Skip to main content
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
College of Liberal Arts & Sciences
Unit for Criticism & Interpretive Theory

Search

Apply
Make a gift
Menu
    • Director's Message
    • About the Unit
    • History
    • Land Acknowledgment
    • Artist Credits
    • Contact
    • Unit Team
    • Advisory Board
    • Affiliated Departments
    • Affiliated Faculty
    • Recent Faculty Fellows
    • Graduate Student Spotlight
    • Upcoming Events
    • Modern Critical Theory Lecture Series
    • Event Archive
    • Video Collections
    • Radical ColLabs
    • Submit Events to Unit Newsletter
    • Accessibility
    • About CBL
    • Apply to CBL
    • Landmark Unit Publications
    • Faculty Book Showcase
    • Affiliated Courses
    • Graduate Affiliation
    • Certification in Theory
    • Nicholson Fellowship at Cornell Summer Institute
    • Semester at University of Heidelberg
    • Unit News
    • Kritik Blog
    • Subscribe to Unit E-Newsletters
    • Search
  • Woven Chronicle--Installation Art Image Reena Kallat
  • Red and black background with the cover of Colonial Racial Capitalism, the most recent publication from the Unit
  • beatriz milhazes installation in Sao Paolo
  • Mycelium Matrix painting-Greg Allen
  • Critical Book Labs collage
  • Woven Chronicle--Installation Art Image Reena Kallat
    Connecting Across Campus
    Learn More
  • Red and black background with the cover of Colonial Racial Capitalism, the most recent publication from the Unit
    Continuing the tradition of producing theory with Colonial Racial Capitalism
    Learn more about the latest Unit publication
  • beatriz milhazes installation in Sao Paolo
    Modern Critical Theory Lecture Series

    a series of public lectures on the history of critical theory

    Learn More
  • Mycelium Matrix painting-Greg Allen
    Our faculty

    a mycelium matrix linking 10 colleges, 37 departments 

    Affiliated Faculty Members
  • Critical Book Labs collage
    Critical Book Labs
    Learn More
  • Abstract shape swirl
    ANTH 515

    Politics, Knowledge, and Evidence

    Professor: Virginia R. Dominguez Meets: Tuesdays 5:30 - 8:20 pm (109 Davenport Hall) This course explores the following topics: (1) political ideas and ideologies of evidence, (2) evidence and the politics of knowledge, (3) Claims as evidence and evidence as knowledge, (4) Knowledge and privilege...
    Course Description for ANTH 515
  • British 19th century, East Indian Lotus
    LA 587

    The Senses

    Professor: Dede Ruggles Meets: Tuesday & Thursday 11:00am - 12:20pm An exploration into the senses as ephemeral and subjective bodily experiences, the sensory perception of the environment (in physiological and psychological terms), and how attention to the senses can more thoughtfully and...
    Course Description for LA 587
  • abstract shape
    MACS 590

    Transnational Politics of Race, Movements, and Media

    Professor: Rachel Kuo Meets: Tuesdays 3:30 - 6:20 pm (336 Gregory Hall) This interdisciplinary course explores race, media, technology, and social movements from a range of critical, historical, and transnational perspectives. How are race and racialization mediated transnationally through...
    Course Description for MACS 590
  • The Stasi left behind 160km of files, dossiers and tapes on about 6m people (Getty Images)
    GER 575

    Revolutionary Archives: Post-1989 Literature, Film, and Theory

    Professor: Anke Pinkert Meets: Thursdays 3-5 pm (108 Bevier Hall) In this seminar, we examine the relationship between archives, memories and artistic forms in the postrevolutionary era since 1989. After the collapse of the German Democratic Republic, the Federal Stasi Records Agency took over...
    Course Description for GER 575
  • Bolivian dancer
    SPAN 535 / CWL 562

    Revolutions & Social Movements seen through Latin American & Iberian Documentary Film

    Professor: Eduardo Ledesma Meets: Wednesdays 3:00-5:50 This course explores Latin American and Spanish documentary film in relation to revolutionary and social movements from the 1930s until today. Documentary is seen as a genre that has an “immediate” relationship with reality and history. The...
    Course Description for SPAN 535 / CWL 562
  • illustrated women hugging
    ENGL 527

    Between Women: Friendship, Separatism, and Feminism from Margaret Cavendish to Jane Austen

    Professor: Hina Nazar Meets: Mondays 12-2:50 pm (online) In A Serious Proposal to the Ladies (1694), the early feminist philosopher Mary Astell argued that centuries of patriarchal oppression and inadequate education for women required a radical solution: separating women from a corrupt and...
    Course Description for ENGL 527
  • open book with blank page and writing that says "poetry"
    ENGL 564

    Literary Modes and Genres

    Professor: Robert Parker Meets: Tuesdays and Thursdays 12:30-1:50 pm (English 125) The Theory and Study of Poetry and Fiction. What does a poem, story, or novel do, and how? Most contemporary practices of criticism and interpretation apply across genres, but critics can also gain from studying...
    Course Description for ENGL 564
  • Black woman protester
    SOC 596/GWS 590

