October 15, 2007

FSS - Shirley Samuels



Professor Shirley Samuels will deliver the second lecture in this year's Fall Speaker Series on October 23rd at 5pm in the Killian Room. Samuels' presentation, "Women, Blood, and Contract", will focus on the issues of land contracts, womens' bodies, and fears of interracial sexuality in historical novels of the 19th century – Hobomok, Hope Leslie, and The Last of the Mohicans. This paper will not only consider the colonial American period to which the narratives refer, but the immediate context in which they were published, a period in which land claims, citizenship, suffrage and slavery were all contested issues in the formulation of the Early Republic's national identity.

September 06, 2007

FSS - Amy Villarejo



The first lecture in this year's EGO Fall Speaker Series will be delivered by Amy Villarejo from Cornell University. This event, held on Tuesday September 25 at 5pm in the Killian Room (500 HL) will inaugurate Professor Villarejo's lecture is entitled "Tales of the City: Television and Queer Urbanity" and explores the role of television in constructing social spaces for the queer denizens of contemporary cities. A small reception will immediately follow the lecture. Save the date and support your grad student colleagues who've made this series such a success in recent years!

The EGO Fall Speaker Series is designed to foster new connections between the Syracuse English Department and other esteemed programs in the region, to showcase our graduate program in English, and to provide an opportunity for members of the SU community to engage with accomplished scholars working outside our own university.

The series is sponsored, planned, organized and funded entirely by our graduate students, which makes it a very exciting and valuable learning experience for all involved. If you haven't already, please get in contact with us to lend a hand!

September 05, 2007

Meeting Minutes, etc

The minutes from our last meeting can be viewed here.

In the continuing efforts to keep better records and make our decision making processes more transparent, we've attached a Google Documents account to the EGO Blog, which will allow us to easily save documents, letters, correspondence, and interesting items of department history.

Our next meeting's agenda should include discussion on policies regarding this storage system (who should be able to access it, what sort of password protection and/or editing priveleges should be arranged, etc). In the short term, anyone wishing to access this account can email me for the password (mddwyer at syr dot edu).

April 01, 2007

All Expenses Paid trip to Rochester Conference


As part of the University's partnership with Cornell and the University of Rochester to create a
"humanities corridor" in Central New York, funded by the Mellon Foundation, the college has
access to funds to send graduate students to the upcoming interdisciplinary conference at
Rochester next weekend, paying for lodging, travel, and sponsoring a reception Friday night to
allow Syracuse and Rochester grads to begin building connections between departments. If you
are interested in attending, please let me know via email: mddwyer (at) syr.edu.

I'm attaching the conference announcement beneath.
m-


The English Department and the Program in Visual and Cultural Studies at the University of Rochester present  
An Interdisciplinary Conference, held as part of
The Humanities Project:

The Archive of the Future / The Future of the
Archive

The conference will take place on Friday and Saturday, April 6 and 7, 2007 and will include a roundtable discussion
on
the future of the archive (with an opening address by Johnathan Massey, Assistant Professor of Architecture at
Syracuse
University, along with a roundtable made up of faculty, librarians and graduate students) and an
opening reception on Friday, which will showcase Marsha Kinder's digital and interactive *Labyrinth Project*.
Saturday's
events include a keynote address by Marsha Kinder, Professor of Cinema, Comparative Literature
and Spanish, at the University of Southern California, as well as 12 presentations by an interdisciplinary and
international group of graduate students on topics as diverse as Popular Culture and New Media,
Politics and Society, Visual Culture, and
History, Revision and Memory.

Please see

http://www.rochester.edu/College/humanities/projects/?archive
http://www.rochester.edu/College/humanities/projects/?archive&conference
for more information (including
specific times and paper topics) and to REGISTER.

This conference, including Friday's reception and Saturday's lunch, is FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. We do
ask, however,
that you register using the form on the website so we have a sense of how many people to expect.


Please free to contact the organizers at futureofthearchive@gmail.com with any questions or comments.

February 23, 2007

Negotiations February



The February Negotiations panel is scheduled for Friday, February 23 at 2pm in 421 HL.

Negotiations is designed as both a showcase for ongoing work produced by graduate students, and a workshop for papers that go on to be presented and published in the academic community. For this reason, it's important for everyone to attend, to make sure that the papers that have "Syracuse University English Department" attached to them are the very best that they can be. Mark your calendars!

