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Events Postgraduate

Registration – Being Modern: Science and Culture in the early 20th century

Being Modern: Science and Culture in the early 20th century

Institute of Historical Research, London 22-24 April 2015

Registration is now invited. See  http://www.qmul.ac.uk/being-modern/

For programme and link to the registration page.

Engagement with science was commonly used as an emblem of “Being modern”, across culture in Britain and the western world in the years around the First World War. Today, historical studies of literature, art, design, lifestyle and consumption as well as of the human sciences are exploring intensively, but frequently separately, on that talk of “science”. Historians of science are exploring the interpenetration of discourse in the public sphere and expert communities. This pioneering interdisciplinary conference is therefore planned to bring together people who do not normally meet in the same space. Scholars from a range of disciplines will come together to explore how the complex interpretations of science affected the re-creation of what it was to be modern.

 In association with the conference, the Science Museum and Ensemble BPM  are mounting two performances of the modernist opera “Three Tales” by Steve Reich and Beryl  Korot, and there will be a limited number of free and reduced price tickets for conference attendees on a first come first serve basis. For more information about the opera,  please write to research@sciencemuseum.ac.uk. The opera will be advertised publically in the very near future.

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Events Postgraduate

Modernist Magazines Research Seminar – Tuesday 27 January

The next session of the Modernist Magazines Research Seminar will take place at 6pm on Tuesday 27 January, in room G35 (ground floor) of Senate House, London.

Research students Jennifer Cole (Oxford) and Sophie Oliver (Royal Holloway) will jointly lead the session, and will be speaking about The Edison Monthly and Charm magazines respectively. Please see below for further details.

The seminar is open to everyone interested in modernism. For more information, please email modernist.magazines.ies@gmail.com or visit http://modmags.wordpress.com

With best wishes,

Charles Dawkins (University of Oxford)

Aimee Gasston (Birkbeck, University of London)

Chris Mourant (King’s College London)

Natasha Periyan (Royal Holloway, University of London)

 

Magazine Mimicry and The Edison Monthly – Jennifer Cole (University of Oxford)

As the field of periodical studies continues to develop, the question of how to meaningfully characterize and categorize magazines remains problematic. Because magazines have to compete for readers within the market place, there are conflicting pressures toward uniqueness, but also toward imitation of existing successful forms. Mimicry in the world of periodicals can serve a similar function to mimicry in nature by allowing one magazine to pass as something completely different.

In January of 1914, a magazine entitled The Edison Monthly ran an ad in Poetry soliciting for ‘electrical verse’, offering to pay ‘one dollar a seven word line’ for ‘serious verse’. This unusual ad led me to research The Edison Monthly, which turned out to be a monthly twenty-page (or more) advertisement for the New York Edison Company attempting to masquerade as a high quality generalist magazine. Although frustratingly little information about the readership of the magazine is available, the magazine’s disguise must have been somewhat successful according to its publishers’ definition because it continued to be published with illustrations on good quality paper from 1908 until 1928. In this talk, I will draw on Brooker and Thacker’s concept of ‘periodical codes’ to show how imitation of the codes of one type of periodical by another blurs the lines between news, science, art and advertising. Comparing the visual, material, and structural characteristics of The Edison Monthly with other, more respected magazines forces us to question our assumptions about the relationship between form and content in periodicals more generally.

Bio

Jennifer Cole is a DPhil student at the University of Oxford. She is a founding member of the editorial committee for the graduate journal Oxford Research in English. Her research interests include periodical studies and the influence of the life sciences on the development of American modernism.

 

 

Make It New Jersey! Modernism à la mode in Newark’s Charm Magazine – Sophie Oliver (Royal Holloway)

The little-known magazine Charm was published by the Newark department store Bamberger’s between 1924 and 1932. As a declared ‘home interest’ journal aimed predominantly at the women who shopped in the store, Charm focused on fashion, interiors and domestic management. In its appeal to the modern woman, whose progressive tastes it answered and shaped, the magazine also favoured political content and cultivated a general air of cosmopolitan modernity – including regular contributions from modernist writers and artists, and critics of modern culture, many of whom were based or had lived in Europe. Yet while this modern outlook assumed France – and specifically Paris – as its benchmark, Charm also promoted a confident localism, a sense of pride in New Jersey and its qualities.

