Bilingual Knowledge/Bilingual Stories

Palestinian-Israeli novelist, columnist and TV-writer Sayed Kashua, Anastasia Giannakidou (University of Chicago, Linguistics) and Na’ama Rokem (University of Chicago, Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations) explore the possibilities and limits of bilingualism in a project that creates a crossover between different methods of engaging the question, “what do bilinguals know?

There are no upcoming events scheduled right now. Please check back soon.

Past events

19

Feb

 Feb 19, 2020, 6:00 PM – 7:00 PM
 Seminary Coop Bookstore

5751 S Woodlawn Ave
Chicago, Illinois 60637

Sayed Kashua discusses new his new book, "Track Changes." A Q&A and signing will follow the conversation.

Sayed Kashua, former Mellow Fellow at the Gray Center, is the author of the novels "Dancing Arabs," "Let It Be Morning," which was shortlisted for the international IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, "Second Person Singular," and "Native." He writes a weekly column for Haaretz and is the creator of the prizewinning sitcom Arab Labor. Now living in the United States with his family, he is completing his PhD at Washington University in St. Louis.

18

Oct

Bilingual Knowledge at Humanities Day

 Oct 18, 2014, 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM
 University of Chicago, Stuart Hall, room 105

What do bilinguals know? There are multiple answers to this question, from multiple disciplinary points of view. Linguists, psychologists, anthropologists, and literary scholars use different tools to account for bilingualism. As collaborators at the Gray Center for Arts and Inquiry, Anastasia Giannakidou (University of Chicago, Linguistics), Sayed Kashua (Israeli-Palestinian novelist and 2014–2015 Mellon Fellow at the Gray Center), and Na’ama Rokem (NELC) plan to bridge these different approaches and experiment with bilingual storytelling. In this talk they introduce their collaboration and describe the different points of departure from which they come to it.