For event information: Mapping Ann-Marie MacDonald Symposium – ExperienceBU
Tickets: Brock University | Ticketing – Ticket Homepage
Articles by author: mvanatte
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Categories: Events
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A successful MA student colloquium!
Congratulations to our English MA Students on a successful colloquium!
“Marginalia: New Perspectives on Old Space” hosted by the English Master’s students on April 28th drew is a large crowd as they shared their research projects.
To learn more about their projects, visit: 2026 Brock University English Graduate Student Colloquium – English Language & Literature

Group from left to right: Elder Benitez-Garcia, Erin Borg, Annalise Quesnelle, Lauren Gallant, Steph Penner, Sandra Ruszewska, Mia Smith. 2026 English MA Student Cohort
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2026 English Master’s Student Colloquium
Join us for our annual English Master’s Student Colloquium!
Marginalia: New Perspectives on Old Spaces.
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
12:00P.M. – 2:00P.M.
Dr. Charles A. Sankey ChambersTo learn more about the students, visit here.
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Making a Case for Cripple: Dethroning Richard III as the King of Disability in Early Modern Literature
Join us at an upcoming talk on Friday, March 27th at 2-3PM in PLZ 600F, as Brock English MA graduate, Daryl Wakunick speaks on “Making a Case for Cripple: Dethroning Richard III as the King of Disability in Early Modern Literature”.
This paper uses concepts from the phenomenology of Maurice Merleau-Ponty (corporeal schema) and critical disability studies (especially, cripple-consciousness and the contrasting medical and social models of disability) to carry out a comparison of how disability is depicted in Shakespeare’s Richard III and the anonymously written early modern city comedy, The Fair Maid of the Exchange. Though Richard III is the most studied disabled character in early modern literature, Shakespeare’s depiction of the king affirms harmful stereotypes that plague disabled people to this day. To counter the false notions about disability in Richard III the paper turns to the
lesser-known character called Cripple from The Fair Maid of the Exchange to highlight a more productive, agentic version of disability. The goal of the paper is to decentre Richard as the pinnacle of early modern disability and present a fresh perspective of how we understand historical depictions of embodied difference.https://brocku.ca/humanities/philosophy/research-in-progress-speaker-series/
All are welcome. Light refreshments provided.
This event is co-hosted with the Department of Philosophy
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2026 Marilyn Rose Lecture Series
For more information visit: 2026 Marilyn Rose Lecture Series – ExperienceBU
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2026 Spring course offering – Creative Writing for Digital Media
Register Today! Timetables – Registration Guides and Timetables
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2026 Spring course offering – Decolonizing Literature
Register Today! Timetables – Registration Guides and Timetables
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2026 Spring course offering – Speculative Fiction
Register Today! Timetables – Registration Guides and Timetables
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A Canada Talks Event – Professor Gregory Betts
The Centre for Canadian Studies in partnership with the St. Catharines Public Library presents their third Canada Talks event featuring Professor Gregory Betts.
“Unerasing Ourselves: St. Catharines, Canadian Literature, and thePast”
Wednesday February 25 starting at 6:15 p.m.
Central Library, Mills Room, Downtown St. CatharinesThis talk attends to the troubling question: what becomes of the nation when we decolonize, when we really take our conflicts head on? By looking at the history and counter-history of St. Catharines, we can start to imagine a strategy of reading Canada through its conflicts, without erasing any, while highlighting the various efforts to erase evidence of conflict. “Unerasing Ourselves” traces out a series of remarkable, improbably, and fascinating links between such authors are Frederick Douglas, John Richardson, Thomas D’Arcy McGee, and Harriet Tubman, amongst others. Provocatively, I argue that we must reconsider erasure as a central dynamic of the Canadian Social contract. For the sake of the future, it is time to think more consciously of the messy conflicts shaping this land.
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Join us at our Careers Night!
To English Department students,
Save the date!
Monday, February 23, 2026, from 7 – 9 pm, the department will host a Careers Night for undergraduate students. It will take place in Sankey Chamber, but it is a hybrid event so you will be able to attend virtually or in-person. There will be alumni speakers as well as information from Brock’s Co-op Career & Experiential Education.
To register, visit: https://experiencebu.brocku.ca/event/321995

Blue Yellow and Red Modern Career Expo Flyer (A4) – 1
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