Categories
CFPs Events

Race and Poetry and Poetics in the UK, 27 Feb. 2016 (London)

Call for Contributions

 

University of Sussex and the Poetics Research Centre, Royal Holloway, University of London present:

Race and Poetry and Poetics in the UK

 

9.30am-6pm, Saturday 27th February 2016

Bedford Square, London

 

In 2015, discussions about race and contemporary poetry and poetics in North America have dominated creative and critical communities. Following Boston Review’s forum on ‘Race and the Poetic Avant-Garde’, co-curated by Dorothy Wang, boundary 2 published the dossier ‘On Race and Innovation’ this November. The Mongrel Coalition Against Gringpo continues to mobilise social media, disseminating their anti-racist and anti-colonial campaigns. The whiteness of the avant-garde and conceptual art and poetry has been disclosed, and readers, writers, and critics are asked to consider their complicity in a movement inextricable from its racialized and possibly racist origins.

 

How do these discussions relate to poetry and poetics in the UK? How do readers, writers, and critics address the complexities of social and political histories and contemporary realities of race in British and Irish contexts? How do racialized assumptions structure and determine English language poetics and aesthetics? Why are the intersections between literary tradition and contemporary practice and post-colonialism, diaspora, racial identity and inequality so rarely addressed? This year, Claudia Rankine’s Citizen: An American Lyric won the Forward Prize for Best Collection; Andrea Brady published an article stating ‘The White Privilege of British Poetry is Getting Worse’; and Paul Gilroy discussed racism in Britain in the interview ‘What “Black Lives” Means in Britain’. Furthermore, the issues of the pressures on multiculturalism – with rising xenophobia, racialized policing, immigration policy and detention, and material inequality stratified along racial lines – hold great significance for the current of cultural production in the UK. This event will create a platform for questions, dialogues, and collaborations in response to the subject of race and poetry and poetics in the UK.

 

We invite contributions in the form of short presentations (10-15 minutes), workshop activities (25-50 minutes), topics and texts for group discussion (25-50 minutes), and poetry readings and performances. We hope to schedule two panel discussions and two workshops during the day (at Bedford Square), and a programme of poetry readings and performances in the evening (venue to be confirmed).

 

We intend to record presentations, readings, and performances, and to make them available on our website. It is our hope that the questions, dialogues, and collaborations initiated by the event will continue online. This event is part of a larger project, which will include further events, digital media, and creative and critical publications.

 

If you would like more information about this project, or if you would like to get involved, please contact: racepoetrypoetics@gmail.com. Website (under construction): www.rapapuk.com.

About:

Race and Poetry and Poetics in the UK is an international research group founded by Dr Sam Solomon (University of Sussex) and Professor Dorothy Wang (Williams College). The steering committee, which includes Professor Robert Hampson (Royal Holloway, University of London), Nat Raha (University of Sussex), and Dr Nisha Ramayya, is organising a programme of events and activities that will take place at various sites in the UK, internationally, and online.

 

Categories
CFPs

CFP for Reimagining the Gothic: Monsters and Monstrosities

Our formal CFP for Reimagining the Gothic: Monsters and Monstrosities, 2016 conference is up now! We’re looking for academic papers for the symposium on interdisciplinary Gothic and creative, interactive, interdisciplinary projects for our showcase event… get your abstracts in now!

http://sheffieldgothicreadinggroup.blogspot.co.uk/2015/11/reimagining-gothic-2016-monsters-and.html

Categories
CFPs

CfP: Shakespeare and the Great War, Oxford 8 April 2016

Shakespeare and the Great War

Cry havoc! and let slip the dogs of war!

The War and Representation Network (WAR-Net) invites paper proposals for a conference on Shakespeare and the Great War to be held at Harris Manchester College, Oxford, on Friday 8 April 2016.

2016 is the 100th anniversary of the Battle of the Somme and the 400th anniversary of William Shakespeare’s death.  This one-day conference will explore intersections between Shakespeare’s plays and the Great War and reflect on anniversary culture more generally.

