2024 CONFERENCE PROGRAM – CANCELED
The last published version of the ACCUTE 2024 Conference Program is available here.
As of June 7, 2024, this program has been canceled. The keynote presentations will be streamed online.
ACCUTE KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Caroline Levine
“Studying Literature in the Climate Crisis, or a Tale of Three Pipelines.”
3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m, Thursday, June 13, 2024; Concordia University McConnell Building LB 125, 1400 de Maisonneuve W
Also available on the Congress Virtual Platform. If you do not have access to the Virtual Platform, please contact info.accute@gmail.com for the link.
Co-sponsored with RhetCanada, ESAC, and CAPS, and University of Toronto Press Journals.
Caroline Levine is the David and Kathleen Ryan Professor of Humanities in the Department of Literatures in English at Cornell University. She has spent her career asking how and why the humanities and the arts matter, especially in democratic societies. She argues for an understanding of forms and structures as essential both to understanding links between art and society and to the challenge of taking meaningful political action. She is the author of four books. The most recent, The Activist Humanist: Form and Method in the Climate Crisis (Princeton University Press 2023), grows out of the theoretical work of Forms: Whole, Rhythm, Hierarchy, Network (2015, winner of the James Russell Lowell Prize from the MLA, and named one of Flavorwire’s “10 Must-Read Academic Books of 2015”). Levine has also published The Serious Pleasures of Suspense: Victorian Realism and Narrative Doubt (2003) and Provoking Democracy: Why We Need the Arts (2007). She is currently the nineteenth-century editor for the Norton Anthology of World Literature and spends much of her free time engaged in climate activism, including the successful drive to divest the Cornell endowment.
ERÍN MOURE
“The Poem Is a Language-Place Where Thinking Trembles Vibrates” ***
co-sponsored with ACQL and CCLA, and University of Alberta Press.
***This keynote will be presented at Congress 2025 at George Brown College in Toronto, Ontario***
Erín Moure is a poet-translator who welcomes poetry called unconventional or difficult. She is a two-time winner of Canada’s Governor General’s Award (poetry and translation), winner of the Pat Lowther Memorial Award and the Nelson Ball Prize, co-recipient of a QWF Spoken Word Prize, three-time finalist for a Best Translated Book Award in poetry in the USA, twice winner of a QWF Poetry Prize, and three-time finalist for the Canadian version of the Griffin Poetry Prize. She has been international translator in residence at The Queen’s College, Oxford University and a creative fellow at the Woodberry Poetry Room, Harvard University. Moure holds two honorary doctorates for contributions to poetry and literary culture, from the Universidade de Vigo in Galician, Spain and Brandon University, Canada. She has published 18 books of poetry, a book of essays, articles on translation, two memoirs, and is translator or co-translator of 26 books from French, Galician, Portunhol, Portuguese, Spanish, and Ukrainian into English, and from Galician into French. Most recent translations: Chus Pato’s The Face of the Quartzes (Veliz Books, 2021) from Galician and Chantal Neveu’s you (Book*hug Press, 2024) from French. Theophylline: ana-poretic migration via the modernisms of Rukeyser, Bishop, Grimké (House of Anansi, 2023) is her latest book. She is based in Tiohtià:ke/Montreal. https://erinmoure.mystrikingly.com







