Categories
Postgraduate

Raymond Williams Society essay competition

RAYMOND WILLIAMS SOCIETY

FOURTH POSTGRADUATE ESSAY COMPETITION (2015)
(THE SIMON DENTITH MEMORIAL PRIZE)

The annual Raymond Williams Society Essay Competition has been renamed in honour of our late and much-missed colleague, Simon Dentith (1952-2014), former editor of Key Words and competition judge.

The aim of the Raymond Williams Society postgraduate essay competition for work founded in the tradition of cultural materialism is to encourage a new generation of scholars in this area, especially those grounded in discourses and approaches arising from the work of Raymond Williams.

The competition is open to anyone studying for a higher degree (masters or doctoral) in the UK or elsewhere, or who graduated no earlier than 31 July 2013. The prize for the winning entry is 100 GBP and a year’s subscription to the Society. The winning essay will also be considered for publication in Key Words.

Entries should be 5-7,000 words in length, including endnotes, which should normally be kept to a minimum. Entries must follow the Key Words Style Notes for contributors. The Style Notes, and information about previous winning entries, can be found on the Raymond Williams Society’s website: http://www.raymondwilliams.co.uk.

Entries should be sent to Catherine Clay at catherine.clay@ntu.ac.uk.

They should be accompanied by a brief coversheet with the following details:

Name
Postal address
Email address
Institutional affiliation
Current or most recent programme of study
Date of graduation (if applicable)
Title of essay
Word count

Please also ask your supervisor to send us an email confirming your status.

The closing date for entries is 3 June 2015.

Categories
CFPs Postgraduate

CFP: ‘Perfectly phrased and quite as true’: Aphoristic Modernity, 1890–1950

We invite proposals for papers for the following academic conference, by 1st April 2015:

 

‘Perfectly phrased and quite as true’: Aphoristic Modernity, 1890–1950
4 July 2015, University of York
Plenary speakers:
Dr Mark Sandy, Durham University
Dr James Williams, University of York

 

‘You cut life to pieces with your epigrams’, says Oscar Wilde’s Dorian Gray to Lord Henry. His statement is itself an adept epigram, encapsulating a particular kind of aphoristic writing which is pointed and authoritative, yet retains a hint of frivolity. Although aphoristic and epigrammatic writing hails from antiquity and has always been a diverse and popular literary genre, the final years of the Victorian era saw a surge in the popularity of the aphorism. As the rhythms of life and industry accelerated, along with the consumption of information, aesthetic fashions followed suit, and the aphorism came to encapsulate the condensation, spontaneity and fragmentation of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century modernity. As Henry James’ epigrammatic assessment of the Victorian novel implied, ‘loose, baggy monsters’ were out, economy of language was in, and the art of aphorism was revivified.

 

Along with its subgenera, such as the epigram, the witticism, and the apophthegm, the aphorismexpresses the kernel of a truth in surprising ways, while playfully destabilising it – a duality embodied by Friedrich Nietzsche’s Human, All Too Human (1878), one of the first modern works to undermine the systematised nature of western philosophical thought by employing aphoristic writing. On a more quotidian level, with advances in modern media drawing the cult of celebrity into the literary world, modern and modernist writers became celebrated for their bon mots. Accordingly, the nimble one-liner popularised by Wilde and Mark Twain was taken up and turned to different purposes by later public figures such as G.K. Chesterton, Winston Churchill, T.S. Eliot, and Dorothy Parker. As this diverse company suggests, the aphorism can assume as many styles and modes as possible themes, while its airtight economy squeezes and condenses meaning rather than whittling it. Like a quaint contraption ingrained with cryptic clues that slowly spool out meaning, the modern aphorism is ‘neither a truism on the one hand, nor a riddle on the other’, as the late-Victorian journalist, John Morley put it.

 

This one-day conference aims not only to showcase the distinctive character of aphoristic writing in modernity, but also to rehabilitate the critical status of this miniaturised, ephemeral literary genre. We invite 20 minute papers and panel proposals on any of the following variations upon this theme (although respondents should not consider themselves restricted to these topics):

 

Aphoristic subgenres (epigram, apophthegm, maxim, proverb, sententia, etc.)
· Aphorisms and politics
· Celebrity and sound-bites
· Paradox and/or self-contradiction
· Technical ingenuity and/or innovation of thought
· Aphorisms and modernism
· Aphorisms and decadence
· The stylistics of aphorisms
· Witticisms and quips
· Earnestness and irony
· Quibbling and wordplay
· Management of meaning: ambiguity, multiplicity, denseness
· fel vs mel epigrams
· The practice of quotation
· Epigraphs, dedications and other paratextual fragments
· Aphorisms implanted within larger texts
· Aphorisms and literary theory
· Modern aphoristic writing as influenced by antiquity and the Renaissance
· Anti-aphorisms: platitudes and commonplaces
· Anti-aphorisms: parody and nonsense aphorisms
· Conversational and anecdotal aphorisms
 

