A reading and conversation with the authors and editors Rajnesh Chakrapani and Tolu Daniel. Introduction by Matthias Göritz.


Rajnesh Chakrapani is the author of a book of poetry and images The Repetition of Exceptional Weeks, a chapbook Brown People who Speak English, and a pamphlet Manifesto on Translations of Hospitality (forthcoming). He is a winner of a Pen/Heim Translation award and his work is placed in Asymptote, The Offing, The Iowa Review, Lana Turner, The Margins, Speculative City, Triquarterly, Literary North, Sequestrum, http://Crevice.ro.

Tolu Daniel is a Nigerian writer and editor. He is the curator of Ellipsis, a newsletter on Migration, Displacement, Alienation and Literature. His essays have appeared on Lolwe, Catapult, Olongo Africa, and a few other places.

Matthias Göritz is the author of four volumes of poetry, three novellas and three novels—including Der kurze Traum des Jakob Voss (The Short Dream of Jakob Voss), 2005, winner of the Hamburg Literature Prize, Radio Bavaria Prize, and the Mara Cassens Prize. His most recent novel is Parker (C.H. Beck, 2018). He teaches as Professor of the Practice in Comparative Literature at Washington University. 

The International Writers Track in Comparative Literature at Washington University in St. Louis.


The project is part of the subthemes Opportunity, Future prospects and Connect not divide.

Author

Tolu Daniel

Tolu Daniel is a Nigerian writer and editor. He is the curator of Ellipsis, a newsletter on Migration, Displacement, Alienation and Literature. His essays have appeared on Lolwe, Catapult, Olongo Africa, and a few other places.

Author

Rajnesh Chakrapani

Rajnesh Chakrapani is the author of a book of poetry and images The Repetition of Exceptional Weeks, a chapbook Brown People who Speak English, and a pamphlet Manifesto on Translations of Hospitality (forthcoming). He is a winner of a Pen/Heim Translation award and his work is placed in Asymptote, The Offing, The Iowa Review, Lana Turner, The Margins, Speculative City, Triquarterly, Literary North, Sequestrum, http://Crevice.ro.

Author

Matthias Göritz

Matthias Göritz is a poet, translator, and novelist. He has written four poetry collections: LoopsPoolsTools, and Spools; four novels, including Der kurze Traum des Jakob Voss (The Brief Dream of Jakob Voss) and Parker; and three novellas. He has received the Hamburg Literature Prize, the Mara Cassens Prize, the Robert Gernhardt Prize, the William Gass Award and the International Pretnar Award. He teaches as Professor of the Practice in Comparative Literature at Washington University.

Author

The International Writers Track in Comparative Literature at Washington University

This PhD track in comparative literature aimed at international writers proceeds from the conviction that advanced study and credentials in literary studies support and enhance the intellectual and creative work of writers by complementing and informing their endeavors with comparative historical, cultural, linguistic, and theoretical frameworks. It offers highly qualified international students the opportunity to advance their careers with academic training in comparative literary studies in the United States. 

“Writer” in our sense comprises fiction writers, poets, essayists, journalists, translators, screenwriters, filmmakers, and public intellectuals. As an internationally-renowned center of literary study in multiple languages and home to one of the best creative writing programs in the country, WashU offers a rich intellectual and cultural foundation for writers from all backgrounds. We recruit candidates who would benefit from pursuing such studies in a context where they can simultaneously work on their writing, make literary contacts, pursue comparative literary and theoretical studies and complete translations of their work (collaborating with fellow graduate students when appropriate). Students completing the program are not necessarily expected to pursue university teaching positions in the United States or elsewhere worldwide, although they may choose to do so; the degree is offered with the expectation that it will help them enter the world of writing and publishing beyond the academy and in their respective home countries.

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