Published: November 21, 2024; Aithor: Julia Sonrisa
Address: 3040 Broadway, New York, NY 10027 Cowin Auditorium (Horace Mann Hall 147) Teachers College, Columbia University New York, NY 10027 United States
1st Annual Edmund W. Gordon Lecturer
Dr. Hortense Spillers, Professor of English Emerita,
Gertrude Conaway Chair, Emerita at Vanderbilt University
Hortense J. Spillers is Professor of English Emerita, Gertrude Conaway Chair Distinguished Research Professor, at Vanderbilt University. Since receiving her Ph.D. from Brandeis, she has taught at Wellesley College, Haverford College, Emory, and Cornell Universities. She has also served as a guest professor in the Program in Literature at Duke University during the academic year 2002-03 and for two consecutive years during tri-semester terms at the John F. Kennedy Center for North American Studies at the Free University in Berlin, Germany, 2000 and 2001.
A recipient of numerous honors and awards, among them, grants from the Rockefeller Foundation and the Ford Foundation, she has been a fellow at both the National Humanities Center, Research Triangle, and the Center for the Study of the Behavioral Sciences, Palo Alto. While at Haverford, she was chair of the English Department for two years before moving to Cornell where she joined the Norton projects by serving as one of the period editors of the Norton Anthology of African-American Literature. At Vanderbilt, where she joined the English faculty there in the academic year 2006-07, she founded The A-Line Journal, an independent online magazine devoted to the examination of national and world events through a theoretical lens.
Her collection of scholarly essays, Black, White, and In Color: Essays on American Literature and Culture, was published by the University of Chicago Press in 2003. With Marjorie Pryse, she co-edited Conjuring: Black Women, Fiction, and Literary Tradition, published by Indiana University Press; Spillers also edited for the English Institute series a collection of essays entitled Comparative American Identities: Race, Sex, and Nationality in the Modern Text, published by Routledge. Spillers serves on several editorial boards, among them, the Editorial Collective of Boundary 2, and is a former member of the Executive Council of the Modern Language Association. Some of her more recent essays have appeared in The New Centennial Review, Das Argument, and Boundary 2. She co-founded with Tamura Lomax The Feminist Wire, an online magazine dedicated to feminist issues and critique. Currently, she is at work on two new projects, the idea of black culture and black women and early state formations.
Dr. Spillers has taught courses in American and African-American literature, Faulkner, and feminist theory. She travels extensively, and lectures widely both at home and abroad, delivering the 2010 Sidney Warhaft Distinguished Memorial lecture at the University of Manitoba and giving the DuBois Lecture at Harvard in the fall of 2014. She lives in Nashville.
The Gordon Lecture is one of three distinguished lectures sponsored by the Office of the Provost, and it is designed to bring together esteemed experts from the field of education and the humanities to share their scholarship and engage in meaningful discussions with the Teachers College community. Sponsored by the Edmund W. Gordon Institute for Advanced Study. A reception will follow the lecture. RSVP required.
Milbank Chapel, Teachers College, Columbia University, 525 West 120th Street, NYC
To request disability-related accommodations, contact OASID at oasid@tc.edu, or 212-678-3689, (646) 755-3144 video phone, as soon as possible.
Time: 5:00-7:00 pm EST
Free!
Detailed information and discussion of the event.