BEGIN:VCALENDAR X-WR-TIMEZONE:America/Chicago PRODID:-//University of Iowa//Events 1.0//EN VERSION:2.0 CALSCALE:GREGORIAN BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20240329T130827Z DTSTART:20190329T153000 DTEND:20190329T170000 SUMMARY:Daniel Balderston Lecture: "The Warring Brothers": Borges Reads Kafka and Flaubert DESCRIPTION:The Spanish & Portuguese Department\, the Latin American Studies Program\, International Programs\, and the Department of Art & Art History present a lecture by Daniel Balderston: “The Warring Brothers: Borges Reads Kafka and Flaubert\,” on Friday\, March 29 at 3:30 in 318 PH.\n\nDaniel Balderston joined the University of Pittsburgh in 2008 as Mellon Professor of Hispanic Languages and Literatures. He is director of the Borges Center\, and editor of Variaciones Borges. Before coming to Pitt\, he taught at Tulane and the University of Iowa. His research focuses on Borges and his contemporaries (Onetti\, Silvina Ocampo\, Roa Bastos) and writers whose work responds in different ways to Borges's work (Wilcock\, Piglia\, Saer). He also works on gender and sexuality studies and in literary translation (and in translation studies). His work ranges across Spanish America and Brazil\, with a particular emphasis on the River Plate area.\n\n\nhttps://events.uiowa.edu/26480 LOCATION:Phillips Hall\, 318\, 16 North Clinton Street\, Iowa City\, IA 52245 UID:edu.uiowa.events-prod-26480 X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
The Spanish &\; Portuguese Department\, the Latin American Studies Program\, International Programs\, and the Department of Art &\; Art History present a lecture by Daniel Balderston: “The Warring Brothers: Borges Reads Kafka and Flaubert\,” on Friday\, March 29 at 3:30 in 318 PH.
\n\nDaniel Balderston joined the University of Pittsburgh in 2008 as Mellon Professor of Hispanic Languages and Literatures. He is director of the Borges Center\, and editor of Variaciones Borges. Before coming to Pitt\, he taught at Tulane and the University of Iowa. His research focuses on Borges and his contemporaries (Onetti\, Silvina Ocampo\, Roa Bastos) and writers whose work responds in different ways to Borges's work (Wilcock\, Piglia\, Saer). He also works on gender and sexuality studies and in literary translation (and in translation studies). His work ranges across Spanish America and Brazil\, with a particular emphasis on the River Plate area.
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