Wake Up Call: Grünbein, Descartes, Pushkin
The Europe Center Seminar
Date and Time
October 29, 2008
4:30 PM - 6:00 PM
Open to the public
No RSVP required
Speaker
Michael Eskin - Columbia University
Michael Eskin (Ph.D., Rutgers 1998) studied comparative literature, German,
American, and Russian literature, and philosophy. Before coming to Columbia, he
was a Research Fellow at Sidney Sussex College, University of Cambridge. He is
the author of Nabokovs Version von Puskins "Evgenij Onegin": Zwischen
Version und Fiktion - eine Ubersetzungs- und fiktionstheoretische
Untersuchung (Sagner 1994); Ethics and Dialogue in the Works of
Levinas, Bakhtin, Mandel'shtam, and Celan (Oxford University Press 2000);
and Poetic Affairs: Celan, Grunbein, Brodsky (Stanford University
Press; forthcoming). His articles have appeared in such venues as PMLA,
Poetics Today, Semiotica, New German Critique, and
TLS. He has also edited special issues of The Germanic Review
(77/1, 2002) and Poetics Today (25/4, 2004). Currently, he is working
on two book projects: one, dealing with philosophical autobiographies; the other
with poetic inscriptions of time.
Michael Eskin's areas of teaching and
research are: nineteenth- through twenty-first-century literature and
intellectual history; post-world war II and contemporary poetry and culture;
interdisciplinary and philosophical approaches to literature (ethics and
literature, hermeneutics, semiotics), literary theory and criticism, the theory
and practice of translation, as well as the theory of fiction and narrative.
Jointly sponsored by the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, Department of German Studies, Forum on Contemporary Europe, Center for Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies, Comparative Literature, and the DLCL Philosophy Reading group.
Location
Pigott Hall (Building 260) Room 113



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