Our flagship Lecture Series, established in 1978 before Translation Studies was even a recognized field, has welcomed some of the most accomplished translators and literary figures of the last half-century.

Held on most Friday afternoons each spring, the Translation Seminar lectures offer intensive and lively literary conversations about what makes literature work across languages. Students, writers, scholars, and translators from across Boston and New England gather to debate whether Odysseus should be called a “complicated man,” how to capture dialects in translation, what to do with rhyme and meter, and other fundamental questions about literary craft. The Q&A sessions, which often run longer than the lectures themselves, show how the translator’s task is the ultimate form of close reading and a fine art in its own right that requires of its practitioners not just linguistic precision and deep cultural understanding, but also creativity and imagination.

View past lectures here. Or browse our alphabetical list of guest lecturers since 1978.

2026 Lecture Series

Recordings of last year’s lectures can be found here.

The 2026 lecture series will be moderated by Professor William Waters.