[ALOUD] at Central Library
Wednesday, November 04, 2009 7:00 PM
EVA HOFFMAN

TIME

 

In conversation with Louise Steinman, Curator, ALOUD

From jet-lag to aging to cryogenic freezing, acclaimed scholar,historian, and memoirist Hoffman offers a broad, eye-opening lookbeyond the clock.

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UK Independent

Eva Hoffman grew up in Cracow, Poland, where she studied music intensively before emigrating in her teens to Canada and then the United States. After receiving her B.A. from Rice University and her Ph. D. in English and American literature from Harvard University, she worked as senior editor at The New York Times, serving for a while as the newspaper's regular literary critic. She is the author of five works of non-fiction: Lost in Translation, Exit Into History, ShtetlAfter Such Knowledge, and Time,; as well as two novels -- The Secret and the forthcoming Appassionata (published in the UK as Illuminations). She has studied psychoanalysis, and has written and lectured internationally on issues of exile, memory, Polish-Jewish relations, politics and culture.  She has taught literature and creative writing at various universities, including the University of East Anglia, MIT and Columbia. She has written and presented radio programs, and has received the prestigious Prix Italia for Radio.  Her literary awards include the Guggenheim Fellowship, the Whiting Award and an award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She holds an honorary doctorate from Warwick University, and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. She currently lives in London, and works as visiting professor at Hunter College, CUNY. 

 

Louise Steinman is curator of ALOUD at Central Library and co-director of the Los Angeles Institute for the Humanities at USC. She is the author of two books: The Souvenir: A Daughter Discovers Her Father's War and The Knowing Body: The Artist as Storyteller in Contemporary Performance.

www.louisesteinman.com