Skip to main content
Browse by:
GROUP

Keohane Distinguished Lecture: Memory, Representation, and the Power of Fiction

Brett Ashley Kaplan headshot; text: Keohane Distinguished Lecture: Memory, Representation and the Power of Fiction
Wednesday, November 08, 2023
5:30 pm - 7:00 pm
Brett Ashley Kaplan (Director of the Initiative in Holocaust, Genocide, and Memory Studies, University of Illinois)
Keohane Distinguished Lecture

Memory touches nearly every aspect of our lives and profoundly shapes culture. How we represent ourselves, both individually and collectively, draws on the stories we tell about our past, which depend in part on memory. This lecture will draw on Professor Kaplan's novel in progress, which imagines the recovery of Nazi-looted objects found in a Vietnamese refugee center in provincial England. Kaplan will explore how the field of critical memory studies can inform fiction, as well as the strengths and limitations of fiction in conveying multicultural borrowing and conflict.

EVENT DETAILS

Join Brett Ashley Kaplan, professor of comparative and world literature at the University of Illinois and the 2023-2024 Nannerl Keohane Distinguished Visiting Professor at UNC-Chapel Hill and Duke University, for the Keohane Distinguished Lecture at the Nasher Museum of Art (2001 Campus Drive, Durham) on November 8. A public reception will take place immediately after the lecture.

This event is free and open to the public. Free parking is available at the Nasher Museum of Art.

ABOUT BRETT ASHLEY KAPLAN

Brett Ashley Kaplan directs the Initiative in Holocaust, Genocide, and Memory Studies at the University of Illinois. She publishes in Haaretz, The Conversation, Salon.com, As It Ought to Be Magazine, AJS Perspectives, Contemporary Literature, Edge Effects and The Jewish Review of Books. She has been interviewed on NPR, the AJS Podcast and The 21st, and is the author of "Critical Memory Studies," "Unwanted Beauty," "Landscapes of Holocaust Postmemory," and "Jewish Anxiety and the Novels of Philip Roth," as well as a novel, "Rare Stuff."

For more information, visit: https://duke.is/8/sg6m