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Uncategorized

New Modernisms Series Announcement

Gayle Rogers and I are pleased to announce the launch of a new series published by Bloomsbury Academic titled New Modernisms.  We’ve co-written the first book, Modernism: Evolution of an Idea and it is now available at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and other booksellers.   This book concisely traces the development of the term “modernism” from its origin in the early twentieth century through its consolidation in anthologies and classrooms to its radical expansion in recent decades.  We hope it can be that book that you hand to students when they ask, “what exactly is modernism?”

 

Our book will be followed in February by Peter Kalliney’s Modernism in a Global Context and then by several others, including:

  • Faye Hammill and Mark Hussey, Modernism’s Print Cultures
  • Mark Morrisson, Modernism, Science and Technology
  • Marina MacKay, Modernism, War, and Violence
  • Robert Spoo, Modernism and the Law

Other books forthcoming in the series will focus on topics like gender, race, environments, and media.  When complete, this this collection will offer useful guides to the complex array of work that has helped define and re-define modernist studies.  All the books include critical bibliographies and a new website will soon feature sample syllabi, expanded bibliographies, and a glossary of key terms.  For more information, visit the series website.  You can download the first chapter for free if you’d like to get a sense of the book and the series.

 

Best wishes for this new year,

Sean Latham

Walter Endowed Chair of English

Editor, James Joyce Quarterly

Director, Oklahoma Center for the Humanities

Categories
Call for submissions Workshop

Opportunities for early career print scholars from APS: printmaking workshop and Article Prize

The Association of Print Scholars is excited to announce two major opportunities for early-career scholars of printmaking. Please see the announcements below for:


1) a printmaking workshop scheduled for May 20-21 in Providence, RI; and

2) the Schulman and Bullard Article Prize which carries a $2,000 award.


Applications for both are due on January 31, 2016.


************


Call for Applications:

Printmaking Workshop for Early-Career Scholars

Sponsored by the Association of Print Scholars (APS)

Providence, RI, May 20-21, 2016


Knowledge of printmaking techniques is integral to a scholarly understanding the field. Print enthusiasts frequently find it necessary to “dissect” a print—count the number of layers used in a screenprint, examine the fineness of a line in a woodcut, or guess how many plates were implemented in the printing of a color etching. Despite this inherent focus on process, many scholars have never had the opportunity to make a print themselves due to issues of time, funding, or resources.


The Association of Print Scholars (APS) is pleased to announce a two-day intensive workshop that will provide early-career scholars with a brief introduction to printmaking techniques. The workshop will begin with a kickoff reception on Thursday evening at Cade Tompkins Projects, a gallery that represents contemporary printmakers including Daniel Heyman, Allison Bianco, and Nancy Friese.


Participants will spend the first day focusing on intaglio processes, with a special presentation on engraving by Andrew Raftery, Professor of Printmaking at the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), held at Overpass Projects, a new printshop founded by RISD printmaking MFA alumni. The second day will focus on lithography. The workshop will be led by Brian Shure, Assistant Professor and Graduate Program Director in Printmaking at RISD, and a former master printer at Crown Point Press. The number of participants will be limited to ensure a hands-on experience with each demonstration and access to individualized attention.


Who: Graduate students currently enrolled in art history, visual culture, or material culture doctoral programs in the United States or early-career professionals who graduated within the last ten years. Applicants must be members of APS.


Fees: Participants will be responsible for travel expenses to Providence and lodging. Stipends will be offered, by application, to offset these costs for those without institutional support.


Application: To apply, please submit the following documents:

  1. a brief statement (500 words or less) describing your research and how it would be enriched by this workshop

  2. a current CV

  3. one letter of reference (sent directly to info@printscholars.org)

  4. a proposed budget for your expenses (only required if you would like to be considered for a stipend)


Please send your application as a single PDF attachment to info@printscholars.org with the subject line “Providence printmaking workshop.” Applications are due by January 31, 2016. Applicants will be notified by February 15, 2016.


