Skip to main content

Can the Puerto Rican Parrots Speak?

On November 7, 2023, the croak of a coqui greeted me as I entered the lecture hall for Ramón E. Soto-Crespo’s Modern Critical Theory talk, “Environmental Humanities and the Caribbean.” According to Soto-Crespo, the coqui and the Puerto Rican parrot are only two of the animals who fill the soundscape in the El Yunque National Forest. Both animals are on the verge of being silenced due to deforestation. In the 1940s and 50s, Puerto Rico switched gears from sugar cane monoculture to a manufacture-based industry that would generate more wealth for the nation. Such modernization, Soto-Crespo...

Paul Un

Paul Un is a Ph.D. student in Political Science, studying international relations. He holds a B.A. in Government from the University of Puget Sound, and an M.A. in International Relations from the...
Read full story

Kei Kato

Coming from Japan, Kei (pronounced kay-ee) joined UIUC in 2023 as a Ph.D. student in the Department of Geography and Geographical Science. His research interests lie at the...
Read full story

Law and Society

Professor: Jose Atiles Meets: Wednesdays 1:00-3:50 pm This course discusses major issues and debates in the fields of law and society and socio-legal studies. This course covers the theory and practice of legal and political institutions in performing several major functions at the local, national, and transnational levels, such as: allocating authority, enabling social control, defining relationships, resolving conflict, adapting to social change, and fostering social solidarity. In examining these functions, the course will assess the nature and limits of law, consider alternative...

Qualifying Disqualification: the “Double Bind” of Pregnancy after Roe

On October 31, 2023, Penelope Deutscher gave the lecture “Revocability, Exception, Disqualifying Qualification: Grammars of Power After Foucault and Roe” for the Unit for Criticism’s Modern Critical Theory lecture series. As a Foucauldian scholar, Deutscher’s work traces power through Foucault’s original theory and the revised grammars that have come afterwards.  The MCT lecture comes from her current project to name hinges of power in contemporary discourse and offers qualifying disqualification and disqualifying qualification as an intervention in naming methods of regulation. ...

"A Labor Theory of Suspense": Shirl Yang ponders the lonesome setting of the office and the volatility of worker stratification

Especially relevant in the era of Coronavirus and current labor movements in the U.S., Shirl Yang (postdoctoral researcher at Washington University of St. Louis) posits that novels set in empty offices undo a longstanding relation between narrative uncertainty and the 18th century notion of the work ethic. In her lecture on October 3, 2023, for the Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, titled “A Labor Theory of Suspense,” Yang notes that the economic excitement of early capitalism was built upon the anxiety of spiritual predestination,...
Subscribe to