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Vambery Lecture: Gerard Passannante, "The Puritan and the Gambler"

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Vambery Lecture: Gerard Passannante, "The Puritan and the Gambler"

Center for Literary and Comparative Studies | English Wednesday, April 15, 2026 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm Tawes Hall, 2115

Join us  for the Annual Vambery Lecture from Professor of English and Comparative Literature Gerard Passannante. The lecture is titled "The Puritan and the Gambler."

Sponsored by Center for Literary & Comparative Studies

This presentation travels from Max Weber's influential proposals about capitalism in the early twentieth century back to practices of spiritual autobiography in the seventeenth, making a case for the significance of an unlikely analogy between the Puritan and the gambler across both historical contexts. With particular attention to the addictive allure of anxiety in early modern Puritan writing, I argue that the experience of compulsion, with its tendency to reduce the self to a simple sequence of thoughts or actions, has the capacity to join otherwise dissimilar activities such as obsessive work, worry, self-interrogation, and the taking of risks. Whereas Weber focuses on the force of ideas in history, my interest is the way compulsion facilitates movement between different domains of experience and enables recognition across space and time.

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Add to Calendar 04/15/26 12:00:00 04/15/26 13:00:00 America/New_York Vambery Lecture: Gerard Passannante, "The Puritan and the Gambler"

Join us  for the Annual Vambery Lecture from Professor of English and Comparative Literature Gerard Passannante. The lecture is titled "The Puritan and the Gambler."

Sponsored by Center for Literary & Comparative Studies

This presentation travels from Max Weber's influential proposals about capitalism in the early twentieth century back to practices of spiritual autobiography in the seventeenth, making a case for the significance of an unlikely analogy between the Puritan and the gambler across both historical contexts. With particular attention to the addictive allure of anxiety in early modern Puritan writing, I argue that the experience of compulsion, with its tendency to reduce the self to a simple sequence of thoughts or actions, has the capacity to join otherwise dissimilar activities such as obsessive work, worry, self-interrogation, and the taking of risks. Whereas Weber focuses on the force of ideas in history, my interest is the way compulsion facilitates movement between different domains of experience and enables recognition across space and time.

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Contact

Sharada Balachandran Orihuela
sbalacha@umd.edu