A conversation between Janet Werther and Jordan Lord about Werther's research on the work and life of John Bernd, legacies of caring labor in the wake of the AIDS crisis, and archival work as a kind of caregiving.
Catherine Engh provides an analysis of two books read as part of the Ecocriticism seminar, David Collings' Stolen Future, Broken Present: The Human Significance of Climate Change and Jedediah Purdy's After Nature.
Selected readings for Gregory Rabassa (1922-2016), A Celebration, including tributes to his work and his essay, "If This Be Treason: Translation and Its Possibilities."
Jordan Lord reflects on the panel "Breaking Into History: AIDS, the Archive, and the Fight Against the Canonization of an Ongoing Epidemic" from the Queer Circuits in Archival Times conference.
Benjamin Haber reflects on a conversation between Patricia Clough, Seb Franklin, and Jasbir Puar about Franklin's book Control: Digitality as Cultural Logic.
Jordan Lord reflects on a screening of the 1979 film El Super and a conversation about the film between screenwriter Manuel Arce Riocabo and Prof. Sujatha Fernandes.
GC PhD student Jessica Murray reports on a forum bringing together students, teachers, administrators, and researchers to emphasize personal narratives in discussions of how to improve community colleges.