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CFPs NWIMS Past Events Postgraduate

CFP: New Work in Modernist Studies, 10 December 2016.

About the conference

The sixth one-day Graduate Conference on New Work in Modernist Studies will take place on Saturday 10th December at Queen Mary University of London (Francis Bancroft Building), in conjunction with theModernist Network Cymru (MONC), 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.

The day will close with a plenary lecture by Sascha Bru who is an Associate Professor in the department of Literary Theory and Cultural Studies, at KU Leuven and co-director of MDRN http://mdrn.be/node/1 He has published widely on the poetics and politics of avant-garde and modernist writing and his books include: The Oxford Critical and Cultural History of Modernist Magazines, Vol III: Europe 1890-1940, edited with Peter Brooker & Andrew Thacker (2013); Regarding the Popular: Modernism, the Avant-Garde and High and Low Culture, ed. with Peter Nicholls et al. (2012); Democracy, Law and the Modernist Avant-Gardes: Writing in the State of Exception (2009); and Europa! Europa? The Avant-Garde, Modernism and the Fate of a Continent, edited with Peter Nicholls et al (2009).

Proposals

Proposals are invited, from PhD research students registered at British universities, for short (10 minutes maximum) research position papers. Your proposal should be no longer than 250 words, and please include with it a short (50 words) biography. It should be sent to nwims2016@gmail.com to which any other enquiries about the conference should also be addressed.

Deadline:  5pm Tuesday 1 November 2016. Acceptance decisions will be communicated within 1 week.

Registration

Registration: delegates (those speaking and those simply attending) must register online via the link:

http://eshop.qmul.ac.uk/browse/extra_info.asp?compid=1&modid=2&deptid=34&catid=1&prodid=662

Registration must be completed by 30 November at the latest. The conference fee is £25 (£15 for BAMS members) and includes lunch, coffee and a wine reception. The day will run 10am – 6pm.

Bursaries

Travel costs: It is 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 Organizer

Dr Suzanne Hobson, Department of English, Queen Mary University of London

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CFPs Postgraduate

CFP: Conflict in the Periodical Press, Milan, June 2017

The call for papers is now open for the sixth annual Espirit conference to be held at  IULM (International University of Languages and Media), Milan, 28-30 June.

About the conference

Conflict is at the core of periodical publishing. Disputes constructed and played out on the periodical stage have been periodical themselves, recurring, though under different names and formats, in different periods from the eighteenth-century to the present day.  There is often an inherently militant aspect to the promulgation of ideologies in the periodical press. However, the spectacularization of conflict accompanying recent events – the in/out rhetoric of Brexit reporting and the representation of some policies on immigration, for instance – has made this key feature of the periodical press particularly visible and urgent. The 2017 ESPRit Conference seeks to explore from interdisciplinary perspectives (literary, linguistic, historical, political, sociological, etc.) how the periodical press mediates and remediates conflicts, including how verbal and visual devices on the periodicals’ pages enact conflict. ESPRit encourages proposals that speak both within and across local, regional and national boundaries and especially those that are able to offer a comparative perspective. We also encourage proposals that examine the full range of periodical culture, that is, all types of periodical publication, including newspapers and specialist magazines, and all aspects of the periodical as an object of study, including design and backroom production.

Proposals are invited that deal with, but are not limited to, the following topics:

  • Staging conflicts: mediating political, cultural, aesthetic, social, moral disputes
  • Visual rhetoric of conflict: e.g., use of black and white, contrasting colours, positive and negative pictures, captions, vectors in the page layout, etc.
  • The grammar of conflict: e.g., use in different periods of verbal rhetoric such as refutation, climax/anticlimax, irony, dos and don’ts, etc.
  • The performance of conflict in periodicals: manifestos, monographic issues, provocations and replies.
  • Dictating socio-cultural agendas: factions and fashions.
  • Cultural values and generational conflict.
  • Militancy, mediation and re-mediation.
  • Translation as a symptom of cultural conflict.
  • Conflict as affect and/or entertainment.
  • The business or commerce of conflict
  • Possibilities and limits of dialogic rhetoric in periodicals.
  • Views, not news? The seduction of ideas and the role of public opinion, with particular reference to the representation of or reporting on legal cases, referendums and opinion polls.

How to submit

Please send proposals for 20-minute papers (max 250 words), panels of three or four papers, round tables, one-hour workshops or other suitable sessions, together with a short CV (max. one page), to 2017esprit@gmail.com. The deadline for proposals is 31st January 2017.

