UATX Speaker Series

Henry Oliver: Who’s there? Literary strangeness in Shakespeare and Henry James 

April 9, 2026

What is literary strangeness? It is common for critics to talk about defamiliarization, which is how art forces us to pay attention to things we become habituated to. However, this is part of the bigger category of literary strangeness, by which writers like Shakespeare and Henry James make us aware of tacit knowledge.  Strangeness is a way for literature to explore the tacit, implicit way in which we know each other and know the world: the things we don't always know that we know, or how we know. One justification for the humanities, therefore, is that strangeness makes us aware of how tacit much of life really is. So much of life cannot be understood explicitly: the world is too strange, too vast for us to be able to know it all. 

Henry Oliver
Henry Oliver is a Research Fellow and Emerging Scholar at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, a writer, and literary critic working on a new book about how classic literature cultivates the liberal values of human flourishing.

He is the author of Second Act (2024) and writes the literary Substack The Common Reader, which has been quoted in The Atlantic and featured in outlets such as The New York Times, GQ, and The Free Press. Among many other projects and podcasts, he is currently working on a paper about Jane Austen and Adam Smith for a journal submission.

Date

Thursday, April 9th

Time

5:00 PM - 6:30 PM

Location

522 Congress Ave, Suite 200

Austin, TX 78701