Maia Sigua and Nana Sharikadze, “Crossroads and Crisis in Georgian Culture”

Maia Sigua Associate Professor, V. Sarajishvili Tbilisi State Conservatoire Nana Sharikadze Associate Professor, V. Sarajishvili Tbilisi State Conservatoire "Crossroads and Crisis in Georgian Culture: Decolonization and Resurgent Sovietism" Prof. Sigua will discuss the formation (and deformation) of collective and cultural memory in the Soviet era, using the example of Georgian opera theatre, and how some […]

Gregor Moder, “Hegel’s Antigone between Historicity and Subjectivity”

Gilman 208

Gregor Moder, Department of Philosophy, University of Ljubjana "Hegel’s Antigone between Historicity and Subjectivity" Hegel treated the myth of Antigone not as material for a particular work of art, but as a direct expression of the Greek world, as the shape of the world spirit in the Greek antiquity. If it were possible to capture […]

Jon Auring Grimm, “The Musicality of Nature and Cosmic Ornamentation”

Gilman 208

Jon Auring Grimm, PhD Candidate, Aarhus University "The Musicality of Nature and Cosmic Ornamentation: Poetic knowledge and ecological imagination in Inger Christensen" The entire web of relationships among all existing phenomena that constitutes our world must lead to an increasingly refined understanding that our cultural forms, all human-made expressions, including the diverse forms of poetry, […]

Ben Morgan talk

Gilman 208

Ben Morgan, Professor of German and Comparative Literature, Fellow at Worcester College, University of Oxford “How updating Frankfurt School political economy changes the way we think about a critical theory of culture in the 21st-century” The lecture shows the transformed potential of the interdisciplinary project of the Frankfurt School when the framework of economic thinking […]

Discontinuous Compositions: Reading Fragments

CTL Seminar Room, Gilman 208

2024 Graduate Symposium at Department of Comparative Thought and Literature Johns Hopkins University Location: Gilman 208 Friday, April 5 10:00am Panel 1: Fragmentary Poetics Between Philosophy and Literature Amy Chan (The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) “Fragmentary Form and Allusion: Tolson’s Skeptic Poetics” Emma Duvall (The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) […]

Jocelyn Benoist, “How Fiction Can Be Made True”

Gilman 208

Jocelyn Benoist, Professor of the Philosophy of Knowledge and Contemporary Philosophy, University Paris 1 Sorbonne "How Fiction Can Be Made True" Philosophy has always been suspicious of fiction. In the philosophical tradition, fiction has often been equated with a lie, or at least a form of false speech. This is a consequence of philosophers' fictional […]

Workshop: “Description: The Implicit Normativity in Language and Norms of Life”

Commons East Room 304 3301 N Charles St, Baltimore, Maryland, United States

This interdisciplinary workshop takes description as a route to explore the ways in which our norms are embedded within and throughout language rather than reflecting external rules. While hard oppositions have been made between description and narration, pictorial and verbal, sound and sense, this workshop is attempting to create a vocabulary of description at different […]

Workshop: “Description: The Implicit Normativity in Language and Norms of Life”

Commons East Room 304 3301 N Charles St, Baltimore, Maryland, United States

This interdisciplinary workshop takes description as a route to explore the ways in which our norms are embedded within and throughout language rather than reflecting external rules. While hard oppositions have been made between description and narration, pictorial and verbal, sound and sense, this workshop is attempting to create a vocabulary of description at different […]

CTL Seminar: Fall Convocation

Gilman 208

The year-long CTL Seminar features research presentations from faculty, students and invited speakers.

CTL Seminar: Mengqi (Mercy) An

Gilman 208

Title: "Literature and Ecologies of Manchuria" The year-long CTL Seminar features research presentations from faculty, students and invited speakers.

CTL Seminar: Bill Egginton

Title: "Early Modern Artificial Intelligence" This talk is part of the year-long CTL Seminar, which features research presentations from faculty, students and invited speakers.