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CfP: Forming the Future, 2–3 Sept 2019, University of Plymouth

Forming the Future, 2–3 Sept 2019, University of Plymouth

Confirmed speakers: Amy J. Elias (Tennessee, Knoxville); Daniel Innerarity (Ikerbasque); Sandra Kemp (Lancaster/Imperial)

Thinking about the future often focuses on its ‘content’: what might happen. Similarly, thinking about ‘future studies’ often concentrates on its goals, concepts and methods. But what about the forms in which the future comes couched? How does the medium in which the future is presented – its genres, structures, conventions – shape or influence what the future might include? What forms do representations of the future currently take in different disciplines and fields of practice – from fiction to non-fiction, the visual to the textual, science to politics – and to what effect? Can we make our representations of the future more efficacious, with a view to the current world situation? And what might different fields learn from each other, or how might they combine, in order to do this?

This interdisciplinary conference sets out to investigate these and related questions, and to trigger dialogue within and across different areas in which the future is being ‘formed’. 

Starting points may include, but are not restricted to:

·      forms old and new (e.g. fiction, report, manifesto, visual media, software …)

·      fact/fiction, realistic/unrealistic, mind/heart …

·      a future without apocalypse? continuity/break?

·      updating key terms (e.g. hope, optimism, pessimism, utopia, horizons …) 

·      instrumentality/openness, prognostication/becoming, fixed/alterable

·      the problems of scale (e.g. individual/collective, local/global, multiplicity/unity …)

·      interdisciplinary practice, thinking, potential

·      history <> future

Please send proposals for 20 minute papers or presentations to david.sergeant@plymouth.ac.uk Proposals will be welcomed from researchers across the humanities, social sciences and STEM disciplines, as well as from those working outside the university sector.

Deadline for proposals: 1 May 2019.

Two £150 bursaries are available for those without institutional funding or equivalent; please describe in your proposal how you qualify. The full call for papers, along with further information, is available on the conference webpage: https://www.plymouth.ac.uk/whats-on/forming-the-future

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CfP: Canon? Practice? Commodity? The past, present and future of the literary anthology, QMUL, 14–15 June 2019

Canon? Practice? Commodity? The past, present and future of the literary anthology

A major International Conference, 14–15 June 2019

Queen Mary, University of London, Department of Comparative Literature, School of Languages, Linguistics and Film

 

Confirmed keynote speakers

Prof. Martin Puchner, Harvard University

Prof. Karen Kilcup, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro

Prof. Tom Mole, The University of Edinburgh

 

The power of the anthology as an instrument of knowledge production has long been recognised, and, since the 1980s, the genre has been problematised and contested both within specific instantiations and in scholarly research which takes the anthology as its subject. The anthology as such, however, has yet to be fully theorised, and this conference aims to move toward a more comprehensive conceptualisation of its forms, functions and cultural dynamics.

Whilst there has been much theorisation of the archive and the canon, for example in the work of Derrida, Foucault, and Guillory, the relationship of the anthology to these concepts still needs to be explored. Is the anthology a conceptual framework that defines its own truth criteria (Foucault 1972)? Is anthologising a hermeneutical tradition, carried out by those who have ‘the power to interpret the archives’ (Derrida 1995:10)? Are all anthologies ‘judgements with canonical force’ circumscribed by an institutional location (Guillory 1993: 29)? Or are the ‘so-called canon wars of the 1980s and 1990s’ a thing of the past (Baym 2012: xxvii)?

As well as probing what these ideas can tell us about the anthology, and vice versa, we also need to consider new approaches. At a time when there is increasing pressure on the Humanities to account for itself, this conference seeks to intervene in the broader discourse of literary studies. If anthologising is an activity which defines and validates the categories that are the object of the humanist gaze, can and/or should it be viewed as an act of composition, an instructive exemplar of the processes Latour outlines as common to the humanities and sciences (Latour 2010)? Along these lines, can the anthology be read as an example of curation, of the kind Felski recommends as a primary activity for the humanities today (Felski 2014)?

