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Humanities Center
t h eHumanitiesc e n t e r
in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences
harvard university
B A R K E R C E N T E R12 QUINCY STREET
CAMBRIDGE, MA 02138
6 1 7 • 4 9 5 • 0 7 3 8
M A R C H 2 0 0 3
In this and all future newsletters, only seminars that are meeting
during that month will be listed in the main text of the newsletter.
A complete list of seminars can be found on page 3.
AMERICAN LITERATURE AND CULTUREChair: John StaufferSusan Manning (University of Edinburgh).“American Romanticism and Transatlantic Relations”
Monday, March 17, 6:00 p.m., Room 110.
THE AMERICASChair: Doris SommerJuan Carlos Godenzzi (University ofMontreal). “Language and Symbolism in the Andes”
Tuesday, March 18, 6:00 p.m., Room 133.
ASIAN CULTURAL STUDIES WORKSHOPChairs: Daniel Botsman, Eileen Cheng-yin ChowTim Weston (University of Colorado,Boulder). Topic to be announced.
Thursday, March 13, 4:00 p.m.,Harvard-Yenching Common Room.
BIOGRAPHYChair: Helena LewisSusan Pedersen (Harvard University).“The Feminist as Biographical Subject: Reflections in
the Midst of Writing”
Wednesday, March 19, 6:00 p.m., Room 133.
BUDDHIST STUDIES FORUMChair: Robert GimelloGriffith Foulk (Sarah Lawrence College).“No Such Thing As Zen”
Monday, March 3, 4:15 p.m., Room 133.
Dorothy Wong (University of Virginia).“Celestial Buddhas and Bodhisattvas in Sixth-Century
Chinese Buddhist Art”
Monday, March 17, 4:15 p.m., Room 133.
Ronald Davidson (Fairfield University).“The Kingly Cosmology and Tibetan Histories: Indian Origins,
Tibetan Space, and the bKa’ ‘chems ka khol ma Synthesis”
Monday, March 31, 4:15 p.m., Room 133.
CELTIC LITERATURE AND CULTUREChairs: Patrick K. Ford, Tomás Ó CathasaighCatherine McKenna (City University ofNew York). “Secrets of the Confessional: Beirdd y
Tywysogion, Private Penance, and Meditative Poetry in
Thirteenth Century Wales”
Friday, March 14, 4:30 p.m., Barker 024.Reception to follow.
Philip T. O’Leary (Boston College).“Gaelic Prose in the Irish Free State: An Overview”
Friday, March 21, 4:30 p.m., Room 133.Reception to follow.
CIVILIZATIONS OF ANCIENTGREECE AND ROMEChairs: Albert Henrichs, Richard F. ThomasRichard Martin (Stanford University).“Pulp Epic: The Hesiodic Catalogue and the Shield”
Tuesday, March 11, 6:00 p.m., Room 114.
Harvey Yunis (Rice University). “Eros in
Plato’s Phaedrus and the Shape of Greek Rhetoric”
Thursday, March 13, 4:00 p.m.,Location to be announced.
Albio Cassio (Università La Sapienza).Topic to be announced.
Friday, March 14, 4:00 p.m., Location to be announced.
John Henderson (Kings College).“Plautus’ Asinaria: asses, asses, asses, and more asses”
Thursday, March 20, 4:00 p.m., Room 105, Boylston Hall.
COGNITIVE THEORYAND THE ARTSChairs: Alan Richardson, Elaine ScarryMahzarin Banaji (Harvard University).“Ordinary Prejudice”
Wednesday, March 5, 7:00 p.m., Room 133.
CROSS-CULTURAL POETICS AND RHETORICChairs: Tom Conley, William GranaraRichard van Leeuwen (University ofAmsterdam). “The Poetics of Space in the ‘Thousand
and One Nights’”
Co-sponsored with the Department of NearEastern Languages and Civilizations.Monday, March 10, 4:30 p.m., Room 133.
