Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
@shahirahathout.bsky.social
1.2K followers 920 following 14 posts
Interdisciplinary Research: Posthumanism / New Materialism / Cultural Studies / Aesthetics / 18th & 19th C. (World) Literature/ Anthropocene discourses. Visiting Scholar @ Centre for Feminist Research @York University, Toronto, Canada.
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shahirahathout.bsky.social
Really glad and grateful to have my piece, "Toward a Posthumanist Sublime in Jane Austen's Persuasion: Lyme Regis in the Anthropocene," now published in Interconnections: Journal of Posthumanism and can be accessed here:

journals.library.brocku.ca/index.php/po...
Reposted by Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
brettrushforth.bsky.social
"A major shift in how we understand colonial growth in the early Caribbean, colonial-Indigenous relations, the origins of slavery in the Caribbean and North America, and the connections between piracy, privateering, and colonization." Greg O'Malley nails it. Congrats @csschmitt.bsky.social!
Reposted by Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
byleaveswelive.bsky.social
🇯🇲 FROM THE CARIBBEAN TO CALEDONIA 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

On a sun-kissed Autumn’s afternoon on the banks of the River Nith two National Poets sat down to chat about Rabbie Burns, Bob Marley, Dante’s Inferno, the Gaelic and Jamaican tongues, and much more. #poetrypodcast

www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk/podcast/from...
From the Caribbean to Caledonia: Two National Bards in Conversation
Scotland's current Makar, Peter Mackay, and the former Poet Laureate of Jamaica, Lorna Goodison, exchanged poems, stories, thoughts and much laughter at Ellisland Farm, once home to Robert Burns and h...
www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk
Reposted by Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
environmentalpol.bsky.social
New book review by Sarah D. Wald.

In Decolonial Environmentalisms: Climate justice and speculative futures in latinx cultural production, David J. Vázquez discusses anti-racist and decolonial environmental politics across contemporary Latinx art, literature, and film.

doi.org/10.1080/0964...
book cover, hills and palm trees are pictured, they are in flames
Reposted by Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
lareviewofbooks.bsky.social
"In the earliest fragments Benjamin sought to salvage a pure and radical concept of criticism that would not dissolve into the universal truth of philosophy." Anthony Curtis Adler reviews Walter Benjamin's "On Goethe." https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/the-useless-prophet/
Reposted by Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
Reposted by Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
saranahmed.bsky.social
It’s launch day for No Is Not A Lonely Utterance! So I shared some of my reasons for writing the book 💜💜
Why I Wrote No is Not A Lonely Utterance
Some thoughts shared on launch day!
substack.com
Reposted by Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
lareviewofbooks.bsky.social
"We must, believed Serres, be in constant motion to establish a reciprocal give-and-take between ourselves and others, in the process ceaselessly altering our understanding." Zach Gibson revisits Michel Serres' "Hermes" series. lareviewofbooks.org/article/revisiting-michel-serress-hermes-series/
Reposted by Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
owenjones.bsky.social
Banksy satirised the state silencing those opposed to Israel’s genocide.

The state then inadvertently made his artwork genius.
Reposted by Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
irlagainstfascism.bsky.social
"A new Banksy has appeared outside the Royal Courts of Justice building in London.

The art shows a judge hitting a protestor on the ground with his gavel.

The mural comes two days after almost 900 people were arrested at a protest in London against the ban on Palestine Action."
Reposted by Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
drbibliomane.bsky.social
#18thc pals, pls RT: @kasiaiskasia.bsky.social & I are assembling a roundtable for the American Society for 18th-C Studies mting in Philly in April, on Olga Tokarczuk's 18th Century. Abstracts due 9/22. Pls help us think together about this fabulous novelist's wayward ways with our period & its 📚.
Olga Tokarczuk's Eighteenth Century, Co-chairs Katarzyna Bartoszyska and Deidre Shauna Lynch 
We are assembling a roundtable on the novels of Nobel laureate Olga Tokarczuk. We hope to identify other scholars who are interested in how her fiction lays claim to the legacy of eighteenth-century literature and philosophy, repurposing the Enlightenment’s encyclopedism and universalism and its concepts of print communications, the public sphere, and the trans-national republic of letters. How do we re-see our period
—its modernity, its concerns with gender, nature, violence, nation—through the lens provided by this 21st-century Polish novelist? Alternately, how might we trace continuities from the eighteenth century to the present in the formal experiments or thematic concerns of novels such as Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead and The Books of Jacob, and what new architectures of totality or concepts of voice might we discover by doing so?
Reposted by Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
drbeard79.bsky.social
Working on various drafts of this piece helped me see and make at least my own writing anew 🖤
Reposted by Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
Reposted by Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
theplantinitiative.bsky.social
Free, open access German/English edited book, Literature and Botany. "This volume explores the deep connections between literature and botany, examining how plants shape cultural narratives, ecological thought, and human imagination." vandenhoeck-ruprecht-verlage.com/themen-entde...
Reposted by Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
Reposted by Shahira Hathout, Ph.D.
andersriel.bsky.social
Abstract submission deadline is approaching (Sep. 1) for our Ghost of Empire in the North Sea workshop. Read more below or on our website where you also find a submission link (You have to scroll down below the introduction text on the website). www.uis.no/en/research/...
Poster with the workshop call text and abstract submission guidelines. These can also be found on our website.