Keynote Speakers
Professor Gordon McMullan, King’s College, London
Professor Emma Smith, University of Oxford

Proposals for 20-minute papers should be sent to Kate McLoughlin (kate.mcloughlin@ell.ox.ac.uk) by 31 January 2016.  Topics might include (but are not limited to):

       Wartime performances of Shakespeare
       Shakespeare in the Trenches
       Shakespeare on the Home Front
       Global Wartime Shakespeare
       Shakespeare / Nation / Empire
       Ireland, Shakespeare and the Uprising
       Shakespeare and Anzac
       Shakespeare in Translation
       Shakespeare and Propaganda
       Shakespeare and Memorialisation
       Shakespeare and ‘The Enemy’
       Shakespeare and Morale
       Wartime dramaturgy
       Wartime publications relating to Shakespeare
       Anniversary Culture (including commemorations of the 350th anniversary of Shakespeare’s birth and 300th anniversary of his death)

Please send proposals of up to 350 words and include your academic affiliation and a brief (100-word) biography.  Please use ‘Shakespeare and the Great War’ as a subject-line.

Categories
CFPs Uncategorized

Flying through the ‘Thirties 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.

–       ‘Airmen’, symbolic and real.

–       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

11 January 2016 to

flyingthroughthethirties@gmail.com

 

Conference organisers:

Dr Luke Seaber (UCL)

Dr Michael McCluskey (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
CFPs Uncategorized

CFP: Poetic Measures conference

Poetic Measures: Variable measure for the fixed

University of York, 1-2 July 2016

poeticmeasures@gmail.com

https://poeticmeasures.wordpress.com/ 

How do we measure poetry? The words ‘measure’ and ‘meter’, with their shared etymological origin in the Greek metron,have a long history of being used synonymously. When William Carlos Williams wrote that ‘[t]he key to modern poetry is measure, which must reflect the flux of modern life’, however, he proposed ‘measure’ as an alternative to the metrical foot in response to ‘the flux of modern life’ that demanded measures of more fluid and unstable permutations.

The ‘formless spawning fury’ of ‘this filthy modern tide’ compels W.B. Yeats in his poem ‘The Statues’ to search alternative measures from other art forms. Describing ‘the lineaments of a plummet-measured face’, the poem aligns itself formally with solidity and precision of sculpture, and rearticulates measurement in terms of spatial, rather than temporal, co-ordinates. Giorgio Agamben, for one, measured the ‘lineaments’ of a poem’s form by the tension between the line break and the sentence to define the lyric poem, a tension Jorie Graham described as ‘the pull from the end, the suction towards closure, and the voice trying (quite desperately in spots) to find forms of delay, digression, side-motions which are not entirely dependent for their effectiveness on that sense-of-the-ending, that stark desire’. These ‘side-motions’ of a poem’s lineation resist the linearity of the sentence, using ‘forms of delay’ not to heighten suspense, but to bypass conventional expectations of closure.

Although Eliot, in ‘Tradition and the Individual Talent’, may have claimed that poetry can only be ‘measured’ against the ‘standards of the past’, his contention has to accommodate increasingly diverse and contested versions of both the past and the present. We thus welcome papers analysing the disparate measures modern poetry takes in a period of accelerated change, but also in a period symptomizing pervasive continuities in structures of privilege: papers investigating how we might count out poetry, but also how ‘measured language’ and its different uses might make poetry count. 

Areas of investigation may include, but are not limited to

  • form and genre
  • scale in poetry
  • brevity and length
  • poetic sequences
  • units of measurement in poetry
  • form, proportion and balance
  • the immeasurable and/or non-measurable in poetry
  • beginnings and ends
  • poetry and other art forms: music, visual arts and/or craft; ekphrasis
  • poetry and architecture
  • poetry and mathematics
  • modernism and canon formation; periodization

 

Please send 300-word abstracts for 20-minute papers or panel proposals by 1st February 2016 to poeticmeasures@gmail.com, and a separate biography of no more than 100 words. The biography should be written in the third person. Please attach the biography and abstract as two separate Word documents.

Poetic Measures_CFP

Poetic Measures Poster

Categories
CFPs Uncategorized

CFP for TSE at ALA

The T. S. Eliot Society will sponsor two sessions at the 2016 annual conference of the American Literature Association, May 26-29, 2016, at the Hyatt Regency San Francisco. 

