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April 2024
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Monday, April 22, 2024
- All dayPassover
- All dayPassover
- 9:00 AM8hOPEN
- 9:00 AM8hOPEN
- 2:00 PM1h 30mWedgwood, Erasmus Darwin, and the Replication of TasteThe Seminar and 18th-& 19th-century Studies, Department of English, invites you to a presentation by Stefan Uhlig, Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at UC Davis. Stefan provides this abstract:  Josiah Wedgwood has been rightly praised as a commercial genius. He reserved a large part of his business for the reinvention or—as an authority like Joshua Reynolds put it—copying of ancient vases dug up around Naples. One contention of this talk will be that Wedgwood mobilized a complex understanding of aesthetic value to help sell his luxury goods. In fact, I tend towards the claim that Wedgwood crafted and, less competently, sold his most expensive work in large part to explore and, as my title has it, replicate the exercise and the experience of taste for customers. The second aspect of my talk involves Erasmus Darwin’s textual extension of the Wedgwood project. Darwin taught his readers that reflective judgement could not only, pace Kant, involve commercial interests but could, equally, sustain the old ambition of a certain kind of verse to teach and educate its readers.  Stefan Uhlig received his PhD from the University of Cambridge. He is the co-editor of collections on Wordsworth’s poetic theory, the dialogue between aesthetics and the work of art, Goethe’s ideas about world literature and, with Yasmin Solomonescu, the persistence of persuasion past the formal teaching of the art of rhetoric. His Rhetoric, Poetics, and Literary Historiography: The Formation of a Discipline at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century was published by the University of Pennsylvania Press in 2024.
- 2:00 PM1h 30mWedgwood, Erasmus Darwin, and the Replication of TasteThe Seminar and 18th-& 19th-century Studies, Department of English, invites you to a presentation by Stefan Uhlig, Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at UC Davis. Stefan provides this abstract:  Josiah Wedgwood has been rightly praised as a commercial genius. He reserved a large part of his business for the reinvention or—as an authority like Joshua Reynolds put it—copying of ancient vases dug up around Naples. One contention of this talk will be that Wedgwood mobilized a complex understanding of aesthetic value to help sell his luxury goods. In fact, I tend towards the claim that Wedgwood crafted and, less competently, sold his most expensive work in large part to explore and, as my title has it, replicate the exercise and the experience of taste for customers. The second aspect of my talk involves Erasmus Darwin’s textual extension of the Wedgwood project. Darwin taught his readers that reflective judgement could not only, pace Kant, involve commercial interests but could, equally, sustain the old ambition of a certain kind of verse to teach and educate its readers.  Stefan Uhlig received his PhD from the University of Cambridge. He is the co-editor of collections on Wordsworth’s poetic theory, the dialogue between aesthetics and the work of art, Goethe’s ideas about world literature and, with Yasmin Solomonescu, the persistence of persuasion past the formal teaching of the art of rhetoric. His Rhetoric, Poetics, and Literary Historiography: The Formation of a Discipline at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century was published by the University of Pennsylvania Press in 2024.
- 4:00 PM1hMulti-Language Reading ClubJoin other language learners in our multi-language reading club! Spend an hour relaxing, reading for fun in the company of others. Bring a foreign language book, magazine, or newspaper or read one from the library collection.
- 4:00 PM1hMulti-Language Reading ClubJoin other language learners in our multi-language reading club! Spend an hour relaxing, reading for fun in the company of others. Bring a foreign language book, magazine, or newspaper or read one from the library collection.
- 5:00 PM2hNeed To Talk (offered by Campus Ministry)Are you looking for ways to grow in your spiritual life? Would you like to just talk about what's going on in your life or looking for guidance in navigating some of life's challenges? Whether you're dealing with friends, family, faith or other issues, we are here to listen and provide support. No appointment necessary! Just drop in! A Campus Minister is available EVERY MONDAY-THURSDAY FROM 5-7pm in 113 CoMo(across from the marble ball) to listen, offer guidance and share the wisdom and hope our faith provides. For more info, contact Mike Urbaniak (murbania@nd.edu). You may also set up a specific time to chat with a Campus Ministry by filling out this brief form: Need to Talk: Chat Request
- 5:00 PM2hNeed To Talk (offered by Campus Ministry)Are you looking for ways to grow in your spiritual life? Would you like to just talk about what's going on in your life or looking for guidance in navigating some of life's challenges? Whether you're dealing with friends, family, faith or other issues, we are here to listen and provide support. No appointment necessary! Just drop in! A Campus Minister is available EVERY MONDAY-THURSDAY FROM 5-7pm in 113 CoMo(across from the marble ball) to listen, offer guidance and share the wisdom and hope our faith provides. For more info, contact Mike Urbaniak (murbania@nd.edu). You may also set up a specific time to chat with a Campus Ministry by filling out this brief form: Need to Talk: Chat Request