This month’s London Beckett Seminar at the CCL

Join us for this month’s London Beckett Seminar, on Friday 21 February at 6pm UTC (UK time), online:

Corinna Salvadori Lonergan, “Dante on Beckett’s Stage”

For more information and to register, please go to: https://sites.gold.ac.uk/comparative-literature/london-beckett-seminar/.

Best wishes from the Centre for Comparative Literature

Today at the CCL: Olympoetics: Bodies, Minds, Athletics and Aesthetics

Join us today at 5pm GMT at Goldsmiths College, RHB 137, for a creative & critical soirée, jointly organised by the Centre for Comparative Literature and the Goldsmiths Writers’ Centre.

The evening will start with a talk on ‘Olympoesis: Revisiting Public Poetry at the 2012 London Games’ by Dr Michael Simpson, Distinguished Visiting Research Fellow at the CCL, and will be followed by readings and/or performances of creative writing, in poetry or prose.

See the full Programme and speaker information at: https://sites.gold.ac.uk/comparative-literature/olympoetics-bodies-minds-athletics-and-aesthetics-programme/

Book a ticket (Goldsmiths staff and students do not need to book)

The Olympic and Paralympic Games may have a claim to be the greatest show on earth.  Geographically global and historically ancient and modern, they move from city to city and divide time into determinate intervals.  As theatre, they are amphitheatrical, encompassing track and field, gymnastics and team sports, and much more; and they figure powerfully in international and national media.  The plots are compelling and instantly scrutable: phenomenal performance and intense competition issue into sweet victories and gnawing defeats, often in photo-finishes.  But there is also an imposing cultural dimension, beyond the sports and excitable commentary on them: the ancient Olympics included orations and readings, while the modern Games involve a Cultural Olympiad, or festival, which the host nation of the next summer Games initiates and promotes for four years before those Games themselves.  Each Cultural Olympiad duly takes some of its characteristic tone and theme from the cultural life of the host nation.

As Paris now equals London in having become the only other city to have hosted the modern Games three times, and as images from this most recent Olympic gathering are fresh in our minds, collective memories of the 2012 Games in London may be recalled, and clarified.  That Olympiad, and the Games concluding it in 2012, was characterised, perhaps above all, by poetry: Simon Armitage organised an international ‘Poetry Parnassus’, which was launched with a ‘poetry bombing’, by helicopter, of the South Bank; Danny Boyle’s opening ceremony for the Games featured Kenneth Branagh reciting Shakespeare; and numerous poems by eminent poets past and present, such as Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Carol Ann Duffy, and Lemn Sissay, were installed in the Olympic Park at Stratford, where they still stand.

In a sense, this Cultural Olympiad was picking up a poetic tradition associated with the Olympics ancient and modern, ranging from Pindar’s odes to the literary competitions of the modern Games in the early twentieth century. Diverse and highly intermittent as this ‘tradition’ may be, it is a significant part of the cultural dimension of the Games.  Yet such proximity does not mean that this poetry only idealises the Games and related official values, such as peace through sport; rather, this poetry can also articulate economic and political realities underlying ideals like competition and level playing fields.  So, where will the next poetic, creative instalments originate?

Olympoetics is in person, and takes place in collaboration with the Writers’ Centre events.

This week at the CCL: The Auto / Bio / Fiction seminar, with Lellida Marinelli and Elisa Russian

Join us on Thursday 6 February 2025 at 5.30pm UTC (London time) for the Auto / Bio / Fiction series, when our focus will be on the essay as dialogical mode of reading and thinking and on the relationship between lived experience, storytelling, and critical theory in British cultural studies. 

Lellida Marinelli, “Reading, writing, being writerly selves through essayistic practice. Deborah Levy’s trilogy on writing and Jeanette Winterson’s Art Objects

and

Elisa Russian, “Landscapes with Social Figures: On the Autobiographical Mode of British Cultural Studies“

For more information and to register: https://sites.gold.ac.uk/comparative-literature/the-auto-bio-fiction-series-lellida-marinelli-and-elisa-russian/

We hope to see many of you there,

With best wishes from the Centre for Comparative Literature