[csaa-forum] MSCP and MSL upcoming courses: Beat Poetry, Deleuze, Badiou, Power and Critique.

MSCP Convenor convenor at mscp.org.au
Tue Feb 27 07:26:24 ACST 2024


Dear CSAA forum subscribers,

Both the MSCP and MSL have upcoming courses starting in March.  Please
forward these details on to any interested students or colleagues.

*MSCP Evening School Sem 1 2024*

The Melbourne School of Continental Philosophy is proud to present the
Evening School Sem1 2024 curriculum. All courses are 24 hours in length. As
always significant discounts apply for those enrolling in multiple courses.
If you have any questions which aren't in our FAQs please email
admin at mscp.org.au.

When: 11 March - 6 June
Where: Nicholas Building, Level 9, 37 Swanston St, Melbourne and online via
Zoom.

Full course descriptions and enrolment at:
https://mscp.org.au/courses/evening-school-sem1-2024

Mon 6:30-8:30pm Starts 11 Mar
*Works of Gilles Deleuze (part 1)*
Lecturer: Jon Roffe

Wed 6:30-8:30pm Starts 13 Mar
*Alain Badiou: The Project*
Lecturer: A.J. Bartlett

Thu 6:30-8:30pm Starts 14 Mar
*The Freedom of the Devil: power, politics and critique from Hobbes to de
Sade*
Lecturer: Jon Rubin

==================

*MSL Evening School Sem 1 2024*

The Melbourne School of Literature is proud to present a 10-week workshop
on Beat poetics. All classes will be in person at the Kathleen Syme Centre
in Carlton. Distance enrolment will be audio access only.

When: 6-8pm Tuesday 5 March - 21 May
Where: Kathleen Syme Centre, 251 Faraday St, Carlton.

*“Mind is shapely, Art is shapely”: Practicing Beat Poetics*
Lecturer: George Mouratidis

Enrol here:
https://mscp.org.au/courses/msl-evening-school-sem1-2024

In the mid-20th century, beneath the state-sanctioned mythos of
American/Western exceptionalism, abundance and “freedom” were the horrors
of WWII and Jim Crow, the terrors of Cold War anxiety and paranoia, and the
occlusion of “outsiders” – along lines of race, gender, sexuality, and
class – from a gatekept public discourse, culture, and “art.” Sound
familiar? There was (as there continues to be) a deep split between private
knowledge/feeling and public avowal maintained by a military-industrial
complex, institutional demagoguery, and a conservatism and mass-conformity
borne of fear and wilful ignorance. This “Syndrome of Shut Down” as Allen
Ginsberg called it, was indeed embodied by the exclusive, stolid, and staid
academic literary culture dominant at that time. The New Critics and New
York intellect were the gatekeepers. There have since been others.


Warm Regards
MSCP Publicity Office.
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