Inaugural Adele Dalsimer lecture
Literary critic and Boston College alumna Margaret Kelleher, a professor at University College Dublin, will present “Focla Dégheanach (Dying Words): The Execution of Myles Joyce (Galway, 1882) and Its Continuing Legacy” at BC’s inaugural Adele Dalsimer Lecture on Oct. 1 at 6 p.m. in Devlin Hall, room 101. Kelleher has reshaped the field of Irish literary studies over the last two decades with her work on 19th-century literature, women’s writings, and on the historical relationship between English and Irish. Her books include The Feminization of Famine and The Cambridge History of Irish Literature, co-edited with BC Professor Philip O’Leary. She was a contributing editor to Field Day Anthology Volumes 4 and 5, and editor of the special issue on the Irish Literary Revival for Irish University Review. Sponsor: Irish Studies. Advanced registration is requested. More about the lecture’s namesake and the event from the Boston College Chronicle.
Edwidge Danticat
In collaboration with Fiction Days, the Lowell Humanities Series presents award-winning writer Edwidge Danticat on Sept. 29 at 7 p.m. in the Murray Room of Yawkey Center. Her appearance is part of a three-day residency at BC. Danticat, a native of Haiti, is the author of Breath, Eyes, Memory, an Oprah Book Club selection; Krik? Krak!, a National Book Award finalist; The Farming of Bones, and Brother, I’m Dying, among other titles. Her newest work, Untwine, is a young adult novel.
Posted in Guest Authors, Lowell Humanities Series
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Dubliners Bookshelf
Department of English doctoral student Andrew Kuhn has edited Dubliners Bookshelf, a digital exploration into the books of James Joyce’s Dubliners. The website collects and organizes texts cited in Joyce’s short story collection, including Walter Scott’s The Abbot, Lord Byron’s Poems, and the Maynooth Catechism, among others. These texts offer insights into Joyce’s characters and themes while also suggesting a portrait of Dublin’s print culture at the turn of the 20th century. This project is part of the Burns Library’s exhibition “Unhemmed As It Is Uneven: Joyce’s Odyssey in Print,” on display through October 8.
Posted in Students
Tagged BC Libraries, Center for Irish Programs, English Department, Irish Studies
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A new way to lead
Sveta Emery, associate dean of finance, research, and administration in the BC School of Social Work, offers her take on The End of Leadership by Barbara Kellerman for a Chronicle of Higher Education feature, “What I’m Reading.” According to Kellerman, as a result of the cultural and technological changes of the last 40 years, the balance of power has shifted decisively from leaders to followers. Emery writes: “A robust leadership model at a school level needs to secure the buy-in of ‘the followership’ by giving a voice to young faculty under pressure of tenure review and encouraging senior faculty to participate in the decision-making process and in the development of the long-term institutional strategy.”
Translating Imperium
Assistant Professor of German Studies Daniel Bowles has written the English translation of Swiss author Christian Kracht’s best-selling novel Imperium: A Fiction of the South Seas (Farrar, Straus & Giroux). The novel is described as a provocative satire and a serious meditation on the fragility and audacity of human activity, an outrageous, fantastical, uncategorizable work of obsession, adventure, and coconuts. The English translation was published over the summer and has been reviewed by the New York Times and Sydney Review of Books, among other outlets. Kracht and Bowles will be at two events to present the translation: Boston University Center for the Study of Europe on Sept. 21 and at the Goethe-Institut Boston on Sept. 22. Details on the book events.
Shedding light on a seminal work
James Madison’s Notes on the 1787 Constitutional Convention have acquired nearly unquestioned authority as the account of the U.S. Constitution’s creation, relied upon by generations of historians and other scholars. In her new book, Madison’s Hand: Revising the Constitutional Convention (Harvard University Press, 2015), Boston College legal scholar Mary Sarah Bilder reveals that Madison revised the Notes to a far greater extent than previously recognized. In an unprecedented investigation that draws on digital technologies and traditional textual analysis to trace Madison’s composition, Bilder shows that The Notes began as a diary of the Convention’s proceedings, but were abandoned by Madison at a critical juncture and left incomplete. Madison did not return to finish them until several years later. By then, his views were influenced by the new government’s challenges and Thomas Jefferson’s political ideas. Madison’s evolving vision of republican government, his Virginia allegiances, his openness to constitutional protection for slavery, his fascination with the finer points of political jockeying, and his depictions of Alexander Hamilton and Charles Pinckney shifted during the writing and rewriting of his account. Bilder is a professor and Michael and Helen Lee Distinguished Scholar at Boston College Law School. More from Bilder via History News Network.
BC Libraries features faculty authors
Boston College Libraries has recently featured three professors who published books last year in the fields of art, management and Irish politics. In Text and Image in Medieval Persian Art (Edinburgh University Press), Calderwood Professor of Islamic and Asian Art Sheila Blair presents a case study of five pieces of Persian art (10th to 16th century) to show how an object can tell a story about time and through time. She was interviewed by librarian Nina Bogdanovsky. Intellectual Shamans: Management Academics Making a Difference (Cambridge University Press). She demonstrates how these individuals in the management academy use their intellectual gifts to perform roles as healers, connectors and sensemakers, like traditional shamans. She was interviewed by librarian Sonia Ensins. History Professor of the Practice Robert Savage‘s biography Sean Lemass (University College Dublin Press) presents a portrait of the influential politician who served as Ireland’s Taoiseach (prime minister) from 1959-66. Librarian Elliot Brandow interviewed Savage about his book.
Kaleidoscope
Kaleidoscope International Journal is an international relations and global studies publication run by Boston College undergraduates, with funding from the Institute for the Liberal Arts. Its goal is to promote greater awareness and understanding of international issues through research, articles and photography by students from a variety of disciplines. The most recent issue includes articles about Kuwait’s expatriate labor force and the preservation of Italy’s cultural heritage, as well as a photo essay on Patagonia. “It’s becoming increasingly important for all citizens to be better informed of international issues, events and trends,” said Omeed Alerasool ’15, who served as editor-in-chief for four years. “We want to reach out to people who are simply looking to learn more about the world.” Kaleidoscope Spring 2015 issue
Posted in Students
Tagged Institute for the Liberal Arts, international, undergraduate journal
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Being Catholic during the Dirty War
During Argentina’s Dirty War — an attempt by the government to fight communism by eliminating subversives —15,000 people were killed, 8,000 were jailed and some 6,000 were exiled. The Catholic Church and Argentina’s Dirty War (Oxford University Press, 2015), a new book by Boston College sociologist Gustavo Morello, SJ, explores the complex relationship of the Catholic Church and the political violence. Fr. Morello, who is a native of Argentina, focuses on the 1976 kidnapping, detainment and torture of American priest James Weeks and five seminarians by the Argentine military government as a means of understanding the broader issues of religion and politics that took place in that Latin American country. More from BC News
Posted in Boston College Authors
Tagged Argentina, Catholic Church, Jesuit author, Latin America, Sociology Dept
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