image via CUNY
William S. Burroughs turned 100 back in February — and we’re all still celebrating!
Today the WSB@100 Festival continues at the CUNY Center for Humanities. What I particularly love about this event is how academic it is! Though the writers associated with the so-called Beat Generation are studied in colleges across the country, many critics and scholars alike still focus more on the writers’ personal lives than on their literature. The William S. Burroughs Centennial Conferences tackles weightier issues such as innovation and technique, the business of publishing, and gender politics.
Here’s a look at the schedule:
Fri Apr 25, 9:30am – 6:30pm | Conference | Room 9206-9207William S. Burroughs Centennial Conference
Held in honor of the centennial of William S. Burroughs’s birth, and the WSB@100 Festival in New York City scheduled for the entirety of the month of April, 2014, this conference will explore the life and works of one of the most innovative and influential twentieth-century American writers and artists. Join us for a series of talks and roundtables by editors, artists, and scholars on a range of issues from the problem of gender in Burroughs’s writings to his role in postwar America little magazines, his still unpublished archival materials, cut-up experiments and novels, and his photography.
“Listen to my last words any world. Listen all you boards syndicates and governments of the earth. And you power powers behind what filth deals consummated in what lavatory to take what is not yours. To sell the ground from unborn feet. Listen. What I have to say is for all men everywhere. I repeat for all. No one is excluded. Free to all who pay. Free to all who pain pay.” – William S. Burroughs
This conference is free and open to the public.
This event will be livestreamed. For viewing during the event, please see here: https://videostreaming.gc.cuny.edu/videos/livestreams/page1/
SCHEDULE:
9:30AM Coffee
10:00AM
Editing Burroughs with John Bennett and Geoffrey Smith11:00AM
Burroughs and Literary Magazines with Jed Birmingham, Charles Plymell, and Jan Herman12:30PM Lunch
2:00PM
Biography and Photography: Barry Miles in conversation with Oliver Harris3:30PM
Gender Trouble with Anne Waldman, Regina Weinreich, and Ann Douglas5:15PM Coffee Break
5:30PM
Keynote: Oliver Harris Cutting up the Trilogy
Cosponsored by the English Students Association, Lost & Found: The CUNY Poetics Document Initiative, the PhD Program in English, the Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies, the Doctoral Students’ Council, and the WSB@100 Festival.
You can find all the information on the CUNY website.
* * *
Interested in how William S. Burroughs helped shape Jack Kerouac’s literature? Check out Burning Furiously Beautiful: The True Story of Jack Kerouac’s “On the Road,” the book I coauthored with Paul Maher Jr. (2013). It’s available through Lulu’s print edition, Amazon, and Barnes & Noble.