Source:
Philip Nel, 785-532-2165, email philnel@k-state.edu
http://www.ksu.edu/english/symposium
Monday,
February 9, 2004
SEX
IS THE TOPIC FOR K-STATE'S 13TH ANNUAL CULTURAL STUDIES SYMPOSIUM, MARCH
4-6
MANHATTAN
-- Let's talk about sex. "Sex and the Body Politic" is the
topic for Kansas State University's 13th Annual Cultural Studies Symposium,
March 4-6.
Guest
speakers, whose talks are free and open to the public, are Carl Phillips,
who will read from his poetry, Thursday, March 4, at 8 p.m. in the K-State
Student Union Room 212; Elizabeth Grosz, who will speak on "The
Future of Female Sexuality" on Friday, March 5, at 8 p.m. in the
K-State Student Union Little Theatre; and Donald Hall, who will speak
on "Queer Bodies: Failures of Instrumentality" on Saturday,
March 6, at 1 p.m. in Union 212. Attending other sessions requires a
registration fee, but K-State undergraduates can attend any session
for free.
"Sex
is everywhere in our culture but very rarely do we talk about it with
any intellectual depth," said Michele Janette, K-State English
professor.
"There's
a great intellectual tradition about sex that goes back to the ancients,"
said Greg Eiselein, also a K-State English professor. Sex has been a
big topic for thinkers for a long, long time."
This
conference, Eiselein said, will provide new and exciting approaches
to an important if familiar topic. To address these issues, conference
participants will investigate connections between sex and topics like
identity, ethics, religion, nationalism, and rebellion. Panelists will
present papers on topics ranging from "Gendering Empire in the
James Bond Series" to "Chile, Sex, and Texas Nationalism,"
from "Feminine Eros in Classical and Late Antiquity" to "Fat
Pornography: A Legitimizing Force?"
Elizabeth
Grosz, who Eiselein describes as "one of the foremost philosophers
in the world," is professor of women's and gender studies at Rutgers,
and the author of many books, including "Volatile Bodies: Toward
a Corporeal Feminism" and the recent "Architecture from the
Outside: Essays on Virtual and Real Space." Carl Phillips' most
recent book is "Rock Harbor." Phillips is professor of English
and of African and Afro-American Studies at Washington University in
St. Louis. Donald E. Hall, chair of the department of English at California
State University at Northridge, is the author, most recently, of "Queer
Theories" and "Academic Self: An Owner's Manual."
K-State
has sponsored the Cultural Studies Symposium since 1991, making it the
longest running annual symposium in its field. This year's conference
is organized by two English professors: Michele Janette and Donna Potts.
"From
clerical sexual abuse in the Catholic church, to repressive Taliban
policies toward women in Afghanistan, to same sex marriage, to debates
about how gender should be determined, sex is a topic that gathers lavish
popular and critical attention," Potts said. "'Sex and the
Body Politic' considers the construction of sexual identity as a function
of political, social, and economic forces."
Kansas State University
is a comprehensive, research, land-grant institution first serving students
and the people of Kansas, and also the nation and the world.