Special Event: Kuan-Hsing Chen – “Asia as Method”

The Center for Cultural Studies Presents:

Kuan-Hsing Chen
Professor, Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies
Coordinator, Center for Asia-Pacific/Cultural Studies
National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan

ASIA AS METHOD

Kuan-Hsing Chen is Professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies and coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies at National Chiao Tung University in Taiwan. Founding chair of Taiwan’s Cultural Studies Association, founding member of the Inter-Asia Cultural Studies Society and a core member of the Taiwan: A Radical Quarterly in Social Studies, he is a co-executive editor of the journal, Inter-Asia Cultural Studies: Movements. His most recent book, is Asia as Method—Towards Deimperialization (Duke University Press, 2010). His other books include Media/Cultural Criticism: A Popular-Democratic Line of Flight (1992, in Chinese), and The Imperialist Eye (2003, in Korean). His edited volumes in English are Stuart Hall: Critical Dialogues in Cultural Studies (1996); Trajectories: Inter-Asia Cultural Studies (1998), and Inter-Asia Cultural Studies Reader (2007).

Readings for the seminar are available here.

For more information, contact G. Hershatter.

Co-sponsored by the Center for Cultural Studies, the Asian Diasporas Research Cluster at the Institute for Humanities Research (sponsored by the UC Humanities Network), and the Nee Fund of Department of History.

Special Event: Patricia T. Clough

Inaugural Lecture for the Affect Working Group

Patricia Clough
Professor of Sociology, Women’s Studies, and Intercultural Studies at Queens College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York

“War by Other Means: What Difference Do(es) the Graphic(s) Make?”

Patricia T. Clough’s books include Autoaffection: Unconscious Thought in the Age of Teletechnology (Minnesota 2000), Feminist Thought: Desire, Power and Academic Discourse (co-edited with Charles Lemert, J.W. Wiley, 1995) and The End(s) of Ethnography (Peter Lang 1992, revised 1998). Her most recent book, co-edited with Jean Halley, is The Affective Turn: Theorizing the Social (Duke 2007).

Patricia Clough on Probabilities, Predictions and Prophecies, Part 2, The New School.

Patricia Clough on the internet as playground and factory.

Clough and Han: Metronome Beating.

Sponsored by the Affect Working Group, the Department of Sociology, and the Center for Cultural Studies. For more information on this event and/or future events of the Affect Working Group please contact Prof. D. Gould or Prof. D. Takagi or Prof. C. Freccero.

Erik Butler: “The Ruse of Faith: Spiritual Politics in Der Nister’s Soviet Symbolism”

Professor Butler has published Metamorphoses of the Vampire in Literature and Film (Camden House, 2010) and The Bellum Grammaticale and the Rise of European Literature (Ashgate, 2010). His translation of Der Nister’s Regrowth (Vidervuks) is forthcoming (Northwestern, 2011). The current book, Cruelty and Mystification, explores violence and ruse in modernist fiction.

Erik Butler is Assistant Professor of German Studies at Emory University.

*co-sponsored by Jewish Studies

Tamara Spira: “Neoliberal Captivities: Pisagua Prison and the Low Intensity Form”

Doctor Spira works at the intersections of feminist, comparative ethnic and hemispheric American studies, and is completing Movements of Feeling: Neoliberalism, Affect and (Post) Revolutionary Memory in the Americas. The talk provides a reading of (the now converted) Pisagua prison in northern Chile, which intermittently served as a concentration camp for leftists and “sexual dissidents” throughout the 20th century.

Tamara Spira is the UC President’s Postdoctoral Fellow in Cultural Studies at UC Davis.

Mark Franko: Myth, Nationalism, and Embodiment in Martha Graham’s American Document

Professor Franko, a UC Humanities Network Scholar, is editor of Dance Research Journal, founding editor of the Oxford Studies in Dance Theory book series, and Director of the Center for Visual and Performance Studies at UCSC. He is finishing a book on Martha Graham in the 1940s (Oxford) supported by an NEH research fellowship and a UC President’s Research Fellowship.

Mark Franko is Professor of Dance and Performance Studies in Theater Arts at UCSC.

*sponsored by the IHR

Cécile Alduy: Obscenity, Obstetrics, and the Origin of the Pornographic Gaze

Professor Alduy is chair of Renaissances, an interdisciplinary forum on the present and future of early modern studies, and director of the Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies at Stanford University. One of her current projects is Archaeology of a Close-Up: The “Blasons anatomiques” and the Prehistory of Obscenity, which looks at the intersection between the field of obstetrics, its book market, and the pre-history of obscenity.

Cécile Alduy is Associate Professor of French and Italian at Stanford University.

Jacob Metcalf: “Meet Shmeat: Animal Biotechnologies and the Philosophical Tensions of the New Food Movements”

Doctor Metcalf is the Postdoctoral Fellow in an NSF-funded program training graduate students in interdisciplinary inquiry on the co-constitution of ethics and scientific knowledge. His research concerns the construction of ethical inquiry. He proposes new applied ethics methodologies that account for the boundaries drawn within techno-scientific apparatuses, and asks how science and technology might become more responsive to the conditions and consequences of those boundaries.

Matthew O’Hara: “The History of the Future in Mexico”

Historians of Latin America have spent much energy studying historical legacies. The notion that “the past weighs heavily on the present” is a standard frame for historical analysis. Stepping outside this paradigm, Professor O’Hara’s book project examines how Mexicans thought about, planned for, and accessed the future from the mid-colonial period into the early republic.

Matthew O’Hara is Associate Professor of History at UCSC.

Rei Terada: “Out of Place: Free Speech, Disruption and Student Protest”

Professor Terada is the author of Derek Walcott’s Poetry: American Mimicry (Northeastern, 1992); Feeling in Theory: Emotion after the “Death of the Subject”(Harvard, 2001); Looking Away: Phenomenality and Dissatisfaction (Harvard, 2009); and the in-progress Revolution-Restoration. The paper considers associations between “free speech” and interiority, and their implications in Marx, Heine, and recent student protest.

Rei Terada is Professor of Comparative Literature and Director, Critical Theory Emphasis at UC Irvine.

*co-sponsored by the Affect Working Group

Cristina Lombardi-Diop: “Spotless Italy: Advertising Culture and the Post-Racial Imagination”

Professor Lombardi-Diop has published on gender and Italian colonial literature, African-Italian autobiographies, and the African diaspora in Italy. Her in-progress book is on the memory of Italian colonialism in Italy’s postwar cultural history. The talk explores Italy as a post-racial society and focuses on when the idea of whiteness as a discursive formation infiltrates Italian popular and mass culture.

Cristina Lombardi-Diop is Associate Professor of Italian Studies at The American University of Rome and Visiting Professor of Italian Studies at UC Berkeley.