ECOLOGY/TECHNOLOGY/CYBERNETICSChair: Verena ConleyCeline Larkin (American Institute ofArchitects) and Lily Ling (New SchoolUniversity). “The Monster within: What Fu Manchu
and Hannibal Lecter Can Tell Us about Terror and
Desire in a Post-9/11 World”
Friday, March 7, 2:00 p.m., Room 133.Reception to follow.
t h e
DIRECTORMarjorie Garber
ADMINISTRATORMary Halpenny-Killip
OFFICE MANAGERShannon Greaney
EVENTS COORDINATORMary Elizabeth Wilkes
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The Humanities CenterM A R C H 2 0 0 3
EIGHTEENTH-CENTURYLITERATURE AND CULTUREChairs: Lynn Festa, Susan StavesAlexis Tadié (Université de Paris VII).“Sterne and the Changing Perceptions of Language”
Thursday, March 13, 8:00 p.m., Room 133.
FEMINIST THEORY AND CULTUREChairs: Janet Halley, Afsaneh Najmabadi, Mari RutiToril Moi (Duke University). “From Femininity
to Finitude: Lacan and Feminism, Again”
Tuesday, March 4, 7:30 p.m., Room 133.
FRENCH AND FRANCOPHONE STUDIESChairs: Alexia Duc, Virginie Greene,Christie McDonaldMichael Sheringham (Royal Holloway,University of London). “Re-thinking the Everyday:
Figure, Theory, and Practice in Recent French Culture”
Co-sponsored with Politics, Literature, and the Arts.Tuesday, March 17, 6:00 p.m., Room 114.
HISPANIC CULTURESChairs: Luis Cárcamo-Huechante, Brad EppsElvira Vilches (University of South Carolina).“Valor y género en la España de los Austrias”
Friday, March 14, 5:00 p.m., Room 114.
HISTORY OF THE BOOKChairs: David D. Hall, Ann BlairKlaus Weimar (University of Zurich). “Books that Aren’t Books” with comments by PeterStallybrass (University of Pennsylvania). Co-sponsored with the Department ofGermanic Languages and Literatures.Thursday, March 20, 5:15 p.m., Room 133.
LESBIAN AND GAY STUDIESChairs: Brad Epps, Heather LoveCynthia Patton (Simon Fraser University).“Outlaw Territories: The Edward Savitz Case and Moral
Panic Theory”
Tuesday, March 4, 5:00 p.m., Room 133.
MEDIEVAL STUDIESChairs: Beverly Kienzle, Eckehard SimonRichard Emmerson (Medieval Academy of America). “Translating Images: The Decorated
Page in French, English, and Latin Versions of Guillaume
de Deguileville’s ‘Trois Pelerinages’”
Wednesday, March 19, 4:15 p.m., Room 133.
MODERN GREEK LITERATURE AND CULTUREChair: Panagiotis RoilosElizabeth Jeffreys (University of Oxford).“Digenis Reconsidered”
Monday, March 17, 6:00 p.m., Room 133.
MODERNISM AND ITS CONTEXTSChairs: Yunte Huang, Oren IzenbergJennifer Ashton (University of Illinois,Chicago). “Modernism’s New Literalism: Perloff,
Hejinian, Bernstein, and Fried”
Wednesday, March 5, 5:00 p.m., Room 133.Reception to follow.
MUSIC AND ITS AUDIENCEChairs: Sean Gallagher, Karen Painter,Christoph WolffRichard Dyer (Boston Globe). “Music Criticism in Context”
Thursday, March 13, 5:00 p.m., Davison Room,Music Building. Reception to follow.
PHILOSOPHY, POETRY, AND RELIGIONChairs: Martin Cohen, Peter SacksLivia Kohn (Boston University).“Justifying Moral Action in Medieval Daoism”
Wednesday, March 5, 6:30 p.m., Room 114.
POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND THE ARTSChairs: Svetlana Boym, Susan SuleimanMichael Sheringham (Royal Holloway,University of London). “Re-thinking the Everyday:
Figure, Theory, and Practice in Recent French Culture”
Co-sponsored with French and Francophone Studies.Monday, March 17, 6:00 p.m., Room 114.
