The keynote speaker for the upcoming CASE Conference -- "Hope, Renewal and Resurgence: America in the Face of Hard Times" -- is Kevin Rozario, a ground-breaking American Studies professor at Smith College.
Kevin Rozario teaches courses in American popular culture, media studies, and cultural theory. He received a BA (1st class) from the University of Warwick and an MA (with distinction) from the School of Oriental and African Studies in the UK . After receiving his Ph.D. from Yale University in 1997, he taught at Oberlin and Wellesley colleges before coming to Smith. Although trained as a historian, his interdisciplinary interests keep pulling him into such other fields as literary criticism, media studies, philosophy, economics, environmental history, gender studies, politics, and cultural theory. He endeavors to incorporate many of these approaches in his writing. Among other works, he is the author of The Culture of Calamity: Disaster and the Making of Modern America (University of Chicago Press, 2007) an article in American Quarterly (2003) on mass culture, sensationalism, and the history of American humanitarianism, and the lead essay in the book The Resilient City (edited by Larry Vale and Tom Campanella). He is currently writing a book under contract with Blackwell Press called Making Sense of American Culture, and directing a year-long interdisciplinary seminar for the Kahn Institute on "Undergrounds and Underworlds." As part of this project he is writing an essay tentatively titled "Whatever Happened to the Underground?: The Culture of Capitalism, Race, and the Aesthetics of Dissent." In addition to critiquing culture, he sometimes attempts to produce it: writing, playing guitar and singing for Merchant Bankers-a local band that performs melodic, country-inflected, occasionally dissonant, alternative pop. He also plays guitar in the American Studies band The Distraction.
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