Convegno internazionale Multicultural Migrant Fictions
Il CISIA ha partecipato all’organizzazione del convegno internazionale Multicultural Migrant Fictions: Italian-American, Jewish-American and Indian-American Literary Representations, che si è svolto il 10 e l’11 aprile 2017 presso la University of Georgia (Athens, USA).
Il programma è il seguente:
April 10
9:00-9:15 Opening remarks
Dorothy Figueira (UGA): “The Politics of Representation in Italian-American, Jewish-American, and Indian-American Fiction”
9:15-11:00 Contours of Immigrant Fictions: The Image of the Italian American – Part 1
Marina Camboni (Honorary President of the Center for Italian American Studies – University of Macerata, Italy): “Going Native: Identity and Identification in Robert Viscusi’s Ellis Island and Carole Maso’s Ghost Dance”
Valerio Massimo De Angelis (Coordinator of the Center for Italian American Studies – University of Macerata, Italy): “The Unfortunate Pilgrim: Marion Puzo’s Deconstruction of the American Myths of Migration”
Discussant: Thomas Peterson (UGA)
11:00-11:15 Coffee Break
11:15-1:15 The Image of the Italian in Italian-American Literature – Part 2
John Lowe (UGA): “Humor as Counterpoint and Engine in Di Donato and Binelli”
May Jo Bona (SUNY at Stony Brook): “Second-wave Daughters and their Italian (American) Mothers: Narratives in the Context of Mother-Daughter Studies”
Tatiana Petrovich-Njegosh (Center for Italian American Studies – Univerity of Macerata, Italy): Italy and Italian American Literature: Salvatore Scibona’s The End”
Discussant: Anne Williams (UGA)
1:30-2:45 Luncheon
3:00-4:30 The Representation of the Jew in Jewish-American Fiction – Part 1
Marta Skwara (University of Szczecin, Poland): “The Polish Factor in Jewish-American Writing. Three Cases: Sholem Asch, Isaack Bashevis Singer, Jerzy Kosinski”
David Schiller (UGA, emeritus): “Let’s All Be Americans Now: Ethnic Stereotyping and Nationalism in the Ragtime and WWI Era Songs of Irving Berlin and Al Plantadosi”
4:30-4:45 Coffee Break
4:45-6:00 The Instituting of Multiculturalism as a Key Component of a “Liberal Arts” Education – Part I
Fred Gardaphe (Queen’s College, New York): “Art of the State: The Politics of Multiculturalism in American Literary Studies; or, Who Hung the Rembrandt on the Multicultural Mural”
Interactive Roundtable Discussion: Dialogue between by Speakers/UGA Faculty/TA’s and UGA undergraduate students
Chair: Jenny Webb, Managing Editor, Recherche littéraire/Literary Research
7:30-10 Opening Reception
April 11
9:00-11:00 The Representation of the Jew in Jewish-American Fiction – Part 2
Doris Kadish (UGA, emerita): “Jewish Immigrants of the 1930s: Literature, Politics, and Religion”
Paolo Simonetti (Sapienza University, Rome): “‘Sounds like Jew Talk to Me’: Assimilaton and Alienation in Bernard Malamud’s The People”
Marjanne Gooze (UGA): “The Holocaust Memoir as American Tale: Ruth Klueger’s Still Alive”
Chair: Charles Byrd
11:00-11:15 Coffee Break
11:15-1:15 Indian-Americans as Model Minorities in Indian-American Fiction
Deepika Bahri (Emory): “Jhumpa Lahiri, the Bengali Indian American Writer”
Dorothy Figueira (UGA): “The Indian-American Male Writer: Curing Aids and Getting a Pulitzer. The Indian-American Female Writer: Quirky, Photogenic, and Brilliant”
Harish Trivedi (Delhi University, India): “Migration, Translation and Languages: India and the US, English and Hindi”
Discussant: Satish Kumar (UGA)
1:30-2:45 Luncheon
3:00-5:00 The Instituting of Multiculturalism as a Key Component of a “Liberal Arts” Education – Part 2
Ipshita Chanda (Jadavpur University, India): “Teaching Alterity”
nteractive Roundtable Discussion: Dialogue between by Speakers/UGA Faculty/TA’s teaching Asian-American Multicultural Classes and UGA undergraduate students
Chair: Jenny Webb (Recherche littéraire/Literary Research)
7:00-10:00 Closing Reception