Panels will follow the format of three 20-minute papers followed by questions. Abstracts of no more than 250 words are invited by 1st April 2015. Please email submissions to aphoristicmodernity@gmail.com
Categories
CFPs Postgraduate

CFP: Media and the Unconscious (MLA 2016)

Please consider submitting an abstract for “Media and the Unconscious,” MLA 2016

Seeking papers exploring the unconscious dimensions and/or effects of media (new and historical). 250-word abstract and 1-page CV by March 15; Matthew Schilleman (schilleman@gmail.com)

https://www.mla.org/cfp_review&id=8070&exit_page=cfp_main

Categories
Uncategorized

Black Mountain College at MSA 17 in Boston

As MSA members shape panel, roundtable, and poster/digital exhibit proposals in advance of the April 17 deadline, it may be helpful to keep in mind that the ICA/Boston will open a major exhibition centered on the legacy of Black Mountain College, curated by Helen Molesworth with Ruth Erickson, about a month before MSA comes to town in November 2015.

Leap Before You Look: Black Mountain College 1933-1957

October 10, 2015 – Jan. 24, 2016

The first comprehensive exhibition on the subject of Black Mountain College to take place in the United States, Leap Before You Look features individual works by over fifty artists. Organized by Helen Molesworth, the ICA’s former Barbara Lee Chief Curator, the exhibition offers new insights into Black Mountain College and the art produced there, as well as its lasting influence on American artistic practice and art education. Following its debut at the ICA, the exhibition will travel to the Armand Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, and The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

As Carrie Preston mentioned in a recent message, the MSA’s conference organizing committee is working with the ICA/Boston to make the most of this happy accident of timing. An update on that prospect is expected soon.

In the meantime, MSA members interested in coordinating BMC-related proposals for the conference program are invited to contact me at steven.evans@maine.edu, preferably before April 1.

I have volunteered to help informally with the crafting of a possible BMC “path” through the conference proceedings and would welcome the chance to work with anyone who shares that interest. (Of course, all proposals will need to go through the regular MSA review process.)

The history of BMC is especially resonant within the interdisciplinary context of MSA. It makes sense, I think, to take advantage of the opportunity the ICA’s exhibition offers us for renewed inquiry into its wide range of radical—and sometimes revolutionary?—activities.

Steve Evans

Categories
CFPs Postgraduate

CFP: Eliot, Media, and Material Culture (MLA)

The T. S. Eliot Society is sponsoring a panel on “Eliot, Media, and Material Culture”at the January 2016 MLA convention in Austin, TX.  If you are interested in presenting a paper on any aspect of this theme, please send a proposal of 250 words or less, together with an abbreviated CV or short bio, to tseliotsociety@gmail.com by March 17.

Information on the 2016 MLA Convention is available here: http://www.mla.org/convention .

Previously announced
“T. S. Eliot and the Arts”: This panel, also sponsored by the Eliot Society, welcomes papers concerned with Eliot’s life and works. Paper proposals addressing Eliot’s many-sided engagement with the extra-literary arts, the SAMLA 87 theme, are especially welcome. By June 1, please submit a 250-word abstract, brief bio, and A/V requirements to John Morgenstern, Clemson University, atjmorgen@clemson.edu. This year’s South Atlantic Modern Languages Association (SAMLA) conference will be held in Durham, NC, November 13 – 15, 2015. Please see https://samla.memberclicks.net/conference for more information.

The T. S. Eliot Society

Home: http://www.luc.edu/eliot

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tseliotsociety

Categories
CFPs

CFP: Industrial Revolutions (MSA 17)

Modernist Studies Association 17th Annual Conference: “Modernism & Revolution”

Boston, MA (November 19 – 22, 2015)

This interdisciplinary panel seeks papers on any aspect of we might call an “industrial revolution” of modernity that will discuss its impact on modernist aesthetics and/or cultural production. Historical, theoretical, and critical approaches are all welcome, as are topics on Machine Age management and technology, corporatism and consumer capitalism, urban development, and mass communication media (including, but not limited to cinema). Authors may consider industrial context as a condition of modernist practices or as a thematic concern of modernist literature and the visual/performing arts.

By Sun., Apr. 5 (11:59 p.m.), please e-mail abstracts of up to 300 words to Will Scheibel at willscheibel@gmail.com. Please also include a 5 item bibliography and brief academic bio.