This workshop is sponsored by a generous grant from The Wolf Kahn and Emily Mason Foundation.

************


Call for Applications:

The Schulman and Bullard Article Prize


The Association of Print Scholars invites applications for the Schulman and Bullard Article Prize. The Prize is given annually to an article published by an early-career scholar that features compelling and innovative research on prints or printmaking. The award, which carries a $2,000 prize, is generously sponsored by Susan Schulman and Carolyn Bullard. Following the mission of the Association of Print Scholars, articles can feature aspects of printmaking across any geographic region and all chronological periods. Articles will be evaluated by a panel of advanced scholars for the author’s commitment to the use of original research and the article’s overall contribution to the field of print scholarship.


The Association of Print Scholars invites nominations and self-nominations for the 2016 Schulman/Bullard Article Prize meeting the criteria outlined below:


Nomination Criteria:

  • Authors must have graduated with an MA, MFA, or PhD fewer than 10 years prior to article publication and have less than 10 years of experience as a practicing professional in an academic or museum institution or as an independent scholar.

  • Authors must be current members of APS.

  • Articles must have been published in a journal, exhibition catalogue, or anthology between January 1, 2015 and December 31, 2015. Online publications will be considered on a case-by-case basis.

  • Articles must be between 3,000 and 10,000 words, inclusive of footnotes and references.

  • Entries for consideration must be in English, though the text of the original article may be in any language.


To submit an article for consideration, please send the completed nomination form along with an electronic or hard copy of the article to Angela Campbell, the APS Grants Coordinator:

https://printscholars.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/APS-Nomination-Form-2016.pdf


The deadline for submissions is January 31, 2016

 

Angela Campbell

Grants Coordinator
Categories
CFPs

(Dis)Connected Forms: Narratives on the Fractured Self

8th and 9th September 2016

An Interdisciplinary Conference at the Wilberforce Institute for the study of Slavery and Emancipation

Co-organised by Gul Dag and Sandra Mills

University of Hull

Discourses concerning the concept of (dis)connection are especially prevalent in contemporary society. The relationship between the mind and the body – whether fractured or in flux – feeds into notions of identity, the self, and the ‘other’. Contemporary scholarship focusing upon borders, transformations and creations considers the manifold ways in which the body can be (re)organised and (dis)assembled.  

The notion of (dis)connection and the fragility of form is of central focus within a range of studies and genres. From the uncanniness of being in gothic and horror studies to the cerebral and corporeal fragmentation prevalent in science and speculative fictions, narratives on the fractured self continue to raise questions about the fundamentals of the lived experience.      

 

Plenary Speakers

Dr Catherine Spooner, Reader in Literature and Culture at Lancaster University

Asylum Chic, or, What to Wear to the Lunatics’ Ball

 

Dr James Aston, Subject Leader for Screen at the University of Hull

“These movies have brought me many problems”: Performance and the Traumatised Self within Hardcore Horror

 

 

Dawn Woolley, Artist and Lecturer in Photography at Anglia Ruskin University

 

The Selfie: Still Life or Nature Morte?

 

 

This conference aims to engage with contemporary academic debate relating to the theme of (Dis)Connected Forms, and will explore how these discourses manifest in narratives on the fractured self.

Possible questions for consideration:   

  • What does it mean to be (dis)connected, fractured, transformed, metamorphosed?
  • How are identities formed, managed, processed, controlled?
  • Are corporeal boundaries distinct, or fluid and open to alteration?
  • How is the self narrated/categorised?
  • How are beings created, crafted, constructed?
  • When/how can the ‘other’ be achieved? 
  • What threat does an ‘other’ pose?
  • Can the human be defined in relation to the cyborg, the lifeless, and the animal?
  • How does/will technology alter the body?

