Acclaimed Author Gary Shteyngart Comes to Buffalo – Uses Humor, Pathos to Explore Immigrant Experience

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Sep 17, 2014 Posted in Buffalo Rising
Author: Erik Seeman

Buffalo’s literary community is abuzz about Gary Shteyngart’s upcoming appearance Friday, September 26, at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery.

“Gary Shteyngart is one of the smartest, most original, and funniest writers in America,” says novelist Mick Cochrane, professor of English and Lowery Writer-in-Residence at Canisius College. “For readers and students of literature here in Buffalo to have the chance to see and hear him as part of the Humanities Festival is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. My students and I couldn’t be more excited.”

Shteyngart, author of three popular novels and the New York Times–bestselling memoir Little Failure, speaks at the Albright-Knox at 8:00pm on the 26th. The event features a reading, on-stage interview, and book signing. A limited number of VIP tickets are available for a wine-and-cheese reception with the author, beginning at 7:00pm.

Shteyngart’s visit kicks off the first Buffalo Humanities Festival, presented by the University at Buffalo Humanities Institute in cooperation with Canisius College, Niagara University, SUNY Buffalo State, and SUNY Fredonia.

The Festival continues the next day with talks, music, conversations, films, and food, at the Burchfield Penney Art Center and SUNY Buffalo State. The Festival’s theme is “Migration Nation: Moving Stories.” Tickets for all events are available at buffalohumanities.org.

Born to a Russian-Jewish family in Leningrad in 1972, Shteyngart migrated to the United States seven years later. His three novels – The Russian Debutante’s Handbook (2002), Absurdistan (2006), and Super Sad True Love Story (2010) – all explore the immigrant experience using dark humor and powerful storytelling.

But many critics feel that his memoir, Little Failure, is his greatest achievement. Zadie Smith, author of White Teeth, calls Little Failure Shteyngart’s “finest book yet.” The Los Angeles Times says it is “as vivid, original, and funny as [anything] contemporary U.S. literature has to offer.”

Readers interested in discussing Little Failure in advance of Shteyngart’s appearance are invited to join the Humanities Festival Book Group on Monday, September 22, from 7:30pm to 9:30pm at Betty’s Restaurant, 370 Virginia Avenue. Joseph Conte of UB’s English Department leads the conversation. Tickets, available on the Festival website, are $8 each and include drinks and light fare.

The Buffalo Humanities Festival Book Group Gathers to Discuss Gary Shteyngart’s Little Failure

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Sep 9, 2014 Posted in Buffalo Rising

On Monday, September 22nd, the public is invited to the first ever Humanities Festival Book Group for an engaging discussion of Gary Shteyngart’s New York Times bestselling memoir, Little Failure, at Betty’s restaurant, 370 Virginia Street, from 7:30 to 9:30pm. The Los Angeles Times calls Little Failure “an ecstatic depiction of survival, guilt, and perseverance… as vivid, original, and funny as [anything] contemporary U.S. literature has to offer.” UB Professor of English Joseph Conte will be on hand at Betty’s to lead the discussion, and light fare and drinks will be served. The cost of the event is $8, and tickets are available at buffalohumanities.org.

Gary Shteyngart will be speaking later that same week at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery on the evening of Friday, September 26th as the keynote speaker of this year’s first annual Buffalo Humanities Festival, “Migration Nation: Moving Stories.” “In the Humanities Festival Book Group, we invite members of the public to really dig in to this moving and hilarious book about Shteyngart’s experiences growing up as a Russian Jewish immigrant in New York. It is also a terrific way to warm up for the Buffalo Humanities Festival,” stated Erik Seeman, Director of UB’s Humanities Institute.

Little Failure is available for purchase at Talking Leaves Bookstore as well as at most major bookstores. Tickets for the Humanities Festival Book Group and for all Festival events can be purchased at the buffalo humanities festival website.

Super-Sad-Love

Buffalo Humanities Festival Lecture, September 27, 2014

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Immigration Literature and the Alien Nation

Joseph Conte

3:30 pm-4:30 pm, Ketchum Hall, Room 111

Buffalo State College

The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services terminology for a legal immigrant who has yet to become “naturalized” as a citizen is “alien resident.” But these verbal vestiges of botanical transplants are rarely found in the literature of immigration. The fiction and memoirs of immigrants in America are more likely to register the strange shores on which they have arrived as an alien nation. Joseph Conte discusses changing encounters with naturalization in examples of three generations of immigrant writing by Anzia Yezierska, Vladimir Nabokov, and Gary Shteyngart.