The anthology is still very much a live issue on the broader cultural scene, reflected in recent political debates about representation and inclusion, not least the boycott prompted by the exclusion of women writers from the 2017 Cambridge Companion to Irish Poets and the furore over Helen Vendler’s critique of the ‘Multicultural inclusiveness’ of Rita Dove’s 2011 Penguin Anthology of Twentieth-Century American Poetry. This renewed attention to anthologising speaks of the urgent need for a more thoroughgoing reflection, the stakes of which are being increasingly raised in the context of ever more global methods of distribution.

A re-evaluation of the anthology is particularly pressing in the light of a number of significant developments in literary studies and the literary field more broadly. As a codex technology, the anthology is coming under pressure from the extension of digitization and the growing accessibility of literary texts online. Because ready availability can also be experienced as overwhelming proliferation, it is not yet clear whether this pressure will destroy, reinvigorate and/or reconfigure the genre. Online platforms present interesting challenges and possibilities for the future of anthologising.

Moreover, advances in Digital Humanities techniques have created a new set of affordances which particularly suit the study of the anthology, presenting as it does both a vast potential dataset amenable to statistical analysis and visualisation and a highly visible paratextual apparatus circumscribed by a narrow set of formal conventions. These technologies mean that the anthology is more available as a significant object for our attention, whether close or distant.

Finally, the surge in the commercialisation of education and the spread of large providers of education services and products with global ambitions has implications for the anthology in its impact on the selection and dissemination of literary texts for the university module or school curriculum. The expansion of service providers who are also publishers, the increasing emphasis on the education market and on students as consumers, and the necessity to follow economies of scale, will inevitably shape the anthologies to come.

We welcome contributions in the form of 90-minute panel proposals or individual submissions for 20-minute papers from scholars at all stages of their careers who have work to present on anthologies or on the anthology genre, historical or current, in any language, and from any national context or geographical region.

Topics may include, but are not limited to:

The archive (Foucault, Derrida)

  • Knowledge and power
  • Anthologies generating and controlling discourse
  • Anthologising as colonisation
  • Anthologies defining territories: time, space and ideas

The canon, inclusion and exclusion (Guillory)

  • Canon formation
  • Alternative anthologies
  • Recovery anthologies
  • Linguistic, national or geographically defined parameters
  • Periodisation
  • Genre
  • The anthology and the literary movement

Print culture (Chartier; Genette)

  • The history of anthologising – from the commonplace book to the online anthology
  • Anthology in/as network
  • Readership and publication
  • The paratext

Value

  • Legitimacy and reputation
  • Pedagogy
  • Taste formation

Anthologies now

  • Anthologising as composition/curation
  • Managing proliferation in the digital age
  • The death of the codex anthology?
  • The role of the anthology in the global education market
  • Digital approaches to anthologies and other new methodologies
  • Anthologies and translation
  • Anthologies and globalisation: whose ‘world literature’?

 

How to submit

Abstracts for papers, whether for individual submissions or as panel proposals, should be no more than 250 words, each accompanied by a short (100-word) bio.

Deadline for proposals: 28 February 2019

All proposals should be sent to i.l.parkinson@qmul.ac.uk

Decisions on proposals will be communicated by 31 March.

Attendance and fees

The conference is open to anyone, in any discipline, working on anthologies.

Prices for the conference, including reduced rates for postgraduate students, and details of how to pay, will appear shortly.