Possible focuses might include (but are not limited to):

  • (Dis)Embodiment
  • Identity
  • Human, cyborg, lifeless, animal
  • Transformation
  • Metamorphosis
  • Crisis of self
  • The ‘other’
  • Borders and boundaries
  • (Re)creations
  • The living and the dead
  • Deviance
  • Disguise
  • Revision/alteration

 

Papers are invited that address these questions in relation to fictional and non-fictional narratives. Submissions which encourage an interdisciplinary outlook will be welcomed. These could include, but are not limited to: literature; cultural studies; the sciences; the social sciences; historical perspectives; theatrical, musical and visual narratives; (auto)biography; personal reflections and creative pieces.

Please send abstracts of no more than 250 words for a twenty minute paper along with a brief biographical note of no more than 100 words todisconnectedforms@gmail.com. The deadline for abstract submission is 3rdApril 2016.

For any enquiries please contact Gul Dag and Sandra Mills atdisconnectedforms@gmail.com. For further information please see the website at disconnectedforms.wordpress.com and follow @DisConnectForms on Twitter.

Categories
Elections Past Events

Call for Nominations: BAMS Postgraduate Reps

Call for Nominations

 

Election of Postgraduate Representatives on the British Association for Modernist Studies Executive Steering Committee

 

Nominees for two two-year postgraduate representative positions are sought from registered doctoral students who have completed their first year of study. The elected representatives will join Jamie Callison (Northampton) and Ellen Ricketts (Hull), who were elected at the beginning of 2015.

 

The roles involve regular attendance at committee meetings (two to three times a year), administrative support for BAMS events (notably the annual postgraduate training symposium and the postgraduate conference New Work in Modernist Studies), maintenance of the membership database, information dissemination, and contribution to BAMS’ online presence.

 

Candidates must be a member of BAMS; they can be nominated by another BAMS member or nominate themselves. The final selection will be made through an on-line election open to all BAMS members.

 

Candidates are asked to submit a brief biography as well as a 250-word proposal outlining their vision for the future of BAMS, their suitability for the role, and their envisaged contribution to the association. The name of the nominator, if there is one, should be included in the proposal. Applications should be emailed to Jeff Wallace no later than 30 January 2016.

 

To find out more about BAMS, and to join or renew your membership, please go to our website https://bams.ac.uk/membership/

 

Information about the positions can be directed to:

Jeff Wallace (Chair) (jwallace@cardiffmet.ac.uk)

Alex Goody (Secretary) (agoody@brookes.ac.uk)

 

or to the current postgraduate representatives:

Jamie Callison (Jamie.Callison@uib.no)

Sarah Chadfield (sarah.chadfield@rhul.ac.uk)

Sophie Oliver (sophie.oliver@rhul.ac.uk)

Ellen Ricketts (e.a.ricketts@2008.hull.ac.uk)

Categories
CFPs

CFP: ‘Revision, Revival, Rediscovery’… ‘Re’ words in British Women’s Writing between 1930 and 1960

Recovery; Revival; Rediscovery; Resistance; Retrenchment; Reclamation; Rebellion; Resignation; Rescue; Revolution…

A One-day Conference at the University of Hull

June 24th. 2016 Dr. Jane Thomas and Sue Kennedy

Department of English

Keynote speakers: Professor Mary Joannou, Anglia Ruskin University

Professor Gill Plain, University of St Andrews

The period of women’s literary history between 1930 and 1960 is beginning to receive the closer attention of literary scholars, feminists and cultural historians. It is a period characterised in many ways by the prefix ‘re’; emblematic of the persistent impulse for re-evaluation of women’s writing that occupies an uncertain, liminal place in relation to the canon.

Located in the ‘no-man’s land’ recently labelled ‘intermodernism’ by Kristin Bluemel and others, the work of women writers in the period between 1930 and 1960 has been too easily overlooked in assessments of large movements in literature. Situated after the Women’s Suffrage Movement, World War One, and high modernism, it remains distinct from the Auden generation, but precedes the appearance of the ‘kitchen sink’, the ‘sexual revolution’, and the ‘woman’s confessional novel’. The thirty-year time-span nonetheless encompasses the destabilisation of Europe, total war, recovery, reconstruction and reform. Whether and how such experiences influenced, implicitly or explicitly, the creative output of the woman writer is a key question for the conference.

