Author Russell Banks and filmmaker Atom Egoyan discuss the excitement of using history as a subject for literature and film.
November 23
Filling the airwaves with music and arts programming, KUSC is the largest nonprofit classical station in the country.
Twenty-four hours a day at 91.5 FM
Marking Time: On Time and Place in Poetry and Film

Monday, April 19, 2010 : 4:00pm
University Park Campus
Doheny Memorial Library
Room 240
Admission is free.
Photo: Emma Dodge Hanson
Join us for a reading and book signing with Robert Pinsky, a world renowned poet, literary critic and translator.
Pinsky’s translation of Dante’s Inferno is among the most praised poetical reimaginings of our time, and his own poetry, including such prize-winning volumes as An Explanation of America, The Figured Wheel and Sadness and Happiness, continues to inspire a wide range of readers. In the book-length essay Thousands of Broadways: Dreams and Nightmares of the American Small Town, Pinsky travels seamlessly from personal history to literary analysis to film. The works of Preston Sturges and Alfred Hitchcock meet up with dazzling insouciance with such writers as William Faulkner, Willa Cather and Thornton Wilder. In his work as U.S. poet laureate and as creator of the Favorite Poem project, Pinsky makes us take literature more seriously and see the way the artistic imagination creates, recreates and transforms the world around us.
In this reading and book signing, Pinsky will bring together his work as a poet and essayist, just as he brings together the very different media of poetry and film, helping us to map the literary terrain of the contemporary world.
Organized by the USC College of Letters, Arts and Sciences. Co-sponsored by The College Commons.