POST-COLONIAL STUDIESChairs: David Kennedy, Kalpana Seshadri-CrooksModhumita Roy (Tufts University).“Edward Said’s Orientalism and After” Co-sponsoredwith the European Law Research Center.Thursday, March 20, 7:00 p.m., Room 133.
PSYCHOANALYTIC PRACTICESChairs: Humphrey Morris, Frances RestucciaDiane O’Donoghue (Tufts University).“Negotiations of Surface: Archaeology in the Early Strata
of Psychoanalysis”
Monday, March 3, 7:30 p.m., Room 133.
2
ABOUT THE HUMANITIES CENTER
THE HUMANITIES CENTER
provides a locus for
interdisciplinary discussions
among Harvard faculty, faculty from
other area institutions, and graduate
students in a variety of fields. It
presently sponsors thirty-eight
ongoing faculty/graduate student
seminars; it also supports lectures,
conferences, workshops, and
informal occasions for the exchange
of ideas and the sharing of scholarly
work.All faculty and students from
Harvard and other area institutions,
and independent scholars in the
greater Boston area, are welcome.
E X E C U T I V E C O M M I T T E E
Homi Bhabha Joaquim-Francisco Coelho Tom Conley Patrick K. Ford Henry Louis Gates, Jr.Alice JardineBarbara Johnson Gregory NagyStephen OwenKatharine Park Eric Rentschler Judith RyanKay Kaufman ShelemaySusan Suleiman Maria TatarJan Ziolkowski
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M A R C H 2 0 0 3
ROMANTIC LITERATURE AND CULTUREChairs: Sonia Hofkosh, Ann Wierda RowlandNeil Fraistat (University of Maryland) andSteven Jones (Loyola University). “Romanticism
and Critical Gaming: The MOOzymandias Project”
Wednesday, March 19, 8:00 p.m. Room 133
SHAKESPEAREAN STUDIESChairs: William Carroll, Coppélia KahnCaroline Bicks (Boston College).“The Mind of a Married Woman: ‘Quick Conceite’ and
Paternal Resemblance in All’s Well that Ends Well”
Friday, March 7, 6:00 p.m., Room 133.Reception at 5:30.
SOUTH ASIA HUMANITIES SEMINARChair: Sharmila SenDavid Dabydeen (University of Warwick).“Lutchmee and Dilloo: The First Fictional Account of
Indo-Guyanese Life in the Nineteenth-Century”
Friday, March 14, 4:00 p.m., Room 133.
VICTORIAN LITERATURE AND CULTUREChairs: James Buzard, John PickerJohn Plotz (Brandeis University).“What’s Wessex? Hardy’s Boundary Problems”
Tuesday, March 11, 6:00 p.m., Room 133.
VISUAL REPRESENTATION AND CULTURAL HISTORYChair: Ewa Lajer-BurcharthRobin Kelsey (Harvard University).“Accident as a Source of Photographic Meaning”
Wednesday, March 12, 5:00 p.m., Room 133.Reception to follow.
WOMEN AND CULTURE IN EARLY MODERN EUROPEChairs: Diana Henderson, Marina LeslieLisa Rosenthal (University of Illinois,Urbana-Champaign). “Venus’s Milk and the
Temptation of Allegory in Otto van Veen’s ‘Allegory
of Temptation,’ Antwerp, c. 1595”
Thursday, March 6, 5:30 p.m., Room 133.
OTHER HUMANITIES EVENTS
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
Please note that parking is not available free-of-charge for these events.
RADCLIFFE FELLOWSPRESENTATION SERIES
SPRING 2003
Mark Robbins ‘Households,’ ExhibitionOpening and Reception*Monday, March 3, 5:00-7:00 p.m.,Baker Room,Agassiz House, Radcliffe Yard.
Nancy Bauer “Cognito Ergo Film”
Wednesday, March 5
Toril Moi “Emperor and Galilean: Isben’s
Neglected Masterpiece”
Wednesday, March 12
John Jost “System Justifying Effects of Complementary
Gender and Status Stereotypes”
Wednesday, March 19
Laura Schwendinger “One Composer’s Voice:
Music by Laura Schwendinger”
Monday, March 31
All presentations are held at 4:00 p.m. at the Cronkhite Graduate Center, 6 Ash Street(unless otherwise noted *).