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CFPs Postgraduate

CFP: Acting Out: The IV International Flann O’Brien Conference, Salzburg, July 2017

The call for papers is now open for the 2017 International Flann O’Brien Conference, to be held in Salzburg, July 17-21, 2017.

Submissions for papers and panels are invited by 1 February, 2017.

About the conference

The International Flann O’Brien Society is proud to announce Acting Out: The IV International Flann O’Brien Conference, an international conference on the theme of performance, theatricality, and illusion in Flann O’Brien’s writing, hosted by the Department of English Studies at Salzburg University17-21 July 2017.

In recent years O’Brien’s writing has been foregrounded as an integral site for testing the rise of new modernist studies, as it troubles critical commonplaces about modernism itself by virtue of its ephemerality and parochial energies. Recent publications of out-of-print English and Irish-language columns, short stories, non-fiction, dramatic works for the stage, and teleplays for Raidió Teilifís Éireann have not only made O’Brien’s broader canon accessible to a new generation of scholars, but have also highlighted its importance to an understanding of modernism which ‘has grown more capacious, turning its attention to previously neglected forms’ (Rónán McDonald and Julian Murphet).

Germane to these critical projects is the recurring concern with performance, theatricality, and illusion in O’Brien’s prose, columns, plays, and TV scripts. In establishing his (highly ironised) aesthetic manifesto in At Swim-Two-Birds, the student narrator notes that ‘the novel was inferior to the play inasmuch as it lacked the outward accidents of illusion, frequently inducing the reader to be outwitted in a shabby fashion and caused to experience a real concern for the fortunes of illusory characters.’ If, as Richard Schechner claims, ‘performances mark identities, bend time, reshape and adorn the body, and tell stories’, then few writers better demonstrate this shaping influence and potential of the performative and the fake.

This dynamic of O’Brien’s work has become all the more visible with the marked rise of creative adaptations of his writing for the stage and beyond. Building on the precedent of pioneering O’Brien performers such as Jimmy O’Dea, David Kelly, and Eamon Morrissey, recent years have seen numerous creative engagements with O’Brien’s work for the stage (Blue Raincoat’s adaptations of O’Brien’s major novels, Arthur Riordan’s Improbable Frequency and Slattery’s Sago Saga, Ergo Phizmiz’s electronic-1920s-Vaudeville adaptation of The Third Policeman, Stephen Rea’s musical dramatic reading of same), film (Kurt Palm’s In Schwimmen-Zwei-Vögel, Park Films’John Duffy’s Brother and The Martyr’s Crown) and the visual arts (John McCloskey’s graphic novel of An Béal Bocht, David O’Kane’s stunning O’Brien artworks). As well as demonstrating the significant weight O’Brien’s writing continues to carry in the present cultural moment, these adaptations emphasise its sustained creative dimensions and dramatic energies.

With these issues in mind, the conference aims to address the contours and concealments of performance in Flann O’Brien’s work as it relates to issues of identity, genre, pseudonymity, adaptation, and creative reception. Salzburg is the home of numerous internationally renowned and prestigious theatrical institutions and events, providing the perfect setting to this symposium, which will take place at the outset of the 2017 Salzburger Festspiele (Salzburg Music and Drama Festival).

Keynote Speakers
Anne Fogarty (University College Dublin)
Stanley E. Gontarski (Florida State University)
Maebh Long (The University of the South Pacific)
Guest Writers & Performers (more to be announced…)
Arthur Riordan (Improbable Frequency, Slattery’s Sago Saga, The Train)
The Liverpool-Irish Literary Theatre (The Glittering Gate, The Dead Spit of Kelly, Thirst)
How to submit

 

The organisers invite proposals on any aspect of O’Nolan’s writing, but are especially interested in papers that explore questions of performance, theatricality, and illusion in O’Brien’s prose, columns, plays, and TV scripts, including, but not limited to:

