Categories
CFPs

CFP: TSE @ Louisville (Feb. 2016)

The T. S. Eliot Society will again sponsor a session at the annual Louisville Conference on Literature and Culture Since 1900, to be held at the University of Louisville, February 18-20, 2016. Abstracts for 20-minute papers on any subject related to Eliot are invited, but those drawing on volume one of The Complete Prose of T. S. Eliot: The Critical Edition are particularly welcome. This first volume, Apprentice Years, 1905-1918, includes Eliot’s juvenilia, his graduate essays in philosophy and the social sciences, and his early journalism. There will be a talk on Eliot’s philosophical papers by Jewel Spears Brooker, co-editor of the volume, at this year’s session. The online edition of Complete Prose is available in many libraries and by individual subscription on the Project MUSE website at Johns Hopkins  (http://muse.jhu.edu/about/reference/eliot/). For further information on the 2016 conference, please visit the website: www.thelouisvilleconference.com.

Those interested should send a 300-word abstract to Anita Patterson (apatters@bu.edu) no later than September 10, 2015. Please include your academic affiliation (if applicable) and a brief biographical note with your abstract.

Categories
CFPs

Deadline reminder: Symposium: Modernist and early twentieth-century publishing houses

To be held at the University of Reading, Special Collections, Friday 26th June 2015

“We are thinking of starting a printing press, for all our friends stories. Don’t you think it’s a good idea?” (Virginia Woolf to Lady Robert Cecil, October 1916.Letters 2:120).

Much scholarship has been undertaken in recent years on the “institutions”, producers, and material makers of literary modernism. Such work has aided our understanding of the cultural and textual production of modernist writing and has been particularly prominent with regards to the important role played by periodicals and small and little magazines. The Modernist Journals Project http://modjourn.org/is one example among many of the dynamic research taking place in this area.

This one-day symposium, taking inspiration from such scholarship, will offer an opportunity to focus on the publishers and publishing houses who also helped to make and produce modernism. Papers are invited from scholars and groups of scholars working on any global publishing house related to modernist writing – from Faber & Faber to Mills & Boon, from Chatto & Windus to the Gregynog Press, from Grant Richards to Tauchnitz. We hope that the day will offer an opportunity to explore some of the multifarious connections between these publishing houses and the writers, illustrators, press workers, managers and editors with whom they were associated. The day is being organised to coincide with the launch of the Modernist Archives Publishing Project (MAPP, funded by SSHRC 2013-15) which we hope, through working with other teams, to expand from the Hogarth Press as case study into the wider publishing landscape of the period.

Papers might explore themes and concepts such as:

  • – Publishing and textuality
  • – Publishing history and the history of reading
  • – Publishing books and the little magazines
  • – The roles of publishers, editors, press workers
  • – Censorship and innovation
  • – Editing
  • – Digital initiatives in book and publishing history

Please submit abstracts for papers (300 words max) to Dr Nicola Wilson,n.l.wilson@reading.ac.uk no later than Friday 8th May.

Co-organised by Dr Nicola Wilson and Dr Claire Battershill, University of Reading

In collaboration with MAPP: The Modernist Archives Publishing Project

www.modernistarchives.com

https://publishinghistory.wordpress.com/
Categories
CFPs

OBSOLESCENCE and RENOVATION – 20th Century Housing in the New Millennium

14-15 December, 2015
University of Seville, Spain

Details: http://architecturemps.com/seville/

Today, approximately 80% of people live in buildings that are thirty years old or more. Around 50% of people live in houses that are fifty years old and more. The possible obsolescence of this housing stock is a critical issue – both across the continent of Europe and beyond.  The reasons for this obsolescence are various: changing lifestyles; changed demographics; an aging population; poor quality of construction; the emergence of new communities etc.

Amongst the questions asked at this conference is how is the modernist legacy of housing in Europe to be conserved, adapted and reused in the future? This is a key practical, technical, cultural and heritage issue across the continent.

Key Dates:

01 September 2015: Abstract Submissions

14-15 December 2015. Conference

01 April 2016: Publication of Full papers begins

Details: http://architecturemps.com/seville/

Categories
CFPs Postgraduate

CFP Deadline Reminder – ‘There and back again’: An Interdisciplinary Postgraduate Workshop on Travel

Please find attached a Call for Papers for the ninth annual postgraduate workshop run by the Landscape, Space, Place Research Group at the University of Nottingham.

