Close Reading Symposium, Panel 2
How do (and should) we read today? What kinds of readers are we becoming? Against the influx of new writings on close reading, the so-called Method Wars, and the rapid popularization of AI and computational approaches, this symposium brings together leading scholars for two days of panels and dialogues. Through an exploration of close, distant, embodied, and artificial modes of reading, speakers consider the contemporary reading-scape in which people and machines, within and beyond academia, across global contexts and in dialogue with different pasts, encounter, teach, and make sense of texts today.
Featuring some of the most compelling voices in the field, the conversation opens onto the embodied and affective dimensions of interpretation; the pedagogical challenges posed by artificial intelligence; and the ways reading practices shape subjectivity while registering, or reproducing, long histories of racial, gendered, and political power.
Introduction: Yael Segalovitz (Comparative Literature and Jewish Studies, UC Berkeley), symposium organizer
DAY ONE • Thursday, Feb 19, 2026
PANEL 2: Disciplines, Fields, and the Limits of Literary Hegemony
Close reading beyond its disciplinary, geo-linguistic, and historical conventions
Farah Bakaari (English), “Close Reading as Field Making”
Nicholas Baer (German), “Unattainable Texts: Reading Beyond Literary Studies”
Sherry (Chiayi) Lee (Ancient Greek & Roman Studies), “Reading, Sight Reading, Close Reading: The Case of Classics"