Events

Filter by:

Limit to events where the title matches:
Limit to events where the first date of the event:
Date range
Limit to events where the first date of the event:
Limit to events where the type is one or more of:
Limit to events tagged with one or more of:
Limit to events where the audience is one or more of:

The Department of English Language and Literature is proud to announce “‘another, flickering world’: Petrocultures of the North Atlantic,” a talk by Dr. Derek Gladwin to take place Friday November 24, 3-5pm in Hagey Hall 373. All are welcome to attend. 

Abstract:


This talk explores the relationship between oil and memory in the North Sea. Linking place-based poetry, film, and web-based media, this talk considers how Roseanne Watt’s filmpoem Sullom (2014) unsettles dominant histories of North Sea oil culture (petroculture) in the Shetland Isles by confronting environmental and spatial injustices. Sullom’s musical score offers an additional element that creates an anti-aesthetic, ironizing petrochemical advertisement campaigns produced by energy companies such as Suncor Energy’s See What Yes Can Do (2013). Watt’s filmpoem ultimately confronts the spaces of Sullom Voe, which is an enormous oil terminal on Shetland, through a combination of literary and visual narratives of place that reclaim ways of being in the world from the dominant petroculture in which they function.

Friday, January 26, 2018 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm EST (GMT -05:00)

Science and Rhetoric in Eighteenth-Century Britain

In ways evocative of our own moment, word and image fought for supremacy across the pages of Enlightenment scientific books. Scientists strove, in a host of ways, to provide a direct access to nature, and with the advancement of copperplate engraving the printed image was increasingly seen as offering the reader/viewer a site of unmediated witness.

Monday, November 19, 2018 7:00 pm - 7:00 pm EST (GMT -05:00)

Jack Halberstam: TRANS* Visual archives of the transgendered body

Jack Halberstam is Professor of American Studies and Ethnicity, Gender Studies and Comparative Literature at the University of Southern California. This is a special lecture and conversation co-sponsored by the Department of English Language & Literature, the Department of Philosophy, the Critical Media Lab, and the Faculty of Arts.​

Friday, February 1, 2019 2:30 pm - 4:00 pm EST (GMT -05:00)

Indigenous Performers, Vaudeville, and Building Relations of Research Exchange

Christine Bold
CHRISTINE BOLD
PROFESSOR AND KILLAM RESEARCH FELLOW

Christine Bold is Professor of English and Killam Research Fellow, University of Guelph. She has published six books and many essays on popular culture and cultural memory, most recently the award-winning The Frontier Club: Popular Westerns and Cultural Power, 1880-1924.

Dr. Christine Bold, Professor of English and Killam Research Fellow, University of Guelph, will give a talk at UWaterloo, “Indigenous Performers, Vaudeville, and Building Relations of Research Exchange.”

As the University of Guelph writes: “Indigenous Performers, Vaudeville, and Building Relations of Research Exchange” is part of “a research project that [Bold] says upends long-held notions of the role Native peoples played in the popular culture of the late 1800s and early 1900s.

Thursday, March 14, 2019 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

A CCCC Social

Dr. Jennifer Clary-Lemon is co-hosting with the Virginia Tech Center for Rhetoric in Society, Rhetoric and Writing PhD program, and Composition Program, a networking reception for faculty, grad students, alumni, and any potential grad students who may be at CCCC in March 2019 to join. 

Download the event flyer for further information.