• May 21, 2024
          Oregon Literary Fellowship Reading
          May 29, 2024
          Gustave Flaubert: Madame Bovary
          May 29, 2024
          BIPOC Reading Series – May
          June 2, 2024
          Willa Cather: A Lost Lady and My Mortal Enemy
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Events, Classes, and Seminars

Our events, classes, and seminars bring the community together to hear, learn, and discuss the most compelling issues and ideas of our day. We hope you will join us in our downtown Literary Arts space, online, and at partnering venues across Portland and Oregon.

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Tuesday

May 31

Wednesday

Jun 15

Wednesday

Jun 29

Wednesday

Jun 29

BIPOC only   Delve Readers Seminars   Online  

Signs. Spoken. Memory. Theresa Hak Kyung Cha’s Dictee

This seminar is for BIPOC participants only Celebrating the 40th anniversary of this seminal publication, we will study Theresa Hak Kyung Cha’s Dictee along with some of its academic critique. This work in many ways defies categorization--with its mixture of French and English, text and images, and the poetic and political. Though it has been described

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Tuesday

Jul 5

Delve Readers Seminars   Online  

Feminist Horror and Millennial Anxiety in South Korean Literature

Cursed Bunny by Bora Chung  and Love in the Big City by Sang Young Park have just been translated into English from the original Korean by Anton Hur and have recently been shortlisted and longlisted (respectively) for the Booker Prize. Though very different from one another, by reading both we can get a taste of the exciting landscape that is

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Wednesday

Aug 10

Tuesday

Aug 23

Delve Readers Seminars   In-person  

“First – Poets – Then the Sun”: Emily Dickinson’s Craft, Life, and Legacy

Emily Dickinson has achieved the rarest of distinctions for a nineteenth-century poet (and a female one at that): lasting, evolving fame. Having escaped the confines of academic study and school syllabi, Dickinson has become a popular figure beloved by a wide and varied readership and the subject of films, television programs, and fan clubs. She

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Sunday

Sep 25

Monday

Oct 3

Delve for Writers   Delve Readers Seminars   In-person   Writing Classes  

Delve for Writers: Joan Didion and Durga Chew-Bose

Delve for Writers is a new, occasional Delve series that offers seminars that focus on close readings of narrative, form, and stylistic choices that writers can incorporate into their own writing practice. Creative nonfiction is the perfect place to find voice, ideas and perspective – and nobody does it better Joan Didion and contemporary groundbreaker

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Tuesday

Oct 25

Tuesday

Nov 1

Tuesday

Jan 3

Delve Readers Seminars   In-person   Winter 2023  

Vanity Fair

Vanity Fair (“A Novel without a Hero”), by William Makepeace Thackeray (1848), belongs on the same shelf with other towering novels of the Victorian age: Bleak House, Middlemarch, Jane Eyre, and The Way We Live Now. Its protagonist, Becky Sharp, is one of the most tantalizing, bewitching, infuriating, charming, scheming, and amoral characters in all

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Sunday

Jan 15

Delve Readers Seminars   In-person   Winter 2023  

The Feminine Gothic: Victorian and American Horror

Novels of ghosts and haunted landscapes can open the door to discussions of sociology and repression, trauma, and the cathartic function of horror. In this seminar, we will examine themes of possession, repression, haunting, and the mad woman in the attic in three Victorian and American horror novels from the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries:

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Sunday

Jan 22

Delve Readers Seminars   In-person   Winter 2023  

Plato On Love

The Symposium by Plato asks: what is love? It is the story of a banquet in classical Athens, attended by Socrates and his friends, at which each person tells a story about the origin of Love. These stories are full of deep psychological insight, powerful mythic imagination, and profound philosophical reflection that have made The

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Monday

Jan 23

Delve Readers Seminars   In-person   Winter 2023  

The Brothers Karamazov

The American novelist Walker Percy described The Brothers Karamazov as “maybe the greatest novel of all time . . . . almost prophesies and prefigures everything—all the bloody mess and the issues of the 20th century.” It’s fair to extend Percy’s observation to include the mess of the present century as well. The Brothers K

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Monday

Jan 30

BIPOC only   Delve Readers Seminars   Winter 2023  

Language as resistance, words as collage: Don Mee Choi and Theresa Hak Kyung Cha

Though published many decades apart, these two texts share similarities both in their subject matter and their experimental qualities. Just as Dictee cannot be merely labeled as a memoir and DMZ Colony cannot be labeled purely as a poetry collection, both texts expand our understanding of genre by weaving together prose, poetry and photographs. Moreover,

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Tuesday

Mar 14

Monday

Apr 10

Sunday

Apr 16

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Apr 25

Wednesday

May 10

Tuesday

May 30

Tuesday

Jun 20

Sunday

Jul 30

Thursday

Aug 10

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Aug 14

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Sep 13

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Sep 19

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Sep 24

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Oct 2

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Oct 4

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Nov 6

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Jan 8

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Jan 10

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Jan 18

Sunday

Jan 21

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Feb 5

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Feb 6

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Mar 19

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Mar 20

Monday

Apr 15

Wednesday

May 29

Sunday

Jun 2

Wednesday

Jul 10

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