Kathleen Stewart Visit
Lecture:ÌýThursday, Feb. 9th at 3:30pm (Reception, 5pm). British Studies Room, Norlin Library, M549
Workshop: Friday, Feb. 10th, 10am–2pm. Lunch provided. Conference Room 245. UMC.
Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ Kathleen Stewart: Katie Stewart (Anthropology, Professor, UT-Austin) writes and teaches on affect, the ordinary, the senses, and modes of ethnographic engagement based on curiosity and attachment. Her first book,ÌýA Space on the Side of the Road: Cultural Poetics in an `Other' AmericaÌý(Princeton University Press, 1996) portrays a dense and textured layering of sense and form laid down in social use.ÌýOrdinary AffectsÌý(Duke University Press, 2007) maps the force, or affects, of encounters, desires, bodily states, dream worlds, and modes of attention and distraction in the composition and suffering of present moments lived as immanent events. Her current project,ÌýWorlding, tries to approach ways of collective living through or sensing out. An attunement that is also a worlding.
Thursday Evening Lecture:ÌýWriting Affect ~ Composing Precarity
In this talk, Stewart will discuss how ethnography’s mantra of grounded writing, or writing from the ground, potentially enables attention to the shakenness of difference encountered or imagined… What kind of ‘‘ground’’ is it, then, that sends people bouncing, takes place as a threshold, hits the senses as a set of provocations, or presents as a problematic sensed in circuits of reaction already set in motion? (The Point of Precision, Representations, 135, 2016)Ìý
Friday Workshop: Ìý
Writing matters if objects of analysis are to be understood as emergent forms with qualities, intensities, and trajectories that can be described or evoked. Writing is not epiphenomenal to thought but its medium. As it sidles up to worlds, disparate and incommensurate things throw themselves together.Ìý(Precarity’s Forms, Cultural Anthropology, 27, 2012)
The Friday workshop will be devoted to the practice of writing ourselves into our worlds as emergent and disparate ensembles. ÌýThe workshop leader, Kathleen Stewart, will introducing the speculative concept of ‘worlding’Ìýthat appearsÌýwin philosophy, criticism, digital studies, and cultural study. We willÌýconsider our writing as an inscription that configures the spaces of form and event in daily living.Ìý The price of admission to this workshop is a 500 word same of the author’s choosing. ÌýWe will not circulate the samples before hand and will instead read each piece aloud, actively listening, and then interspersing talk among the group. ÌýThe process ofÌýsharing, hearing, questioning, and proposing—for oneself and for the sake of others—is intended to help everyone, regardless of theirÌýstation in life, to start to think through a project or concept by working with words.
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All events are open and free to the public. Advance Registration Required for Workshop Only. To register for writing workshop or to ask questions, emailÌýjohn.ackerman@colorado.edu.Ìý
This Event is Sponsored by:ÌýÌý Program for Writing and Rhetoric, A&S
Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý ÌýThe WRITE LabÌý
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