English Literature Research Seminar Series: Aarthi Vadde In brief Guest Speaker - Aarthi Vadde (Duke University) Title - Communication, Computation, and the Icon Novel Chair - Penny Fielding About the speaker Arthi Vadde is Associate Professor of English at Duke University. She joined Duke in 2011 after completing a postdoctoral fellowship in the English Department at Harvard University. Her work focuses on twentieth- and twenty-first-century Anglophone literature, particularly how literary history interfaces with theories of internationalism and the history of computation. Her book 'Chimeras of Form: Modernist Internationalism beyond Europe, 1914-2016' (Columbia University Press, 2016) won the ACLA’s 2018 Harry Levin Prize for outstanding first book in the field of comparative literature. Vadde co-hosts a podcast called Novel Dialogue, which brings novelists and literary critics together to talk about the art of novel-writing, how novels are made, and how they can change the way we think about the world. Find out more about Novel Dialogue on their website How to join Seminars are free, and everyone is welcome. All seminars take place on Fridays between 16.00 and 17.00. Please contact the seminar chair to receive a Zoom invitation and password. The chair for this seminar is Penny Fielding. Email Penny for joining instructions Are you interested in a PhD in English Literature? We offer two PhDs: one in English Literature; and one in Creative Writing. Working with colleagues in LLC and across the wider University, we are able to support research which crosses boundaries between disciplines and/or languages. Find out more about PhD study in English Literature with us Mar 04 2022 16.00 - 17.00 English Literature Research Seminar Series: Aarthi Vadde Join us on Zoom for a free seminar by Aarthi Vadde (Duke University) entitled “Communication, Computation, and the Icon Novel”. Online on Zoom Email Penny Fielding for joining instructions
English Literature Research Seminar Series: Aarthi Vadde In brief Guest Speaker - Aarthi Vadde (Duke University) Title - Communication, Computation, and the Icon Novel Chair - Penny Fielding About the speaker Arthi Vadde is Associate Professor of English at Duke University. She joined Duke in 2011 after completing a postdoctoral fellowship in the English Department at Harvard University. Her work focuses on twentieth- and twenty-first-century Anglophone literature, particularly how literary history interfaces with theories of internationalism and the history of computation. Her book 'Chimeras of Form: Modernist Internationalism beyond Europe, 1914-2016' (Columbia University Press, 2016) won the ACLA’s 2018 Harry Levin Prize for outstanding first book in the field of comparative literature. Vadde co-hosts a podcast called Novel Dialogue, which brings novelists and literary critics together to talk about the art of novel-writing, how novels are made, and how they can change the way we think about the world. Find out more about Novel Dialogue on their website How to join Seminars are free, and everyone is welcome. All seminars take place on Fridays between 16.00 and 17.00. Please contact the seminar chair to receive a Zoom invitation and password. The chair for this seminar is Penny Fielding. Email Penny for joining instructions Are you interested in a PhD in English Literature? We offer two PhDs: one in English Literature; and one in Creative Writing. Working with colleagues in LLC and across the wider University, we are able to support research which crosses boundaries between disciplines and/or languages. Find out more about PhD study in English Literature with us Mar 04 2022 16.00 - 17.00 English Literature Research Seminar Series: Aarthi Vadde Join us on Zoom for a free seminar by Aarthi Vadde (Duke University) entitled “Communication, Computation, and the Icon Novel”. Online on Zoom Email Penny Fielding for joining instructions
Mar 04 2022 16.00 - 17.00 English Literature Research Seminar Series: Aarthi Vadde Join us on Zoom for a free seminar by Aarthi Vadde (Duke University) entitled “Communication, Computation, and the Icon Novel”.