黑料门

Graduate candidates and faculty hold “Meeting Grounds,” a critical workshop and symposium

In April 2021, members of the Department of English met virtually with faculty and graduate students from various institutions to hold 鈥淢eeting Grounds: Mutual Ethics and Action in Animal Studies, Ecocriticism, and Posthumanism.鈥 The two-day event fostered dialogue among an international audience during a critical workshop on Friday, April 23, as well as a symposium on Saturday, April 24.

The critical workshop brought together graduate students and early career researchers for a day of convivial conversation and respectful critique of participants鈥 work in progress. Attendees acknowledged the benefits of sustaining writing communities, especially during conditions occasioned by the ongoing, global pandemic. As such, those who engaged in the critical workshop plan to meet again in the coming months.

While the critical workshop addressed the meeting grounds of animal studies, ecocriticism, and posthumanism within literary studies, the symposium broadened the conversation to engage critical race studies, theology, and anthropology.

During the first session of the symposium, presented the keynote lecture 鈥淭he Habit in Cohabitation (Or, How to Meet a Tiger on the Path).鈥 Weston鈥檚 talk discussed methods by which we consider and narrate multispecies meetings. Following Weston鈥檚 talk, Dr. Suzanne Bost, , and Dr. Elisabeth Bayley shared responses and questions before opening the floor for audience members to ask questions.  

The symposium鈥檚 afternoon session also featured a keynote address, three responses, and Q&A session. Keynote lecturer spoke on the significance of nonhuman animal figures in literature written by black authors during his presentation 鈥The beginning of the end of the world: vermin being & 20th century black ecopoetics.鈥 Respondents Dr. Long Le-Khac, LaShaunda Reese, and Courtney Walton offered insights and questions before holding space for audience participation during a Q&A session.

The of Professors Weston鈥檚 and Bennett鈥檚 lectures are available to the public for free.

For more information, please contact one of the organizers of 鈥淢eeting Grounds.鈥

Organizers:

Danielle Richardsdrichards@luc.edu

esharrett@luc.edu

John Hawkins, jhawkins8@luc.edu