    Gender, Race and Sexuality

    Professor: Ghassan Moussawi Meets: Tuesdays 3:30-6:20 pm (English 119) This graduate seminar explores contemporary sociological and interdisciplinary debates in studies of gender, race, and sexuality, with a particular focus on power. Even though we will go over multiple theories, we will pay...
    Course Description for SOC 596/GWS 590
  • aerial view of whale in water
    CWL 581

    A Whaley Seminar

    Professor: Brett Kaplan Meets: Mondays 3-5 pm (Siebel Design Center SCD 0060) This course explores literatures intersecting environmental and memory studies through a focus on whales and water. We’ll practice close reading and literary analyses as we work through a series of texts probably...
    Course Description for CWL 581
  • manyabstract heads
    LAW 657

    International Human Rights Law

    Professor: Francis A. Boyle Meets: Mondays & Tuesdays 3-4:15 pm (online) Based primarily on a series of contemporary “real world” problems, the course introduces the student to the established and developing legal rules and procedures governing the protection of international human rights....
    Course Description for LAW 657
  • AAG Logo

    Faculty Affiliate David Wilson Receives Lifetime Achievement Honor from the Association of American Geographers

    David Wilson (Geography and GGIS, Urban Planning, Unit for Criticism) was recently made a lifetime Association of American Geographers (AAG) Fellow for his contributions to critical urban studies. His research focuses on the class and racial production of disadvantaged and elite spaces, emergent...
    Read full story Faculty Affiliate David Wilson Receives Lifetime Achievement Honor from the Association of American Geographers
  • A bust of Frank McWorter, copies of which appear in the DuSable Museum of African American History in Chicago, the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield, Ill., and the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C.

    New Philadelphia Receives National Park Designation

    "New Philadelphia was the first known town planned and legally registered by an African American before the Civil War. Frank McWorter, a formerly enslaved man from Kentucky, founded the town in 1836 and bought his freedom and the freedom of 15 family members. The rural community situated near the...
    Read full story New Philadelphia Receives National Park Designation
  • Adrian Wong headshot

    Graduate Affiliate Adrian Wong Awarded Fulbright-Hays Fellowship

    Unit Affiliated Graduate student Adrian Wong has been awarded a Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad (DDRA) Fellowships. "He will travel to the greater Santiago Metropolitan Region to study the development of digital infrastructure in Chile amid the context of social and...
    Read full story Graduate Affiliate Adrian Wong Awarded Fulbright-Hays Fellowship
  • Hyeree Ellis is wearing black and smiles at the camera in front of a beige background.

    Graduate Student Spotlight: Hyeree Ellis

    Hyeree Ellis (she/her) is a PhD student in the Department of English, specializing in Old and Middle English literature. She received her MA in English from UIUC, and her BAs in Sociology and English Literature from DePauw University. Driven by her curiosities with early global connections, Hyeree...
    Read full story Hyeree Ellis

More Department News

  • 40 Years of Theory: Timothy Ingold "Philosophy with the People In"
    Tim Ingold is a renowned anthropologist whose work has examined the relationship between the material and the social in the fields of anthropology, archaeology, art, and architecture. A phenomenologist, Ingold sees humans as beings that move through and sense a world that is itself also moving. In...
    Read full story
  • 40 Years of Theory: Kaja Silverman "Before the Before"
    Kaja Silverman (University of Pennsylvania Sachs Professor of Art History) has been an important theorist of visuality for the past four decades. In 2011 she was given the Mellon Distinguished Achievement Award by the Mellon Foundation in recognition of her outstanding contributions to scholarship...
    Read full story
  • Distinguished Lecture from Geraldine Heng
    Dr. Geraldine Heng delivered the Krouse Family Visiting Scholar in Judaism and Western Culture Lecture, titled "Race Before the Modern Era: 'Presentism,' 'Intersectionality,' and the Politics of Keywords." Professor Heng's visit was co-sponsored by the Unit for Criticism & Interpretive Theory,...
    Read full story
More News

Events

More Events

Land Acknowledgement

Grandmother stands on a turtle in the water, looking at the moon

We acknowledge that we are on the homelands of the Peoria, Kaskaskia, Piankashaw, Wea, Miami, Mascoutin, Odawa, Sauk, Mesquaki, Kickapoo, Potawatomi, Ojibwe, and Chickasaw Nations. We honor these ancestral grounds as the traditional territory of these Native Nations prior to their forced removal. As members of a land-grant institution, we are obligated to know the histories of dispossession that have allowed the University of Illinois to grow. We must acknowledge and reflect on colonialism as an active crisis and address the role that this university has played in it. The centering of Native peoples is merely a start in committing to undoing the erasure of Native voices, histories, and futures. We have a responsibility to decolonize this institution and our communities, to raise consciousness about indigenous sovereignty, and to act in ways that bring about justice. 

Donate to the Native American House at the University of Illinois.

Image courtesy of Waab-Shki-Makoons (Clayton Samuel King), a multimedia artist living in Ontario, Canada. He is of Bodewadmi (Potawatomi) Anishinabek and Chi Mookomaan descent and is a member of Beausoleil First Nation, otherwise known as Chimnissing. Nookmis and the Water Beings is acrylic on canvas. 

 

Facebook
Instagram
Twitter
YouTube

Search form

  • Copyright
  • Privacy Notice
  • Accessibility
  • ATLAS
  • Site login