Meghan Boyle will be presenting from her paper "From Nanook of the North to Survivor: The Entertainment of Imperialism."

Rachel Collins will contribute a presentation entitled "'Living was an ache': Authorial Distance and Indentification in Experiments of Class Transvestism".

Finally Soumitree Gupta will read from her "Resignifying Female Desire: Regulation and Resistance in Post-War Psychiatric Melodramas on the Mad Woman".

See you all there!

February 19, 2007

Negotiations: Spring Schedule


The Spring schedule for the Negotiations Graduate paper series is set, so make sure you mark your calendars and come to support your colleagues, and help to improve the work coming out of the department.

Presenters for this semester will be:
Meghan Boyle, Jared Champion, Rinku Chatterjee, Rachel Collins, Tanushree Ghosh, Soumitree Gupta, Mike O'Connor, Matt Rigilano, and Jon Singleton

February 13, 2007

Matt Hotham's Early Art, back in print!





Early Art, a chapbook of 11 poems from 3rd year MFA Matt Hotham, is now in its second printing from Turtle Creek Press.

Jane Cassady, author of An Awkward Kind of Faith and host of Monday Night Poetry, says that Matt "humanizes political life while letting NO ONE off the hook. He is both fierce and playful. It's not all politics, of course. There are some sweet love poems with just the right ratio of emo and remove. I'm not pulling any lines to show you because the book is a treasure map of images, and you should get the privelege of making these discoveries on your own."

Copies are $5, ($7.50 with shipping).

Order by mail:
Matt Hotham
131 Dell St, Apt #2
Syracuse, NY 13210

January 13, 2007

Syracuse English @ the MLA

Syracuse made an excellent impression at the 2006 annual conference of the Modern Language Association in Philadelphia. Graduate students, faculty, and some recently departed department alumni delivered presentations, interviewed, and crashed an Ivy League party.

  • Gina Liotta, MA '06, on the Early Twentieth Century African-American Children's Literature panel, delivered her presentation, "A New Narrative: Reading Langston Hughes Literature for Children as Imagetext". This paper was originally composed for Susan Edmunds' Harlem Renaissance course and was initially delivered in a 2005 Negotiations panel. Gina is currently enrolled in graduate studies at the University of Oregon Education program.

  • Professor Susan Edmunds was busy at the MLA--sitting on the "Posthuman, All Too Posthuman" roundtable, as well as giving a paper entitled "A New Beauty: Anzia Yezierska's Immigrant Women and the Making of Modern America".

  • Cindy Linden, fresh off her dissertation defense, appeared on the Pain and Disability panel. Cindy presented her paper, "In the Interests of Normativity: A reconsideration of Elaine Scarry's The Body in Pain".

  • Appearing on the Names, Language, and Theory panel, Amy Leal presented ""The Cockney School of Naming: Keats' Political Allegory in 'Caps and Bells'". Amy has also had an article published in The Chronicle of Higher Ed entitled "Who Killed John Keats?".

  • Former Emerson Fellow Sarah Brouillette, who is now an Assistant Professor of Literature at MIT, appeared on the Spectacles of Violence panel with her paper, "The Culture Industries of Northern Ireland: Specularity, Violence, and the Conviction Plays".

  • Professor Monika Wadman chaired a panel on the Native American artist Jimmie Durham. Monika's paper was entitled "Indian Playing Indian? Jimmie Durham's Columbus Day".

  • Finally, former EGO facilitator, MA 2006, and current Cornell PhD Jon Senchyne not only delivered a paper entitled "Class, Sexuality, Hypervisibility: Complicating 'Diversity' with Everything I have is Blue", a paper that emerged from his experiences teaching at Syracuse, but also extended the invite to many Syracuseans to Cornell's Friday night party. Thanks, Jon!

December 06, 2006

Negotiations: April



Negotiations Paper Reading Series December 8

Our final graduate student reading of the fall semester will be held this Friday at 3pm in 421 HL, directly after the PhD advisory meeting with Dympna Callaghan. Three of our second-year students will be presenting their work, followed by a happy hour / end of the semester celebration. Please plan to attend.