  • Becoming Other: Masks, Pseudonyms, Role-Playing in O’Brien
  • (Mis)Leading Men: Gender Performativity in O’Brien
  • Props/Performing Objects: The life of objects / Object as metaphor
  • The outward accidents of illusion: Sartorial style, costumes, & uniforms in O’Brien
  • Transmedialisation: Music, Performing Arts, Visual Arts, Illustration, Animation, Film
  • Come to your Senses: Sight, Sound, Smell, Touch, Taste in O’Brien
  • Comic & Tragic Passions: O’Brien & Genre
  • Puppets and Puppet-Masters: Agency, Post-Humanism; Author vs. The Authored
  • Creativity: Improvisation vs. learning by heart
  • Culture’s Scripts: Secular and Sacred Rituals
  • Dumb play: Playing dumb
  • O’Brien and the Theatre in Irish, European, & Modernist contexts (The Abbey, The Čapeks, Pirandello, modernist anti-theatricality, William Sayoran, etc.)
  • Creative Receptions / Adaptations of O’Brien’s work

Abstracts and Submissions

If you would like to propose a paper (not exceeding 20 minutes), or panel (maximum 3 speakers) please submit your title and an abstract of 250 words accompanied by a short biographical sketch toflannsalzburg2017@gmail.com or paul.fagan@sbg.ac.at by 1 February 2017.

Given the conference’s theme, the organisers also welcome alternative forms of presentation and dialogue, such as roundtables, workshops, debate motions (and debaters), performances, creative responses to Flann O’Brien’s writing, etc.

More information

Is available via the conference website, its Twitter, and its Facebook.

Organising Committee

Sabine Coelsch-Foisner (Salzburg University)

Paul Fagan (Salzburg University  University of Vienna)

Dieter Fuchs (University of Vienna)

Ruben Borg (Hebrew University of Jerusalem)

 

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CFPs Postgraduate

CFP: Ted Hughes & Place, University of Huddersfield, June ’17

The call for papers is now open for Ted Hughes & Place, to be held at the University of Huddersfield, July 15-16, 2017.

Abstracts are requested by December 31, 2016.

About the symposium

‘Place’ is key to understanding the work of Ted Hughes. The key geographical locations of Hughes’s life — Mytholmroyd, Mexborough, Cambridge, Boston, Devon, Ireland, and London (by no means an exhaustive list) — each contributed to the formation of the poet and have left indelible marks in his oeuvre. Recent critical and biographical studies have opened up new topographical trajectories into Hughes’s work, expanding the field and challenging received narratives and interpretations.

However, ‘place’ can also be understood more widely. Hughes seems often to be regarded as one of English poetry’s ‘outsiders’, a poet too singular and maverick to be easily placed within the canon and within the context of modern and contemporary English verse. Accordingly, Hughes’s relationships with his poetic predecessors, peers, and literary ‘movements’ — modernism, the Movement, or American, Eastern European and other international poets and artists, for example — are perhaps insufficiently explored, as is the extent of his own influence on poets and artists during his lifetime and after his death.

A third understanding of ‘place’ might be social and cultural: issues related to class and politics, and how these are reflected in Hughes’s work and its reception in the different stages of his life and career.

This two-day symposium will explore these different aspects of place in the writings of Ted Hughes, and in doing so help to develop a deeper understanding of the contexts of Hughes’s life and work.

Keynote speakers

Professor Terry Gifford (Bath Spa University)

Emeritus Professor Neil Roberts (University of Sheffield)

Dr Mark Wormald (Pembroke College, University of Cambridge)

Submissions

Proposals might address, but need not be limited by, the following topics:

  • the locations of Hughes’s life and work
  • Hughes and geography / topography / landscape
  • Hughes and the environment
  • Hughes and the canon
  • Hughes’s influences
  • Hughes’s influence
  • Hughes and post-war poetry
  • Hughes and the Movement
  • Hughes and modernism
  • Hughes and postmodernism
  • Hughes and world literatures
  • Hughes and society
  • Hughes and politics
  • Hughes and class

How to submit

Please send proposals of 250 words with a short biographical note to James Underwood (j.s.underwood@hud.ac.uk) by 31 December 2016.

Speakers will be notified in January 2017.

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CFPs

CFP: Modernisms and Modernities East, West and South: Comparing Literary and Cultural Experiences, Shanghai, July ’17

The call for papers is now live for Modernisms and Modernities East, West and South: Comparing Literary and Cultural Experiences,  to be held at Fudan University, Shanghai, July 19-22, 2017.

Abstracts are requested by 1 October 2016.

About the conference

Convened by Fudan University (China), Universität Hamburg (Germany), Macquarie University (Australia)

Modernism has often been critiqued for being homogenising and Eurocentric. Yet, modernity was experienced differently by different societies and cultures, each pursuing their own specific historical trajectory. Across the world in societies as different as China, Australia, the US and Europe, modernist literature and art were, in very different ways, crucial mediators of modernity. This conference will survey diverse experiences of modernity and the place of modernist art and aesthetics in those experiences. Implicit in this discussion is the question of what survives of modernist practices and modernity as a project beyond the known debates around modernism and postmodernism towards a new relevance in the era of globalisation and climate change.