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CfP: Beastly Modernisms, 12–13 Sept 2019, University of Glasgow

Keynote Speakers
Kari Weil, Wesleyan University (US)
Derek Ryan, University of Kent (UK)

‘I still do not think La Somnambule the perfect title – Night Beast would be better except for that debased meaning now put on that nice word beast.’ – Djuna Barnes to Emily Holmes Coleman

​‘Once again we are in a knot of species coshaping one another in layers of reciprocating complexity all the way down’ – Donna Haraway

​If modernism heralded a moment of socio-political, cultural and aesthetic transformation, it also instigated a refashioning of how we think about, encounter, and live with animals. Beasts abound in modernism. Virginia Woolf’s spaniel, T.S. Eliot’s cats, James Joyce’s earwig, D.H. Lawrence’s snake, Samuel Beckett’s lobster, and Djuna Barnes’s lioness all present prominent examples of where animals and animality are at the forefront of modernist innovation. At stake in such beastly figurations are not just matters of species relations, but questions of human animality and broader ideas of social relations, culture, sex, gender, capitalism, and religion. Modernism’s interest in the figure of the animal speaks to the immense changes in animal life in the early twentieth century, a period where the reverberations of Darwinian theory were being felt in the new life sciences, as well as emergent social theories that employed discourses of species, and developing technologies and markets that radically alerted everyday human-animal relations. It was also a period in which new theories of human responsibilities towards animals were also being articulated with Donald Watson coining the idea of veganism in 1944.

The recent “animal turn” in the humanities invites new ways of thinking about the beasts that we find in modernist culture. Moreover, animal studies arrives at a point at which modernist studies is already in the process of redefining what modernism means. Turning to modernism’s beasts not only promises fresh ways of understanding its multispecies foundations, but also points towards how modernist studies might intervene in contemporary debates around animal life. Building on the foundational work on animals and modernism by Carrie Rohman, Margot Norris, Kari Weil, Derek Ryan and others, Beastly Modernisms invites papers on animals and all aspects of modernist culture. Topics may include, but are not limited to:

•    Animal Life, Species and Speciesism
•    Beasts, Beastliness and Bestiality
•    The Creaturely
•    Unstable Signifiers
•    Animal Rights, Ethics and Politics
•    Anti-Vivisection Movements
•    Bestial Ontologies and Materialities
•    Queer Animals and Sexuality
•    Anthropocentrism and Anthropomorphism
•    Human Animality and Social Darwinism
•    Animal Commodification and Capitalism
•    Race, Class, Sex and Gender
•    Religion, Myth and Animism
•    Wildlife, Imperialism and Hunting
•    Pets, Companion Species and Domestic Animals
•    Biology, Ethology, Ecology and the Natural Sciences
•    Animal Performance, Circuses and Zoos
•    Animal Trauma, Violence and Warfare
•    Extinction and the Anthropocene
•    Livestock, Agriculture and Working Animals
•    Meat Production and the Animal Industry
•    Vegetarianism, Veganism and Eating Animals
•    Modernist Animal Philosophy
•    Humanism, Posthumanism and Transhumanism
•    Early- and Late- Modernist Animals

Papers
Individual papers should be no more than twenty minutes in length. Please send an abstract of 300 words and a brief biography to beastlymodernisms@gmail.com by 31 January 2019.

Panels 
We welcome proposals for panels or roundtables of 3 to 4 speakers. Please send an abstract of 500 words and speaker biographies to beastlymodernisms@gmail.com by 31 January 2019.

​Submissions are open to all researchers at every level of study. We particularly encourage submissions from postgraduate researchers.

https://beastlymodernisms.wixsite.com/home/call-for-papers

@BeastlyMods

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Call for Poems: Beastly Modernisms, 12–13 Sept 2019, University of Glasgow

Whether it’s Virginia Woolf crafting a playful biography of Elizabeth Barrett-Browning’s dog in Flush, Clarice Lispector pondering the metaphysics of chickens in ‘The Egg and the Chicken’, or Marianne Moore with her elegant swans and pigeons, modernism is quite the menagerie of poetic animals. As part of an interdisciplinary conference on Beastly Modernisms, hosted by the University of Glasgow in September 2019, we invite friends, colleagues and writers alike to submit their own creative take on a beastly modernist poetics.

