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5th Annual Michael Henry Heim Memorial Lecture

Humanities Conference Room, Royce Hall 314 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

The 2018 Michael Henry Heim Annual Memorial Lecture in Translation and Translation Studies, entitled “Self-Translation and Its Discontents; Or: The Translational Work Lost in the Theory of Bilingualism”, will be given by Dr. Sigrid Weigel (Professor of German Literature and Director of the Centre for Literature Research in Berlin). Members of the community are welcome to attend.

Free

Primo Levi Symposium

UCLA Faculty Center, California Room 480 Charles E. Young Drive East, Los Angeles, CA

  This half-day symposium brings together an array of international scholars and writers engaged with the history, literature, and impact of Primo Levi, a chemist, writer, and humanist who survived Auschwitz and, through his writing, provided generations of students and scholars with the philosophical language to understand the Shoah—and the modern condition. The symposium celebrates...

Indigenous Knowledge. Taiwan: Comparative and Relational Perspectives

UCLA ROYCE HALL 314 10745 Dickson Ct, Los Angeles, CA 90095, Los Angeles, California (CA)

       Important conference news from UCLA Professor of Comparative Literature, Shu-mei Shih (shih@humnet.ucla.edu) RSVP FOR THIS EVENT HERE The UCLA-NTNU Taiwan Studies Initiative Conference Indigenous Knowledge, Taiwan: Comparative and Relational Perspectives Friday–Saturday, May 11–12 Royce Hall 314 UCLA This conference aims to engender transnational conversations about indigenous knowledge, with Taiwan as its comparative pivot...

Area Impossible: Sexuality and Geopolitics Symposium

Humanities Conference Room, Royce Hall 314 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Within queer studies, the geopolitical has posed a much-needed challenge to the spatial and temporal logics of the field (logics that often mire the field in the US), especially in the aftermath of the turn to transnationalism. Comparative literature has historically fashioned its domains outside US borders, but despite its range has remained somewhat tied...

Welcome Week Open House

Kaplan Hall 348 415 Portola Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Please join the Department of Comparative Literature for its annual Welcome Week Open House! Students from all majors are welcome to come learn about UCLA's exciting Comparative Literature undergraduate program! The Department offers: GE/Writing II courses Major and minor programs Unique research opportunities Meet new and continuing COM LIT students, faculty and department staff. Light refreshments will be...

Comparative Literature-Edinburgh: Summer Travel Study Information Session

Kaplan Hall 348 415 Portola Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Come learn about the Comparative Literature-Edinburgh program, new for 2019. Each August, Edinburgh is home to the Edinburgh International Festival (EIF), founded in 1947 and now the biggest arts celebration in the world. Along with EIF, which showcases classical music, major theater, dance, and cinema in the city’s primary venues, The Fringe is a carnival...

The Human Chameleon: Hybrid Jews in Cinema

Royce Hall 314 10745 Dickson Court, Los Angeles, CA

The lecture will explore representations of “chameleon” or hybrid Jewish figures in cinema: Jewish characters that change their appearance, transform their identity, infiltrate other cultures and express their Jewishness by becoming “other-than-Jewish.”  The hybrid Jew will be discussed from the theoretical perspective of postcolonial studies, feminism and queer studies, post-structural French philosophy and traditional Jewish...

1939 Society Lecture in Holocaust Studies: The Matter of the Neighbor: Budd Schulberg, James Baldwin, and the Watts Writers Workshop

Royce Hall 314 10745 Dickson Court, Los Angeles, CA

  This talk explores the Watts Writers Workshop, founded in the heart of Watts by Jewish American writer Budd Schulberg immediately after the Watts Rebellion of 1965, and argues that the success and final demise of the project tracks Schulberg’s shift from prose to property. Drawing on Schulberg’s archives, including lease contracts, letters, and personal...

The 1939 Society Lecture in Holocaust Studies: Hannah Arendt’s Message of Ill-Tidings

Royce Hall 314 10745 Dickson Court, Los Angeles, CA

'It was not only their own misfortunes that the refugees carried with them from land to land, from continent to continent,' Hannah Arendt wrote, 'but the great misfortune of the whole world.' Shortly before her death, Arendt said that the real story of her generation of Jewish refugees from Nazism had yet to be fully...

Paul Bové: “Language, Criticism, and the Intellectual Virtues”

Kaplan Hall 193

Paul A. Bové (Distinguished Professor, University of Pittsburgh) is the Editor of boundary 2, an international journal of literature and culture, published by Duke University Press. The journal has published recent special issues on major topics in the academy, including Antinomies of the Post-Secular, Second Hand Europe, as well as a Dossier: Orientalism and the...