poem has received no critical attention. I claim the The Peoplemover as a significant work in the the history of Concretism and as such, a transitional work, marking a historically and geographically specific moment in which the modernist problematic of the “concrete” is subsumed within the neo-avant-garde formation of political performance art in the US. Solt calls the work a “demonstration poem,” and my essay tries to show how it not only transforms what might otherwise be wall-hung works of concrete poetry into tools for protest; but also how the poem more fundamentally demands interpretation of what this transformation of art into activism means—in 1968—in art-philosophical and political-economic terms.

Monday, October 19 from 3:00pm-4:20pm on Zoom

with respondent Deborah Nelson, Helen B. and Frank L. Sulzberger Professor of English and the College, University of Chicago

Christopher’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 coordinators, Zachary Hope (zhope@uchicago.edu) and Zoe Hughes (zbhughes@uchicago.edu).

Harris Feinsod, Oct 5, 2020

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

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

On Monday, October 5 from 4:00pm-5:20pm via Zoom

with respondent Christopher Taylor, Associate Professor of English, University of Chicago.

Harris’ paper (to be read in advance), an accompanying set of images, and Zoom meeting info can all be found here. The paper is password-protected, so 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 coordinators, Zachary Hope (zhope@uchicago.edu) and Zoe Hughes (zbhughes@uchicago.edu).

Harris Feinsod, Oct 3, 2020

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

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

On Monday, October 5 from 4:00pm-5:20pm via Zoom

with respondent Christopher Taylor, Associate Professor of English, University of Chicago.

Harris’ paper, to be read in advance, is available here. The paper is password-protected, so please contact the workshop coordinators if you need access.

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 coordinators, Zachary Hope (zhope@uchicago.edu) and Zoe Hughes (zbhughes@uchicago.edu).