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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Graduate-Student Papers in Cultural Politics
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SUMMARY:Graduate-Student Papers in Cultural Politics
DESCRIPTION:<h2>"Romantic Hellenism and Violence: The Case of P. B. Shelley"</h2><h3>Speaker:</h3><p><strong>Simos Zeniou</strong>, <em>PhD Candidate, Department of Comparative Literature, Harvard University</em>.</p><h3>Contact:</h3><p><strong>Heather Conrad</strong><br>hconrad@wcfia.harvard.edu<!--break--></p><h3>Chair:</h3><p><strong>Panagiotis Roilos</strong>, <em>Faculty Associate</em>. George Seferis Professor of Modern Greek Studies and Professor of Comparative Literature, Harvard University.</p><h3>Abstract:</h3><p>This talk proposes a reading of P. B. Shelley’s lyrical drama Hellas as a critical encounter with early nineteenth-century philhellenic discourse. This reading challenges, therefore, the still prevalent understanding of Shelley as an archetypal idealizing Philhellenist. By reading <em>Hellas</em> in the context of Shelley’s manifold engagements with classical and modern Greece and by examining the subversive deployment of the “westering” theme in the lyrical parts of the work, I argue that: 1) Shelley draws attention to the appropriation of Hellenism by hegemonic political and cultural discourses of the period and to its entanglement with imperial politics; 2) the chorus’s gradual recognition of the historical situatedness of its discourse simultaneously resists its wholesale subsumption under Eurocentric universalism and retains a utopian, future-oriented Hellenism as a guide for radical politics.</p>
LOCATION:CGIS South Building, 1730 Cambridge Street, Doris and Ted Lee Gathering Room (S030)
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20161115T210000Z
DTEND:20161115T230000Z
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