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ACLA Undergraduate Seminar "Bad Readers"

Type: Virtual

Description

In view of the popularity of last year's topic, we reprise it this year and encourage all who applied last year but weren't admitted due to space constraints, to reapply.

From Heinrich von Kleist’s “The Earthquake in Chile” to Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary and Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment, literature teems with warnings about the perils of “bad reading”: when characters who over-identify with fantasies, archetypes, and plotlines face dire consequences. This seminar will offer an opportunity for comparing representations of “bad reading” along with the situations and repercussions they generate. What are the cultural, intersectional, geopolitical, and historical vectors of bad reading in and beyond imperial nations and their canons?

Schedule

Thursday, May 29, 2025
3:45 PM CDT - 5:30 PM CDT
Room: 2025 Annual Meeting > Conference Rooms

Papers

“That Day We Read No More”: Textual Mediation and the Border of Language in Inferno 5
Weike Li
Signing Off: Misreading Kafka’s Castle
Emily Trujillo
The Writing on the Wall: Virginia Woolf’s Cautious Imperative to Misread
John Sexton
Friday, May 30, 2025
2:30 PM CDT - 4:15 PM CDT
Room: 2025 Annual Meeting > Conference Rooms

Papers

Moorish Misreadings in Don Quixote
Maya Cheikh
Bad Reading and Literary Anxieties in Ottoman Tanzimat Literature: An Analysis of Hayal ve Hakikat
Zehra Yedidal
Emmas' Illusion: How "Bad Reading" Shapes Contemporary Chinese Literary Trends
Yushan Lei
Negotiating Diasporic Fantasy with Identity Construction - Bad Reading and its Over-correction in Chinese American Literature
Shuwen Qi
Saturday, May 31, 2025
2:30 PM CDT - 4:15 PM CDT
Room: 2025 Annual Meeting > Conference Rooms

Papers

See-through Beings in Gabriel García Márquez´ "Crónica de una muerte anunciada"
Sarah Sophie Schwarzhappel
The Archimboldians: Obsession and Misreading in Roberto Bolaño's 2666
Cannon Sharp