| Who | Reconnecting Visual and Verbal Thinking |
| When |
Friday, February 19, 2010
5:00pm
-
FREE
-
All ages
|
| Where |
varies (check website)
Philadelphia, PA, USA 19140 The Penn Humanities Forum was launched with a "Celebration of Philadelphia Writers," a spring weekend in 1999 in which sixty local novelists, poets, and scholars assembled in historic and cultural venues throughout the city. Over 2000 Philadelphians attended the readings, walking tours, performances, and lectures, and thousands across the country saw these re-broadcast on C-Span. The Celebration epitomizes the Forum's mission: to use humanistic knowledge and expertise to promote an ongoing cultural conversation involving the range of university disciplines and the general public. |
| Other Info | Laura Otis Professor of English, Emory University In the humanities, many scholars associate ideas with words, but as we hear from our students in composition classes, thoughts suffer in the process of their “translation” into language. English Professor Laura Otis reviews some of the latest findings in cognitive science, philosophy, and literary studies to explain what thought is and whether we can make meaningful connections between its visual and verbal forms. Laura Otis began her career as a scientist, earning her BS in Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry from Yale and MA in Neuroscience from the University of California at San Francisco. Before completing her PhD in Comparative Literature from Cornell University, she worked in labs for eight years. Since 1986, Otis has been studying and teaching about the ways that scientific and literary thinking coincide and foster each other’s growth. Otis works with English, Spanish, German, French, and North and South American literature, especially nineteenth-century novels. She is particularly interested in memory, identity formation, and communication technologies and has been a frequent guest scholar at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin. She is author of Müller's Lab (Oxford, 2007), Networking: Communicating with Bodies and Machines in the Nineteenth Century (Michigan, 2001), and translator of Santiago Ramon y Cajal, Vacation Stories: Five Science Fiction Tales (Illinois, 2001). In addition to her academic books, Otis has written four novels. In 2000, she was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship for creativity. |
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