In addition to two days of keynotes and panels, Beastly Modernisms will host a poetry evening at The Poetry Club on Thursday 12th September, 2019. This event will be open to the public, and presents an opportunity for exploring the critical resonance of modernist animal studies within a more informal, performance context. Alongside several commissioned poets, we are looking for writers of all backgrounds, academic or otherwise, to apply to perform at the event.

In line with the conference’s creative-critical knowledge exchange, responses may involve a direct engagement with animal-focused work within modernist aesthetics, a revisioning of modernist animality within the contemporary moment or something completely original, perhaps spawned by a relevant text from the past that catches your eye. We are looking for writing that devours and challenges, chases the margins, acts parasitically with its source material, questions the relationship between human and animal, pushes the scale and scope of ‘modernism’ and stimulates appetite for a beastlier modernist canon.

How to apply: 

Please send a maximum of three poems on the theme of ‘Beastly Modernisms’ to beastlymodernisms@gmail.com by 31 January 2019, alongside a 50-word author bio. You might also mention any context to your work and how it engages with particular modernist texts, although this is only suggested. Please be aware that reading slots are likely to be 5 minutes per poet, and slots will be very limited so do send us your best work! If you so wish on the night, you can bring your favourite existing animal modernisms poem to recite as part of your reading.

https://beastlymodernisms.wixsite.com/home/call-for-poems

@BeastlyMods

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CfP: Queer Modernism(s), 25–26 April 2019, Oxford

‘How does one go about getting an introduction to a fictional character?’
― Richard Bruce Nugent

After the resounding success of the Queer Modernism(s) conferences in 2017 and 2018, we are excited to announce the CfP for the third Queer Modernism(s) conference, Queer Networks, set to be held on April 25th and 26th 2019 at the University of Oxford. Queer Networks is an interdisciplinary, international conference exploring the place of queer identity in modernist art, literature and culture, with an emphasis on the connections, grids, relationships, systems and societies that underpinned modernity. Panelists are invited to question, discuss and interrogate the intersectional social, sexual, romantic, artistic, affective, legal and textual relationship between queerness and modernism.

We are further delighted to announce that our first keynote will be delivered by Anjalie Dalal-Clayton. Anjalie Dalal-Clayton is an art historian, specialising in black British art histories and the art of the African and Asian diasporas. She is currently a Paul Mellon Fellow based at University of the Arts London (UAL), where she is researching the archive of the Institute of International Visual Art and preparing her forthcoming monograph, Curating Black British Art: Exhibition Cultures since the 1980s (Bloomsbury). Most recently she was a core member of the Black Artists & Modernism research project (UAL), for which she undertook post-doctoral research on work by artists including Keith Piper and Sonia Boyce, and led the first national audit of work by black artists in UK public collections. She was awarded a PhD from Liverpool John Moores University for a thesis that examined black British exhibition histories and contemporary approaches to curating work by black artists.

The CfP closes December 18th 2018. Decisions will be made in early January.


The early Twentieth Century saw sweeping changes in legislature, politics and lifestyle for queer people. More than ever, LGBTQ+ citizens faced penal repercussions for their behaviour, as well as public scrutiny. In 1895, art collided with the judicial system as the trial of Oscar Wilde scandalised the press, succeeded by censorship against the likes of Radclyffe Hall and Federico García Lorca. At the same time, queerness became a political issue. Throughout the 1900s, governments legislated queer relationships and women’s reproductive rights, while eugenicist thinking codified racialized bodies and disabled subjects.

In the same period however, LGBTQ+ citizens established networks that allowed them to flourish. Magnus Hirschfeld set up the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft as a means of studying sexual behaviour and gender identity, while providing a welcoming home to many who had been previously outcast. Around the corner notoriously outrageous boy-bars flourished in Berlin, cherished by silver screen stars like Marlene Dietrich and Greta Garbo, who sharpened their talents in the underbelly of the metropolis. In Paris, Gertrude Stein and Natalie Clifford Barney set up influential salons, whilst Sam Wooding toured Europe with his big band company. Across the pond, the ball scene began to lay its roots in Harlem as influential critics W. E. B. Du Bois and Alain Locke fostered the voices of growing talents Wallace Thurman, Nella Larsen, Claude McKay and Angelina Weld Grimké. So too did philanthropy and activism play an important role for many modernists, with Josephine Baker working with the NAACP to protest segregation and Peggy Guggenheim sponsoring a multitude of important artists.

Such queer networks were not wholly positive, however, but open to nepotism, favouritism, bias and fetishism. As Langston Hughes ironically noted, for a while ‘the Negro Was in Vogue’, yet black citizens were still often barred from clubs unless they were performing for white audiences. In a similar vein, patronage was often the preserve of an elitist upper crust, stifling the voices of many emerging artists. And this is not a historical issue. Activism and pedagogy have just as scintillating a relationship as ever before. Today, in the forms of campaigns such as Rhodes Must Fall and Why Is My Curriculum White? we see vital pushes for sweeping changes to an educational system that still priorities the literature, histories, creativity and voices of a certain groups, whilst pushing others to the margins. Just as networks can uplift those within them, so too can they provide an old boys club that maintains a status quo.

The conference invites discussion of the ways in which modernists negotiate the concept of queerness within their work, with particular attention to the place of networks. Topics may include, but are not limited to:

  • Friendships, Camaraderie and Alliances
  • Romances, Flirtations and Relationships
  • Nepotism, Favours, Bias
  • Patronage and Sponsorship
  • Coterie, Exclusivity and Societies
  • Charity and Philanthropy
  • Editorships, Readerships, Fan Culture and Audiences
  • Camp, Drag and Performance
  • Rumours, Gossip, Slander and Shame
  • Life-writing and Biography
  • Early / Late / New Modernisms
  • Sex Work, Kink, Pornography and BDSM
  • Religions and Spirituality
  • Femininities / Masculinities
  • Formal, Aesthetic and Textual Queerness
  • Civil Rights and Legal Standing
  • Club Culture and Ball Culture
  • The Death Drive and Pleasure Principle
  • Trans and Non-Binary Identities
  • Psychology, Sexology, Sexual Deviance and Inversion
  • (B)identities, Sapphisms and Homosocialities
  • Ecologies
  • Activism and Pedagogy

Papers
Individual papers should be fifteen minutes in length. To apply, please send an abstract of no more than 500 words to queermodernism@gmail.com as well as a brief biography of no more than 200 words.

Panels
Panel presentations should be forty-five minutes in length. To apply, please send an abstract of no more than 800 words to queermodernism@gmail.com as well as a brief biography of no more than 200 words per person.

Submissions are open to all: activists, creatives, artists, curators, students, PhDs, ECRs and academics. We especially welcome submissions from those not traditionally included in the academy.

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CfP: ASLE-UKI Biennial Conference, September 2019, Plymouth

ASLE-UKI BIENNIAL CONFERENCE 2019

4–6 September 2019, University of Plymouth

The University of Plymouth is delighted to be hosting the 2019 Biennial Conference of the Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment, UK and Ireland.

Confirmed Plenary Speakers:

Greg Garrard (University of British Columbia)
David Higgins (University of Leeds)
Adeline Johns-Putra (University of Surrey)
Harriet Tarlo (Sheffield Hallam University)

While proposals on all and any aspects and periods of environmental literature are welcome, this year’s theme is ‘Co-emergence, Co-creation, Co-existence’. We invite proposals for individual (20-minute) papers, or pre-formed panels (90 minutes) which may comprise traditional panels of 3 or 4 papers, roundtables or paper jams with 6 or more speakers, or other innovative formats. We welcome proposals for creative contributions or creative-critical dialogues. The deadline for proposals is April 1st 2019.