 

Please send proposals (up to 250 words), along with a brief biography or curriculum vitae, to Professor Emerita Nancy K. Gish (nancy.gish@maine.edu.) Submissions must be received no later than January 15, 2016.

 

For information on the ALA and its 2016 meeting, please see the ALA website at www.americanliteratureassociation.org

Categories
CFPs Uncategorized

CFP: Forgotten Geographies in the Fin de Siècle, 1880-1920 (Birkbeck, UoL, 8-9 July 2016)

Dear Colleagues,

 

Proposals are invited for the international conference to be held at Birkbeck, University of London, on 8-9 July 2016, on Forgotten Geographies in the Fin de Siècle, 1880-1920. The deadline for abstracts is 20 December. Please find attached the CFP and visit the webpage for more info:

https://forgottengeographies.wordpress.com/

Categories
CFPs Uncategorized

CFP: H.D. panel at American Literature Assn, San Francisco, May 2016 (deadline Jan 26, 2016)

The H.D. International Society is sponsoring a panel at the American Literature Association conference, May 26-29, 2016, at the Hyatt Regency in San Francisco, CA. The call for paper proposals is open ended, although we are particularly interested in projects that take advantage of the recent availability of H.D.’s later memoir writing and fiction. Please send a brief paper proposal (250 words) along with a 1 paragraph bio to Rebecca Walsh, rawalsh@ncsu.edu, no later than January 26, 2016.

Here is a link to the ALA site for more information about the upcoming convention: http://alaconf.org/

Best,

Rebecca Walsh and Celena Kusch, co-chairs, The H.D. International Society

Categories
CFPs

The submission deadline for DRAFF is this Sunday, 15th November

DRAFF

5th–6th August, 2016

Trinity College Dublin

Keynote speakers:
Mark Nixon (University of Reading)

Dirk Van Hulle (Universiteit Antwerpen)

***

Deadline for abstracts: 15th November, 2015

***

‘I don’t suppose many people know what “Draff” is, but if they look it up, they will be put off.’

Charles Prentice to Samuel Beckett (25th September, 1933)

 

As suggested by his original title for More Pricks Than Kicks (1934), and proved by the pochades, roughs, foirades, and (un)abandoned works of his mature œuvre, works often presented by their author as being no more than the run-off from the creative process, Beckett was anything but put off by draff. The same can surely be said of the scholars who have long devoted themselves to studying Beckett’s aesthetic engagement with the seemingly worthless.

In recent decades, however, Beckett Studies’ fascination with the residual has taken a much more literal meaning as the field, as well as its perception of Beckett and his art, has been reshaped by unprecedented access to the refuse, dregs, and lees of a voluminous archive, as well as the blackened pages of forgotten diaries and private correspondence. Despite, or perhaps because of, this flood of fresh effluvia, however, particular aspects of, and questions pertaining to, Beckett’s canon have been left unexamined, understudied, or wholly ignored.

Taking place next year in Trinity College Dublin, two decades after Damned to Fame(1996) opened a new chapter in Beckett scholarship, this bilingual conference invites proposals for 20-minute papers, in English or French, from prospective delegates who, sharing Beckett’s conviction in the value of what is left behind, are keen to pick through the ends and odds of Beckett Studies:

  • Why, for instance, does Beckett’s poetry continue to attract so little critical attention?
  • The nature of Beckett’s relation to Joyce and Proust has provoked much debate, but what are we to make of Beckett’s lesser-studied literary influences (e.g. Burton, Camus, Dostoevsky, and Hölderlin)?
  • What are the correspondences between Beckett’s writing and the lesser-studied cultural and political spaces in which he lived and worked, such as France during the Franco-Algerian war?
  • As we deepen our awareness of the role played by the visual arts in Beckett’s work, what might that same work have owed to his keen ear for music and his love of certain composers (e.g. Beethoven’s pauses, Schubert’s Lieder)?
  • At a time of increasing interest in the bilingual Beckett, what was the role of Beckett’s lesser-known languages (e.g. German, Latin, Spanish) and, as we come to a better knowledge of Beckett’s own work as a translator, what might there be to gain in examining how Beckett’s art has been reimagined by those translators – and performers – who have made his words heard in languages he himself did not speak (e.g. Chinese, Dutch, Polish)?
  • With the approaching publication of the German Diaries and the final volume of Beckett’s letters, to what uses can and should scholars put the inestimable trove of material represented by the biographic archive?
  • How might the publication of such (auto)biographic material affect our appreciation of Beckett’s canons – the published, the ‘grey’, and the emerging? Where within this continuum should we situate the work he consigned to the wastepaper basket or, indeed, the ‘old shit’ he allowed to be republished?