WOMEN’S STUDIES IN RELIGION PROGRAM
SPRING LECTURE SERIES
Kelly Pemberton (visiting lecturer). “Reading Gender in Mystical Islam: Women, Piety, and
Sainthood Contextualized”
Thursday, March 13, 5:15 p.m.,Sperry Room,Andover Hall, Harvard Divinity School.
JAPAN FORUM/EVENTS
SPRING 2003
Anne Allison “Japanese Monsters in the Era of
Pokemon Capitalism” Co-sponsored with theProgram in U.S.-Japan Relations.Tuesday, March 4, 12:30 p.m.,Room 228, 1033 Massachusetts Avenue
Aileen Gatten “Documents as Narrative: Letters
of an Eleventh-Century Japanese Noblewoman”
Friday, March 7, 4:00 p.m., Lower Library, Robinson Hall.
3
HUMANITIES CENTERSEMINARS, 2002-2003
American Literature and Culture
The Americas
Anthropology and Cultural Studies
Asian Cultural Studies
Biography
Buddhist Studies Forum
Celtic Literature and Culture
China Humanities Seminar
Civilizations of Ancient Greece and Rome
Cognitive Theory and the Arts
Cross-Cultural Poetics and Rhetoric
Ecology/Technology/Cybernetics
Eighteenth-Century Literature and Culture
Environmental Values
Ethnomusicology
Feminist Theory and Culture
Film Theory/Film History
French and Francophone Studies
Hispanic Cultures
History of the Book
Italian Studies
Jacques Lacan Workshop
Lesbian and Gay Studies
Medieval Studies
Modern Greek Literature
Modernism and Its Contexts
Music and Its Audience
Philosophy, Poetry, and Religion
Politics, Literature, and the Arts
Post-Colonial Studies
Psychoanalytic Practices
Renaissance Studies
Romantic Literature and Culture
Shakespearean Studies
South Asia Humanities
Victorian Literature and Culture
Visual Representation and Cultural History
Women and Culture in Early Modern Europe
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The Humanities CenterSidney Brown ”Tokyo as the Eastern Jazz Capital”
Co-sponsored with the Program in U.S.-Japan Relations.Friday, March 14, 4:00 p.m., Lower Library, Robinson Hall
Alisa Freedman “Daily Commutes and Evening
Dates: Images of Modern Middle Class Tokyo, 1925-
1935” Co-sponsored with the Program inU.S.-Japan RelationsWednesday, March 19, 4:00 p.m.,Lower Library, Robinson Hall.
Lawrence Marceau “Genji Does Edo: Reception
(and Perversion) of Genji monogatari in Early
Modern Japan”
Friday, March 21, 4:00 p.m., Lower Library, Robinson Hall.
MUSIC DEPARTMENT EVENTSCONCERTFromm Players at Harvard featuring BostonModern Orchestra Project with music by theCharles Eliot Norton Professors and MarioDavidovskyFriday, March 21, 8:00 p.m.,John Knowles Paine Concert Hall.
Free and open to the public, but passes arerequired. Free passes available March 7th atthe Harvard Box Office, Holyoke CenterArcade, Harvard Square. Hours: seven days aweek, noon to 6 p.m. 617-496-2222/TTY:617-495-1642.
LECTURESusan Youens (University of Notre Dame).“Heine and the Lied: The History of a Long
Misunderstanding”
Monday, March 17, 4:15 p.m.,Davison Room, Music Building.
CARPENTER CENTER LECTURESCarolee Schneemann (performance artist).“Disruptive Consciousness”
Thursday, March 6, 6:00 p.m.,Carpenter Center Lecture Hall.
THE HUMANITIES CENTER PRESENTSThe Erasmus Lecture Series, spring 2003
PHILOLOGISTS AND FATHERLANDProfessor Joep Leerssen (University ofAmsterdam), Erasmus Lecturer on theHistory and Civilization of the Netherlandsand Flanders.
