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Come blow off some mid-semester steam and catch up at our Happy Hour TONIGHT starting at 5 pm at Rattle n’ Hum (33rd between 5th and Madison, http://www.rattlenhumbarnyc.com/). If you want to join us after class or other commitments but aren’t sure if we’re still hanging about, feel free to shoot Bethany an e-mail (bethanyholmstrom@gmail.com) before heading over. On the agenda (to make sure we’re drinking craft beer and eating cheese fries with a purpose): choose a text for our next book club meet-up later this semester, come up with some ways to exchange/share sources and start a running resource list of interdisciplinary books, and generally relax and socialize.

All are welcome. Hope to see you there!

We’d love for you to join us for two exciting Americanist events hosted by the CUNY Americanist group (the latter co-hosted by Studies in American Fiction). Both will take place in the English department lounge (4406).

Friday, February 25

2:00PM “‘I Hear America Singing’: A Live Performance and Discussion of Music of Walt Whitman’s Era.” Performed by Steve Vitoff (guitar and vocals) featuring Professor David S. Reynolds providing historical and cultural background.

4:00PM Chistopher Castiglia (Penn State), “A Usable Past? How Romanticism Saved Criticism from the Cold War.”

Here is an abstract of the talk:

American critics who wrote during the Cold War—figures like Newton Arvin, Richard Chase, R.W.B. Lewis, and Richard Poirier—are often characterized now as advocates of apolitical turns to genre and literary form, of national exceptionalism, and of conformity to conventional lifestyles.  In this paper, I revisit these critics to show how they adapted Romanticism to escape and, in many cases, to counter Cold War norms and values, often through the use of same-sex intimacy and imaginative world-making.  Through a reparative reading of these critics, I hope to offer a model for how critics today might revalue terms central to these critics—idealism, imagination, inspiration—in ways that take us beyond the Cold War melancholy that has shaped a good deal of contemporary Americanist scholarship.

The events will be followed by a lovely Friday Forum reception.

Hoping you can join us!

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