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Showing posts with the label claudia rankine

Want to Learn More about Black Lives Matter? Villanova English Faculty Reading Recommendations

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The Villanova English  Department stands in solidarity with our Black students, staff, and faculty and their allies against anti-Black racism, police violence, and racial injustice. The faculty intend to contact students with  an action plan before the fall semester begins, and we will be asking for student input as we proceed. In the meantime, if you have specific suggestions or questions about our department response, please direct them to  Dr.  Jean   Lutes , chair of our department Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion committee, at   jean . lutes @villanova.edu . As a first step in our response to the rising Black Lives Matter movement, we invite you to consider  this reading list  on white supremacy, policing, and racial justice: James Baldwin, The Fire Next Time (1963) [available online via Falvey Library], and Raoul Peck’s 2018 documentary I Am Not Your Negro [available for purchase on Youtube and Amazon prime video] ...

Dr. Kamran Javadizadeh Wins Prestigious Award for Essay on Claudia Rankine and Robert Lowell

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Huge congratulations to Dr. Kamran Javadizadeh, who has been awarded this year's William Riley Parker Prize for the best article published in  PMLA , the leading journal for literary studies!  His article “The Atlantic Ocean Breaking on Our Heads: Claudia Rankine, Robert Lowell, and the Whiteness of the Lyric Subject” appeared in the May 2019 issue of  PMLA .  Dr. Javadizadeh will  be presented with his award on 11 January 2020, during the association’s annual convention, to be held in Seattle. The members of the selection committee were Elizabeth Bearden (Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison); Christopher D. Castiglia (Penn State Univ., University Park), chair; Beth Piatote (Univ. of California, Berkeley); Melissa E. Sanchez (Univ. of Pennsylvania); and John H. Smith (Univ. of California, Irvine). In their citation the committee wrote: "' The Atlantic Ocean Breaking on Our Heads' rose gracefully from a comparison of a line appearing in poems written by Claudia Rankin...

Just Published: Dr. Kamran Javadizadeh on Claudia Rankine and Robert Lowell

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Professor Kamran Javadizadeh was recently published in PMLA, the official publication of the Modern Language Association. His article, “The Atlantic Ocean Breaking on Our Heads: Claudia Rankine, Robert Lowell, and the Whiteness of the Lyric Subject,” arose for Dr. Javadizadeh when he was reading Rankine's Citizen. "I noticed," said Javadizadeh, "that, tucked into the middle of her book, and in a moment that seemed to me like a reference to the Middle Passage and the history of slavery, Rankine used a phrase—'the Atlantic Ocean breaking on our heads'—that she was clearly (to me at least!) lifting and adapting from a poem by Robert Lowell. But I had no idea what the two moments had to do with each other—and no idea, therefore, why Rankine was turning to Lowell’s language to evoke the history of slavery." Javadizadeh started digging, and what he found surprised him. "It was when I went back to Lowell’s archive at Harvard and looked at drafts of ...

Join Villanova Literary Fest for a Reading from Claudia Rankine! Thurs, 4/4

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