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The
Center for the Humanities at Grinnell College is pleased to
announce the second annual Humanities Symposium April 16-18,
2003. The symposium will focus on “Montage and Modern Art,”
a theme related to the faculty seminar presented in Fall 2002
by Distinguished Visiting Professor in the Humanities Vyacheslav
Ivanov.
The
speakers for the symposium are:
Wednesday,
April 16
4:15
p.m., Forum South Lounge, “Montage as Dominant Device of the
Art in the 20th Century” by Vyacheslav Ivanov,
Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures, University
of California, Los Angeles. Professor Ivanov’s long and distinguished
teaching career began in 1955 at the University of Moscow,
where he taught comparative and general linguistics until
he was dismissed in 1958 because of his friendship with Boris
Pasternak. For the next thirty years he was unable to travel
abroad as the Soviet government denied him an official travel
visa. Fortunately, he was still able to continue his research
work at various Institutes of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
In 1988 he was invited to return to Moscow University to become
Chair of the new Department of the Theory and History of World
Culture and Director of its affiliated Research Institute.
In 1988, Professor Ivanov also began teaching regularly in
American universities — first at Yale University, then at
Stanford University, and finally at the University of California,
Los Angeles, where he has been teaching since 1991. In addition
to his undergraduate and graduate courses in Linguistics and
Russian Literature, Film, and Civilization, Professor Ivanov
is involved in a current research project, “The Languages
of Los Angeles Project ,” which seeks to be the first comprehensive
linguistic investigation of a multilingual and multicultural
metropolis. He is the author of more than fifteen books and
over fourteen hundred journal articles on a range of topics
including General, diachronic and comparative linguistics;
Folklore and mythology; Literature and poetics; Cultural anthropology;
Native languages of America; Neuro‑linguistics; art
history and theory, film studies, opera, Semiotics; and Urban
Studies. He has served as a Foreign Fellow of the British
Academy since 1977, as a member in the Council of Scholars
of the Library of Congress since 1990, and is a member of
the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences, the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences, the Latvian Academy of Arts and Sciences,
and the American Philosophical Society.
5:30
Forum South Lounge, Opening Reception, all welcome.
8:00
p.m. Forum South Lounge, “Blowup” by Maya Turovskaya,
Senior Research Fellow at the Research Film Institute, Moscow,
Russia. Ms. Turovskaya is a film theorist and historian as
well as a scriptwriter. She has been a leading observer and
practitioner in Soviet and Russian filmmaking for much of
its history. Ms. Turovskaya co‑authored the screeplay
for Mikhail Romm’s famous documentary Ordinary Fascism
in 1966. Her publications include M.M. Straukh (1952),
Yes and No: On Film and Theory in the Last Decade (1966),
Heroes of an Unheroic Time (1971), On the Borders
of Art: Brecht and Film (1985), Tarkovsky: Cinema as
Poetry (1990), and 7 1/2 or the Films of Andrei Tarkovskii
(1991). She is a major international figure in the study
of Russian cinema and has lectured at many universities in
the United States and Europe. A member of the Union of Writers,
the Union of Cinematographers, and the Critics Guild, her
major research interest today continues to focus on mass culture
with an emphasis on film and theater.
Thursday,
April 17
11:00
a.m., Herrick Chapel, Scholars’ Convocation – “Is there a
Modernist Literary Montage?” by Robert Scholes, Andrew
W. Mellon Professor of Humanities Emeritus, Professor Emeritus
of English, Comparative Literature, and Modern Culture and
Media, Brown University. Professor Scholes is the author,
co-author or editor of over thirty books, including Structuralism
in Literature; Semiotics and Interpretation; Textual
Power; The Rise and Fall of English; The Crafty
Reader; and co-author with Eric S. Rabkin of Science
Fiction: History, Science, Vision and Hemingway's Genders,
with Nancy R. Comley. He has published articles in dozens
of scholarly journals including Yale Review, Georgia Review,
Philological Quarterly, Quarterly Review of Film, diacritics,
Critical Inquiry, Iowa Review, Semiotica, and American
Journal of Semiotics. Professor Scholes is director of
the Modernist Journals Project and he was recently elected
President of the Modern Language Association for year 2004.
He is currently at work on two book projects: one is a study
of the history of English teaching in particular and the liberal
arts in general in America; the other, which continues aspects
of The Crafty Reader, is a study of light modernism,
or what he calls “iridescent mediocrity.”
4:15
p.m., Forum South Lounge, “Cinematic Thresholds or the Frame-mobile”
by Dudley Andrew, Professor of Comparative Literature
and Co-Chair of the Film Studies Program, Yale University.
Professor Andrew’s areas of research include World Cinema
(special attention to West Africa, Ireland, France, Japan),
Aesthetics (theories of the image, Film among the arts) and
French cinema and culture from the 1930s to today. He has
published The Major Film Theories; Concepts of Film
Theory; Andre Bazin, co-written with Francois Truffaut;
Film in the Aura of Art, a source book on Mizoguchi,
a presentation of Breathless, and a “BFI classic” on
Mizoguchi’s Sansho Dayu. His most ambitious work, Mists
of Regret: Culture and Sensibility in Classic French Film
came out in 1995, followed by an edited collection, The
Image in Dispute: Art and Cinema in the Age of Photography.
He has programmed films for The Guggenheim Museum and served
as a film festival judge. He is the recipient of the Guggenheim
and several NEH fellowships and was named Chevalier dans
l’ordre des arts et des lettres by the French Cultural
Ministry.
Friday,
April 19
4:15
p.m., Forum South Lounge, Round Table: “Montage and Modern
Art” Galina Aksenova, Dudley Andrew, Jenny Anger,
Vyacheslav Ivanov, Daniel Reynolds, Robert Scholes, Alan Schrift,
Maya Turovskaya
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