Comparative Moods: Language, Diversity and Kinship in a Changing World
13 November 2018, 6:30 pm–8:00 pm
Comparative literature departments and programmes in the United Kingdom are often located within units of – broadly conceived – modern languages and cultures. Our symposium wishes to shed light on this complex disciplinary framework by exploring a rich range of perspectives that unite and concern both fields of study.
This event is free.
Event Information
Open to
- All
Availability
- Yes
Cost
- Free
Organiser
-
Florian Mussgnug
Location
-
IAS ForumGround Floor, South Wing, UCLLondonWC1E 6BTUnited Kingdom
Moving beyond the monolithic notion of world literature - commonly associated with cultural connectivity and transnational interaction but also with monolingual sameness - our debate opens to a multiplicity of emergent "comparative moods" that have come to re-define research in the modern languages and that are presented here, from the perspective of Comparative Literature, as a cause for optimism and mutual renewal of purpose.
Speakers
- Emma Bond (St Andrews)
- Andrew Ginger (University of Birmingham)
- Sara Marzagora (SOAS)
- Rosa Mucignat (King's College London)
- Florian Mussgnug (UCL)
- Henriette Partzsch (University of Glasgow)
- Haun Saussy (University of Chicago)
- Galin Tihanov (Queen Mary University London)
This symposium celebrates the launch of the Comparative Literature Section of Modern Languages Open. Michael Cronin, Andrew Ginger, Florian Mussgnug, Francesca Orsini, Haun Saussy and Galin Tihanov were invited to identify a theme or issue facing the discipline of Comparative Literature today, and to explore it within a Modern Languages framework. Each piece can be read as a manifesto of sorts: posing new questions, sketching out new areas of enquiry, and suggesting new frameworks of thought. All are written as brief reports, designed to be accessible to undergraduate and postgraduate students.
All welcome. The event will be followed by a wine reception.
Image: Susan Collins, Wembury, 20th October 2015 at 20:49pm. Image © Susan Collins