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READING
Satyr Square
A Year, A Life in Rome
Leonard Barkan
Arthur W. Marks '19 Professor of Comparative Literature, and Director,
Society of Fellows
Princeton University
Cosponsored by the Penn Humanities Forum
in association with Penn's English Department.
Wednesday, 7 February, 2007
5:00 – 6:30 pm
Penn
Humanities Forum
3619 Locust Walk, Penn campus
Event free and open to the public.
In this reading from Satyr Square—an account of art,
literature, food, wine, Italy, and Barkan himself—prize-winning
scholar and former actor and director Leonard Barkan tells of spending
a magical year in Rome. At first hungry, lonely, and uncertain of
his intellectual mission, he gradually finds himself the unofficial
mascot of an eccentric community of gastronomes, becoming virtually
bilingual and falling in love.
Join us for this celebration of a time lived in the quirky intersections
between art and life.
Leonard Barkan is the Arthur W. Marks '19 Professor of Comparative
Literature and Director of the Society of Fellows at Princeton University.
His interests are Shakespeare and English renaissance literature;
Italian renaissance art; medieval and renaissance Italian literature;
relations between literature and the visual arts; Latin literature
and the survival of antiquity; drama and theater; and food, wine,
and the arts. He has been an actor and a director. He is also a
regular contributor to publications in both the U.S. and Italy,
where he writes on the subject of food and wine.
He is currently working on a scholarly study of the relations among
words, images, and pleasure from Plato to the Renaissance. He recently
won the Morton Dauwen Zabel Award from the American Academy of Arts
and Letters. |
Suggested Reading
"The Professor
of Desire on Sabbatical," NY Sun review of Satyr Square
by Adam Kirsch
Leonard Barkan on Amazon
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