Peter Swirski is a Canadian
novelist, scholar, and literary critic[1] featured in Canadian Who's Who.[2][3] He is the author and editor of 19 nonfictions, including the prize-winning[citation needed]Ars Americana, Ars Politica (2010) and the staple of American
popular culture studiesFrom Lowbrow to Nobrow (2005). His other studies include American Utopia and Social Engineering (2011), American Political Fictions (2015), American Utopia: Literature, Society, and the Human Use of Human Beings (2020, Routledge textbook), and the digital-futurological bestseller From Literature to Biterature (2013). He is also the leading authority on the late writer and philosopher
Stanisław Lem.[4]
Life and career
Among other appointments, Peter Swirski was formerly a professor and research director at the
Helsinki Iinstitute for Advanced Studies in Finland,[5] Distinguished Professor of American Studies and Literature at
Sun Yat-sen University,[6] a n associate professor and director of american studies at HKU, an assistant professor and senior research associate at the
University of Alberta,[7] and an honorary professor in American literature at
South China University of Technology.[8] In the mid-1980s he worked for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).[citation needed] He obtained his doctorate summa cum laude from McGill University in Montreal, in 1996.[9][10]
Swirski's 2005 study of American popular and "nobrow" cultures, From Lowbrow to Nobrow, was followed up by several other books on "nobrow" literature, culture, and other forms of "artertainment" (his coinage): American Crime Fiction (2016), a collection of critical essays When Highbrow Meets Lowbrow: Popular Culture and the Rise of Nobrow (2017), and The Art of Artertainment: Nobrow, American Style (2019). His book Ars Americana, Ars Politica (2010) received a positive review from the
Financial Times.[11]
A number of his monographs, collections, as well as articles from the Times Literary Supplement to the MIT Technology Review and other venues deal with the analysis of the work of the writer and philosopher
Stanislaw Lem.[citation needed]
In 2012 Ars Americana was the subject of Professor Swirski's plenary lecture at UNE's Institute for Global Humanities alongside Noam Chomsky and other speakers.[12] In the summer and fall of 2013, he was a speaker at the 4th Philippine Literary festival in Manila,[13] and a BBC World Service panelist at the
Hong Kong International Literary Festival.[14] In March 2015, he was a keynoter at the Millennium International Documentary Film Festival in Brussels.[15] In 2022 he was an invited speaker at the Santa Fe Institute's Interplanetary Project.[16]
Bibliography
Books
American Utopia: Literature, Society, and the Human Use of Human Beings (2020)
The Art of Artertainment: Nobrow, American Style (2019)
When Highbrow Meets Lowbrow: Popular Fiction and the Rise of Nobrow (2017)
Literature, Analytically Speaking: Explorations in the Theory of Interpretation, Analytic Aesthetics, and Evolution (Cognitive Approaches to Literature and Culture) (2010)
I Sing the Body Politic: History as Prophecy in Contemporary American Literature (2009)
Of Literature and Knowledge: Explorations in Narrative Thought Experiments, Evolution, and Game Theory (2007)