ZARZĄDZENIE KIEROWNICZKI JEDNOSTKI DYDAKTYCZNEJ (KJD) INSTYTUTU AMERYK I EUROPY
z dnia 27 września 2021 r.
w sprawie ogłoszenia listy przedmiotów prowadzonych zdalnie w semestrze zimowym 2021/22
ZARZĄDZENIE KIEROWNICZKI JEDNOSTKI DYDAKTYCZNEJ (KJD) INSTYTUTU AMERYK I EUROPY
z dnia 27 września 2021 r.
w sprawie ogłoszenia listy przedmiotów prowadzonych zdalnie w semestrze zimowym 2021/22
Year 2021/2022
May 24, 2022
This open seminar will explore initial literary responses to the ongoing SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, offering participants opportunities to talk through this world-changing event. By the end of the seminar, participants should be able to not only identify but also to interpret and evaluate common features of early COVID literature within and beyond the United States.
American Studies Colloquium Series
May 24, 2022
This talk, whose title plays off the Julia Robert’s film “Eat, Pray, Love,” will explore queer films and queer immigrants’ relationships to food as part of the cultural identity, and how the rituals around food preparation and consumption informs their negotiations in the US.
Year 2021/2022
May 24, 2022
In this workshop we’ll talk about Frank Herbert’s “Dune” and its many adaptations (both real and unrealized), in order to see how music and sound are used to bridge sensory gaps in cinematic experiences, and how to write about such synaesthetic encounters in our research.
Year 2021/2022
May 23, 2022
ASC’s Gender/Sexuality Research Group invites all students and faculty members to the first ASC’s Student Conference on gender and sexuality in American studies. We have an exciting day planned, with a keynote by Dr. Richard Reitsma and four panels of student presentations, on everything from feminist theories to representation of trans characters on TV and challenging the norms of masculinity.
American Studies Colloquium Series
May 19, 2022
Given its origins in horseshoe bat populations, the SARS-CoV-2 virus offers many opportunities to re-think our relationships with the nonhuman world around us. In this talk, Raymond Malewitz will explore emerging cultural narratives embodied in COVID poetry and fiction, which tend to reinforce the stiff differences between the human and the nonhuman as physically and conceptually separate from one another.