English Graduate Conference

The University of Toronto Department of English Graduate Conference is this week, on Thursday and Friday.

The conference web site is here.

A direct link to the pdf of the conference schedule is here.

Last year we heard Barack Obama say “Yes, we can” for a second time, and saw Youtube viewers watch and re-watch Psy’s “Gangnam Style” for the billionth time (really!): we live surrounded by repetition. As scholars embedded in a culture obsessed with imitation, parody, and countless other forms of re- acting, we ought to ask one another “what is the significance of repetition?” When is it a form of questioning or deconstruction, and when is it simply re(in)statement or obsession? We invite you to join us as we explore the ontological, political, ethical, and literary implications of repetition.

Grad Student Conference, “Repetition,” 9-10 May 2013

by wiltond

Repetition with a difference?
The University of Toronto Dep’t of English Graduate Conference
May 9th – 10th, 2013
CFP Responses Due: March 1st, 2013

“Happiness is the longing for repetition.” – Milan Kundera

“Like warmed-up cabbage served at each repast, The Repetition kills the wretch at last.” – Juvenal

Last year we heard Barack Obama say “Yes, we can” for a second time, and saw Youtube viewers watch and re-watch Psy’s “Gangnam Style” for the billionth time (really!): we live surrounded by repetition. As scholars embedded in a culture obsessed with imitation, parody, and countless other forms of reacting, we ought to ask one another “what is the significance of repetition?” When is it a form of questioning or deconstruction, and when is it simply re(in)statement or obsession? We invite you to join us as we explore the ontological, political, ethical, and literary implications of repetition.

Subjects of interest include, but are not limited to:

  • Poetics, Allusion, Illusion
  • Sequels, Trilogies, Fan fiction
  • Nostalgia, Memory, Flashbacks
  • Psychoanalysis, Madness, Trauma, Dreams, the Unconscious
  • Obsession, Compulsion, Criminality
  • Family, Inheritance, Reproduction
  • Performance, Gender, Sexuality
  • Parody, Satire
  • Genre Conventions, Genre Fiction, Archetypes
  • Writing Back, Mimicry, Hybridity, Orality
  • Formalism, Structure, Refrains, Schematic devices
  • Visual Art, Photography, Iconoclasm, Pop Art
  • Imprinting, Conceptual Art, Editions, Paratext, Digitization
  • Adaptation, Translation
  • Existentialism, Deconstructionism, Différance
  • Doubling, Doppelgangers
  • Labour, Boredom, Mass Production, Commodification
  • Pedagogy, Rote Learning, Memorizationli>Journaling, Life Writing, Biography

This conference is interdisciplinary: We welcome submissions from a variety of fields. Send an abstract (of up to 250 words) for your 20-minute presentation to uoftgradcolloquium2013@gmail.com, with your name and institutional affiliation.

Responses are due by March 1st, 2013

Keynote Speaker To Be Announced

Cook the Books (Rescheduled), 1 March, 5-8pm

by wiltond

We’ve rescheduled Cook the Books.

It’s time once again for an evening of delightful, delicious, edible literary puns! Cook the Books, the Graduate English Department’s Annual Literary Potluck, will be taking place on Friday, March 1st from 5 to 8pm in JHB Room 719. Bring a dish or stop by to socialize and enjoy the puns!

If you are planning to contribute a food item, please bring your own serving implements, and make sure to provide a list of ingredients. We are also asking that dishes contain no nuts.

This year’s potluck will also feature a silent talent auction to raise money for the GEA’s Karma Travel Fund. If you have a talent you would like to auction, please email elisa.tersigni at mail.utoronto dot ca. Items that will be up for auction include:

  • Dinner at a local restaurant with Alan Bewell. Offered by: Alan Bewell
  • A custom knit shawl. Offered by: Chris Pugh
  • A 90-minute Thai yoga massage. Offered by: Kathleen Ogden
  • A tour of the new Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library exhibition, “From No Where: Utopian and Dystopian Visions of our Past, Present, and Future.” Offered by: Curator Chris Young
  • A signed, first-edition copy of Heather Jessup’s The Lightning Field. Offered by: Heather Jessup
  • Composition and recording of a song, on the topic of your choice. Offered by: Dave Ritter
  • Consultation on Pedadigigogy I: Harnessing technologies to stay human in today’s oversized humanities classroom. Offered by: Peter Latka
  • Consultation on Pedadigigogy II: Ready to upgrade your in-class operating system? How digital media helps undergraduate students engage black marks on white pages. Offered by: Peter Latka
  • A night in at Robertson Davies’ collection of 19th century printing presses for up to 6 people. Offered by: Elisa Tersigni
  • 25 copies of a custom-set card, printed in 19th century letterpress. Offered by: Elisa Tersigni
  • A custom bookmarklet that allows you to replace any term or name with any other term or name, all at the click of a button! Just one tap on this bookmarklet, and you can transform “Justin Bieber” into “Friedrich Kittler.” Offered by: Matt Schneider

Hope to see lots of you there!