We invite abstracts of up to 250 words, plus brief biography, for papers of no more than 20 minutes or panels of three associated papers which could include any of a broad range of related issues. Please refer to website for further ideas/details

website:   http://britishwomenwriters1930to1960.wordpress.com

email contact    britwomenwriters30to60@gmail.com

Please e-mail with any queries

Closing date for submissions: March 15th. 2016

Categories
CFPs

The Oak and The Acorns: Recovering the Hidden Carlyle

July 6-8, 2016

To be held at

The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)

Oxford University

 

 

“It is an idle question to ask whether his books will be read a century hence: if they were all burnt as the grandest of Suttees on his funeral-pile, it would only be like cutting down an oak after its acorns have sown a forest. For there is hardly a superior or active mind of this generation that has not been modified by Carlyle’s writings; there has hardly been an English book written for the last ten or twelve years that would not have been different if Carlyle had not lived.” 

George Eliot, “Thomas Carlyle” (1855)

 

Several generations read the works of Thomas Carlyle with surprise, awe, inspiration, fervor, excitement, and occasionally anger—and they went on to shape the rest of the 19th century and much of the 20th century with the words and prophecies of Carlyle embedded in their politics, philosophy, art, literature, history, and ideals for a better world.

 

Some of these impacts would have pleased Carlyle; others would have greatly surprised him, and a few, perhaps, would have dismayed him.  But for good and ill, Carlyle left an impact that in some ways is hard to see because it is so deeply pervasive.

 

This conference aims to retrieve that hidden Carlyle, and to recognize how he served, and continues to serve, as a bedrock of far-ranging ideals for several generations of readers and admirers.

 

For this conference, we invite proposals that explore the rich diversity of where Carlyle lies hidden in the vision and hopes of eminent Victorians, Edwardians, and Modernists throughout England, Scotland, Ireland, Europe, and across the ocean in America and beyond.  Because Jane Welsh Carlyle had a similar effect on the readers of her letters, both in her lifetime and afterwards, we also invite proposals that address her continuing influence as well.

 

We especially welcome papers that delineate how the reception of Carlyle’s works shaped critical movements in politics, art, historiography, literature, including (among many):

 

Socialism

Communism

Muscular Christianity

The Gospel of Work

Pre-Raphaelite Art

The New Biography

Modernism

Young Ireland/Irish Nationalism

Transcendentalism

 

We also welcome papers that explore individual figures from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and their relation to the writings of Thomas and Jane Welsh Carlyle.  A short list of significant figures influenced by the Carlyles includes:

 

Charles Dickens

John Stuart Mill

Karl Marx and Frederic Engels

Benjamin Disraeli

George Eliot

Erasmus and Charles Darwin

James Anthony Froude

Leslie Stephen

Alfred Lord Tennyson

Robert Browning

Elizabeth Barrett-Browning

William Morris

John Ruskin

Lady Jane “Speranza” Wilde

Oscar Wilde

W.E.B. DuBois

Ralph Waldo Emerson

Margaret Fuller

Henry David Thoreau

Friedrich Nietzsche

Virginia Woolf

James Joyce

 

Conference website:  http://www.torch.ox.ac.uk/cfp-recovering-hidden-carlyle

 

Proposals of no more than 500 words, along with short CV, should be sent by February 15, 2016 to:

Marylu Hill (Villanova University):  marylu.hill@villanova.edu

and

Paul E. Kerry (Oxford/BYU): paul.kerry@ccc.ox.ac.uk

 

Categories
CFPs Uncategorized

CFP: Flying through the ’Thirties

a one-day symposium on air travel and interwar Britain 

16 April 2016

The Aerodrome Hotel, Croydon Airport

London

 

In his seminal British Writers of the Thirties, Valentine Cunningham notes the ‘airmindedness’ of the decade; this one-day symposium aims at exploring the role held by flying in interwar Britain—actual, textual, material, cultural.

