Daily Archives: February 4, 2016

The Americas Project: Spring 2016 Events

We’re writing to extend a warm invitation to the spring events of The Americas Project (TAP).

Leonard Cassuto, Professor of American Literature at Fordham University, will visit as a special guest of TAP and give a lecture on Thursday, February 18 at 4:30 PM in CLA 1.302E. Cassuto is an expert on both crime fiction and academic culture. In addition to Hard-Boiled Sentimentality: The Secret History of American Crime Stories (Columbia, 2008), Cassuto edited The Cambridge History of the American Novel (2011) and The Cambridge Companion to Baseball (2011). Last fall, he published The Graduate School Mess: What Caused It and How We Can Fix It (Harvard, 2015). In it, he observes that “to pursue a professorship at the expense of all other options can hardly be called rational” and argues for a much more student-centered graduate education.

Rebecca Walkowitz, Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies in the English Department at Rutgers University and current President of the Modernist Studies Association, will join us for the TAP Distinguished Lecture Series on Friday, April 1 at 4:00 PM in CLA 1.302E. Walkowitz has published Cosmopolitan Style: Modernism Beyond the Nation (2006) and, late last year, Born Translated: The Contemporary Novel in an Age of World Literature, in which she argues, “Like born-digital literature, which is made on or for the computer, born-translated literature approaches translation as medium and origin rather than as afterthought.” Walkowitz’s visit is co-sponsored by the Program in Comparative Literature.

Finally, Matthew Taylor, Associate Professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, will give a second TAP Distinguished Lecture on April 22 at 4:30 PM in CLA 1.302E.  Taylor’s Universes without Us: Posthuman Cosmologies in American Literature (Minnesota, 2013) situates Edgar Allan Poe, Henry Adams, Charles Chesnutt, and Zora Neale Hurston in an alternative posthumanist tradition in which “both our separation from the universe and our identity with it are exposed as fantasies.” Taylor’s visit is co-sponsored by TILTS: Environmental Humanities.

Thrive at UT: a free iPhone app to enhance well-being

Thrive at UT: a free iPhone app to enhance well-being

Thrive at UT is a free iPhone app designed to enhance student well-being and help better manage the ups and downs of college life.  The app is specifically for UT Austin students and utilized student input throughout the development process.  Students will find short videos of actual UT Austin students sharing their own stories as well as interactive activities designed to help them apply these concepts to their own unique experience.  Click here to download the app or to learn more about Thrive at UT.

Great discussion groups for students! (Women of Color, Queer Students, Asian American Students, International Students)

These are discussion groups that CMHC’s Diversity Coordinators are offering for students.  These are not clinical groups, so you don’t have to be clients to attend.  You can drop in and attend as often as they’d like.

Discussion group offerings include:

Queer Voices

Women of Color Discussion Group

Asian American Voice

International Student Discussion Group

See the attached flyer for more info.  There is a Voice_3 Groups_FLYER