Tag: audio

  • TRB Podcast: Naveen Joshi on South Asian Canadians Finding Marriage Online

    TRB Podcast: Naveen Joshi on South Asian Canadians Finding Marriage Online

    On September 29, Humber College presented the 2012 Liberal Arts and Sciences Interdisciplinary Conference, at which Professor Naveen Joshi presented his paper “It’s About the Parents: Second-generation Indo-Canadians and an Online Matrimonial.” Professor Joshi’s talk draws on interviews with 30 second-generation Indo-Canadians in the Greater Toronto Area, examining why they use Shaadi.com, the world’s largest…

  • TRB Podcast: John Baird on Dickens and Great Expectations

    TRB Podcast: John Baird on Dickens and Great Expectations

    On September 20, lauded U of T professor John Baird visited the Deer Park Branch of the Toronto Public Library to give a reading and lead a discussion of Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations. As part of the TPL’s lecture series “Celebrate Dickens,” which commemorates the bicentennial of the author’s birth, Prof. Baird addressed the social mores…

  • TRB Podcast: Martin Manalansan on “Queer Dwellings: Migrancy, Precarity and Fabulosity”

    TRB Podcast: Martin Manalansan on “Queer Dwellings: Migrancy, Precarity and Fabulosity”

    On September 11, Professor Martin F. Manalansan was welcomed by a packed room at U of T’s Munk School of Global Affairs. In “Queer Dwellings: Migrancy, Precarity and Fabulosity,” Prof. Manalansan “builds” and reflects on the nuances of Martin Heidegger’s notion of dwelling in these precarious times. Although about the early 20th century, Heidegger’s understanding of dwelling…

  • TRB Podcast: Audrey Jaffe on the Production of Realist Space

    TRB Podcast: Audrey Jaffe on the Production of Realist Space

    On April 28, the Victorian Studies Association of Ontario invited Audrey Jaffe to present at their 45th annual Spring Conference at York University. The TRB is pleased to present the podcast of her talk, entitled “Walk this Way: Adam Bede and the Production of Realist Space.” Listen and enjoy! [audio:april-june/jaffe.mp3] Audrey Jaffe is a faculty…

  • TRB Podcast: Richard Firth Green’s “Elf Queens and Holy Friars”

    TRB Podcast: Richard Firth Green’s “Elf Queens and  Holy Friars”

    Reviewed by Kathryn Kuitenbrouwer: On April 26, 2012, The University of Toronto hosted Richard Firth Green as the keynote speaker of the 4th annual Canada Chaucer Seminar. Green gave a brilliant speech from a forthcoming book on the topic of “Elf Queens and Holy Friars,” arguing for a medieval belief in fairies across class boundaries.…

  • TRB Podcast: Richard Stursberg’s Tower of Babble

    TRB Podcast: Richard Stursberg’s Tower of Babble

    On April 24, Richard Stursberg joined Don Ferguson of the Royal Canadian Air Farce in conversation at the Toronto launch of Stursberg’s new book, presented by This Is Not a Reading Series, D&M Publishers, the Gladstone Hotel, and the Toronto Review of Books. In The Tower of Babble: Sins, Secrets and Successes Inside the CBC, Stursberg…

  • TRB Podcast: Bonnie Mak at the TRB’s e-Reading Symposium

    TRB Podcast: Bonnie Mak at the TRB’s e-Reading Symposium

    On March 31, Bonnie Mak delivered the keynote address at the TRB’s e-Reading Symposium, presented in collaboration with U of T’s Book History and Print Culture program and the Toronto Centre for the Book. Her lecture, entitled “Reading the ‘E’ in E-Reading,” examines the impact of new technologies on reader engagement and the future of the…

  • TRB Podcast: Deidre Lynch on the Culture of Scrap-books in the Georgian Period

    TRB Podcast: Deidre Lynch on the Culture of Scrap-books in the Georgian Period

    Listen here: [audio: May2012/lynch.mp3] On March 22, Professor Deidre Lynch delivered a lecture as part of the Book History and Print Culture Lecture Series at the University of Toronto. Following is an excerpt from the U of T press release on Dr. Lynch’s talk, titled “Recycled Paper: Readers’ Scrap-books in Late Georgian Literary Culture.” Enjoy!…

  • TRB Podcast: Matthew Kirschenbaum on the Literary History of Word Processing

    TRB Podcast: Matthew Kirschenbaum on the Literary History of Word Processing

    Listen here: [audio:May2012/kirschenbaum.mp3] On March 1, Dr. Matthew Kirschenbaum spoke at the University of Toronto’s iSchool Colloquium. Dr. Kirschenbaum’s lecture, titled “Track Changes: The Literary History of Word Processing” examines the past and continued influence that word processing technology has had on the craft of literary composition. Listen and enjoy! The U of T press…

  • TRB Podcast: Carolina Cambre on Che Guevara’s Image in East Timor

    TRB Podcast: Carolina Cambre on Che Guevara’s Image in East Timor

    Listen here: [audio:May2012/cambre.mp3] On February 25, Dr. Carolina Cambre was invited to speak at the Toronto Semiotic Circle as part of their monthly lecture series. Her lecture, titled “The Semiotics of Artifice in the Case of Che Guevara’s Face in East Timor,” explores the appropriation of the famous South American revolutionary for use in the…

  • TRB Podcast: Veronica Hollinger on “Technologies of Enchantment in Science Fiction”

    TRB Podcast: Veronica Hollinger on “Technologies of Enchantment in Science Fiction”

    Listen here:[audio:hollinger.mp3] On February 13, the Centre for Comparative Literature at the University of Toronto hosted a lecture by Dr. Veronica Hollinger (Cultural Studies, Trent University). The title of Dr. Hollinger’s lecture, “Technologies of Enchantment in Science Fiction,” refers not only to the role played by technology within literary science fiction, but also posits the…

  • TRB Podcast: Diana Taylor on “Taking to the Streets: Mass Mobilization Online and Off”

    TRB Podcast: Diana Taylor on “Taking to the Streets: Mass Mobilization Online and Off”

    On January 18th, the Distinguished Lecture Series, sponsored by the TransCanada Institute / School of English and Theatre Studies (University of Guelph), presented Dr. Diana Taylor’s lecture entitled “Taking to the Streets: Mass Mobilization Online and Off.” Listen here:[audio:taylor.mp3] As Taylor asks in the abstract for her talk, “What options for political and economic justice…