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News from the Division of Languages and Literature

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Student sitting outdoors looking upward into the distance.

Bard College Student Samantha Barrett ’26 Wins 2025 PEN/Robert J Dau Short Story Prize

This award recognizes 12 emerging writers each year for their debut short story published in a literary magazine, journal, or cultural website, and aims to support the launch of their careers as fiction writers.
Student smiling and holding up an award certificate.

Bard College Celebrates Student Achievements at Undergraduate Awards Ceremony

The annual ceremony is a celebration of the incredible talent and dedication showcased by Bard students, as well as the unwavering support and guidance from esteemed faculty and staff at the College.
A person with blond hair and a blue blazer sits with a video game controller in hand

“Rebuilding the World Through Queer Video Games:” Bo Ruberg ’07 for YES Magazine

For Ruberg, the relationship between the physical world and the virtual space accessed within video games is complex, and the latter is no less real for being speculative, given that it offers players a chance to inhabit and interact with realities that a

Division of Languages and Literature News by Date

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April 2023

04-25-2023
Opinion: Francine Prose Asks “Why Are Americans Being Shot for Knocking on the Wrong Door?”
For the Guardian, Francine Prose, distinguished writer in residence at Bard, writes about the recent shooting incidents in Missouri and upstate New York, where innocent young people were shot by homeowners for the simple mistake of knocking on the wrong door or pulling into the wrong driveway. Prose acknowledges that as Americans, compared to just a decade and a half ago, an “uptick in impulsive, explosive, trigger-happy rage ramps up the fear and paranoia that has us warily eyeing our fellow passengers and shoppers”—and asks, “So how do we change the belief that it’s a good idea to shoot first and ask questions later? How do we repair this broken chromosome in our nation’s cowboy DNA?”
Read more in the Guardian
Photo: Distinguished Writer in Residence Francine Prose.
Meta: Type(s): Article,Faculty | Subject(s): Division of Languages and Literature,Literature Program,Written Arts Program |
04-25-2023
“A Reasonable Supreme Court? Hardly. Don’t Be Fooled by this Extremist Establishment:” Moira Donegan ’12 on the Court’s Recent Abortion Pill Ruling for the<em> Guardian</em>
In an opinion piece for the Guardian, Bard Written Arts alumna and journalist Moira Donegan ’12 cautions that we should not be fooled by the highest court’s decision to allow the abortion drug mifepristone to remain available—temporarily staying a Texas federal judge’s ruling to reverse the drug’s FDA approval and pull it from US markets—while the case goes through an appeals process. Donegan deduces “sharp intra-Republican disagreement over how to handle the unexpectedly virulent political fallout from the Dobbs decision” among the right-wing Supreme Court justices who jointly ruled to overturn abortion access as a federal right. She asserts the ideologues want to “hit the gas” while the institutionalists want to “pump the brakes,” but that doesn’t change where they are all headed. “Do not let the mifepristone ruling fool you about where this extremist court is going,” she writes. 

While the nation waited for the Supreme Court to issue its order on mifepristone, the past week served as a stark realization of “just how far the Overton window has shifted, and just how low the standards for women’s health and freedom have sunk, in the months since Dobbs.” She notes that “developments that could only have been fairly understood as grave insults to women’s dignity were instead pitched as mercies or signs of moderation.”
Read more in the Guardian
Photo: Photo by Jordan Uhl / CC-by-2.0
Meta: Type(s): Alumni | Subject(s): Alumni/ae,Division of Languages and Literature,Written Arts Program |
04-04-2023
Hua Hsu’s <em>Stay True: A Memoir</em> Wins 2022 National Book Critics Circle Award for Autobiography
The National Book Critics Circle (NBCC) has announced the recipients of its book awards for 2022. Bard Professor of Literature Hua Hsu’s Stay True: A Memoir won the award for autobiography. NBCC Committee Chair Heather Scott Partington called Hsu’s account of a college-age friendship a “clear-eyed and vulnerable exploration of platonic friendship and lifelong loss” that “demonstrates how earnest teens seek to define themselves in dichotomies, and how it’s our routines that create our identities.” One of the most prestigious of literary honors in the United States, the NBCC awards are selected annually by a committee of book critics and review editors. The awards recognize works published the prior year and are open to books published in English in the United States.
Read the NBCC announcement
Read more in the New York Times
Photo: Hua Hsu and his memoir, Stay True.
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Awards,Division of Languages and Literature,Literature Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
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