Please see the attached call for papers for full details or:
Send proposals and queries to: asleuki2019@gmail.com
Visit the conference website at: https://www.plymouth.ac.uk/whats-on/asle
We look forwards to seeing you in Plymouth in September!

Dr Mandy Bloomfield, Conference Organiser
Professor Brycchan Carey, Chair, ASLE-UKI

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CfP: 2019 Conference of the International Association for the Study of Irish Literatures, Dublin, 22–26 July 2019

THE CRITICAL GROUND
The 2019 Conference of the International Association for the Study of Irish Literatures
22–26 July 2019 | Trinity College Dublin 
2019 marks the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of IASIL (or IASAIL, the International Association for the Study of Anglo-Irish Literature, as it existed in its first incarnation). This anniversary presents an opportunity to consider the evolution of Irish literary and critical studies since the very first IASAIL conference, held in Trinity in the summer of 1970, and to assess the role of criticism in advancing this field of scholarship. The 2019 conference theme, ‘The Critical Ground’, is an invitation to reflect in the broadest possible terms on the critical traditions, interventions, controversies, and conversations which have shaped Ireland’s literature in both the Irish and English languages, and to chart the relationship between such critical engagement and Ireland’s wider political, cultural, and intellectual sphere.
For the full call for papers and further details on the conference, please see: http://www.tcd.ie/English/iasil-2019/
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CfP: British Society for Literature and Science Fourteenth Annual Conference, Royal Holloway University of London, 4–6 April 2019

CALL FOR PAPERS

The fourteenth annual conference of the British Society for Literature and Science will take place at Royal Holloway, University of London, from Thursday 4 April until Saturday 6 April 2019. Keynote speakers will include Professor Tim Armstrong (Royal Holloway) and Professor Angelique Richardson (Exeter).

The BSLS invites proposals for 20-minute papers, panels of three papers, or special roundtables on any subjects within the field of science, and literatures in the broadest sense, including theatre, film, and television. There is no special theme for this conference, but abstracts or panels exploring one of the following topics are especially welcome: (1) how the literatures of Africa, the Americas, Asia, or Australasia address, interact with, or respond to the discourses of science; (2) the digital humanities; (3) the writing, reading, and interpretation of human nature; (4) innovative or progressive models for uniting the sciences and the humanities.

In addition, we are hoping to put together sessions with looser, non-traditional formats, and would welcome proposals from any person or persons interested in making presentations of approximately ten minutes from notes rather than completed papers. The hope is that this format will encourage longer Q&A sessions with more discussion.

Please send an abstract (200 words) and short biographical note (50 words) to the conference organiser, Dr. Mike Wainwright, mike.wainwright@rhul.ac.uk, by no later than 18.00 GMT, Friday 7 December 2018. Include the abstract and biographical note in the body of the email.

All proposers of a paper or panel will receive notification of the results by the end of January 2019.

The conference fee will be waived for two graduate students in exchange for written reports on the conference, to be published in the BSLS Newsletter. If you are interested in being selected for one of these awards, please mention this when sending in your proposal. To qualify you will need to be registered for a postgraduate degree at the time of the conference.

Information concerning onsite accommodation and local hotels will be forthcoming.
Membership: conference delegates will need to register/renew as members of the BSLS (annual membership: £25 waged/ £10 unwaged).

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CfP: V International Flann O’Brien Conference, Dublin, 16–19 July 2019

Palimpsests: The V International Flann O’Brien Conference

University College Dublin (16–19 July 2019)

Keynotes
Louis de Paor (NUI Galway)
Katherine Ebury (University of Sheffield)
Maebh Long (University of Waikato)
Erika Mihálycsa (Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj)

Guest Writers
Anne Enright (The GatheringThe Green Road)
Patrick McCabe (The Butcher BoyBreakfast on Pluto)
Lisa McInerney (The Glorious HeresiesThe Blood Miracles)

more to be announced…

Deadline for Submissions
Friday 8 March 2019

The International Flann O’Brien Society is proud to announce Palimpsests: The V International Flann O’Brien Conference16–19 July 2019, hosted by the University College Dublin, School of English, Drama and Film, in cooperation with the Museum of Literature Ireland (MoLI) and the International Flann O’Brien Society.