Categories
CFPs Postgraduate

CFP: MLA 2016: “Playful Modernism”

Please consider submitting an abstract for a special session at MLA 2016, “Playful Modernism”:

Inviting abstracts for papers on the ludic aspects of modernism, including toys, games, the aleatory, uselessness, frivolity, wastefulness, the illogical and the irrational. 300 word abstract by 15 March; Michael Opest (opest@wisc.edu)

http://www.mla.org/cfp_detail_8147

Categories
CFPs Postgraduate

CFP: Katherine Mansfield, Leslie Beauchamp & World War One

An international symposium to be held at
Mesen/Messines, Belgium
26 – 27 September 2015

Keynote Speakers: Professor J. Lawrence Mitchell 

and Dr Gerri Kimber

Call for Papers

Leslie Heron Beauchamp lost his life in Ploegsteert Wood, close to Messines, on October 6 1915. The young Second Lieutenant serving with the South Lancashire Regiment was just 21 when he was accidentally killed by a malfunctioning grenade while teaching his men how to throw these “bombs”. “Chummie”, as he was known to his family, had just spent two weeks with Mansfield and John Middleton Murry at their home in St John’s Wood, London, while on an army course, ironically on the use of hand grenades. The death of her much-loved younger brother would go on to have a significant impact on Mansfield’s writing, unleashing memories of New Zealand and their shared childhood, which she now felt compelled to record.

This symposium in Messines, commemorating the centenary of Leslie’s death, and close to where he died, aims to encourage a discussion of his life, his relationship with his sister Katherine, and how her own writing was transformed by his untimely death.

The symposium will take place in the theatre on the second floor of the Old Town Hall at Messines over the weekend of September 26 and 27 and will include a visit to Leslie’s grave. Keynote speakers include Dr Gerri Kimber of Northampton University, UK, and Professor J. Lawrence Mitchell of Texas A&M University, USA. The organisers are grateful for the support of the Katherine Mansfield Society, the Mesen/Messines Council and the New Zealand Embassy in Brussels.

Please send 200 word abstracts to Martin O’Connor, symposium organiser at:

words@telenet.be 

The deadline for submitting abstracts is 31 July 2015.

In addition to the symposium, an optional battlefield tour is offered on Friday September 25

A tour of main World War One sites on the Ypres Salient will be run for those attending the symposium, on Friday September 25. This is optional only and the charge per person is 85 euros (€50 for students / unwaged). The price includes the guide, lunch and transport.

Your transport will leave at 8.30 am from the coach park at the front of the Cathedral in Ypres (behind the Cloth Hall).

We will visit the Messines battlefield of June 7 1917, including the Pool of Peace, the preserved crater of one of the massive British mines exploded that day. We will then move on to Ypres and the Menin Gate.

We will drive over the Passchendaele battlefield and visit Tyne Cot, the largest of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission’s cemeteries. We will then visit the Memorial Museum Passchendaele before ending the day at Essex Farm, the site where John McCrae wrote the iconic poem “In Flanders Fields”. Lunch will be provided en route.

Should time permit we will also visit the German Cemetery at Langemark and the area of the frontline where the Germans launched the first gas attack in April 1915.

New Zealanders who are visiting for the symposium may wish to do a tour focused on the New Zealand Division. This can cover Flanders, The Somme, Arras and Le Quesnoy depending on how much time is available and can be made prior to or after the symposium. Anyone who is interested should contact Martin O’Connor at:  words@telenet.be

On the weekend following the symposium a major New Zealand event which will be announced shortly will take place on Saturday October 3 at Zonnebeke (Passchendaele). Memorial services are planned for Sunday October 4 in commemoration of The Battle of Broodseinde in which the New Zealand Division with the Australians to their right made a first successful push towards Passchendaele. Eight days later as they made the push for the village itself, the New Zealanders suffered their worst day in history losing 840 dead in just four hours.

Conference details will be updated regularly on the website: http://www.katherinemansfieldsociety.org/messines-symposium-2015/

Categories
Postgraduate Registration open

Registration Open: ‘Digesting Modernity: An Interdisciplinary Study of Food’

Just a quick reminder that St Mary’s University is hosting a food conference: ‘Digesting Modernity: An Interdisciplinary Study of Food’ on Saturday 18th April 2015.
Although the Call for Papers is now closed, if you would like to come along for the day we have a varied and interesting panel of speakers presenting on Ford Madox Food, the Futurist Cookbook, Joyce, Hardy, Georgia O’Keefe, Virginia Woolf and more.
Registration is via the following link:
http://www.stmarys.ac.uk/news/events/event/st-marys-host-postgraduate-interdisciplinary-food-conference/
The fee includes lunch, strawberry cream tea, coffee and a vin d’honneur.
Categories
CFPs Postgraduate

CFP: special session at the 2016 MLA: Poetry and Tone

Please consider submitting an abstract for this special session at the 2016 MLA (in Austin, TX):

Is tone an independent feature of verse, working against the speaker’s or poet’s ostensible intent? Are tone and voice always analogous or synonymous concepts? 300-word abstract by March 10 to magdakay@uvic.ca.