Emily Apter - Against World Literature: On the Politics of Untranslatability
Emily Apter, Professor of French and Comparative Literature at New York University, discusses her new book, Against World Literature: On the Politics of Untranslatability at Great New Books in the Humanities: New Directions in Comparative Literature. Held on September 11, 2013, this event was hosted by The Humanities Initiative at NYU and the NYU department of Comparative Literature.

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UC Berkeley Comparative Literature

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Translation in Theory and Imagination with Emily Apter and Katie Kitamura

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Martin Puchner 1: The Challenge of World Literature

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2016 IWL: David Damrosch, “What Isn’t World Literature? Problems of Language, Context, and Politics”

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1986: How to Spot the Upper Class | That's Life! | BBC Archive

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Clara Mattei: capitalism is not natural - it’s enforced

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Thomas Keenan - The Human Snapshot

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Why Aliens Would NEVER Invade Africa

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NYU Florence: Translating the Untranslatable

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For Whom Do We Read? — “Reading Fore” | Emily Apter

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Sarah Paine - Why Putin and Xi can't escape geography

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In-comparative Literature: On the Problem of Untranslatability in Literary Studies

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The French Do Not Care About Work

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Why English Departments Hate Literature

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Technology, Pluralism, and Cosmopolitanism amidst the Return of Tribalism

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The ACTUAL audition that changed cinema forever

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The Concept of Language (Noam Chomsky)

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Globalization and Literature -- A Panel Discussion (in English and French)

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Humanities+ | Collaborative Research

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