Topics may include

Papers can discuss the experience of modernity in particular societies, literatures and cultures, or comparatively. Themes may include, but are not limited to:

  • Aesthetic strategies across different media (from the avant-garde to digital experi- mentation)
  • Intercultural encounters, transnational identities
  • Travel, migration, cosmopolitanism
  • Self and other, subjectivities
  • Gender and sexuality
  • Race, ethnicity, plurality
  • Class and social justice
  • Imperialism, decolonisation and post-colonialism
  • Metropolis, urban and suburban spaces
  • Shanghai as a site of cultural encounters
  • Nature, ecology, sustainability, ecopoetics
  • Scientific discourse, technology
  • Ethics, religion and spirituality

Further information

The conference language will be English.

Please send abstracts of 250 words for 20-minute presentations to: modernisms.iaa@uni-hamburg.de by 1 October 2016.

Conference Conveners

Prof. Dr. Susanne Rohr (Department for English and American Studies, Universität Hamburg)

Prof. Dr. Ute Berns (Department for English and American Studies, Universität Hamburg)

Prof. Dr. Zhu Jianxin (Vice Chair of English Department, Fudan University)

Prof. Dr. Jian Sun (Vice Chair Academic Committee of College of Foreign Languages & Literature, Fudan University)

Prof. Dr. Nick Mansfield (Dean, Higher Degree Research, Macquarie University)

Dr. Toby Davidson (English Department Internationalisation Representative, Macquarie University)

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CFPs Postgraduate

CFP: Virginia Woolf and the World of Books, Reading, July ’17

The call for papers is now open for Virginia Woolf and the World of Books, to be held at the University of Reading, June 29 – July 2, 2017.

Abstracts are requested by February 1, 2017.

About the conference

“Virginia Woolf and the World of Books” invites you to consider the past, present and future of Virginia Woolf’s works.
Attendees are invited to submit papers relating to all aspects of the Woolfs, the world of books, and print cultures, including topics related to Leonard and Virginia Woolf and the Hogarth Press; the production, reception and distribution of Woolf’s works; editing, revision and translation; periodicals and book publishing; Woolf and her readers; global and planetary modernisms; Bloomsbury and its networks; Hogarth Press authors and illustrators; modernist publishing houses and publishers; Woolf and the Digital Humanities.
Further details are available on the conference website. There will be day rates and reduced rates for students and the unwaged.
The e-mail contact is vwoolf2017@gmail.com
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CFPs Events

CFP: Ear Pieces: Listening, Diagnosing, Writing – Cambridge, 16-17 December

The call for papers is now live for Ear Pieces: Listening, Diagnosing, Writing to be held in Cambridge on the 16th and 17th of December, 2016.

About the project

Ear Pieces is a new interdisciplinary venture, hosted by the Faculty of English at the University of Cambridge, and funded by the Wellcome Trust. Building on the latest research undertaken in the environs of sound studies, it is the first initiative of its kind to assess the mutual legibility of medical and literary records, and so to kindle a dialogue between specialists from the humanities, neuroscience, and clinical medicine.

One aim of Ear Pieces is to illuminate, in the course of discussion, the definitional contours of harmful listening in the last 200 years, from colloquial strains of otitis – ‘glue ear’ and ‘swimmer’s ear’ – to peripheral kinds of hearing loss, impairment and excess, such as otosis, sound-blindness, melomania, and Involuntary Musical Imagery. How have such complaints been understood historically? Whose vocabulary are we drawing on when we speak of neurotological trauma? In what ways, and to what ends, have poets, novelists, and musicians addressed the challenges and opportunities of representing sonic modernity?

The conference

Over the course of 2 days in December 2016, a diverse group of listeners will meet in Cambridge to discuss some of these questions. In doing so, our aim is to excavate the parallel histories of otology and the humanities, broadly conceived, to evaluate their intersections and points of resistance, and to gauge their present affinities, in public policy and the popular imagination.

Established scholars, early career researchers, and graduate students are invited to propose papers of 20 minutes in length; panel proposals will also be considered. In the spirit of enabling interdisciplinary conversation, we hope to hear from anyone who’s interested in small or large ways in the medical humanities.