Joseph Conte is Professor of English at the University at Buffalo. His book, Design & Debris: A Chaotics of Postmodern American Fiction, received the Elizabeth Agee Prize from the University of Alabama Press in 2002. He was a Senior Fellow at the New York Institute of Cognitive and Cultural Studies in St. Petersburg, Russia, in 2005. In 2009 he was a Visiting Professor of English at Capital Normal University in Beijing, China. His new book is on Transnational Politics and the Post-9/11 Novel.

Buffalo Humanities Festival Program

Film Screening: Who is Dayani Cristal? (2013)

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Thursday, September 25, 5:00-7:00pm

Film Screening: Who is Dayani Cristal? (2013), directed by Marc Silver, starring Gael García Bernal

Location: Screening Room, 112 Center for the Arts, UB North Campus

Introduction: Dr. Tanya Shilina-Conte, UB Department of Media Study

Post-screening Discussion: Professor Joseph Conte, UB Department of English

Free and open to the public

Synopsis: August 3, 2010, Pima County, Arizona. Deep in the sun-blistered Sonora desert, border police discover a decomposing male body. Lifting a tattered T-shirt, they expose a tattoo that reads “Dayani Cristal.” Who is this person? What brought him here? How did he die? And who—or what—is Dayani Cristal? Marc Silver’s masterful documentary assembles the answers to these questions using beautifully realized dramatic sequences with famed actor Gael García Bernal. Who Is Dayani Cristal? tells the story of one migrant who found himself in that deadly stretch of desert known as “the corridor of death” and how one life becomes testimony to the tragic results of the U.S. war on immigration.

Who Is Dayani Cristal?

Who Is Dayani Cristal?

Humanities Festival Book Group

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Monday, September 22, 7:30-9:30pm

Humanities Festival Book Group: Join us for a discussion of Gary Shteyngart’s Little Failure, led by Joseph Conte of UB’s English Department, at Betty’s Restaurant, 370 Virginia Street. Food, wine, and stimulating conversation at one of Buffalo’s most beloved restaurants!

$8 per person to attend. Appetizers and one glass of wine, beer, or a soft drink included in the price.

Gary Shteyngart, Little Failure

Gary Shteyngart, Little Failure

Buffalo Humanities Festival, September 26-27, 2014

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Buffalo Humanities Festival

Buffalo Humanities Festival

As part of the Buffalo Humanities Festival, “Migration Nation: Moving Stories,” I will present a lecture on “Naturalization, the Alien Nation and the Literature of Immigration,” Saturday, September 27, 2014 at 4 pm in the Burchfield Penney Arts Center on the Buffalo State College campus.

 

Humanities Institute Lecture at Hallwalls, Friday, December 6 at 4 pm

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Scholars at Hallwalls Lecture Series

Scholars at Hallwalls Lecture Series

Friday, December 6, 4PM
Scholars@Hallwalls Series
Transnational Politics and the Post-9/11 Novel
Location: Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center
(341 Delaware Avenue)

Speaker: Joseph Conte, UB English

“Transnational Politics and the Post-9/11 Novel,” suggests that literature produced after Sept. 11, 2001 reflects a shift from the provincial politics of nation-states to those of transnational politics, and confronts issues that require adjudication across national, geographic, cultural, linguistic, religious and racial borders. Conte cites Don DeLillo’s “Falling Man,” Orhan Pamuk’s “Snow” and J.M. Coetzee’s “Diary of a Bad Year” as examples of work that articulates the emergence of resistance to the global hegemony of the market state and explicitly critiques transnational politics that arise as a result of globalization.

Joseph Conte’s research interests include postmodern fiction, transnational literature and politics, fiction after 9/11, postmodern theory, the literature of immigration, poetry and poetics. He is the author of Design & Debris: A Chaotics of Postmodern American Fiction, which received the Elizabeth Agee Prize in American Literature from the University of Alabama Press in 2002, and Unending Design: The Forms of Postmodern Poetry, published by Cornell University Press in 1991. He has been a SUNY Senior Fellow at the New York-St. Petersburg State University Institute of Cognitive and Cultural Studies in St. Petersburg, Russia and Visiting Professor in Comparative Literature at Capital Normal University in Beijing, China.

Alexander Livergant in Juxtapositions Lecture Series

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In conjunction with the College of Arts and Sciences Centennial Celebration, The Juxtapositions Lecture Series, Department of English and the Center for Global Media, Department of Media Study, present a lecture by Alexander Livergant, “American and Russian Literature: Politics of Translation,” on Thursday, November 14, 2013 at 4:00 PM in the Screening Room, Center for the Arts 112.

The lecture will be followed by a screening of The Woman with the Five Elephants, directed by Vadim Jendreyko, and discussion with Prof. Livergant.

Juxtapositions Lecture by Alexander Livergant

Juxtapositions Lecture by Alexander Livergant