Categories
Events Postgraduate

Literature and Material Culture seminar series, Oxford

In Michaelmas Term 2014 the English Faculty at the University of Oxford (click here for a map) will be hosting a cross-period, interdisciplinary seminar series on literature and material culture. The seminars will take place on alternate Tuesday evenings at 5.15pm in the Faculty’s History of the Book Room throughout the autumn term. Drinks and discussion will follow each seminar.

Please see the attached poster and literaturematerial.wordpress.com for more information, or contact Claire Johnstone and Hannah Ryley at literaturematerial@gmail.com

Across the term, established academics (including Dr Adam Smyth, Dr Paula Byrne, and Dr Vike Plock) and graduate and visiting speakers will explore three main threads: material texts, clothing in literature, and object-oriented literary biography. We hope to see you there!

Tues 21 Oct (Week 2) Dr Adam Smyth (University of Oxford)

– Fallen books in early modern England: or, what can we do with errors in print?

Tues 4 Nov (Week 4) Dr Paula Byrne (University of Oxford)

– The Life of Small Things: researching and writing an object-based biography of Jane Austen

Tues 18 Nov (Week 6) Dr Vike Plock (University of Exeter)

– Edith Wharton, fashion, and the fictions of modernity

Tues 2 Dec (Week 8) Graduate & Visiting Speakers:

Beatrice Montedoro (University of Oxford)

– Reading early modern drama: the ‘material trace’ left in commonplace books

Dr Kate Macdonald (Sassoon Visiting Research Fellow)

– The missing bodies of the First World War

All at 5.15pm in the History of the Book Room,

English Faculty, University of Oxford

Categories
CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP: EMERGENCE Symposium- 4th Dec 2014, Durham University

Kaleidoscope, Durham’s postgraduate interdisciplinary journal, is organising a symposium at Durham Castle on the 4th of December 2014

 

A key feature of Kaleidoscope is that it embodies and connects diverse subject areas in a single publication, whether in the Arts and Humanities, the Sciences, or the Social Sciences. This symposium is an excellent opportunity to communicate concepts and ideas to those in other fields.

The symposium is on the theme of ‘Emergence’. Suggestions include, but are not limited to:

  • Emergency, Tipping Points and Fragility
  • Emergence of Genre
  • Emergent Technology and Systems
  • Emergence, Novelty and Creativity
  • Emergent Organisations, Orders, Structures and Patterns
  • Emergence and Evolution

More information on possible approaches can be found at:

www.dur.ac.uk/ias/themes/emergence

For this one-day symposium, we are seeking papers from postgraduate students.  We welcome material of individual or collaborative work for presentations of 15 to 20 minutes. Lunch and refreshments provided.

Please send abstracts (max. 300 words) before 1st November 2014 to editor.kaleidoscope@durham.ac.uk.

Kaleidoscope will encourage and support speakers to submit articles developed from their presentations for publication in the next issue of the journal.

Enquiries should be sent to editor.kaleidoscope@durham.ac.uk

Facebook:  http://www.facebook.com/JournalKaleidoscope

Twitter: @Kaleidoscope_J

Categories
Jobs Postgraduate

Call for Nominations: BAMS Postgraduate Representatives

2014 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 Sarah Chadfield (RHUL) and Sophie Oliver (RHUL), who were elected at the beginning of 2014. 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 require a nomination from an existing member of BAMS and must themselves be members of the association. The final selection will be made through an on-line election process 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 should be included in the proposal. Applications should be emailed to Rebecca Beasley no later than 31 October 2014. Information about the positions can be directed to: Rebecca Beasley (Chair) (rebecca.beasley@queens.ox.ac.uk) Alex Goody (Secretary) (agoody@brookes.ac.uk) or to the current postgraduate representatives: Sarah Chadfield (sarah.chadfield.2012@rhul.ac.uk) Chris Mourant (christopher.mourant@kcl.ac.uk) Sophie Oliver (sophie.oliver@rhul.ac.uk)

Categories
Events Postgraduate

Life-Writers of London

The following series is for postgraduates and early career researchers; this autumn season has a particular focus on modernist writers…
Life-Writers of London
In conjunction with the King’s College London Centre for Life-Writing Research
Life-Writers of London is a monthly colloquium for postgraduates and early career researchers to engage in lively debate touching upon contemporary and interdisciplinary life-writing topics. The three sessions in each term will feature a pairing of a speaker and selected short readings. In our discussions we will explore the craft and practice of life-writing as well as critical modes of reading. The sessions will last approximately an hour and a half, with wine and nibbles provided. Afterwards, join us for informal conversation over burritos and drinks at Benito’s Hat!
The autumn term speakers will be:
Monday 6 October, 18.00-19.30
With Susie Christensen (King’s Cultural Institute)

Please note room change to K0.16, King’s Building, Strand Campus

In this talk Susie Christensen will explore representations of life in both text and images, asking what the difference between these two media might be when it comes to depictions of the self in the work of three female writers. The starting point will be the work of Beryl Bainbridge (1932-2010), who fictionalised and distorted her own life experiences in both novels and paintings. From here, working backwards in time, the work of Anais Nin (1903-1977) and Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) will be considered, with particular exploration of Woolf and Nin’s self-fashioning in both diaries and photographs.
 
