Genres of Response: Gesture, Method, Trope

Alastair Thorne's picture
Type: 
Conference
Date: 
November 3, 2017 to November 4, 2017
Location: 
California, United States
Subject Fields: 
Early Modern History and Period Studies, Literature, Medieval and Byzantine History / Studies

—a conference organized by Anahid Nersessian, University of California, Los Angeles

In a series of talks that follow the imaginative movements of genre from the medieval period to the nineteenth century, the conference examines the uneasy relationship between genre’s aesthetic promise and its practical uses. It brings together scholars whose work moves beyond the consideration of specific genres—whether elegy or epic, illustration or instruction, story or archive—toward a decidedly conceptual treatment of genre’s effects across literary, visual, historiographic, and scientific domains. Genre may encompass modes of classification, such as species or race, and of circulation, including the material genres of print, manuscript, and edition. It includes styles of address—polemic, sermon, pedagogy, riddle—and styles of collective activity, among them performance or protest. Genre segregates space, cordoning off the rural from the urban or the sacred from the secular, and it is a strategy of nation-building and imperial self-description. By pursuing multiple trajectories of generic expression and reception, the conference hopes to secure a genuinely interdisciplinary, globally-oriented exchange grounded but far from bound by historical context. It is directed toward a collective enrichment of our understanding of the play of conformity and idiosyncrasy bound up in habits of cultural expression, along with the freedom such play provisionally offers.


Speakers
Manan Ahmed, Columbia University
Kevis Goodman, University of California, Berkeley
Cecily Hilsdale, McGill University
Matthew C. Hunter, McGill University
Eleanor Johnson, Columbia University
Agnes Lugo-Ortiz, University of Chicago
Gerard Passannante, University of Maryland, College Park
Rebecca L. Spang, Indiana University Bloomington

Contact Info: 

The UCLA Center for 17th- & 18th-Century Studies
302 Royce Hall
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1404
P: 310-206-8552
F: 310-206-8577   

Contact Email: