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CFPs

RECONSIDERING THE GREAT WAR: The Later Years (1916-1918) (NeMLA)

Panel in the NeMLA 2016 (Northeast Modern Language Association) convention in Hartford, Connecticut
http://www.buffalo.edu/nemla.html
This panel will focus on a wide range of cultural responses to the latter two years of the Great War, namely from the beginning of the Battle of Verdun in 1916 to the end of the war in 1918. Proposals on literature, film, painting, graphic arts, music, philosophy, and other cultural forms are welcome. Works from 1916-2015 will be considered. This panel is open to many themes and questions, including but not limited to the following: how have those two years of war influenced actual combatants or fictional characters? Do responses to the long war vary from writer to writer or from novel to novel? Did different countries/languages have distinct or overlapping approaches to representing war after it had been going on for two or more years? How are movements and attitudes toward peace portrayed in the later years of the war? How are particular battles portrayed in the various arts? How does the war affect personal or sexual identity as portrayed in the arts? What are the similarities and differences between combatants and civilians that are represented in the arts? How has the duration of that war affected artistic forms? How has the war affected popular and high culture? Have different cultures or nations reacted in different ways to the war? How is disability that was caused by the war portrayed in the arts? What methodological perspectives are best suited to grasp the Great War? Presentations dealing with non-English writers and works are especially appreciated.


Please contact the chairs Richard Schumaker (rschumaker3@gmail.com) and Marja Härmänmaa (Marja.harmanmaa@helsinki.fi)

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CFPs

Retelling Stories through Literature and Film (NeMLA)

Dear colleagues,

please see our CFP for the NeMLA conference in Hartford, Connecticut (US), March 17-20, 2016.

Retelling Stories through Literature and Film

Retelling a story may be conceived as an act of cultural translation through which authors render established models on the basis of their position in society. We invite submissions of paper proposals exploring the aesthetic and/or political implications of retelling stories across different media and/or cultures.
Panel organizers: Marja Härmänmaa (University of Helsinki, Finland) and Paola Sica (Connecticut College, USA).

Please submit your abstract (300-400 words), a short biographical note and requests for special equipment to the NeMLA website:

http://www.buffalo.edu/nemla.html

The deadline to submit abstracts is September 30, 2015. Please note: we accept papers either in English or Italian. If you have any questions please do not hesitate to contact us at marja.harmanmaa@helsinki.fi and psica@conncoll.edu.

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CFPs

The 2015 International Symposium on Women’s Studies

The 2015 International Symposium on Women’s Studies

5 December 2015 – Warsaw, Poland

organised by Interdisciplinary Research Foundation

Keynote speaker: Dalia Leinarte

Professor of History, Director of Gender Studies Centre, Vilnius University

Fellow Commoner at Lucy Cavendish College, Cambridge University

Member of the UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women

The symposium seeks to explore the past and current status of women around the world and to situate gender in relation to the full scope of human affairs. It aims to examine the ways in which society is shaped by gender from an interdisciplinary perspective.

Papers are invited on topics related, but not limited, to:

  • gender equality

  • women’s rights

  • women’s history

  • women and education

  • women and leadership

  • women’s health

  • women and sexuality

  • women and religion

  • women and literature

The symposium is addressed to academics, researchers and professionalswith a particular interest related to the conference topic. We invite proposals from various disciplines including history, sociology, political studies, anthropology, culture studies and literature. The language of the conference is English.

We also welcome poster proposals that address the conference theme.

Paper proposals up to 200 words and a brief biographical note should be sent by 15 October, 2015 to: 2015womensstudies@gmail.com. Notifications will be sent by 20 October 2015.

Full registration fee – 70 €

Student registration fee – 50 €

The conference venue:

As-Bud Conference Centre

Al. Jerozolimskie 44,
00-024 Warsaw, Poland

The Conference venue is situated in the very heart of the city, right next to the underground station Centrum. It is a 10 minute walk away from the central railway station and a 15 minute walk away from Warsaw University.

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Seminars

London Modernism Seminar – 3 Oct 2015

The first London Modernism Seminar of 2014-15 will take place on Saturday 3 October at 11-1pm in Room 349 at Senate House, London. The theme of the seminar is Modernism and Science and we are very pleased to welcome as speakers Esther Leslie (Birkbeck, University of London) and Max Saunders (Kings College London). You can find abstracts and speaker biographies below. The titles of the papers are:

Esther Leslie, ‘Liquid Crystal Lives in Modernist Europe’

Max Saunders, ‘Human Sciences: the idea of science in C. K. Ogden’s “To-Day and To-Morrow” Book Series’

The seminar is open to everyone who is interested in modernism, and you can find directions to the venue on the Institute of English Studies website: http://www.ies.sas.ac.uk/about-us/contact-us