Keynote speakers

Carolyn Abbate (Harvard University)

Steven Connor (University of Cambridge)

Lennard J. Davis (University of Illinois at Chicago)

Mara Mills (New York University)

Submissions

Proposals might include, but are not limited to, the following subjects:

  • Fictional fantasies about, and aesthetic representations of, listening
  • Disabilities and disorders of the ear
  • Technologies of listening (sound telegraphy, telephony, phonography, radio, microphony, sound film, iPods and MP3s)
  • Medical techniques (auscultation, hearing tests, ultrasound)
  • Acoustical engineering
  • Music therapy, talking cures
  • Sound art and aesthetics
  • Muzak
  • Sound pollution, war, and the politics of noise abatement
  • Anthropologies and ethnologies of sound

Please send 300-word proposals for papers of 20 minutes, or 500-word proposals for panels of three papers, to Edward Allen – ejfa2@cam.ac.uk – by Monday 29 August 2016. We plan to publish a selection of essays stemming from the event in a special issue of Critical Inquiry in 2018.

Details regarding conference registration will be made available in due course. All enquires in the meantime should be directed to Edward Allen (organiser, University of Cambridge).

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CFPs News Postgraduate

Introducing The Modernist Review

We are delighted to announce that the British Association for Modernist Studies will now be hosting its own online space for new work in modernist studies, The Modernist Review.

The Modernist Review is designed to provide a platform for scholars and others with a keen interest in modernism to share emerging work across a range of interests.

We believe that accessible does not necessarily mean less rigorous. While we intend to make The Modernist Review an interesting read for non-academic audiences, we also want it to be a good place to share those research off-cuts that don’t really fit anywhere else.

If you’ve come across a curious book, poster, film or quotation which doesn’t work in your current project, this is where to send it. Similarly, if a late-night thought leaves you with a thousand words on the state of modernist studies, we’d like to see them.

Visit us now here, and please do consider submitting! (You can also follow us on twitter @modernistreview)

Thank you,

Helen Saunders and Stephanie Boland (PGR reps)

 

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Call for submissions CFPs

CFP: Writing Europe, Kingston, Nov 2

The call for papers is now open for a one-day conference on Writing Europe, to be held at Kingston University, London on Wednesday, November 2nd.

Proposals are invited by August 15th.

About the conference

In the wake of the European referendum result, what does literature have to contribute to current and future thinking about the relationship between the UK and the rest of Europe? How are works of fiction engaging with the socio-political shifts of the new millennium? And does literature still possess a pragmatic political function? In this one day conference, we aim to provide a forum for academics to position their own work in relation to the idea of European identity, and indeed to consider what part literature and those who study it might have in the forthcoming political landscape.

Submissions

Papers are invited in two formats:

  • Conventional 20 minute papers
  • 10 minute ‘thought pieces’ which represent immediate responses to the current situation

We welcome diverse interpretations of the conference theme. Subjects for discussion might, however, include:

  • Representations of UK/European relations
  • Representations of Europe and/or European migrants
  • The refugee crisis and its wider ramifications
  • The British ex-patriot community in Europe
  • The ‘lessons’ of literature in the wake of the referendum: models of community, identity politics and the economy
  • Regional UK identities and their contribution to European identity
  • The causes of Brexit: national identity in literature
  • The role of the academic and/or the literary text in relation to Brexit as a discourse of major political change
  • The role of dystopian/utopian literature in anticipating or imagining political futures for Europe

How to submit

Please send 200-250 word abstracts with brief biographical notes (50 words) to S.Upstone@kingston.ac.uk or KShaw@lincoln.ac.uk by 15th August.

Please indicate on your abstract whether you would like to present a 20 minute or 10 minute paper. Panel proposals also welcome.

Select papers will be invited to contribute to a related edited collection.

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Call for submissions CFPs

CFP: Irish Modernisms: Gaps, Conjectures, Possibilities – Vienna, 29 Sep–1 Oct

We are proud to open a call for papers for Irish Modernisms: Gaps, Conjectures, Possibilities, an international conference dedicated to testing the borders of Irish Modernism to be hosted by the Dept. of English and American Studies, University of Vienna, 29 Sept–1 Oct 2016.

The deadline for submission of abstracts is August 1st.