The panel:

Sarah Etlinger
Walking the Line: Reading Ambivalence in Edna Ferber

Corinne Martin
'Supplanters of the Tribe': American Exceptionalism and Thoreau's 'A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers'

Brigitte Fielder-Montero
Pretend Indians: The Fictionality of Literature in David Treuer's Native American Fiction and The Translation of Dr. Apelles


November 30, 2006

FSS - Ernesto Laclau

An afternoon lecture with Ernesto Laclau:
"The Signifier, the Role of Naming, and the Logic of Antagonism"





Ernesto Laclau, Chair of Political Theory at the University of Essex, will deliver the final lecture in the inaugural EGO Fall Speakers Series. His lecture will be held in the Killian Room, 500 Hall of Languages, at 3:15 PM on Thursday, November 30.

Professor Laclau is
Director of the doctoral program in Ideology and Discourse Analysis at the Centre for Theoretical Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences. He also is currently University Professor of the Humanities and Rhetorical Studies at Northwestern University. He is coauthor, with Chantal Mouffe, of Hegemony and Socialist Strategy: Toward a Radical Democratic Politics (Verso, 1985). His numerous other works include New Reflections on the Revolution of Our Time (Verso, 1990) and Emancipation(s) (Verso, 1996), and he is the editor of The Making of Political Identities (Verso, 1994). His latest book, On Populist Reason, seeks to understand how the construction of a people relates to other forms of political subjectivity—classes, corporations and other forms of association.

October 10, 2006

FSS - Tim Dean

bareback

English Graduate Organization presents lecture by Tim Dean Oct. 16
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Professor Tim Dean, from the English Department at the University of Buffalo, will deliver a lecture entitled "Breeding Culture: Barebacking, Bugchasing, Gift-Giving" at 1:00PM in the Killian Room, 500 Hall of Languages.

Professor Dean will present research from his forthcoming book, Unlimited Intimacy, which addresses the emergence of bareback subculture. By suspending the impulse to pathologize this behavior, Unlimited Intimacy explores the kinship structures that the subculture produces as an alternative to normative heterosexuality.

**This lecture is a part of the English Graduate Organizations's Fall Speaker Series, jointly sponsored by the English Department, the LGBT Senate, and the Graduate Student Organization**

September 29, 2006

FSS - Susan Buck-Morss

sbm flyer

May 07, 2006

2k6 End of the Year Party: English & Film



Just a quick note to thank everyone that came out to celebrate the end of the year, the
graduation of some fantastic colleagues, the Film Department's MFA show, and a few birthdays,
as well. It was a great time, everyone got home safe, and nobody broke anything. A successful
year and a successful party. Those of you who will be in town for the summer, make sure to
keep an eye on this space for announcements, etc.

Here's a few pictures from the events of the last few weeks of the semester.


Ana, Brigitte, Emily & Polina @ Gina's Dossier Party Tanushree, Celina & Gina: Year 2 The O'Connors
SUNY Alums Conference @ SUNY Albany EGO Panel: American Fiction 1890-1940
Chris + Corinne Nate & Brigitte Ina & Jon

2k4 Entry Class...Respect is Due Ryan & Meg Materialist Couchsitting

April 04, 2006

Negotiations: April

Negotiations in April






FPP Workshop: MLA Jobsearches

COMING YOUR WAY IN APRIL:

NEGOTIATING THE MLA JOBSEARCH--A WORKSHOP

Will you be seeking a job soon, or just want to learn more about what
it entails? Join CRYSTAL BARTOLOVICH, SARAH BROUILLETTE (newly hired
at MIT), STEVEN COHAN, and KATE GIGLIO (newly hired at the University
of Central Florida) for a discussion of the nitty gritty of the
search, from finding where jobs are to surviving an on-campus
interview. With Syracuse faculty who have served on numerous job
committees as well as successful recent job candidates both on hand,
you can hear about the search from both sides, and start to plan your
own search.

The workshop itself will be on THURSDAY APRIL 20 at 4pm in the
English Department Library. Please mark you calendars now! Everyone
welcome.

I am writing early, though, to ask people who are planning on
attending to let me know--we'd like to have a sense of how big a
group we will be. Also, if you have particular questions you'd like
us to cover, please let me know.

Hope to see you there!


RSVP and direct questions to Crystal: clbartol@syr.edu