Exciting News For Miltonists
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Recently the Townsend Humanities Center at U.C. Berkeley has initiated a site devoted to heightening modern awareness of Milton’s relevance and currency by using audiovisual approaches…
The Holloway Faculty Poetry Reading
At 6:30PM today, Thursday, September 8, in 315 Wheeler Hall (Maude Fife Room), the 2011-2012 Holloway Series begins the autumn season in poetry with a reading featuring UC Berkeley’s own celebrated poets and teachers.
Happy First Day of School!
Welcome back everyone!!
I’m not on campus today, so I don’t have the pleasure of seeing your beautiful, shining faces or feeding off your I’m So Rested From An Amazing Summer!! energy, but I did want to wish you all a very happy first day of the new semester.
Here’s some Ferris Bueller to help get you good and ready for the new year.
Late-Summer Listening List, Courtesy of Professor Eric Falci and His “Poetry and Music” Seminar
If you’ve ever wondered what your students were listening to on their iPods while they waltzed into class or what albums were the soundtrack to their writing, Professor Eric Falci clues us all in.
Mission Street Food: Recipes and Ideas from an Improbable Restaurant
In an article for Food and Wine Magazine, our department’s own Karen Leibowitz writes, “We weren’t chefs—I was a graduate student and my husband, Anthony Myint, was a line cook—but we thought it would be fun to sublet a taco cart and sell “PB&Js,” sandwiches stuffed with pork belly and jicama. We set up shop at 21st and Mission in San Francisco and called ourselves Mission Street Food.” Karen answers some of my excited questions about how studying literature helped her first, manage a restaurant, then write a funky cookbook, with her husband.
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Commencement 2011: Our Undergraduates, Part 2
If you studied English as an undergraduate, someone eventually asked you, “What are you going to do with that?” Candace Cunard ’11 gives her answer.
Commencement 2011: Our Undergraduates
Newly minted graduate from our department, Maadhevi Comar ’11, reminds us to pay more attention to our transitions in her commencement speech.
A Poem for Thursday: “Mawqif of Station”
Just in time for the weekend, a poem.
Commencement 2011: The Speeches
Even if you didn’t graduate, that doesn’t mean you don’t need some inspiration. Here’s a roundup of some of the best commencement speeches of the season.
YARN Wins Innovations in Reading Prize from National Book Foundation
Congratulations to the Young Adult Review Network (YARN), which has recently been awarded an Innovations in Reading Prize from the National Book Foundation. YARN was founded in 2010 as an independent online journal to publish fiction, poetry, and essays by teen-aged writers alongside the work of established and emerging adult contributors. Read full post…
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Alumnus Takes Over California Beat
Berkeley English alumnus Ashley Dunn has been named California editor for the Los Angeles Times. Dunn is a veteran reporter and editor, having worked at the New York Times, the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong, the Danbury News-Times in Connecticut, and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Most recently, he has worked as Washington editor for the Times.
Announcing “Chapter and Verse: Structures of Reading” — A Call for Papers
Chapter and Verse: Structures of Reading
University of California at Berkeley
Saturday, October 8, 2011
Keynote Speaker: Associate Professor Nicholas Dames, Departments of Comparative Literature and English, Columbia University
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Remembering Flo Gibson
Audiobook pioneer and Berkeley alumna Flo Gibson died in January at the age of 86. Gibson founded Audio Book Contractors in 1983 and personally recorded over one-thousand titles, including works by Jane Austen, George Eliot, Henry James, and Leo Tolstoy. Born in San Francisco in 1924, Gibson studied dramatic literature at Berkeley, going on to New York’s Neighborhood Playhouse and a successful acting career, before beginning to record books for the Library of Congress in the 1970s. Her full obituary is available on-line at The New York Times.
Memorial for Charles Muscatine
A memorial service for Charles Muscatine, late Professor Emeritus of English, will be held at 11 a.m., Sunday, February 13, 2011, in the Pauley Ballroom of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Student Union. A distinguished scholar of medieval literature, Muscatine was also well known as an advocate for educational reform and for his refusal to sign a state loyalty oath...