‘There and back again’: An Interdisciplinary Postgraduate Workshop on Travel

Monday 22nd June 2015

University of Nottingham

Keynote Speaker: Professor Andrew Thacker (Nottingham Trent University)

To travel is unavoidable, whether as part of the everyday or the exceptional. It can be political or leisurely, routine or unexpected, real or imaginary. Travel can create different spatial, bodily, and object identities, as (un)familiar places and landscapes are negotiated, and borders and boundaries are crossed and re-crossed. It can have multiple implications and legacies and can be represented and documented in diverse, sometimes surprising, ways.

This workshop aims to emphasise and explore the richness of travel in its multivalent forms, from antiquity to modernity and beyond. We will consider travel in relation to social, political, cultural, and environmental forces, as we ask how it is interpreted across the arts, humanities, and social sciences.

Papers are invited on – but are by no means limited to – the following themes:

  • The narration and representation of travel
  • Journeying in/through the landscape
  • Spatial identity and place
  • Travel and temporality
  • Modes and methods of transport
  • Home, abroad, belonging, displacement
  • Departures and arrivals
  • Origins, destinations, and the in-between
  • Crossing borders and boundaries
  • The implications and legacies of travel

This is a one-day, interdisciplinary workshop that seeks to offer postgraduate students an opportunity to present related work at any stage of their research within a friendly, supportive and stimulating environment. It is the ninth annual postgraduate workshop to be run by the Landscape, Space, Place Research Group and hosted by the Schools of English and Geography at the University of Nottingham.

We welcome abstracts of 250-300 words for 20 minute papers from all current postgraduate students. Please send, along with a short biography, to lsp.pgworkshop@nottingham.ac.uk by Friday 8th May 2015.

Organising Committee:  Alexander Harby, Alice Insley, Hollie Johnson, Mark Lambert, Xiaofan Xu & Emma Zimmerman

Further details can be found in the attached CFP.

Visit the LSPRG website: http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/research/groups/lsprg/index.aspx

Categories
CFPs

CfP: Texts in times of conflict (8 September 2015)

Reflecting on the seismic cultural and political shifts of his own time, Francis Bacon pinpointed ‘printing, gunpowder, and the compass’ as the technological drivers which had ‘changed the appearance and state of the whole world’. Bacon’s identification of communicative (print), violent (gunpowder) and technological (compass) forms of cultural expression and exchange as world-shaping continues to resonate, shaping the production and interpretation of texts.

We welcome papers of between 15 and 20 minutes’ length on topics including but not limited to:

  • Textual and visual representations, interpretations of and responses to conflict
  • Adaptations which respond to past and/or present conflicts (including conflicts within academic disciplines)
  • Conflictual relationships between artistic, critical and intellectual movements
  • Processes and agents shaping the design, production, dissemination and consumption of texts
  • Theoretical and bibliographical methodologies
  • Intellectual conflicts surrounding the emergence of new media and technologies
  • Competing or contradictory representations of conflict through identical or different expressive forms
  • State involvement in the production, dissemination and consumption of texts in times of conflict
  • The evolution of media forms and their impact on conflict-based studies

Proposals of up to 250 words should be submitted online at https://gradcats.wordpress.com/call-for-papers/ by Friday 5 June. Alternatively, email them to gradcats@outlook.com.

Our keynote speakers are Dr Natasha Alden (Aberystwyth University) and Prof. Ian Gadd (Bath Spa University).

Bursaries are available. See https://gradcats.wordpress.com/ for details.

This conference is jointly hosted by De Montfort’s Centre for Textual Studies and Centre for Adaptations.

Categories
CFPs

Conference on Working-Class Literature – DEADLINE APPROACHING

*** REMINDER ***

The deadline for abstracts and proposals for the following conference is 28 April 2015.

What Ever Happened to the Working Class?
Rediscovering Class Consciousness in Contemporary Literature

An International Symposium at the Institute of English Studies, Senate House.
17 September 2015

Between Ed Miliband’s squeezed middle and tabloid diatribes against the underclass, the working class has seemingly disappeared from critical discourse in literary and cultural studies. Nevertheless issues of class, class consciousness, classlessness, and new configurations of class such as new affluent workers, the emergent service sector, and the precariat continue to form a rich source for novelists, poets and dramatists.