LECTURE 1“Hoffmann von Fallersleben, Jacob Grimm and the Low
Countries: Retrieving the Nation’s Literary Heritage”
Tuesday, March 18, 7:00 p.m.,Room 110, Barker Center, Reception to follow.
(Lecture 2, April 8, “Henric van Veldeke / Heinrich
von Veldeken: A Contested Figurehead; Lecture 3,April 15, “Historical Novel, National Past: Romantic
Visions and Identities in Holland, Flanders, and Belgium”)
APRIL CONFERENCE ANNOUNCEMENTSponsored by the Humanities Center Interdisciplinary Initiatives for Graduate Students
ALPHABETICSLetters are ubiquitous, multifunctional, andlargely ignored. Alphabetics, an interdisciplinarygraduate student conference, aims to exposeparticipants from various fields and thegeneral academic community to the wide rangeof uses and interpretations – literary, political,mystical, artistic, linguistic, etc. – for whichalphabets and their component letters havebeen marshaled. Hosted by the HarvardHumanities Center, the conference will takeplace on Saturday and Sunday, April 26-27 in the Barker Center’s Thompson Room.
Special conference events include an exhibitionat the Houghton Library, running March 16through April 30, 2003. It features books and manuscripts with unusual applications ofletters, and documents keyed to the conferencepresentations. Renowned lutenist Olav ChrisHenriksen will perform and discuss Baroquealphabetic music on Saturday, April 26. Formore details, contact Erika Boeckeler andDaniel Kokin at alphabet@fas.harvard.edu.
4
GENERAL INFORMATION
THE MONTHLY NEWSLETTER
of the Humanities Centerincludes listings of seminars
and other events sponsored by theHumanities Center. All are open tofaculty, graduate students, and otherinterested individuals. Seminar meetingstake place at the Humanities Centerunless otherwise indicated.
In many seminars, copies of thepapers are circulated to participants in advance of the meeting.They can beobtained by sending in a paper requestform to the office or by calling theHumanities Center at 617-495-0738.Please call this number also forinformation about upcoming eventsincluding any cancellations or changes.In order to receive pre-circulatedpapers, please see the instructions on the paper request form.Humanities Center email address ishumcentr@fas.harvard.edu.Humanities Center webpagehttp://www.fas.harvard.edu/~humcentr
DIRECTIONSThe Barker Center is bordered byPrescott, Harvard, and Quincy Streets.Enter the courtyard from QuincyStreet, opposite the Lamont Gate.TheBarker Center is the large brick buildingfacing the Faculty Club.
The Humanities Center administrativeoffices are located on the first floor inrooms 136 and 135.
To locate Humanities Center seminarevents, please consult the postings in theBarker Center main lobby.
M A R C H 2 0 0 3
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PARKINGParking is available at no charge forHumanities Center seminars only, on aspace available basis, at the BroadwayGarage, located on Felton St. betweenCambridge St. and Broadway.The garagecloses at midnight All parkers shouldidentify themselves as participants in aseminar at the Humanities Center (theguard’s list of events does not includethe names of individual seminars) andshould arrive close to the time that theseminar begins. If the garage is full,which is more likely prior to 4:00 p.m.,ask the attendant to direct you toanother Harvard parking facility. Pleasecontact the Humanities Center forinformation on parking for conferencesand weekend events.
CHANGES IN ADDRESS AND ZIP CODEIf your address or zip code has changed,please contact us at 617-495-0738 orvia email at humcentr@fas.harvard.edu.