Held at Croydon Airport, a key site for aviation in interwar Britain, the conference will explore the texts and contexts that help to examine the impact of air travel on art, literature, film, space, perception and production.

Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

–       The imagery of flight in poetry, prose, painting.

–       ‘Airmindedness’

–       Flights taken by individual authors, explorers, adventurers.

–       Travel literature and its response to flight.

–       The threat and reality of aerial bombardment.

–       Airport architectures.

–       Films featuring flying.

–       The luggage and logistics of air travel.

Please send a maximum 250-word proposal by

18 January 2016 to

flyingthroughthethirties@gmail.com

 

Conference organisers:

Dr Michael McCluskey (UCL)

Dr Luke Seaber (UCL)

Dr Amara Thornton (UCL)

Dr Debbie Challis (Croydon Airport Society)

 

‘As you all know, the greatest feat, the most stupendous risk in human history is being undertaken this evening by a gentleman who prefers to remain known simply as the Pilot.  His ambition is no less than to reach the very heart of Reality.’ 

 

                                                                    W.H. Auden, The Dance of Death (1933)

Categories
Call for submissions

Edinburgh Critical Studies in Atlantic Literatures and Cultures

Edinburgh Critical Studies in Atlantic Literatures and Cultureshttp://www.euppublishing.com/series/ecsalc

A note from series editors Laura Doyle, Colleen Glenney Boggs, and Andrew Taylor. 

The editors of the Edinburgh Studies in Atlantic Literatures and Cultures invite book submissions and proposals on all historical periods, including postcolonial, modernist, and contemporary.  In addition to excellent books on all regions and circuits of the Atlantic world, including Africa, Europe, and the Americas, we also publish studies that interpret Atlantic-world literary culture within larger global or transhemispheric circuits, where the Atlantic world is a salient focus or paradigm.  Expanding on the rich archive of books published between 2005 and 2014 in the Edinburgh Studies in Transatlantic Literatures, this renamed series features research  situating print culture within interconnected Atlantic histories and forms, whether linked by economies, ideas, institutions, laws, struggles, revolutions, diasporas or migrations.  We welcome a multiplicity of methodologies, and approaches that theorize Atlantic literary studies are of  particular interest.

Categories
CFPs

CFP: Thirteenth International Robert Graves Conference

‘The Robert Graves Society is pleased to announce that the Thirteenth International Robert Graves Conference will be held at St John’s College, Oxford, from 7 September to 10 September 2016. The theme of the conference will be ‘Robert Graves and the First World War’.

On the 20 July 1916, just four days before his 21st birthday, Robert Graves was seriously injured and left for dead during action in the Battle of the Somme. His Colonel wrote to Graves’s parents that their son was very gallant, and had died of wounds. However, despite a night’s neglect Graves was discovered the next day still alive in an old German Dressing station near Mametz Wood. On 5 August the Times was able to report that Graves, officially reported died of wounds, wished to inform his friends of his recovery. That Graves’s naturally mythological imagination saw this as a kind of rebirth should come as no surprise, and it afforded him an opportunity to draw on his experiences to become one of the best-known chroniclers of the war in his memoir Good-bye to All That (1929), and in a handful of regularly anthologised poems that survived the process of Graves’s own editing out of his early poetry. But Graves’s engagement with the war goes far beyond these important and popularly-known texts, and it was to remain a subject of conscious and unconscious preoccupation for much of the rest of his long life. The war’s transformative effects on Graves, his contemporaries, and subsequent generations is much under scrutiny in these centenary years, and this conference in the anniversary year of the Battle of the Somme looks to use Robert Graves as a way to further our understanding of the Great War in context.

The conference will include academic papers and readings by contemporary writers. Keynote speakers and participants to include Jean Moorcroft Wilson, Professor Tim Kendall, Patrick McGuinness, William Graves, and Professor Fran Brearton.