This interdisciplinary and international conference aims to bring together researchers and academics working in the fields of the literature and culture of the working class.

After the heyday of working-class literary studies in the 1950s to the 1980s with critics and theorists such as Louis Althusser, Etienne Balibar, Terry Eagleton, Fredric Jameson, Georg Lukàcs, and Raymond Williams helping to reconfigure the canon, working-class writing as a literary category seemed to slip from critical analysis. In its wake a series of critical paradigms around gender, sexuality, ethnicity, postcolonialism, postmodernism, ecocriticism, and disability studies, important as they have been, have tended on the whole to shift class contexts from centre stage.

The rich period of working-class fiction, drama and poetry during the same period has perhaps been underplayed in the following decades. Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, Room at the Top, Look Back in Anger, A Taste of Honey, and poetry by Tony Harrison, Tom Leonard and Barry Tebb now appear as works from a golden age in the exploration of working-class life. However, a significant number of writers continue to locate plots and characters in working-class contexts. In fiction, novelists such as Monica Ali, Martin Amis, Pat Barker, Bernardine Evaristo, James Kelman, Andrea Levy, Courttia Newland, David Peace, Irvine Welsh, Zadie Smith, Alan Warner, Sarah Waters, Alex Wheatle, and Jeanette Winterson have continued to explore, construct and represent working-class life. Simon Armitage, Jackie Kaye, Linton Kwesi Johnson, Philip Levine and John Cooper Clarke have maintained the legacy of working-class poetry in differing ways, while dramatists like Caryl Churchill, David Eldridge and Roy Williams have developed approaches that develop the ‘kitchen-sink’ dramas of the 1950s and 60s.
One of the aims of the conference is to bring together those working to reintegrate and re- articulate class back into the fields of literary studies and cultural politics more broadly, with the aim of establishing a new set of critical approaches that foreground issues of class.

We welcome proposals for 20-minute individual papers, or 1-hour panels, from academics and researchers working primarily in the fields of twentieth- and twenty-first century literature and culture who have research interests in exploring issues of class. Papers may be on broad topics or on individual authors, and although the focus of the conference will be on contemporary literature and culture, we also welcome proposals that offer contemporary re- assessments of working-class literature from all periods.

Although many of the literary texts cited above have UK settings, we also welcome papers on the representation of working-class life from all parts of the world, and are indeed interested in the way in which class identities circulate internationally.
We are also open to the possibility of including a strand of creative practice into the conference, so would welcome 20-minute presentations/performances/films or displays from literary writers (fiction, poetry or drama), or film makers, photographers, visual artists, musicians or other creative practitioners.

Abstracts should be 250-300 words in length and emailed to n.bentley@keele.ac.uk by 28th April 2015.

The conference organizers are Dr Nick Bentley and Dr Beth Johnson at Keele University.

Categories
CFPs

CFP: Dramatic Influences

Part of the Novel Playwrights Project

Bath Spa University, Corsham Court Campus

3rd and 4th July 2015

‘The highest conjoint work of art is the drama: it can only exist in all its potential completeness when there exists in it each separate branch of art in its own utmost completeness.’ Richard Wagner

Keynote Speakers: Laura Rattray (University of Glasgow) and Ros Ballaster (Mansfield College, University of Oxford

Dramatic Influences is an interdisciplinary conference which will explore the connections between the novel, poetry and the stage.

Papers, short performance pieces, works of art, suggestions for literary/artistic workshops inspired by the interactions between drama and other art forms are welcomed as the catalyst for interdisciplinary discussion. Proposals for 20 min papers are invited addressing the work of novelists and poets who also wrote plays or whose forms were significantly influenced by drama and theatre.

Topics or questions may include (but are not limited to):

  • the formal influence of drama and theatre on poetry and fiction
  • adaptation
  • ‘anxieties of influence’ (Harold Bloom)
  • the problems and benefits of reclaiming lesser known dramatic works by authors better know for their other creative enterprises
  • why have specific novelists and poets failed or succeeded in writing for the stage?
  • The Gesamptkunstwerk
  • Theatre history and the practical considerations of joining art forms together to produce dramatic productions
  • The influence of drama and theatre on specific genres

250 word proposals for individual papers and/or panels due by 1st May 2015.

