Lindsay Waters on Daniel Bell, the Harvard Blog.
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Poems and Poetry from b2!
Epic Visions, Lyric Voices — edited by Dan O’Hara
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Global Humanities
A new paper by Arif Dirlik, “Civilization-Talk, Contemporary Global Relations, and the Humanities: Predicament and Promise”
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Death of Miriam Hansen
Several boundary 2 colleagues had important interactions with Miriam and we all admired and learned from her work. We sadly note her parting.
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William Spanos on Billy Budd
The Exceptionalist State and the State of Exception: Herman Melville’s Billy Budd, Sailor. The Johns Hopkins UP, 2011.
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On the Philological Imagination
most recent b2 special issue, edited by Dan O’Hara, volume 37, no. 3 Fall 2010.
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Humanism
boundary 2 has decided to commit substantial time and resources to discussing “humanism,” a topic current in all serious intellectual disciplines now and central to the political organization of the world and its imaginative dispositions.
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Call for Papers: ACLA
Ruth Hung has asked that we post this CFP for the ACLA of 2011. If you are interested, please contact Ruth at ruthhung@hkbu.edu.hk or check the ACLA Website at http://www.acla.org/acla2011. Thanks.The panel invites comparatists to reflect on the spectral aesthetics of state power, to investigate how it colonizes a population’s mind, limits its imaginative possibilities, and yet creates new subject formations. The Derridean word “specters” is a point of departure. This seminar agrees that the spectral world of capital creates a “phantom State” and evacuates public spaces. It departs from the “Cold War mentality,” reflected in Derrida, and sees the traffic between the U.S. and China as evidence of an emergent neoconservative world of state power and imaginative deprivation as one cause of the current crisis in thinking. This seminar proposes that the way forward for a comparative critical humanist is to understand how state power, spectral and spectacular, now takes offense not, as during the cold war, at any one competing worldview but at the very root of the humanistic belief that the human’s desire to imagine and create alternative realities should know no limit. Building on the study of earlier spectral forms —
the novel, propaganda, and advertising — it seeks to understand how in most recent global media events, powerful states establish specters of their own insurmountable power to create new forms of subjectivity settled within consumerism, religion, and the passivity of the status quo. These specters (such as the bombing of Baghdad, the opening ceremonies of the Beijing Olympics, the military parades at the People’s Republic of China’s 60th anniversary) also threaten violence against any imaginable alternatives to their own domination of the norms of life.