Candidate Job Talks and Coffee Hours

by wiltond

Throughout January and into February we have job talks and coffee hours scheduled with the candidates for the eight open positions on the English Department faculty. We encourage all grad students to attend as many of these as you can. Check the GEA calendar on this page for dates and times.

The coffee hours are for just for grad students and the candidates. It’s a chance to meet the prospective new members of the department and chat about their work, life at U of T, and what the job search process is like. The job talks, open to the whole department, are a chance to hear about the candidates’ research. We’ve also been asked by the search committee chairs for our feedback on the candidates. So after meeting them, if you have thoughts, concerns, or endorsements, please email those to the respective chairs.

GEA Meeting and Pubnight

by wiltond

The end of semester GEA meeting is Friday, 7 December, 4–6pm in the multipurpose room (JHB 719).

Then we’ll be heading out for drinks at the Massey College JCR. First round is on the GEA.

Research Roundtable, Friday 9 November

by wiltond

The Staff and Students Relations Committee invites you to the annual Research Roundtable! Designed to foster conversation across fields and research areas, the Research Roundtable provides an opportunity for faculty and graduate students to share their work with each other and highlights the range of research being pursued within the Department of English. We hope that you will be able to join us for what promises to be a stimulating discussion!

Event Date: November 9, 2012, from 1:30 PM-4:15 PM.
Location: JHB 616
A wine and cheese reception at 4:30 will conclude the day.
Please find the schedule of presenters below.

Session One (1:30-2:45 PM)

Speakers:

  • Professor Jeremy Lopez, “Bad Literature: Does it Exist?”
  • Morgan Vanek, PhD candidate, “Under the Weather: Environmental Influence in Travel Writing about North America, 1700-1795”
  • Professor Ato Quayson, “Spatial Practices and Performative Streetscapes: On Oxford St., Accra”
  • Andrea Day, PhD candidate, “Leonora Blanche Lang and the Fairy Books”

Coffee and Dessert Break (2:45-3:00)

Session Two (3:00-4:15)

Speakers:

  • Professor Jenny Kerber, “Writing and Rewriting Boundaries along the St. Lawrence Seaway”
  • Talia Regan Palmer, PhD candidate, “The Sound and the Fury of Esquire’s Readers: Langston Hughes, Esquire, and the Literary Marketplace”
  • Professor Simon Stern,”Legal Fictions and Literary Plots”
  • Peter Latka, PhD candidate, “roges and ronnawayes: British Aborigines and the Tudor Historical Imaginary”

4:30 PM Wine and Cheese Reception

Welcome and Welcome Back

by wiltond

Wednesday, September 5th is orientation day, and this is just a reminder of what’s going on.

Orientation for incoming MA and MA/Creative Writing students is at 10 am in Jackman Humanities Building (JHB) 100A. (That’s on the right as you walk into JHB.)

Orientation for incoming PhD students begins at 11:30 am, also in JHB 100A.

In between, the GEA is hosting an informal reception, 11:15 am –1:30 pm in the multi-purpose room, JHB 719. We hope that as many returning students as possible can drop in and meet some of the new faces.

———————-
And on Thursday, September 6th, we have our GEA Siblings Meet & Greet, where incoming students can meet their “siblings,” starting at 11 am in JHB 719.

The Meet & Greet will be followed by campus and library tours for new students. We’ll meet up at 1 pm in *the lobby of the JHB* for the first set of tours, and then at 2:30 pm in the lobby for the second set. See you there!

Intl Students: Permanent Residency Info

by wiltond

There was an information session by Citizenship and Immigration Canada and by Opportunities Ontario today. For details and official info, see www.cic.gc.ca and www.ontarioimmigration.ca

The one thing you may not be aware of is the Provincial Nominee Program. If you know what province you want to stay in, this is probably the fastest and easiest way for a graduating student to get permanent residency.

