30 septembre : séminaire avec Shankar Raman (MIT, membre USIAS)

9h-10h conseil d’unité SEARCH

10h-12h séminaire SEARCH avec Shankar Raman (MIT, membre USIAS)

 

30 septembre 2022
9h 12h
Salle de conférence, MISHA

Before the Borders: Mathematics and Literature in Early Modernity.

Shankar Raman is a Professor in Literature Section at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).  His research focuses on late medieval and early modern literature and culture. He received his PhD in English Literature (with a minor in German) from Stanford University in 1995, switching fields and careers after receiving both a master’s (U. C. Berkeley) and a bachelor’s (MIT) degree in Electrical Engineering (along with a second bachelor’s at MIT through the Department of Architecture).

His first book, Framing ‘India’: The Colonial Imaginary in Early Modern Culture (Stanford 2002)investigates the relationship between colonialism and literature in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Europe. It compares Portuguese, English and Dutch colonial activity to examine the role of India as a figure through which these diverse European powers imagined and defined themselves. A second book, Renaissance Literature and Postcolonial Studies, was published by Edinburgh University Press (2011) . He is also co-editor, with Lowell Gallagher, of Knowing Shakespeare: Senses, Embodiment, Cognition (Palgrave Macmillan 2010)He is currently working on a monograph on the relationship between literature and mathematics in early modern Europe, tentatively entitled Before the Two Cultures. From 2005 to 2010 he participated in Making Publics: Media, Markets and Associations in Early Modern Europe, 1500 – 1700 [MaPs], a major five-year interdisciplinary research initiative funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) of Canada.