Attend IPRH’s Inside Scoop! “Literature and War,” a conversation with Jim Hicks, on Tuesday November 11, and receive CHP SAS Credit!
In partnership with the IPRH, CHP announces that attendance at the *entire program* of “Inside Scoop” from 5:00 to 6:30-6:45 will give credit for an SAS to Chancellor’s Scholars (pizza and ice cream included!); no need to rsvp, just sign in!
IPRH-hosted program at Honors House! Inside Scoop: “Literature and War,” a conversation with Jim Hicks on 11/11/14
Don’t miss IPRH’s Inside Scoop! “Literature and War,” a conversation with Jim Hicks, is scheduled for November 11, 2014 at 5:00 p.m. in Room 212, Campus Honors Program at the Honors House (1205 W. Oregon Street, Urbana).
The IPRH and the Campus Honors Program, in collaboration with the Great War Initiative, present an undergraduate “Inside Scoop” Series event on “Literature and War,” with Jim Hicks, author of Lessons from Sarajevo and editor of the “Massachusetts Review.” Join us for an informal conversation with Professor Hicks, exploring how he was drawn to his subject of “war stories,” and how literature can illuminate our understanding of war.
This session offers an opportunity for all interested undergraduates, no matter their majors, to share in the excitement of the great breadth of work done by humanities professors near you. Pizza and, of course, ice cream (scoops!) will be served.
This free event is open to all undergraduate students.
About the speaker:
Jim Hicks is executive editor of the “Massachusetts Review” and director of the Graduate Program in Comparative Literature at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He has studied in France, lectured in Italy, and taught in Bosnia-Herzegovina as a Fulbright Professor of English. He also directed an Educational Partnership Program with the University of Sarajevo as well as the American Studies Diploma Program – a small, one-year graduate program for international students – at Smith College. His book “Lessons from Sarajevo: A War Stories Primer” was published by the University of Massachusetts Press in 2013.
Thanks to the Illinois Program for Research in the Humanities for this information item.
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