About EKaufman

English Adjunct

Info for my event…

Hi all,

As promised, here’s the details for the reading I mentioned in our last class.

Wednesday, May 22

erica kaufman & Simone White

8PM @ The Poetry Project

($7 for students–bring an ID)

erica kaufman is the author of the full-length poetry collection Censory Impulse (Factory School 2009). Excerpts from her long poem, INSTANT CLASSIC are available in chapbook form from Least Weasel and Belladonna*. kaufman is the co-editor of NO GENDER: Reflections on the Life and Work of kari edwards. Poetry and prose can be found in Rain TaxiAufgabeBombay Gin, Verse, The Poetry Project Newsletter, and Jacket2. kaufman prides herself as having Simone White as her BFF4E.

Simone White was born in 1972 in Middletown, Connecticut and grew up in Philadelphia. Her most recent chapbook is Unrest (Ugly Duckling Presse, Dossier Series, 2013). She is also the author of House Envy of All of the World (Factory School, 2010) and Dolly (Q Ave Press, curated by Ross Gay, with the paintings of Kim Thomas), and her work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Brooklyn Rail, The Claudius App, Aufgabe and The Recluse among other places. erica kaufman is her BFF.

CANDIDE, OR OPTIMISM

  1. Candide’s life came crashing down when he decided to express his feelings at the wrong time(#@thedinnertable).
  2. STRANGER DANGER!
  3. Run Candide Run!
  4. The resurrection of Candide’s philosophy master
  5. Even when the going gets tough, be proactive not reactive.
  6. When the going gets tough, it gets tougher
  7. Cunegonde’s back from the dead?
  8. Mournful Cunegonde
  9. After Candide killed both Inquisitor and the Jew, they were trying to figure out how to get rid from the house
  10. How they made it to the other place with nothing, and the introduction to the old lady’s story
  11. the woman experienced the life from heaven to hell
  12. Woman was bought and sold like goods.
  13. How Cunegonde two-timed Candide and kicked him to the street
  14. Candide and Cacambo’s big OMG moment in Paraguay

What is Enlightenment…Really

lorenzAfter class on Wednesday, I found myself kind of obsessed with thinking about the word we spent pretty much the entire session on: “enlightenment.” In Kant’s native German, the word is “Äufklarung”–which literally means something like “to clear up” (auf=up, klarung=make clear). According to our friend the Oxford English Dictionary, here are a few more definitions of “enlightenment”:

  • “The action of bringing someone to a state of greater knowledge, understanding, or insight; the state of being enlightened in this way. Also: an instance of this. rare before 19th cent.”
  • spec. Usu. with capital initial. The action or process of freeing human understanding from the accepted and customary beliefs sanctioned by traditional, esp. religious, authority, chiefly by rational and scientific inquiry into all aspects of human life, which became a characteristic goal of philosophical writing in the late 17th and 18th centuries. Freq. in the Age of Enlightenment.”

But, do any of these meanings really give us a sense of what enlightenment is today, in 2013? Why is the word still used so often, in so many different contexts? It must be important…

314264.zoomI keep coming back to the passage where Kant states, “But that the public should enlighten itself is more possible…disseminate the spirit of the rational appreciation of both their own worth and every man’s vocation for thinking for himself.” Perhaps this is the key to understanding why we think about enlightenment today? It seems as though Kant is hinting at the importance that the “public” mobilize in order to break out of a pattern of being “followers.” He definitely thinks that it is crucial that all people learn to think for themselves and seems to think that “revolution” is a good and necessary thing. But, Kant was also living in a world ruled by a monarch.

How would “the public enlighten itself” today? Should “the public enlighten itself”? What is “the public”? What do we need to save?