In 2019 the International Flann O’Brien Conference series comes to Brian O’Nolan’s alma mater University College Dublin, where he wrote his MA thesis on Medieval “Irish Nature Poetry”! The Dublin setting of the 5th conference in the series is also apt, given that 2019 marks the 80th anniversary of At Swim-Two-Birds. With these anniversaries and resonances in mind, the conference’s theme of Palimpsests invites us to discuss key aspects in O’Nolan’s work, including:

  • At Swim-Two-Birds: “When Fiction Lives in Fiction”
  • Rewriting/Overwriting/Mixing traditions, languages, genres
  • Intertextuality, reference, allusions
  • Translation in/of O’Brien
  • Creative Receptions / Adaptations of O’Brien’s work

For all the latest details and updates on the conference, please check, like, and follow our websites and accounts below.

Website: https://www.univie.ac.at/flannobrien2011/IFOBS.html

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/683652945308341/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/2019Flann

Tag: #Flann2019
We’re looking forward to seeing you in Dublin!

 

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New Work in Modernist Studies, 1 December 2018

The Eighth Annual BAMS Postgraduate Conference: New Work in Modernist Studies

1 December 2018

About the conference
The eighth one-day Graduate Conference on New Work in Modernist Studies will take place on Saturday 1 December at the University of Glasgow (English Literature, School of Critical Studies), in conjunction with the Modernist Network Cymru (MONC), the London Modernism Seminar, the Scottish Network of Modernist Studies (SNoMS), Modernism Studies Ireland (MSI), the Northern Modernism Seminar, the Midlands Modernist Network and the British Association for Modernist Studies (BAMS).

As in previous years, the 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 studies who are eager to share their research.

The day will close with a plenary lecture by Dr Anouk Lang. Dr Lang is Senior Lecturer in Digital Humanities in the School of Literatures, Languages and Cultures at the University of Edinburgh, where she teaches in the areas of modernism, postcolonialism and twentieth and twenty-first century literature. Her research centres around investigating modernism as a global and transnational cultural phenomenon, and finding ways to understand its global flows and developments using methods from digital humanities and data science. She is the editor of From Codex to Hypertext: Reading at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century (U Mass P, 2012) and co-editor of Patrick White: Beyond the Grave (Anthem, 2015), and has published articles in Canadian LiteratureEnglish Language Notes, Postcolonial Text and others. She has directed digital humanities projects funded by the AHRC, the British Academy and the Carnegie Trust. Her most recent project uses word embedding models to explore discourses of spatiality in a 33 million word corpus, and is forthcoming in a special forum on Modernism/Modernity‘s Print Plus platform in 2019.

Proposals
Proposals are invited, from PhD research students registered at British and Irish 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. If you wish to apply for a contribution to your travel expenses you should also include an estimation of travel costs with your proposal (see below for details). Proposals should be sent to nwims2018@gmail.com to which any other enquiries about the conference should also be addressed.

Deadline: 5pm Monday 29 October 2018. Acceptance decisions will be communicated within ten days.

Registration
Conference registration will open soon. Registration must be completed by 1 December 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 subsidised contribution to all travel costs over £20 will be offered to all postgraduates who contribute to the conference. If your travel expenses are less than £20 we will not be able to contribute. Please note that funds are limited and our ability to contribute depends on your co-operation in finding the cheapest fares. To apply for a travel bursary 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
Maria-Daniella Dick, Matthew Creasy & Bryony Randall, University of Glasgow, and Alex Thomson (University of Edinburgh).