Additional dates for the diary… 
Monday 3 November, 18.00-19.30
‘“Endless talk”: the counterculture & the interview’
With Becky Roach (King’s College London)
Please note room change to K0.16, King’s Building, Strand Campus
Monday 1 December, 18.00-19.30
‘A Biographical Reading of Trenches: St. Eloi (As Abbreviated from the Conversation of T.E.H)
With Christos Hadjiyiannis (University of Oxford)

Please note room change to K0.16, King’s Building, Strand Campus

It is our hope that Life-writers of London will spark a further dialogue amongst young scholars and institutions about ongoing topics in contemporary life-writing. We welcome postgraduates and early career researchers writing and/or working across London and the UK.
Oline Eaton
PhD candidate, KCL
King’s College London Centre for Life-Writing Research
Nanette O’Brien
PRS DPhil candidate, Wolfson College, Oxford
Oxford Centre for Life-Writing
Categories
Events Postgraduate

Beckett Week – Reading University, 1-4 October 2014

Reading Beckett Week runs from Wednesday 1st
October to Saturday 4th October 2014.

The week consists of an exhibition and series of events to showcase Reading
University’s internationally renowned collection of manuscripts from the
Nobel Prize-winning writer Samuel Beckett (1906-1989). The exhibition will
display the recently acquired notebooks for Beckett’s novel Murphy
alongside a wide range of fascinating supporting material. There will also
be a public lecture by Professor Dan Gunn, editor of the multi-volume
Letters of Samuel Beckett, a free two-hour workshop introducing the
University’s Beckett archive and a day-long advanced seminar on Beckett’s
work. All events are open to the public.

Exhibition: Samuel Beckett in London – The Murphy Notebooks Wednesday 1st
October to Saturday 4th October. Museum of English Rural Life, Redlands
Road, Reading. Free. Opening Reception 5-7pm on Wednesday 1 October. All
welcome.

Although we often associate Samuel Beckett with Paris or Dublin, the time
he spent in London as a young man was decisive in his emergence as a major
writer. Away from familiar networks of friends he was forced, as never
before, back on his own resources, walking for miles through the city or
spending long hours in galleries and the British Library. Eventually he
poured all his reading, looking and thinking into his first great novel
Murphy. This exhibition of manuscripts, drawings, notebooks and other items
from Samuel Beckett’s stay in London between 1934 and 1935 includes
material previously unseen by the public.

Manuscript Workshop : Introducing the Archive Thursday 2nd October 2-4pm
Museum of English Rural Life, Redlands Road, Reading. Free. Booking
essential.

In this two-hour workshop, we will investigate how studying Beckett’s
drafts and manuscripts, his personal correspondence, and his reading notes
on literature, philosophy, psychology and the visual arts can help enrich
our understanding of one of the most important writers of the
twentieth-century. Using the composition of Beckett’s first published novel
Murphy (1938) as a case study, participants will be given access to a wide
range of unpublished materials including the short story ‘Lightning
Calculation’ (1934), the ‘Whoroscope’ notebook (1932-39), and the six
Murphy notebooks (1935-36).

Public Lecture: Professor Dan Gunn (American University of Paris) –
‘Samuel Beckett Through his Letters 1957-1965’

Friday 3rd October at 5.30pm, followed by a reception. Minghella Building,
Whiteknights Campus, University of Reading. Free. Booking essential.

Professor Gunn will read from and discuss the third volume of The Letters
of Samuel Beckett, of which he is an editor. The letters in this volume
were written between 1957 and 1965, an era that sees Beckett more and more
involved in theatre and production of his own plays, even while he is
determined to return to writing prose. Through his work with BBC radio,
Beckett meets Barbara Bray, who becomes his chief correspondent for this
era, and with whom he shares his work in progress with an uncharacteristic
openness. Pulled between his ever-increasing public success and his need
for the privacy required by writing, Beckett writes letters that are
marvellously expressive of his ambivalent attitude towards his own work and
the fame it has brought him.

