TA46 EASA Paris #2 Helena Wulff

Published: Feb. 18, 2013, 11:03 a.m.

We talked about the meaning of the EASA conference theme \u201cUncertainty and Disquiet\u201d, the tradition of the discipline in Sweden and how to keep friendships over vast distances. Central to the talk is Helena\xb4s approach to writing and she provides helpful advice to develop strategies and techniques for the improvement of one\xb4s own texts. We touched on issues concerning the handling of critique, rejection, envy, competition and collaboration, and the tension between the creative potential of crisis and increased competition due to shrinking funding opportunities.\n\nHelena Wulff\xb4s research is in the anthropology of communication and aesthetics based on a wide range of studies on the social worlds of literary production, dance, and visual arts. Her specialist skills are in expressive cultural form (dance, art, images, and text) in a transnational perspective, visual culture, the emotions, and media as well as anthropological methods. Helena has held visiting professorships at the University of Ulster, the University of Vienna, the National University of Singapore, and the University of Illinois. Drawing on her research, she also occasionally writes popular articles for newspapers and magazines in Sweden and the UK.\nHelena has conducted field studies in Stockholm, London, New York, Frankfurt-am-Main, and Ireland (mostly Dublin). Her current research is on writing and literature as cultural process and form focusing on contemporary Irish writers as cultural translators and public intellectuals.\n\nFurther talks recorded at the EASA conference provide interviews with Henrietta Moore, Professor at Cambridge University and Dan Rabinowitz from Tel Aviv University. For more information about EASA please check our http://www.easaonline.org/.