Lit Event

Benjamin Franklin and the Liberty to Communicate – 02/24/10 – Penn Humanities Forum

Who
Benjamin Franklin and the Liberty to Communicate
When
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
5:00pm - FREE - All ages Buy Tickets
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.

The Forum provokes its diverse participants to discover common ground through the selection of a yearly theme. Human Nature was the inaugural topic in 1999-2000, enlisting evolutionary biologists, medical ethicists, literary and music scholars, artists, gender theorists, and human rights experts. In this and subsequent themes we have considered how the humanities are linked with many areas of inquiry in medicine, law, business, and the social sciences.

Each topic is explored in a rich program of public lectures, performances, and exhibitions, as well as through faculty and student research. An eager participant in Philadelphia's civic life, we cosponsor and site programs in major cultural and historical venues in the city.

Other Info
Lewis Hyde
Richard L. Thomas Professor of Creative Writing, Kenyon College Fellow, Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Harvard

Viewed in the light of intellectual property law, Benjamin Franklin appears to be our nation’s Founding Pirate. In his scientific pursuits and his relationship to the international circulation of knowledge, Franklin believed above all in the“liberty to communicate.” Reviewing the experiences and principles that shaped that view, Lewis Hyde explores Franklin’s belief that lively creative communities emerge
when barriers to the exchange of ideas are low and connections, therefore, are easily forged.

Lewis Hyde is a poet, essayist, translator, and cultural critic with a particular interest in the public life of the imagination. His 1983 book, The Gift: Imagination and the Erotic Life of Property, illuminates and defends the non-commercial portion of artistic practice. Trickster Makes This World (1998) uses a group of ancient myths to argue for the kind of disruptive intelligence all cultures need if they are to remain lively, flexible, and open to change. Hyde is currently at work on a book about our “cultural commons,” that vast store of ideas, inventions, and works of art that we have inherited from the past and continue to produce.

Former director of undergraduate creative writing at Harvard University, Hyde teaches during the fall semesters at Kenyon College, where he is the Richard L. Thomas Professor of Creative Writing. During the rest of the year he lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he is a Fellow at Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society.

Hyde received a BA in sociology from the University of Minnesota and an MA in comparative literature from the University of Iowa. His many awards include a Guggenheim Fellowship, Lannan Literary Fellowship, MacArthur "Genius Award" Fellowship, American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship, three Pushcart Prizes for Best of the Small Presses, and three National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellowships for Nonfiction.

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