Best wishes,

The Seminar Organisers

Suzanne Hobson, Queen Mary, University of London, s.hobson@qmul.ac.uk

Tim Armstrong, Royal Holloway, University of London, t.armstrong@rhul.ac.uk

David Ayers, University of Kent, David Ayers, dsa@kent.ac.uk

Rebecca Beasley, Queen’s College, Oxford, rebecca.beasley@ell.ox.ac.uk

Helen Carr, Goldsmiths, University of London, h.carr@gold.ac.uk

Peter Fifield, Birkbeck, University of London, p.fifield@birkbeck.ac.uk

Esther Leslie (Birkbeck), ‘Liquid Crystal Lives in Modernist Europe’

In 1933 Alfred Doeblin wrote a virtually unread book titled Unser Dasein, Our Existence. It was a compendium of scientific reflection, fiction, philosophy, philosophical pronouncement. It fell victim to political circumstances, but it also evades all the disciplinary certitudes and so slips through the cracks between disciplines. This paper explores it as a contribution to a ‘liquid crystal’ discourse that operates on the fringes of scientific and cultural analysis in Europe between the wars, a quest that was as significant politically as it would come to later be technologically.

ESTHER LESLIE is Professor of Political Aesthetics at Birkbeck, University of London, UK. Her first book was Walter Benjamin: Overpowering Conformism (Pluto, 2000). She has also written a biography of Benjamin (Reaktion, 2007). In 2002 she published Hollywood Flatlands:Animation, Critical Theory, and the Avant Garde (Verso). Synthetic Worlds: Nature, Art, and the Chemical Industry (Reaktion) appeared in 2005. Derelicts: Thought Worms from the Wreckage was published by Unkant in 2014.  She has translated and edited a collection of Walter Benjamin’s writings on photography (Reaktion, 2015) and a book on liquid crystals is forthcoming.

Max Saunders (KCL), ‘Human Sciences: the idea of science in C. K. Ogden’s “To-Day and To-Morrow” Book Series’

The  “To-Day and To-Morrow” series, edited by C. K. Ogden for Kegan Paul from 1923-31, included over 100 pithy volumes outlining the present state of the topic at issue, combined with a projection of its future. Some of the most influential volumes in the series were devoted to science, such as those by J. B. S. Haldane, Bertrand Russell, James Jeans and J. D. Bernal. Though the majority of the volumes (some 80%) were on other topics, this paper will argue for a scientific paradigm as a primary motivation of the series; and for an appreciation of the significance of the series as a contribution to thought about modernity and the future.

MAX SAUNDERS is Director of the Arts and Humanities Research Institute, Professor of English and Co-Director of the Centre for Life-Writing Research at King’s College London, where he teaches modern literature. He studied at the universities of Cambridge and Harvard, and was a Fellow of Selwyn College, Cambridge. He is the author of Ford Madox Ford: A Dual Life, 2 vols. (Oxford University Press, 1996) and Self Impression: Life-Writing, Autobiografiction, and the Forms of Modern Literature (Oxford University Press 2010); the editor of five volumes of Ford’s writing, including an annotated critical edition of Some Do Not . . . (Carcanet, 2010), and has published essays on Life-writing, on Impressionism, and on a number of modern writers. He was awarded a Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship from 2008-10 to research the To-Day and To-Morrow book series; and in 2013 an Advanced Grant from the ERC for a 5-year collaborative project on Digital Life Writing called ‘Ego-Media’.

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Registration open

Rewriting(s) MHRA PG and EC Conference

There is one week left to register for Rewriting(s), the MHRA Postgraduate and Early Career Conference, to be held at the Institute of Modern Language Research at Senate House in London on the 16th October 2015.

Keynote and MHRA Presidential Address: Professor Martin McLaughlin (Agnelli-Serena Professor of Italian at the University of Oxford/ Fellow of Magdalen College).

Registration ends on the 2nd October.

For the programme and registration form please see the IMLR’s listing below:

http://events.sas.ac.uk/imlr/events/view/18464/Rewriting(s).+MHRA+Postgraduate+and+Early+Career+Conference

We look forward to seeing you there!
Sophie Corser and Lucy Russell

Postgraduate Representatives

Modern Humanities Research Association

Categories
Events

Upcoming Event Announcement – “Vanguard Women – A Welcome to the Anna Mendelssohn Papers”

Please see below for the poster for the event “Vanguard Women – A Welcome to the Anna Mendelssohn Papers” which will be held at The Keep, Brighton on Friday 16th October 2015.

This event is being organised by the Centre for Modernist Studies at the University of Sussex and will feature a series of talks, open to the public, given by academics talking on the theme of “Feminism and Vanguardism” in different historical moments, covering the fin de siècle and modernist periods, post 9-11, and 1968 and its environs. The speakers are Jill Richards (Yale), Liz Sage (Sussex), and Sara Crangle (Sussex).