The proposal should include a title, name, affiliation and short biography of the speaker, and a contact email address. These will be circulated prior to the conference and will appear on the conference website. Please indicate if you do not wish these details to appear. Feel free to submit proposals presenting work in progress as well as completed projects. Papers will be a maximum of 20 minutes in length. Proposals for suggested panels are also welcome. We also welcome practice-based research examples which demonstrate how the stage has influenced or been influence by fiction and poetry. These may include, but are not limited to performances (dance, drama, music), creative workshops, readings, exhibitions, live art, film.

Please send 250-word abstracts as Word attachments tonovelplaywrights@gmail.com

by 1st May 2015.

Who to contact:
Dr Elizabeth Wright or Annabel Wynne at novelplaywrights@gmail.com

Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Novel-Playwrights/253963081467742?fref=ts

Twitter: @NovelPlaywright

To register for the conference and for further information, please visit our website: http://novelplaywrights.wordpress.com/

Categories
CFPs

CFP: THE CONTEMPORARY: CULTURE IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, MARCH 3–5, 2016

We are constantly under pressure to define the “now.” When did it begin? What does it include? When will it end? Recent attempts to capture this moving target have offered an array of starting points–the end of World War II, 1968, the end of the Cold War, the start of the new millennium, 9/11, the 2008 financial crisis. These attempts have also offered an array of periodizing concepts–postmodernism, post-postmodernism, late capitalism, neoliberalism, the anthropocene, the post-civil rights era, the post-human. We propose to respond to and circumvent this pressure in two ways. First, by creating a dialogue between our periodizing concerns and recent literature and art. Second, by contextualizing our concerns against recent developments in politics, science, technology, philosophy, and education. We aim to illuminate what makes the now new—and how and why we should study it.

“The Contemporary: Culture in the Twenty-First Century” will take place from March 3–5, 2016, at Princeton University. We invite early and mid-career scholars to propose 20-minute papers that examine the culture of the twenty-first century and the question of contemporaneity itself. The conference will focus primarily on literature in English, but we are open to scholarship that addresses work in other languages and in a range of media. We hope that the conference will be a unique opportunity to discuss major issues in the emerging field of twenty-first century literature and art. The conference will feature six panels, each organized around three speakers and one respondent. Keynotes will be delivered by Johanna Drucker and Ali Smith. We plan to use the conference as the foundation for an edited volume. Accepted participants will receive a travel allowance and lodging from Princeton.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

Paper proposals should include a title, 250–500 word abstract, and cover letter with institutional affiliation and contact information.

Submit to: contemporary.princeton@gmail.com

SUBMISSION DEADLINE: July 31, 2015
NOTIFICATION: September 1, 2015

Organized by Sarah Chihaya, Kinohi Nishikawa, and Joshua Kotin

Categories
CFPs

CfP Deadline: Sensory Modernism(s): Cultures of Perception (21/5/2015)

Just a reminder that the deadline for submissions to the ‘Sensory Modernism(s)’ conference is tomorrow (Wednesday 15 April).

Categories
CFPs

CFP: T. S. Eliot Society (St. Louis, Sept. 25-27)

The 36th Annual Meeting of the T. S. Eliot Society
St. Louis, September 25-27, 2015

The Society invites proposals for papers to be presented at our annual meeting in St. Louis. Clearly organized proposals of about 300 words, on any topic reasonably related to Eliot, along with brief biographical sketches, should be emailed by June 13, 2014, to tseliotsociety@gmail.com, with the subject heading “conference proposal.”

The 2015 T. S. Eliot Memorial Lecturer will be Jed Esty, University of Pennsylvania. For complete information, please see our website (http://www.luc.edu/eliot).

Peer Seminar:  Prufrock One Hundred Years Later
Seminar Leader: Cassandra Laity

“The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” first appeared in print 100 years ago, in Poetry magazine, June 1915.  Our 2015 peer seminar with Cassandra Laity will recognize this centennial with a focus on “Prufrock” then and now. Please see our website (http://www.luc.edu/eliot) for further information on participating in the seminar, including how to sign up.