C O N F E R E N C E
INFORMATIONMARCH 20 AND 21, 2003HARVARD UNIVERSITYBARKER CENTERDEPARTMENT OF ENGLISHCAMBRIDGE, MA 02138
FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
KEYNOTE SPEAKEREDUARDO CADAVAPRINCETON UNIVERSITY“PALM READING: FAZAL SHEIKH’S HANDBOOK OF DEATH”
FOR MORE INFORMATIONBIRMINGH@FAS.HARVARD.EDURUTKOSKI@FAS.HARVARD.EDU
POSSIBLE PANELSHUMAN TRACESINTERIOR SETTINGSCOMPOSITIONMEMENTO MORIFROZEN MOMENTSTABLEAUX VIVANTSEKPHRASIS
SPONSORED BYTHE HUMANITIES CENTERDEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH
AND AMERICAN LITERATURE AND LANGUAGE
WALTER HUGHES MEMORIAL FUNDTHEODORE SPENCER MEMORIAL FUND
AN INTERDISCIPLINARY GRADUATE STUDENT CONFERENCE
STILL LIFE:AN INTERDISCIPLINARY GRADUATE STUDENT CONFERENCE
Sponsored by the English Department and the Humanities Center
THURSDAY, MARCH 20 AND FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 2003, 9:00 A.M. – 5:00 P.M.
THOMPSON ROOM, BARKER CENTER
For more information please call (617) 495-0728.
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6
ABOUT THE HUMANITIES CENTER
THE HUMANITIES CENTER
provides a locus for
interdisciplinary discussions
among Harvard faculty, faculty from
other area institutions, and graduate
students in a variety of fields. It
presently sponsors thirty-eight
ongoing faculty/graduate student
seminars; it also supports lectures,
conferences, workshops, and
informal occasions for the exchange
of ideas and the sharing of scholarly
work.All faculty and students from
Harvard and other area institutions,
and independent scholars in the
greater Boston area, are welcome.
E X E C U T I V E C O M M I T T E E
Homi Bhabha Joaquim-Francisco Coelho Tom Conley Patrick K. Ford Henry Louis Gates, Jr.Alice JardineBarbara Johnson Gregory NagyStephen OwenKatharine Park Eric Rentschler Judith RyanKay Kaufman ShelemaySusan Suleiman Maria TatarJan Ziolkowski
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harv
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MAIL TO: PAPER REQUESTS
The Humanities Center
Harvard University
Barker Center, 12 Quincy St.
Cambridge, MA 02138
NA M E
A D D R E S S
( P L E A S E P R I NT L E G I B LY )
MARCH 2003There are no pre-circulatedpapers in the month of March.
If you would like to receive papersand have not yet paid your annualfee, please enclose a check payableto Harvard University for $25($15 for graduate students). This fee entitles you to receive up to 3 papers per monththroughout the academic year and is tax deductible. If you arepaying the $15 fee you mustenclose a photocopy of yourstudent identification card. Papers may also be obtainedindividually for $5. Papers can be requested over the phone (617-495-0738), option number 2.Please note that papers can only besent to those who plan to attendthe seminar.
C O N F E R E N C E
HUMANITIES CENTER IN THE FACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES AT HARVARD UNIVERSITY
The Consortium of Humanities Centersand InstitutesAnnual MeetingMarch 13 – 15, 2003Welcoming Reception and Pre-Note Address,Thursday, March 13, 5:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.
Friday and Saturday sessions, 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Lectures and panels open to the public, pre-registration required, seating limited.$10 (students $5)
Thompson Room, Barker Center,12 Quincy Street, Cambridge, MA
Co-sponsored by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University, and the Office of the Provost, Harvard University.
For schedule and registration materials, please write to mbwilkes@fas.harvard.edu or go to our website: www.chcinetwork.org.
DISCIPLINES
DISINTEREST
DEANS OF THEHUMANITIES
SCHOLARLYPUBLISHING
CHALLENGES:THE HUMANITIES
CENTER IN THE 21ST CENTURY
PROVOCATIONS:HUMANITIES AND
THE WORLD TODAY
Humanities Center Approved 3/16/2003
Design: Bruce Williams
• HUM_NLMAR03_8pp R3 2/7/03 3:00 PM Page 7
Non-Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Boston, MA
Permit No. 1636
THE HUMANITIES CENTER IN THE FACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCESHARVARD UNIVERSITYBarker Center, 12 Quincy StreetCambridge, Massachusetts 02138
• HUM_NLMAR03_8pp R3 2/7/03 3:00 PM Page 8
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