The Beckett International Foundation Research Seminar 2014

Saturday 4th October from 10am Museum of English Rural Life, Redlands Road,
Reading. £20 waged,
£15
unwaged. Includes lunch and refreshments. Booking essential. Speakers: John
Pilling and Andrew Nash, Helen Bailey, Judith Wilkinson and Anthony
Paraskeva.

For booking please contact:

Conor Carville on c.carville@reading.ac.uk to book for the workshop and/or
lecture. Mark Nixon on m.nixon@reading.ac.uk to book for the Beckett
Seminar.

Categories
Events Postgraduate

London Modernism Seminar – 4th Oct

The first London Modernism Seminar of 2014-15 will take place on Saturday 4th October in Room 349 (third floor) of Senate House at 11am. We are very pleased to welcome Randall Stevenson and Elza Adamowitz as our first speakers. The titles of their papers are below and I will circulate abstracts later in the week.
Randall Stevenson (Edinburgh), ‘”Innumerable Circles. . . Chaos and Eternity”: Conrad, Modernism and the Maritimes’
Elza Adamowitz, (Queen Mary University of London), ‘Surrealism’s Utopian Cartographies: Off the Map’
The seminar is open to everyone interested in modernism and you can find our full programme for this year on the Institute of English Studies website: http://events.sas.ac.uk/ies/seminars/53/Modernism+Seminar You can also find directions to Senate House on their contact page: http://www.ies.sas.ac.uk/about-us/contact-us
Please do advertise the seminar to any colleagues or postgraduate students who may be interested in attending. We are especially keen to encourage newly enrolled MA and PhD students to come along.
Best wishes,
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
Categories
CFPs Postgraduate

Conference in Chicago: Katherine Mansfield and the ‘Blooms Berries’, 28-30 May 2015

Katherine Mansfield and the ‘Blooms Berries’

An international conference organized by the Katherine Mansfield Society, to be held at the Newberry Library in Chicago, Illinois, USA

2830 May 2015

Keynote Address:

Professor Sydney Janet Kaplan

University of Washington

In his eagerness to establish Katherine Mansfield’s place among her peers, John Middleton Murry sometimes published work that she herself would have rejected. Likewise, the extent of his culling of her letters and notebooks glossed over Mansfield’s complex personality and relationships, elements of her life that provide a context for better understanding her fiction.  This ‘Mansfield Myth’ made her appear out of touch with the social and cultural upheaval of her time.

Having generally been relegated to the fringe of literary modernism during her lifetime, especially among the influential ‘Blooms Berries’, as Mansfield referred to them in a letter to Lady Ottoline Morrell on 15 August 1917, she nevertheless worked her way into enviable positions of prestige in some key literary magazines, and had become well known as a writer by the end of her life. It is as a member of the social fringe, though, that Mansfield becomes the most intriguing. As Sydney Janet Kaplan demonstrates in her seminal book, Katherine Mansfield and the Origins of Modernist Fiction, Mansfield brings a different perspective –– and, like Virginia Woolf, provides a corrective – to the dominant, male-centered version of modernism.  Likewise, as a colonial, Mansfield remained free of the traditions that haunted most of the Bloomsbury group, including their ‘anxiety of influence’.  In this, Mansfield demonstrated herself as more ‘modern’ than some of her contemporaries; having less ‘tradition’ to overcome, she was able to adopt a style that was unselfconscious of influence. The focus of this conference will therefore allow us to place her more firmly within the literary context of her time.

Suggested topics for papers might include:

  • Mansfield and the ‘Blooms Berries’, focusing on her personal and/or professional relationships with particular members of the Bloomsbury group.
  • Mansfield on the Fringe, exploring her relationship with other fringe-members of the Bloomsbury group such as D.H. Lawrence and T.S. Eliot, or perhaps the impact her relegation to the fringe had on her personal and/or professional life.
  • Mansfield and Style, which could address some of the literary influences of some of the Bloomsbury group on Mansfield or her influence on them.
  • Mansfield and Art, focusing on the shared influences the post-impressionists had on both Mansfield and the members of the Bloomsbury group, as well as other cross-fertilizations.
  • Mansfield ‘in’ Bloomsbury, exploring how Mansfield has been portrayed in the fiction and letters of the various members.
  • Bloomsbury ‘in’ Mansfield, turning the tables to focus on how members of Bloomsbury are portrayed in Mansfield’s fiction and letters.
  • Mansfield, herself. We would entertain proposals that focus more specifically on Mansfield; however, priority will be given to those proposals that tie more directly to the conference theme.

