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(Comp Lit Luncheon) Tarek El-Ariss (Dartmouth College) presents “The Self in Theory”

(Comp Lit Luncheon) Tarek El-Ariss (Dartmouth College) presents “The Self in Theory”

Monday, September 23, 2024 12:15 pm
- 1:30 pm EDT
102 Kern

In this talk, Tarek El-Ariss discuss his newly published book, Water on Fire: A Memoir of War, in which he reconstructs a personal and historical narrative shaped by conflict, displacement, and literature while engaging with the following questions: How do we remember war? Is war experience constitutive of memory itself? What is the role of theory in the production of the subject as both character and survivor of catastrophic events? The talk expounds on the entanglement of the self in interpretive frameworks that are shaped by a comparative practice drawing on a wide range of literary influences and intellectual traditions.

 

Tarek El-Ariss is the James Wright Professor and Chair of Middle Eastern Studies at Dartmouth College. Born in Beirut during the Civil War (1975-1990) and trained in philosophy, literary theory, and visual and cultural studies, his work deals with questions of displacement, war, and desire. He has written about disoriented travelers, outcasts, queers, hackers, and characters with complicated relations to home. He is the author of Trials of Arab Modernity: Literary Affects and the New Political (Fordham, 2013) and Leaks, Hacks, and Scandals: Arab Culture in the Digital Age (Princeton, 2019), and editor of The Arab Renaissance: A Bilingual Anthology of the Nahda (MLA, 2018). In 2021, he received a Guggenheim Fellowship to complete his forthcoming book, Water on Fire: A Memoir of War.

Contact: Olivia Beveridge