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Famed Novelist Joyce Carol Oates to Keynote
"Celebrating Our Books, Recognizing Our Authors" Event

The Center for the Humanities and University Libraries present the
Sixth Annual Faculty Book Colloquium
5:00 p.m., December 3, 2007
Holmes Lounge, Danforth Campus

Joyce Carol Oates, one of America's most important and distinguished authors, three times nominated for the Nobel Prize for Literature, will deliver the keynote address, entitled The Writer's (Secret) Life: Woundedness, Rejection, and Inspiration, for "Celebrating Our Books, Recognizing Our Authors," Washington University's sixth annual faculty book colloquium.

Celebrating Our Books honors the work of scholars from across the arts and sciences disciplines. Featured faculty presenters, who will present their works, are Ahmet T. Karamustafa of History and Religious Studies, who will speak on his book, Sufism: The Formative Period, and Marina MacKay of English, who will speak on her book, Modernism and World War II.

The event is free and open to the public and is sponsored by the Center for the Humanities in Arts & Sciences and University Libraries. Holmes Lounge is located across from Duncker Hall, just east of Olin Library on the University's Danforth Campus. For more information call (314) 935-5576.

In conjunction with Celebrating Our Books, the Washington University Campus Store will display books by colloquium participants, all of which will be available for purchase. Authors will be available after the colloquium to sign their works.

Joyce Carol Oates is the author of a number of esteemed books in several genres, published over the course of a career that began in 1963 with her first novel, By the North Gate. In addition to numerous novels and short-story collections, she has published several volumes of poetry, many plays, five books of literary criticism, and the book-length essay On Boxing. John Gardner has called her "one of the greatest writers of our time."

Her writing has earned her much praise and many awards, including the 2005 Prix Femina, France's literary prize for the best novel published in its country; the 2004 Fairfax Prize for Lifetime Achievement in the Literary Arts; PEN/Malamud Award for Excellence in short fiction; Rosenthal Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters; a Guggenheim fellowship; the O'Henry Prize for Continued Achievement in the Short Story; National Book Award for her novel Them; and in 1978, membership in the American Academy-Institute. What I Lived For was nominated for the 1995 PEN/Faulkner Award. In 1999 she was nominated for the Nobel Prize for the third time.

Ahmet T. Karamustafa's new book, Sufism: The Formative Period (University of California Press and Edinburgh University Press, 2007), is a comprehensive historical overview of the formative period of Sufism, the major mystical tradition in Islam, from the ninth to the twelfth century. Based on a fresh reading of the primary sources and the integration of the findings of recent scholarship on the subject, Professor Karamustafa presents a unified narrative of Sufism's historical development within an innovative analytical framework.

Marina MacKay's new book, Modernism and World War II (Cambridge University Press, 2007), reconstructs the political and aesthetic contexts of mid-century writing by Virginia Woolf, T. S. Eliot, Rebecca West, Henry Green, and Evelyn Waugh in order to describe how the war transformed literary modernism in England. In recovering how the writings of these major authors engaged other texts of their time-political discourses, mass and middlebrow culture-this study reveals how World War II brought to the surface the underlying politics of modernism's aesthetic practices.

To RVSP for "Celebrating Our Books, Recognizing Our Authors," please call (314) 935-5576.

Date of announcement: 11/30/07