Abstracts of no more than 300 words, in English or French, as well as a short bio of no more than 150 words, should be sent to conference organisers Stephen Stacey and James Little at draff2016@gmail.com no later than 15th November 2015.

Whilst prospective delegates are encouraged to consider those topics outlined above, proposals for papers addressing any heretofore under-analysed aspect of Beckett’s ‘literary waste’ are warmly welcomed for this two-day conference, during which both Beckett’s and Beckett Studies’ disjecta membra will be dragged into the ‘pestiferous sunlight’ of scholarly discourse.

Categories
CFPs

CFP deadline approaching: Lawrence conference Cornwall 12-14 September 2016

International D.H. Lawrence Conference St Ives Cornwall 12-14 September 2016

 

“Outside England…Far off from the world”: D.H. Lawrence, Cornwall and Regional Modernism

 

Organised in association with the University of Exeter Penryn Campus, this conference will be held at the Tregenna Castle Hotel St Ives to commemorate the centenary of                    D.H. Lawrence’s move to the nearby village of Zennor.

In the midst of the Great War, Lawrence arrived in Zennor following a brief stay in Porthcothan in North Cornwall. His description of Porthcothan as “Outside England…Far off from the world” shows the impression this place made on his imagination, but his reaction to Zennor was even more remarkable: “When we came over the shoulder of the wild hill, above the sea, to Zennor, I felt we were coming into the Promised Land. I know there will a new heaven and a new earth take place now: we have triumphed…this isn’t merely territory, it is a new continent of the soul”.

In seeking to highlight the significance of Lawrence’s fascination with Cornwall, this conference will use his response to that place as a way into looking at broader issues in his work and, more widely, the position of place in British modernism. In the context of Lawrence’s utterances about the Midlands, which have attracted much critical attention, it will probe Lawrence’s use of the term “outside England” to describe his response to Cornwall that, by comparison, has been largely overlooked. Whilst this conference seeks to bring together scholars and postgraduates to focus on the role of place in the work of D.H. Lawrence, it will also consider the significance of peripherality and localism, creative responses to marginalisation, the expression of disparities between imagined and familiar locations and the legacy of pastoral experience in modernist literature. In interrogating these ideas, it intends to contribute to broader discussions about the complex and interrelated relationship between place and the literary imagination.

Whilst we particularly welcome abstracts that consider all aspects of D.H. Lawrence’s—often fluctuating—responses to place, either pastoral or city and especially to Cornwall, we also invite papers on other related topics that focus on the significance of place in the modernist period, which may include but are not limited to;

Consideration of how perceptions of particular places can alter in reaction to traumatic events such as war

The construction of place as the Other

Differences between literary interpretations of place and the lived experience of the inhabitants of that place

The conflict between the pastoral and the city in modernist experience and writing

The impact of outsiders into rural communities

Groupings of literary, political or cultural figures that were encouraged by specific locations or any consequences of these associations

The relationship between place and the literary form

The tensions between class/race/gender and pastoral/city places

Literary interpretations of the connections between history and place

The relevance of place in attempts to find a more hopeful future

Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words for proposed 25 minute papers to

dhlcornwall@btinternet.com

 

cfp deadline: 1 December 2015 successful applicants will be notified by 1 February 2016.

There will be an opportunity for selected papers to be published in a special conference edition of the journal of the D.H. Lawrence Society.

The conference will be held at the Tregenna Castle Hotel St Ives which is within walking distance of this artistically alluring seaside town that Lawrence knew well. St Ives can be reached by train from London Paddington (changing at St Erth).

Further information regarding the conference is available at

www.lawrencecornwall.wix.com/conference