Events

Past Event

From Monomyth to Multimyth: BIPOC Children’s Fantasists Discuss

May 4, 2021
6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
America/New_York
Online Event

ICLS presents:

From Monomyth to Multimyth: BIPOC Children’s Fantasists Discuss Globalism, Possible Futures, and Writing in the Age of Pandemic

May 4, 6:00 PM EST

Registration is required. You may register here.

Authors Sayantani DasGupta (ICLS, Columbia University), Carlos Hernandez (English, CUNY), and David Bowles (Texas Institute of Letters Governing Council) with moderator Neni Panourgiá (Justice-in-Education, Columbia University).

Closing remarks from Arden Hegele and Rishi Goyal (Columbia University).

To mark the launch of the Medical Humanities major at the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society, we are proposing an inaugural virtual series, “Medical Humanities and Pandemic Urbanisms,” which will serve as an essential rallying point for Columbia faculty, current students, and alumni of the Medicine, Literature and Society track. While urban life has been overturned by the pandemic, this crisis invites us to think more broadly how the urban is an emergent form that can be redesigned to promote life and human flourishing. Featuring scholars, activists and artists from a range of fields—from epidemiology to science fiction to urban planning—the series will both illustrate the imaginative possibilities of the Medical Humanities, while also grounding its activities in the community-building work of students at Columbia University in the City of New York.

We will elaborate on the theme of utopian imagination with a final roundtable event featuring BIPOC fantasy writers in the academy.

This event celebrates the launch of our new Medical Humanities major. Learn more about the major here.

Medical Humanities and Pandemic Urbanisms is co sponsored by the Center for Science and Society, Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture, Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, Columbia Global Centers, Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities, Department of English and Comparative Literature, and the Department of Medical Humanities and Ethics.

Contact Information

ICLS