Articles by author: bnagy

  • SCLA Virtual Hour

    The graduate program Studies in Comparative Literatures and Art invites prospective students to join SCLA’s Virtual Hour on Wednesday November 24, 2021 (2:00-3:00 pm).

    Microsoft Teams Meeting:

    Join on your computer or mobile app
    Click here to join the meeting

    Join with a video conferencing device
    172330346@teams.bjn.vc

    Video Conference ID: 113 291 548 1
    Alternate VTC instructions

    Categories: News, Other events

  • The Studies in Comparative Literature and Arts program at Brock University invites proposals for its graduate symposium to be held March 5th, 2022 on the theme of “Pressures.”

    The Studies in Comparative Literature and Arts program at Brock University invites proposals for
    its graduate symposium to be held March 5th, 2022 on the theme of “Pressures.”

    The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has compounded many of the everyday pressures we live with.
    For young people in particular, symptoms of anxiety and depression stemming from uncertainty,
    and insecurity have risen dramatically, even with the partial reopening of the world’s economies.
    In Weariness of the Self Alain Ehrenberg writes about the increasing rates of depression in
    contemporary societies, and attributes thisto the constant pressure to “measure up.” In The Burn
    Out Society, Byung-Chul Han explores the paradox of individual freedom in late capitalist society
    where discipline has been internalized and transformed into a subject’s constant self-pressuring
    to perform and achieve.
    Nevertheless, pressure is often the catalyst for creation. The “need for” can be triggered by a
    variety of pressures from within artists (their drives and psyches) as well as from their lived
    environments. This can vary from trauma and psychological problems to oppression from
    authority that distort and control writers, artists, and other creatives. The literature of
    displacement caused by war offers an example of creation under collective pressure. Can art be
    created in the absence of pressure? What other aesthetic and artistic trends can be traced back
    to times of cultural pressure? How does aesthetic production respond to current global
    pressures? Which artistic responses are being created out of our needs to respond to pressure
    and traumas of the past?
    Socially conscious artists are responding to a growing planetary catastrophe. While society faces
    growing pressure from an existential crisis requiring a global effort to avoid environmental
    destruction, we ask what contributions are being made by artiststo the cause today? Sound artist
    Kevin Curtis Norcross addresses the problematic nature of working within the Anthropocene
    through his “sound works,” for example. How affective is art in increasing and mobilizing public
    awareness? Are there aesthetic responses from the Indigenous cultures of Canada that offer new
    perspectives for settler-colonial society?
    Finally, pressure as a generative source can be into extended to an array of discussions, both
    actual and potential. There are ways in which pressure, as a physical phenomenon, is productive.
    A diamond, for example, only begins to form under 725,000 pounds of pressure per square inch.
    Conceptually, obligation can take the form of the pressure to decide, resulting in action. In both
    cases, pressure is the catalyst for the transformation from one form to another. Pressure, then,
    is not static, but a continuous exertion of force against an object or boundary. There is a spatiotemporal element to pressure, as it moves through time and space in both an actual and/or
    virtual way. The concept of pressure as a hermeneutic object opens questions such as: Is pressure
    ever completely released? Does pressure create something come from nothing? In what
    circumstances does pressure lead to freedom?

    Possible topics may include, but are not limited to:
    – Societal vs individual pressure
    – The pressure to perform
    – Depressurizing
    – Tangible and intangible pressure
    – Pressure of productivity / productive pressure
    – Pressures and social media
    – Pressures on/of the environment
    – Geological pressure
    – “Under Pressure”
    – Discipline and pressure
    – Releasing pressure and the carnivalesque

    Please send abstracts of 200-250 words maximum along with a 50-word bio to pressures2022@gmail.com by 15 December 2021

    Categories: Colloquia

  • SCLA Virtual Hour, Tuesday 24 November 2020 (2-3pm)

    SCLA Virtual Hour, Tuesday 24 November 2020 (2-3pm)

    The graduate program Studies in Comparative Literatures and Art invites prospective students to join SCLA’s Virtual Hour on Tuesday 24 November 2020 (2-3 pm).

    You are invited to call SCLA Virtual Hour on LifeSize.

    Join the meeting: https://call.lifesizecloud.com/6517321

    Join the LifeSize meeting using Skype for Business: https://skype.lifesizecloud.com/6517321

    Click to call from Mobile (audio only)

    Canada: +1 (844) 572-5683,, 6517321#

    United States: +1 (877) 422-8614,, 6517321#

    United States: +1 (833) 881-5208,, 6517321#

    Call in by Phone (audio only)

    Canada: +1 (844) 572-5683

    United States: +1 (877) 422-8614

    United States: +1 (833) 881-5208

    Meeting extension: 6517321#

    Additional phone numbers: https://call.lifesize.com/numbers

    Other ways to call: https://call.lifesize.com/otherways/6517321

    Categories: News, Other events

  • SCLA Virtual Hour /Tuesday 20 October 2020, 2-3 pm

    SCLA Virtual Hour /Tuesday 20 October 2020, 2-3 pm

    Are you interested in graduate studies at Brock? Would you like to know more about Studies in Comparative Literatures and Arts (SCLA)?

    You are invited to call SCLA Virtual Hour 20 Oct 2020 2-3 pm on Lifesize.

    Join the meeting: https://call.lifesizecloud.com/5870283

    Join the Lifesize meeting using Skype for Business: https://skype.lifesizecloud.com/5870283

    Click to call from Mobile (audio only)

    Canada: +1 (844) 572-5683,, 5870283#
    United States: +1 (877) 422-8614,, 5870283#
    United States: +1 (833) 881-5208,, 5870283#

    Call in by Phone (audio only)

    Canada: +1 (844) 572-5683
    United States: +1 (877) 422-8614
    United States: +1 (833) 881-5208

    Meeting extension: 5870283#

    Additional phone numbers: https://call.lifesize.com/numbers

    Other ways to call: https://call.lifesize.com/otherways/5870283

    Categories: News, Other events

  • Meet the Director of SCLA

    Meet the Director of SCLA

    In Fall 2020, meet Catherine Parayre, Director of SCLA during online office hours and ask her your questions about the program:

    Tuesday 22 September 2020, 2-3 pm (Canada, Ontario).

    SCLA meeting on Lifesize (Tuesday 22 September 2020, 2-3 pm, Canada, Ontario):

    You are invited to call SCLA Office hours on Lifesize.

    Join the meeting: https://call.lifesizecloud.com/5306052

    Join the Lifesize meeting using Skype for Business: https://skype.lifesizecloud.com/5306052

    Click to call from Mobile (audio only)
    Canada: +1 (844) 572-5683,, 5306052#
    United States: +1 (877) 422-8614,, 5306052#
    United States: +1 (833) 881-5208,, 5306052#

    Call in by Phone (audio only)
    Canada: +1 (844) 572-5683
    United States: +1 (877) 422-8614
    United States: +1 (833) 881-5208
    Meeting extension: 5306052#

    Additional phone numbers: https://call.lifesize.com/numbers

    Other ways to call: https://call.lifesize.com/otherways/5306052

    You may also reach her via email: cparayre@brocku.ca

    Full details and other events can be found here

    Categories: News, Other events