The following is a summary:

  • Maintaining visa/study permit status
  • Post-graduation work permits
  • Applying for permanent residency
    • Federal Skilled Worker Program
    • Canadian Experience Class
    • Provincial Nominee Program

Keeping your immigration status current

  • For visa or study/work permit extensions, apply at least 30 days in advance of expiration.
  • Be sure to start your passport renewal process at least 6 months in advance of expiration.
  • Your visa/study permit will only be issued for the duration of your passport. So if you passport is near expiration, you should renew that first and then apply for the permit extension.
  • Once you’ve submitted your application, you have “implied status” and can continue to study/work under the same conditions as your expired permit. So if the process takes longer than 30 days, you’re still good.
  • If you let your study/work permit lapse, you have 90 days during which you can apply for restoration. It costs more and you don’t have implied status (i.e., you can’t continue to attend U of T until it is restored). So it’s really important not to let your permit lapse.

Online applications will be processed faster than paper applications, so applying online is usually your best choice. If you do use a paper application, use registered mail for any material sent to CIC.

Post-Graduation Work Permit

Following graduation, you may apply for a post-graduation work permit that will allow you stay in Canada and work. It’s an open work permit. You don’t need a job offer to apply, and once recieved you can work for anyone, anywhere in Canada.

The Post Graduation Work Permit is a once-in-a-lifetime offer. So if you are completing your master’s and think you may want to go on to a PhD, you only get it once, either at the end of your master’s program or at the end of your PhD program.

You must apply within 90 days of receiving formal, written notification that you have completed your program requirements. Your study permit must be valid at the time you apply.

The work permit is good for a period equal to the period of your study, up to 2 years.

Permanent Residency

There are three paths to permanent residency for students:

  • Federal Skilled Worker’s Program
  • Canadian Experience Class Program
  • Provincial Nomination Program.

You can apply along multiple tracks, except for the Provincial Nomination Program, for which you can only apply through one province.

The Federal Skilled Worker’s Program

There are three categories:

  • Skilled workers with an offer of employment
  • Skilled workers in special categories without an offer of employment (probably doesn’t apply to any of us)
  • PhD students who have completed 2 years of their program or who have graduated within the last 12 months

For the PhD student track:

  • 1000 applications will be processed each year.
  • You must have completed at least 2 years of the program or graduated within the last 12 months.
  • You must have current, valid immigration status to apply.
  • You must not have received a grant requiring return to your home country.
  • You must be in good academic standing if still a student.
  • You must pass the IELTS or TEF language test.
  • You must demonstrate sufficient savings/income (about $12K for an individual)
  • Pass CIC criminal/medical/not-a-terrorist screening

Canadian Experience Class

  • You must have graduated.
  • You must have current, valid immigration status at time of application.
  • You must have 2 years of study in Canada (can include undergraduate work).
  • You must have 1 year of work experience in Canada after graduation at the NOC O, A, or B level (i.e., professional/skilled work, not at Tim Horton’s).
  • Pass CIC criminal/medical/not-a-terrorist screening
  • You don’t have to remain in Canada while the application is processed.

Provincial Nominee Program

Provinces can fast track permanent residency applications for those intending to work in the province. The requirements vary by province. The following applies to Ontario.

The province can nominate 1000 students per calendar year for permanent residency. In 2011 the quota was reached in mid-December, so you can apply pretty much any time.

PhD students:

  • You must itend to live and work in Ontario.
  • Apply within 2 years after graduation. You may apply after you’ve successfully defended their thesis.
  • Pay $1500 fee. Fee is non-refundable, but if the quota is reached, your application rolls over to the next year, and you don’t need to repay.
  • Pass CIC criminal/medical/not-a-terrorist screening
  • That’s it. No other requirements.

MA students:

  • You must intend to live and work in Ontario.
  • You must not be contemplating further study. (No outstanding PhD program applications.)
  • Apply within 2 years after graduation.
  • MA students can apply in their final semester.
  • Currently residing in Ontario with legal status (e.g., study/work permit).
  • Resided in Ontario for 1 year out of the last 2 years.
  • Demonstrate sufficient savings/income (about $12K for an individual)
  • Pass the IELTS or TEF language test.
  • Pay $1500 fee. Fee is non-refundable, but if the quota is reached, your application rolls over to next year, and you don’t need to repay.
  • Pass CIC criminal/medical/not-a-terrorist screening