GRAND NARRATIVES/MODEST PROPOSALS

In 1979 Jean-Francois Lyotard famously announced the end of the Grand Narrative ushering in a new epistemological frame based on fragmentation and difference.  The initial impetus of this movement was characterized by a turn to high theory but this eventually shifted toward an interest in returning to the "real", to the evidentiary, and to matters of fact.  More recently, and despite pretensions to divine a more immediate access to the subjects under investigation, this impulse has been characterized in the human sciences by a rhetoric of modesty quite removed from either the grand narratives or high theory of the prior movements.  And yet such modest proposals are now igniting a return to grand narrative be it in evolutionary theory, Big or Deep History, or the vast expanse of the digital humanities.  The counter or companion to this unlikely twinning is a resurgence of apologetic or unapologetic rhetorics of big theory or narrative/interpretation as either counterpoint or support.  In this semester, we will explore the relation of grand narratives, modest proposals, and meta-narratives over diverse periods and places bringing these to bear on our current moment.  

 

Lectures

All lectures begin at 6 p.m. unless otherwise noted, and are held in the Daniel Family Commons, which is located in the Usdan University Center.

Neither Grand nor Modest: Critique as a form of historical analysis

02/05/2018

JOAN W. SCOTT • Institute for Advanced Studies

 

On Capitalization 

02/12/2018

TIMOTHY MITCHELL • Columbia University

 

Chariotless: The Poet in the Anthropocene

02/19/2018

GABRIELLE PONCE-HEGENAUER • Wesleyan

 

The Historian's Task in the Anthropocene: Theory and Practice

02/26/2018

JULIA ADENEY THOMAS • University of Notre Dame

 

Robert Hooke's Prosthetic Gods GO

03/05/2018

LYNN FESTA • Rutgers University 

 

"Blown from Cannon": A History of Violence, 1857 - 1764  GO    

04/02/2018

WILLIAM PINCH • Wesleyan 

 

Catastrophes and the Centralization of Urban Planning in Modern China

04/09/2018

YING JIA TAN• Wesleyan

 

“Diderot’s Hairshirt: The Story of the Great Encyclopédie” 

04/16/2018

ANDREW CURRAN • Wesleyan 

 

Twitter Stevens, Tumblr Stevens 

04/23/2018

STEPHANIE BURT • Harvard University

 

Haunting History: Grand Digital Schemes in a Modest Analog Box GO

04/30/2018

ETHAN KLEINBERG • Wesleyan