福利亚洲国产精品

Literature faculty present research at the 2023 Modern Language Association Annual Convention

Assistant professors of English Erin Pearson, Dinidu Karunanayake, and Dan Burns each presented at this year鈥檚 Modern Language Association (MLA) Convention in San Francisco.

福利亚洲国产精品 Department of English faculty Erin Pearson, Dinidu Karunanayake and Dan Burns presented research in their respective areas of specialization at this year鈥檚 MLA Convention held in San Francisco from Jan. 5-8.

Speaker at podium and panelists at table at 2022 MLA Convention.

A panelist on the interdisciplinary Forum Session 聽Pearson delivered her paper, 鈥淭he White Supremacist Strategy of Lost Cause Medievalism,鈥 in a roundtable format that included scholars from Drake, Rice, Caltech, George Washington and Cal State-Monterey Bay. Pearson鈥檚 paper argued that Thomas Dixon鈥檚 bestselling novels “The Leopard鈥檚 Spots”聽and “The Clansman” (on which the blockbuster 1915 movie The Birth of a Nation was based) used popular ideas about the medieval period to seize the white U.S. imagination and promulgate white racial reunification at the expense of Black lives and rights.

Panelists on stage at 2022 MLA Convention.

Chairing an Asian Literatures Special Session entitled 聽Karunanayake introduced and moderated discussions by literature faculty from Colgate University, Hunter College and UT-El Paso. His talk, 鈥淪hyam Selvadurai鈥檚 Mapping of Queer Memory as Postmemory,鈥 applied Marianne Hirsch鈥檚 formulation of 鈥減ostmemory鈥 to the queer Sri Lankan Canadian writer鈥檚 work and argued that Selvadurai鈥檚 invocation of queer memory fills the gaps of the heteropatriarchal nationalist consciousness, thus presenting a postmemory of postcolonial Sri Lanka.

For the roundtable 聽Burns鈥 鈥淭oo Big to Fail: Hanya Yanagihara鈥檚 A Little Life and the Art of Excess in the Age of Inclusion鈥 analyzed narrative theories of maximalist fiction in a comparative case study on the varied reception histories surrounding Yanagihara鈥檚 National Book Award-nominated and Booker Prize-shortlisted epic novel. Burns鈥 paper explored how the existing critical orthodoxy surrounding big, ambitious novels written by women deliberately fails its subjects through implicit biases that conflate the perceived perceptual limitations of a given work鈥檚 visionary scope with the minoritarian positionality of its authorship. The panel included scholars from Hartwick College, UT-Austin, Cornell, Oregon, and Penn State-Harrisburg, whose work examined emergent literary forms and their relationship with or remediation by other media, including film, documentary, social media, publishing platforms, transmedia, autotheory, and other hybrid narrative and poetic forms.

The Modern Language Association has been the flagship conference in literary studies since 1883 with sessions that present a range of critical approaches on a variety of languages, literatures, and cultural traditions. This year鈥檚 convention鈥檚 theme, 鈥淲orking Conditions,鈥 invited participants to consider the subject of knowledge work through 鈥渢he reconstruction of the profession, its institutions, and its wider environment.鈥