Eadington Gaming Fellow Lee Scrivner | In Residence March 17 -March 29

Special Collections and the Center for Gaming Research are delighted to welcome Eadington Gaming Fellow, Lee Scrivner.

Lee Scrivner (PhD London 2011, MA Utah 1998, BA Utah 1997) is a Lecturer in American literature and culture sponsored by the US Department of State, currently touring universities in Colombia. Formerly, (2010-2012) he was a Fulbright Lecturer in the Humanities at Bosphorus University in Istanbul, a sessional lecturer at the University of London (2007-2008); and an adjunct professor at UNLV (2001-2005). His first book, Becoming Insomniac: How Sleeplessness Alarmed Modernity forthcoming from Palgrave Macmillan explores a century-and-a-half old notion that modern, technologized life causes insomnia. The book investigates theories of sleeplessness, sensation, attention, and volition in medical, psychological, literary texts--mostly from the Victorian period, but also spanning through to today.

Why he's coming:

"My research will focus on ways in which Las Vegas came to epitomize global modernity’s technologized forays into the nocturnal and atemporality in general in the past century--especially through the city’s association with “nightlife” and 24-hour activity and in its tendency to deconstruct time and history in its casinos' themes, etc."

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