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Canceled: On Close Reading

April 2, 2024, 7:00 pm-8:30 pm

Free

Note: This event has been canceled. We apologize for any inconvenience.

TU and Tulsa community join the Oklahoma Center for Humanities and the Office of the Provost for a free, public lecture with John Guillory. Guillory is an American literary critic best known for his book Cultural Capital (1993). He is the Julius Silver Professor of English at New York University.

John Guillory’s teaching and research focus on two areas: early modern literature, and the histories of criticism, literary theory, and literary scholarship. In his period field, he is currently working on a book entitled, “Things of Heaven and Earth: Figures of Philosophy in English Renaissance Writing.” This study looks at the emergence of the philosopher as a distinct social type in the Renaissance, and at the complex interrelations between philosophy and theology on the one side, and philosophy and literature on the other. Several chapters from this monograph have been published, including essays on Shakespeare, Bacon, and Milton. He is further interested in studying the development of discursive prose in the early modern period, especially in relation to norms of “clarity” and the long decline of rhetoric. In the area of the history and sociology of criticism, he has published on topics that include the problem of canon formation, the American reception of Pierre Bourdieu, the history of literacy, the theory of reading, the theory of pedagogy, professionalization and graduate education, science studies, the evaluation of scholarship, and media studies. He is currently working on a disciplinary history entitled, “Literary Study in the Age of Professionalism.” This study undertakes a sociology of literary study in the context of the professionalization of science and scholarship in the new American university of the later nineteenth century. Essays from this work have been published on several topics, including early disciplinary formations such as philology and belles lettres, and the concurrent demise of the rhetorical curriculum and rise of bureaucratic writing genres such as the memorandum.

Details

Date:
April 2, 2024
Time:
7:00 pm-8:30 pm
Cost:
Free
Event Categories:
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Venue

101 E. Archer
101 E. Archer St.
Tulsa, OK 74103 United States
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