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- Skin/Screen ExhibitionAll day
- Enhancing Models for Breast Cancer Risk Prediction Through Clinician-AI Collaboration: Hariri Institute Focused Research Program12:00 am
- Ni de Aquí, Ni de Allá (Not From Here, Not From There) Exhibition11:00 am
- Enhancing Models for Breast Cancer Risk Prediction Through Clinician-AI Collaboration11:30 am
- AI and the Human Leader: What Can't Be Automated (and Why It Matters)12:00 pm
- MPI Seminar: John Porco, PhD12:00 pm
- Archaeology Brown Bag Talk: Andreana Cunningham12:20 pm
- BU Hillel: Blurt Journaling12:30 pm
- Workshop - LinkedIn for Networking1:00 pm
- BU Hillel: Tai Chi Flow with Rav Micha3:30 pm
- BU Hillel: SoulCycle3:45 pm
- Halloween Movie Night5:00 pm
- Together in Manzanar: The True Story of a Japanese Jewish Family in an American Concentration Camp5:00 pm
- Faithful Footprints5:15 pm
- Breath, Rhythm & Music for Your Wellbeing 5:30 pm
- Broads, Sisters, Exes: Feminist Millennial Television 5:30 pm
- BU Hillel: Paint a Pretty Pumpkin at a Picnic5:45 pm
- ECE Distinguished Lecture 2025: Pamela Cosman11:00 am
- Hidden in the Layers Exhibition11:00 am
- [HMS] Crafting Effective CVs12:00 pm
- Graduate Admissions Office Hours (Virtual)2:00 pm
- CFA Halloween Celebration3:30 pm
- From Refugees to ‘Non-Criminal Collaterals’: Immigration after the Vietnam War and Now with Ben Tran4:00 pm
- Research on Tap: Engineering the Future of Surgery4:00 pm
- [HBC] Business Development (BD) Workshop4:00 pm
- Getting Along with Imaginary Others: Case Studies in Japanese Fiction with Christopher Weinberger4:30 pm
- The Climate Crisis and the Future of Infectious Diseases4:30 pm
- Third Thursday: Lattes & Lanterns4:30 pm
- Thriving Globally: Your Wellbeing and Academic Success Abroad5:00 pm
- Dylan and Judgments: “Just like a Woman”6:00 pm
- Reception for Skin/Screen6:00 pm
Getting Along with Imaginary Others: Case Studies in Japanese Fiction with Christopher Weinberger
Can novels contribute to the ethical lives of readers? What responsibilities might they bear in representing others? Are we ethically accountable for how we read fiction? Modern Japanese novels and contemporary metafiction, neither of which have figured centrally in Anglophone scholarship on novel ethics, offer innovative answers to these and other questions. This talk will offer new readings of seminal works of Japanese literature to demonstrate how their metafictional strategies can provide new perspectives on contemporary concerns, including debates about identification and empathy, the representation of alterity, and widespread disagreement about whether novel ethics consists in the manner of reading, the effects of reading, or the content of novel representation. We will briefly trace the development of an overlooked “ethical reflexivity” in the fiction of modern writers often critiqued for ethical failures: Mori Ōgai (1868-1922) and Akutagawa Ryūnosuke. The talk will then focus on the relevance of their work for the contemporary moment through analysis of a writer whose ethics continue to provoke debate: Murakami Haruki (1949–). In the end we find a startling continuity between the methods of Japan’s novel progenitors and some of the supposedly recent innovations of metamodernism as well as an original methodology for the further study of world literature.
| When | 4:30 pm - 6:00 pm on 30 October 2025 |
|---|---|
| Building | CAS 533B, 685 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02215 Hybrid – also via Zoom |