Visiting Scholar: Elizabeth Maddock Dillon, October 29, 2012

RESCHEDULED!  Due to Hurricane Sandy, we will be rescheduling Professor Dillon's visit for later in the semester.  Please check the syllabus for the schedule changes.

Please join us for our next Mellon Workshop meeting on Monday, October 29 at 12pm, at 70 Brown Street (The English Department), Room 218.  We will be hosting Professor Elizabeth Maddock Dillon, professor of English at Northeastern University, whose research interests include Early American literature and drama; feminist, political and aesthetic theory; transatlantic print culture; Atlantic colonialism; and the early novel. In her first book, The Gender of Freedom: Fictions of Liberalism and the Literary Public Sphere (Stanford UP, 2004), Dillon argues that narratives of citizenship and subjectivity within liberalism include - and, indeed, rely upon - depictions of women that encourage affective identification as an unspoken political act and thereby complicate the distinction between private and public spheres. Currently, Dillon is working on her manuscript for New World Drama: Theatre of the Atlantic, 1660-1850, as well as co-editing a volume of essays on early American culture and the Haitian Revolution.

For Monday's meeting, we will be reading selections from Dillon's The Gender of Freedom, a recent essay entitled "John Marrant Blows the French Horn," as well as a forthcoming essay from Professor Dillon.  All readings are available here (log-in required).  There are also additional, optional readings available for this week's discussion.

Meeting: October 15, 2012

Our third Mellon meeting will be held Monday, October 15, 2012 at 12pm in Partridge Hall (Third World Center), Room 104.  Join us for lunch and conversation as we discuss John Dewey's The Public and Its Problems (1927) and Isaiah Berlin's "Two Concepts of Liberty" (1958).  Copies of the Dewey were distributed at our previous meeting--if you need a copy, please email Devon to arrange a pickup.  "Two Concepts of Liberty" is available on the accompanying documents site (available here, log in required).  You may also want to bring copies of Lippmann, as the Dewey piece responds directly to The Phantom Public.

Professor Philip Gould, the Nicholas Brown Professor of Oratory and Belles Lettres (Department of English), will be joining our discussion of Dewey and Berlin.  Professor Gould has recently taught a graduate seminar on American liberalism and is the faculty advisor for our Mellon workshop.

Our previous meeting, in which we discussed Rawls and Lippmann raised a number of stimulating questions about the potency of liberalism as a political philosophy, as well as its more aesthetic use of the imagination.