CALL FOR PAPERS

Proposals are invited for papers (20-30 minutes) on relevant topics relating to Graves and/or his contemporaries. These could include but are not limited to:
·         Rethinking the literary canon of the First World War;
·         literary networks and the war;
·         the war and literary ‘isms’ (such as Georgianism; modernism);
·         Graves and First World War writing;
·         Graves’s poetry of the war and about war;
·         the First World War, memory and memoir;
·         Graves and military history;
·         Graves, Wales, and the Royal Welch Fusiliers;
·         Graves and Europe;
·         the war and mythology;
·         legacies of the war in Graves’s writing;
·         the war and subsequent conflict;
·         music and the war;
·         the war and medicine;
·         the war and gender / sexuality.

Critical responses to recent works on Graves, papers on research in progress, on recently discovered archival material of interest to Graves scholars, on digital collections or on exhibitions of Graves’s work, and on the war in relation to Graves’s contemporaries, are also welcome.
Please send an abstract (max. 250 words) by 30 April 2016 to the conference organiser:

Dr Charles Mundye, FEA
Head of Academic Development
Department of Humanities
Faculty of Development and Society
Sheffield Hallam University
City Campus
Howard Street
Sheffield S1 1WB
E: c.mundye@shu.ac.uk

PARTICIPANTS
The conference is open to all. It will be of interest to academics, teachers, research students, and anyone else who is interested in the life and writings of Robert Graves and his circle. The series of Robert Graves conferences have built up a reputation for their scholarly excellence and their friendly dialogue among participants from a wide variety of back-grounds, both lay and academic, and the Graves family itself.

To register an interest in attending the conference as a non-speaker, please e-mail Patrick Villa: pjvilla@aol.com.

Categories
Call for submissions Uncategorized

Call for submissions, Vol 9, Katherine Mansfield Studies: KM and Russia

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS FOR VOLUME 9 OF

 

Katherine Mansfield Studies

 

(THE PEER-REVIEWED YEARBOOK OF THE KATHERINE MANSFIELD SOCIETY)

 

KATHERINE MANSFIELD AND RUSSIA

 

Guest Editor: Professor Galya Diment (University of Washington, Seattle, US)

 

Katherine Mansfield’s passion for Russian literature and culture is well known. Anton Chekhov was not just her most significant literary influence, he was a mythological presence with whom she felt a close bond. Indeed, this emotional bond became even stronger when she discovered the two of them shared not just similar artistic sensibilities but also the same deadly disease – tuberculosis. While Chekhov reigned supreme in Mansfield’s world, several other Russian writers, and Russia in general, fascinated her for most of her adult life. This volume seeks essay submissions that engage with all aspects of Mansfield’s response to Russian literature, culture and history, as well as to the Russians she met in England and France.

 

Possible topics include but are not limited to:

 

 

  • KM and Russian Literature
  • KM and Chekhov
  • Translating with Koteliansky
  • KM and Tolstoy
  • KM, Gurdjieff and his Institute
  • The Hogarth Press and Russia
  • KM and Marie Bashkirtseff
  • KM and Dostoevsky
  • KM and Constance Garnett
  • KM and the Russian Revolution of 1917
  • KM and Russian Ballet and/or Theatre

 

 

Submissions of between 5000–6000 words (inclusive of endnotes), in Word format and using MHRA style, should be emailed to the Guest Editor for this volume, Professor Galya Diment, accompanied by a 50 word biography: kms@katherinemansfieldsociety.org

 

A detailed MHRA style guide is available from the Katherine Mansfield Society website:

http://www.katherinemansfieldsociety.org/yearbook-katherine-mansfield-studies/

 

CREATIVE WRITING 

 

Pieces of creative writing on the general theme of Katherine Mansfield – poetry, short stories, etc., should be submitted to the editors for consideration, accompanied by a 50 word biography: kms@katherinemansfieldsociety.org

 

DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS: 31 August 2016