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Boston College

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A lecture by Jane Tylus, Andrew Downey Orrick Professor of Italian and Professor of Comparative Literature, Yale University.

Prof. Tylus specializes in late medieval and early modern European literature, religion, and culture, with secondary interests in 19th-20th century fiction.  Her work has focused on the recovery and interrogation of lost and marginalized voices -- historical personages, dialects and “parole pellegrine,” minor genres such as pastoral, secondary characters in plays, poems, and epics.  She has also been active in the practice and theory of translation. Her current book project explores the ritual of departure in early modernity, especially how writers and artists sent their works into the world.

She previously taught at NYU in Italian Studies and Comparative Literature, where she was founding faculty director of the Humanities Initiative, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison.  She has been General Editor for the journal I Tatti Studies in the Italian Renaissance since 2013.

Prof. Tylus's lecture represents the keynote address at the Boston College Romance Languages Annual Graduate Student Conference, dedicated this year to the theme, "Exile: Narratives of Exclusion and Belonging."