What better venue to explore Mansfield’s interrelationships with the members of Bloomsbury than the beautiful Newberry Library in Chicago, the world’s second largest holder of Mansfield’s papers.  As part of the conference, Huntington University will sponsor an exhibit of some of the library’s Mansfield holdings.  Those interested in staying over on Sunday can arrange to visit the Shedd Aquarium, the Art Institute of Chicago, or the Chicago Field Museum of Natural History.

Please submit abstracts of 250 words plus a bio-sketch of 50 words to the conference organizers, Todd Martin, Erika Baldt, and Alex Moffett, to:

kmsintheus@gmail.com

Complete panel proposals of three speakers plus a chair, are welcome.

Deadline for abstracts:  30 October 2014

Categories
Events Postgraduate

Literature and Visual Cultures Research Seminar, Thursday 2 October

Literature and Visual Cultures Research Seminar, Thursday 2 October, 6 pm
11 Bedford Square, London WC1B 3RA (Royal Holloway’s central building), Room G3

We are pleased to have organised the next session of the Literature and Visual Cultures Research Seminar in collaboration with Art Writing Writing Art, a Bristol-based research group for those interested in the intersections between art, writing and art history.

Our interdisciplinary panel will include papers on art writing from:

Kevin Brazil, ‘Samuel Beckett and the Histories of Art’

Henry Mead, ‘T. E. Hulme and Abstraction’

Sam Rose, ‘Inference and Intention in Formalist Art Writing: Lessons from Michael Baxandall’

See our website for abstracts
http://literatureandvisualcultures.wordpress.com

Kevin Brazil is a DPhil candidate in English Literature at New College, University of Oxford, working on a thesis on the relationship between postwar fiction and visual art. He has articles published or forthcoming in the Journal for Modern Literature and Modernism/modernity, and is a contributing editor on the Beckett Digital Manuscripts Project.

Sam Rose is a Research Fellow at Peterhouse, Cambridge. He is currently completing a book on art writing, aestheticism, and art theory in twentieth-century England.

We hope to see you there.

Sarah Chadfield and Sophie Oliver
Royal Holloway, University of London

Categories
Events Postgraduate

Event: Northern Modernism Seminar, 14 November

nmslogo1

The next Northern Modernism Seminar will be on the theme of

Modernism and Textual Scholarship

It will be held in the Sustainability Hub at Keele University

on Friday 14 November 2014

The event will feature the public launch of the

Richardson Editions Project.

Jo Winning (Birkbeck), ‘Dorothy Richardson: Textual Traces’
Wim Van-Mierlo (Institute for English Studies), ‘Yeats’ Manuscripts: Processes of Composition’
Daniela Caselli (Manchester), ‘Dante’s Pilgrimage in Dorothy Richardson’
Categories
NWIMS Past Events Postgraduate

CFP: New Work in Modernist Studies — deadline 3 November

bamslogosmall cardiff logo wnms

CALL FOR PAPERS

 

New Work in Modernist Studies

 

Cardiff Metropolitan University

 

Saturday 6th December 2014

 

Keynote Speaker: Dr Jane Goldman (University of Glasgow)

The fourth one-day Graduate Conference on New Work in Modernist Studies will take place at Cardiff Metropolitan University (Cyncoed campus), in conjunction with the Welsh Network of Modernist Studies, the London Modernism Seminar, the Scottish Network of Modernist Studies, the Northern Modernism Seminar, and the British Association for Modernist Studies (BAMS).

As in previous years, this conference will take the form of an interdisciplinary programme reflecting the full diversity of current graduate work in modernist studies; it encourages contributions both from those already involved in the existing networks and from students new to modernist students who are eager to share their work.

Proposals are invited, from PhD research students registered at British universities, for short (10 minutes) research position papers. Your proposal should be no longer than 300 words, and please include with it a short (50 words) biography. It should be emailed to newmodstud2014@gmail.com to which any other enquiries about the conference should also be addressed.

Deadline:  3 November 2014. Acceptance decisions will be communicated within one week.

The conference fee is £15 (£10 for BAMS members) and includes lunch, tea and coffee and a post-conference drinks reception/book launch. If you are not already a member of BAMS, you may wish to join online at https://bams.ac.uk/membership/. Benefits include a free subscription to Modernist Cultures (3 issues per year from 2015), free or reduced fee entry to all BAMS events, access to a members-only area of the BAMS website, and subscription to the dedicated BAMS email list.

It is also anticipated that a subsidized contribution to all travel costs over £20 will be offered to all postgraduates who contribute to the conference. Further details will be forthcoming, but please include a separate indication of your estimated travel costs with your proposal. This will not be taken into account when assessing your proposal.

Conference organizers:

Elizabeth English

Kathryn Simpson

Jeff Wallace