Division of Languages and Literature News by Date
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July 2024
07-23-2024
Dinaw Mengestu, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Professor of the Humanities and director of the Written Arts Program at Bard College, was interviewed for the New York Times Book Review about his new novel, Someone Like Us. “Dinaw Mengestu thinks deeply about how stories are told, especially migrant tales,” writes Anderson Tepper. “With Someone Like Us, out this month from Knopf, Mengestu approaches this essential material from a variety of angles.” Mengestu spoke about the hidden lives of his characters, his goals when directing the writing program at Bard, and the ideas that inform the way he writes about immigrant experiences in his fiction.
Further coverage:
Someone Like Us is a fresh, idiosyncratic novel about immigrating to the US (NPR)
For Dinaw Mengestu, reading can be a return to his youth (Boston Globe)
A new novel from Dinaw Mengestu, our patron saint of longing (Washington Post)
Further coverage:
Someone Like Us is a fresh, idiosyncratic novel about immigrating to the US (NPR)
For Dinaw Mengestu, reading can be a return to his youth (Boston Globe)
A new novel from Dinaw Mengestu, our patron saint of longing (Washington Post)
07-23-2024
“This is the first time the complete text of The Book Against Death has appeared in English, compliments of a superlative translation by Peter Filkins,” writes Sam Sacks for the Wall Street Journal. The Book Against Death, translated by Visiting Professor of Literature Peter Filkins from German, is a collection of notes, fragments, and aphorisms that Elias Canetti wrote across half a century. It was the preparation for what Canetti called a “life work,” a book in which he would put “everything” and which he never finished—the manuscript accumulating his musings until his own death at age 89. A Jewish writer who cast himself as “Death’s Enemy,” Canetti lived through the Holocaust and wrote: “No other feeling approaches the intensity and unshakable nature of this one. I accept no death. Thus all who have died remain genuinely alive to me, not because they have claims upon me, not because I fear them, not because I feel that something of them is still alive, but rather because they never should have died. All of the deaths that have occurred thus far are a multi-thousand-pronged form of judicial murder that I cannot deem legal.” This is the philosophical position Canetti maintains throughout his text.
Further Reading:
“Elias Canetti’s war against death” in the New Statesman
Further Reading:
“Elias Canetti’s war against death” in the New Statesman
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