“poetry after barbarism”, by jennifer scappettone: online talk, h. 00:00
Society of Fellows, American Academy in Rome, Tuesday talk from On Fascism series, in conversation with Franco Baldasso, h. 6 pm ET (online) = h. 00:00 Wed 3rd, Rome Time
Register at eventbrite.com/e/tuesday-talks…
Poetry After Barbarism. The Invention of Motherless Tongues and Resistance to Fascism
Columbia University Press, 2025
Jennifer Scappettone discusses her new book (begun at the AAR) with Franco Baldasso
Against a backdrop of xenophobic and ethnonationalist fantasies of linguistic purity, Poetry After Barbarism uncovers a stateless, polyglot poetry of resistance—the poetry of motherless tongues. Departing from the national and global paradigms that dominate literary history, Jennifer Scappettone traces the aesthetic and geopolitical resonance of “xenoglossic” poetics: poetry composed in the space of contestation between national languages, concretizing dreams of mending the ruptures traced to the story of Babel. Studying experiments between languages by immigrant, refugee, and otherwise stateless authors, this book explores how poetry can both represent and jumpstart metamorphosis of the shape and sound of citizenship, modeling paths toward alternative republics in which poetry might assume a central agency.
Jennifer Scappettone, 2011 Fellow, works in zones of confluence and cross-contamination of the literary, visual, and scholarly arts, on the page and off. She is Professor of literature, creative writing, gender studies, and the Committee on Environment, Geography, and Urbanization at the University of Chicago, where she founded and directs the Environmental Arts + Humanities Lab (The City and its Others). She is the author of Killing the Moonlight: Modernism in Venice (Columbia, 2014) and the cross-genre verse books From Dame Quickly and The Republic of Exit 43: Outtakes & Scores from an Archaeology of the Corporate Dump. She is also the editor and translator of Locomotrix: Selected Poetry and Prose of Amelia Rosselli, which won the biennial Raiziss/De Palchi prize in translation from the Academy of American Poets.
Franco Baldasso, 2019 Fellow, is Associate Professor of Italian Studies at Bard College, New York, and Fellow of the American Academy in Rome since 2019. He is also co-Director of the Graduate Summer School “The Cultural Heritage and Memory of Totalitarianism” at Sapienza University in Rome. Among his publications: Against Redemption: Democracy, Memory, and Literature in Post-Fascist Italy. (2022), which was awarded the 2023 Helen and Howard R. Marraro Prize in Italian History, and will be published in Italian in 2026.
cup.columbia.edu/book/poetry-a…
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Tuesday Talks: Poetry After Barbarism by Jennifer Scappettone
Poetry After Barbarism - Jennifer Scappettone discusses her new book,(begun at the AAR) with Franco BaldassoEventbrite
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