There will also be a pre-talk workshop led by the Head of Special Collections at Sussex, Fiona Courage, and the collection’s archivist, Simon Coleman, which will give participants the opportunity to explore the holdings and learn more about the way in which the archive has been collated and catalogued. Limited to 20 spaces.

Further details of the event can be found on the Centre for Modernist Studies website. 

Registration  must be made in advance and the fee is  £10 / £5 concessions (including students). Participants attending both sessions will only pay once. To register please send your full name, your institutional affiliation (if any), which session(s) you would like to attend along with any dietary or access requirements to centreformoderniststudies@gmail.com.

Vanguard Women Poster

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Job opportunities

Hiring in literature of the African diasporas

The Fordham University English department invites applications for a tenure-track position in literatures of the African diaspora, with a focus on African American and/or Caribbean literatures.
Interfolio link: http://apply.interfolio.com/31814
This is an assistant professor position. Please apply and please encourage your graduate students & post-docs to apply,
Categories
Seminars

Seminar Series at the Scottish Poetry Library: From Renaissance to Referendum

From Renaissance to Referendum: Poetry, Culture, and Politics

At the Scottish Poetry Library, 2015-16

www.renaissancetoreferendum.blogspot.com

SPL

Throughout 2015-16, the Scottish Poetry Library will host the public seminar series From Renaissance to ReferendumPoetry, Culture and Politics in collaboration with the University of Edinburgh, supported by the British Academy, and by Edinburgh University’s Humanities and Social Sciences Knowledge Exchange and Impact Fund.

Across the course of six free, evening events, poets and critics will introduce some of the most important and exciting areas of debate around the relationships between poetry, culture and politics in twentieth-century and contemporary Scotland, setting up open audience discussions on these themes. We hope these events will bring new critical and creative voices from the University and beyond into the Scottish Poetry Library’s newly renovated discussion and performance space. Staff and students are encouraged to come along to listen, talk, and drink wine!

Our six events will be spread throughout the academic year 2015-16:

The Scottish Renaissance and the Origins of Scottish Nationalism

1 October 2015, 6.30-8 pm, Saltire Society, 22 High Street, EH1 1TF

The Languages of Scottish Poetry

22 October 2015, 6.30-8 pm, Scottish Poetry Library, 5 Crichton’s Close, EH8 8DT

Contemporary Scottish Poetry and Ecology

12 November 2015, 6.30-8 pm, Scottish Poetry Library

Women’s Voices in Modern and Contemporary Scottish Poetry

4 February 2016, 6.30-8 pm, Scottish Poetry Library

Poetry and the Referendum: 2014 and After

25 February 2016, 6.30-8 pm, Scottish Poetry Library

 

Poetry, Culture and Politics in the Scottish Sixties

17 March 2016, 6.30-8 pm, Scottish Poetry Library

To find out more about the series and book ticket, visit

www.renaissancetoreferendum.blogspot.com

http://www.scottishpoetrylibrary.eventbrite.co.uk

Email any queries to Greg.Thomas@ed.ac.uk

Categories
Events

The Brigid Brophy Anniversary Conference

English & Creative Writing at The University of Northampton proudly presents:
The Brigid Brophy Anniversary Conference
9 – 10 October 2015
Avenue Campus, The University of Northampton

To celebrate the twentieth anniversary of the death of Brigid Antonia Brophy (1929-1995), and the fiftieth anniversary of her article ‘The Rights of Animals’, published in The Sunday Times on 10th October 1965, the School of The Arts at the University of Northampton is delighted to announce a two-day international conference to celebrate all aspects of Brophy’s literary career, as well as her leading contributions to animal rights, vegetarianism, anti-vivisectionism, humanism, feminism and her advocacy of the Public Lending Right.

Featuring: Professor Philip Hensher (Bath Spa University)
Dr Carole Ann Sweeney (Goldsmiths, University of London)
Professor Michael Bronski (Harvard University)
Professor Gary L. Francione (Rutgers University)
Dr Robert McKay (University of Sheffield)
Dr Richard Ryder (anti-speciesism campaigner)
Peter Parker (biographer and author)
– and Kate Levey (daughter of Brigid Brophy)

For more information, please e-mail: ecw@northampton.ac.uk
Organiser: Professor Richard Canning

Categories
Job opportunities

Post-45 American job listing

Please let your friends, students, and colleagues know about a
tenure-track position (Assistant Professor) in post-1945 American
literature, starting 9/1/16: https://apply.interfolio.com/31701 and
http://www.mla.org/jil_listing?id=23562

Applications are accepted through Nov. 13th, 2015.