Talk on Textual Science: The Future of the Past

Thursday, January 30, 2:00 – 3:00 pm.

Room 3-133

Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bldg 16-635
77 Massachusetts Ave.
Cambridge, MA 02139

Professor Gregory Heyworth, Associate Professor of English at the University of Mississippi and the Director of the Lazarus Project will lead a discussion on textual science.

Description from the event:

Over the past decade, a quiet technological revolution has been occurring in the humanities. Great texts – the Archimedes palimpsest, the Dead Sea Scrolls among others – once largely illegible and lost to history, have been returned to us through spectral imaging. We stand now at the threshold of a renaissance of the past, but only if we can integrate science with the humanities in a new, hybrid discipline. Textual Science, as Gregory Heyworth argues, is poised to change the established order of things: the notion that the humanities is about husbanding the past with scholarship that adds to human insight in ever slenderer increments; that the canon is a coffin, the past irrevocably the past, and that scholars and students must behave as humble curators rather than archaeologists of an undiscovered country; that the artistic mind cannot, in any profound way, share neurons with the scientific. With images of recovered works, many previously unseen, this talk will chart the way ahead in theory and praxis.

More information here.