Adam McLain

Adam McLain is a PhD student in the department of English at the University of Connecticut and an incoming 1L at UConn Law. He researches and writes on dystopian literature, legal theory, and sexual justice. He has a BA in English, editing, and women’s studies from Brigham Young University, a master of theological studies, emphasizing in women, gender, sexuality, and religion, from Harvard University, and a MA in English from the University of Connecticut.

Spring 2021 Reading Circle: Foucaulting Around
Reading Circle Adam McLain Reading Circle Adam McLain

Spring 2021 Reading Circle: Foucaulting Around

It is time for my Spring 2021 Reading Circle. This time there will just be one Reading Circle and it'll continue the conversations (and welcome new conversations from new people!) to the Gender, Sexuality, and Faith Reading Circle. It is subtitled "Foucaulting Around" because we will be discussing the three volumes of The History of Sexuality over nine weeks.

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Fall 2020 Reading Circles
Reading Circle Adam McLain Reading Circle Adam McLain

Fall 2020 Reading Circles

As we enter this Fall of our Discontent (or Content?), I have created new Reading Circles that I hope will help bring out more people to read and to discuss. These Reading Circles begin in late September / early October and go through November. All of the Reading Circles will be through Zoom or other video calling technology.

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Adam Angkor Wat Writing.JPG

Essaying; or, Why I Blog

To Think

Writing is a spiritual experience. It is a movement toward greater understanding of myself and the world around me. It is a journey toward apotheosis as I come to know my humanity better through the words I write. I write because it allows me to ruminate on a subject, not coming to a definitive conclusion, but rather opening the door to understanding, even in just a little way, the simple complexity and complex simplicity of the universe that surrounds us.

To Share

Writing is a communal experience. It is meant to communicate thoughts across words in order to form other thoughts in other beings. Those thoughts do not come perfectly thought-for-thought, word-for-word, but in their imperfection, there is a connection, a community that is formed between you and me. A joining. A unity.

To Experience

Writing is an experience. Taking the time to consider something and then to write about it allows one to experience and re-experience an event, a moment, a text.