During the month of November 2008, PCPH presents two challenging lectures on queer aspects of psychic life and sexuality, hosted by Professor Marcia Klotz (Departments of English and Women's Studies).
On Wednesday, November 12, Tim Dean (Professor of English and Director of the Humanities Institute at the State University of New York, Buffalo, will be speaking on the cultural meanings and ethics of "barebacking," sex that intentionally risks transmission of the HIV virus. On Wednesday, November 19, in his lecture entitled: "The Will to Know: Foucault, Proust, Psychoanalysis, Godard,"Leo Bersani, Emeritus Professor of French at the University of California, Berkeley, will discuss Foucault's history of subjectivity in the West, in particular, the conflict between knowledge and "care of the self" in the constitution of the subject.
In February 2009, the Portland Center for Public Humanities will once again be working with the PSU English department and the larger PSU community to create an academic and intellectual program for the Multnomah County Library "Everybody Reads" project. Speakers and events will be announced by November 2008. Please also see the library's "Everybody Reads" web page to stay updated on emerging plans.
Beginning in February 2009, PCPH is hosting an ambitious series of faculty workshops and public lectures by leading scholars on the subject of "Cosmopolitanism." How and when do we form social relations, loyalties, and meanings that are global in scope? What is the relationship of these cosmopolitanisms to traditional borders of nation, race, or religion? What do they mean for international community? domestic politics, war, religion, capitalism, or the mass media? The questions will be explored by a distinguished group of scholars from a wide range of disciplines.
Winter and Spring:
The Bruce Robbins and Saskia Sassen lectures have been arranged in a new collaboration between PCPH and the Public Policy Lecture series at Reed College.
Academic Year 2009-2010: Speakers slated to speak in this series for the next academic year are: Thomas Bender (Professor of History, New York University), Srinivas Aravamudan (Professor of Literature, Duke University), Etienne Balibar (Professor of Philosophy, University of Paris and University of California, Irvine), David Theo Goldberg (Professor of Comparative Literature and Director of the UC Humanities Research Institute), and Michael Curtin (Professor of Communication and Global Studies, University of Wisconsin, Madison).
On June 16-20, 2009, the Portland Center for Public Humanities will be hosting the Marxist Literary Group's distinguished "Institute on Culture and Society." An organizational affiliate of the Modern Language Association, the MLG gathers scholars from around the the nation to discuss new directions in marxist and materialist criticism. In the wake of this year's massive financial crisis, the conference theme will be "new directions in marxist political economy." Please see the MLG website for more information on the organization and its annual conference. Further information will appear on this website as well.
Hear & see some of the world's leading scholars from the convenience of your desktop or iPod!
The Portland Center for Public Humanities will provide full-length podcasts of all scheduled center events.
Podcasts
Dylan Rodríguez Lecture
American Apocalypse: Prisons, the Racist states, and U.S. Globality
June 5, 2008
Julie Sze Lecture
“Environmental Justice and Environmental Humanities at the Crossroads”
May 20, 2008
Julie Sze APA Compass Interview
May 20, 2008
“The Other Black Northwest: Beyond Portland and Seattle"
Quintard Taylor, Professor of History at the University of Washington
5:30 p.m., Wenesday October 8
PSU Multicultural Center, Smith 228
Hazard Adams Reading and Lecture on Blakes's Annotations to Wordsworth
Hazard Adams is professor emeritus of comparative literature, University of Washington, and founder and honorary senior fellow of the School of Criticism and Theory.
7:30 p.m on Monday, October 27, 2008
Miller 105 at Lewis and Clark
"The Reverse Money Shot: On Bareback Pornography."
Tim Dean, Professor of English at SUNY Buffalo
4 p.m., Wednesday November 12
Location TBD
"The Will to Know: Foucault, Proust, Psychoanalysis, Godard"
Leo Bersani, Professor Emeritus of French at the University of California at Berkeley
4 p.m., Wednesday November 19
Location: TBA
"Praise and Blame in Transnational Perspective"
4 p.m., Tuesday, March 3
Location: TBA
"Territory, Authority, Rights"
Saskia Sassen, Professor of Sociology and in the Committee of Global Thought at Columbia University
4 p.m., March 30
Location: TBA
"The Cosmopolitan Neighborhood: Political Theological Models for Living in an Open World"
Kenneth Reinhard, Professor of English, Comparative Literature and Jewish Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Date and Location TBD
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