About the conference

Over the course of the past two decades, the coordinates of Irish studies and modernist studies have shifted dramatically. Where once the critic may have nodded in agreement with Ezra Pound’s estimation that Joyce “writes as a European, not as a provincial” and approved of Pound’s implication of an oxymoronic quality to the notion of an Irish Modernism, the ongoing historicising turn has irrevocably problematised these critical commonplaces. Significant studies re-positioning Yeats, Joyce, and Beckett’s modernist impulses in their Irish contexts have traced their sustained, if often contentious engagements with overlapping debates regarding Irish aesthetics, politics, and identities. At the same time, the previously assured binaries of Revivalist and Modernist creative modes have been profoundly complicated and disrupted.

The rise of New Modernist studies, with its insistence upon a plurality of modernisms, has also refocused the critical lens to look to marginal modernisms and previously neglected genres, forms, and sites of publication or expression. Casting a critical eye across this transformed landscape, Edwina Keown and Carol Taaffe observe that if “the incompatability of modernism and Ireland gradually became a critical staple, juxtaposing an enlightened internationalism with an insular and conservative nationalist culture,” recent critical work has revealed “not only the importance of modernism to Ireland, but also of Ireland to modernism”.

The Cambridge Companion to Irish Modernism, published in 2014, presents an ideal occasion to take stock of this critical turn, to evaluate its past and future influence in the field and investigate it for gaps, oversights, and unfulfilled potential. Boasting contributions by leading figures in the field, the volume aims both to stabilise and push the ground upon which Irish Modernism can be conceived. A note by the editor Joe Cleary impresses that this volume “serves as an incisive and accessible overview of that brilliant period in which Irish artists not only helped create a distinctive national literature but also changed the face of European and Anglophone culture”.

This vantage encourages us to complicate and nuance our historical view in a dual direction, noting the anti-realist experimentation of the Revivalist turn away from the modern alongside Jean-Michel Rabaté’s insistence that “in most recently produced histories of the concept of modernity, the return of the past is too often overlooked because the declaration of the ‘new’ is taken at face value”. A vista of new critical considerations thus comes into view, incorporating Irish modernism’s roots in, and debts to, the 19th century as well as residual or belated modernisms in mid-century and (post-)Celtic Tiger Ireland; the too often marginalised importance of women’s writing to the Irish avant-garde; the interventions of Irish-language, bilingual, and diglossic modes; the exchanges and clashes of mass culture and rural modernisms.

Keynote Speakers

Patricia Couglan (University College Cork)
Barry Sheils (University College Dublin)

Submissions

The conference invites critical, scholarly, and creative responses to the question of Irish Modernism as characterised in this Cambridge Companion. Rather than restating past gains, we propose to initiate a conversation that treats the field’s borders, coordinates, and key texts as fluid and open to further investigation.

As we mean to foster dialogue, debate and exchange on this focused topic, in addition to the submission of papers (15–20 minutes in length) and themed panels (maximum 3 speakers), the organisers particularly welcome alternative forms of presentation and dialogue, such as roundtables, workshops, debate motions (and debaters), creative responses, etc. which tackle the question of Irish Modernism and engage with the parameters of the Cambridge Companion project.

Topics for presentation & discussion include:

  • Direct responses to The Cambridge Companion to Irish Modernism
  • Unearthing omissions, oversights; proposing expansions, additions
  • Its value and place beside previous engagements with the concept; e.g. Kearney, Transitions: Narratives in Modern Irish Culture (1987), Booth and Rigby, Modernism and Empire (2000), Keown and Taaffe, Irish Modernism: Origin, Contexts, Publics (2009),
  • Reviewing the European, American, and Imperial modes, communities, and geographies that shape Irish modernism (and vice versa)
  • Mediating between traditional and modern scripts, local and international perspectives, mass and minority cultures, and between avant-garde and conservative approaches to science, history, religion, and literary tradition
  • Marginal modernisms, neglected forms
  • Testing and revising the relationship between the Anglo-Irish Literary Revival, Irish-language writing, Romanticism, Realism, Modernism, Late Modernism, Postmodernism, New Modernist Studies etc.
  • Neglected genres and forms, such as journals, newspaper columns, autobiography, oral history, westerns, sci-fi, fantasy, performance, visual arts, ‘political theatre’.

Abstracts

If you wish to propose a paper, panel, roundtable, workshop, debate motion (and debaters), creative response, etc. please submit a 250-word abstract, together with a short biographical note, to irishmodernismvienna@gmail.com by 1 August 2016.

Tamara Radak (University of Vienna)

John Greaney (University College Dublin)

Paul Fagan (Salzburg University/University of Vienna)