How do these disparate editorial priorities work together? How do they position Charm‘s modernist content? In this paper I will explore the series of satirical articles about expatriate life that Djuna Barnes wrote for the magazine in the mid-1920s in light of these questions. I use Charm‘s fashion coverage as a frame through which to read Barnes’s pieces, whose ambiguous voice itself displays a complex blend of cosmopolitan and local allegiances. This discussion will propose the relevance of fashion as a methodological tool for the modernist critic, not just a thematic concern for the modernist writer. It will also address the ways in which mainstream magazines such as Charm fashioned the modernism that appeared in their pages.

Bio

Sophie Oliver is a PhD candidate at Royal Holloway, University of London, where she is writing a thesis about female modernists, fashion and transatlantic modernity. Her first article, on Djuna Barnes and fashion in the 1910s, was published by Literature Compass in 2014.

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP: Strata – Birmingham

CFP: Strata

The organisers invite proposals for papers and presentations on the theme of ‘strata’ in the period 1845-1945 across the arts, humanities and social sciences, for a one-day interdisciplinary conference specifically aimed at postgraduate students. In association with the University of Birmingham’s Centre for the Study of Cultural Modernity and hosted by the College of Arts and Law, the conference will showcase current research from a variety of critical perspectives and use this to springboard dialogue across disciplines and institutions.

The period 1845-1945 saw the rise of the skyscraper, the development of underground railways in metropolitan centres, landmarks in archaeological discovery including the ancient city of Troy in 1868, the tomb of Tutankhamun in 1922 and the Sutton Hoo ship-burial in 1939. In the early twentieth century, the radiometric dating of strata revolutionised geology, while psychology moved into a laboratory setting, and pioneers such as Sigmund Freud developed ground-breaking analytical techniques to penetrate the unconscious. Thus, the era was one in which countless varieties of heights and depths were explored, their treasures exposed and their findings made to impact upon the ways in which both the external world and the internal self were perceived.

Topics may include, but are not limited to:

  • Psychic strata, consciousness, identity, dreams, multiple personalities
  • Geology, archaeological finds, fossils, artefacts, burial and tombs
  • Social and economic hierarchies, class boundaries
  • Artistic layering – collage, fashion, prosody, layers of narrative
  • Temporal strata, antiquity and modernity, time travel
  • The internal / external – anatomy, the body, skin; physical, mental, emotional
  • Layers of meaning – approaches to interpretation and criticism
  • Coatings and veneers – make-up, masks and disguises, truth and reality
  • Weather – layers of snow, ice and clouds
  • Architecture – buildings, structures extending up or down, the multi-storey

The symposium will be held at the University of Birmingham on Friday 8 May 2015. Please submit 200 word abstracts for 20 minute presentations, along with a 50 word biography, to strataconference@gmail.com by Monday 9 March 2015.

strataconference@wordpress.com

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Events Postgraduate

Translating Sounds in Proust – Nanterre

Translating Sounds in Proust

International Conference

25-26 June 2015

Université de Paris Ouest Nanterre, France

 

Translation is inherent to Proust’s idea of literary creation, and his work develops a rhythmical, musical conception of literary language as foreign in and of itself. What then happens when Proust’s work is itself translated, and, more specifically, how does the practice of translation shed light on his understanding of the relationship between sound and language, between phonè and writing? Bringing together critics and translators, this conference draws on the English-language translations of Proust’s work in order to explore the way sound plays out in his work, disrupting the lines that separate the “original” or source text from its echo in translation. This, in turn, interrogates the distinctions in his work between silence, noise, music and language, and between experience, representation and memory.

 

PROGRAMME PROVISOIRE/ DRAFT PROGRAMME

 

Jeudi 25 juin, après-midi / Thursday 25th June, afternoon

Françoise Asso, Université de Lille III

La Traduction chez Proust (titre provisoire)

Margaret Gray, Indiana University, Bloomington

Voices Off: Translating the Sounds of Silence in Proust

 

Daniel Karlin, Bristol University

Translating “les cris de Paris” in Proust’s La Prisonnière

 

Vendredi 26 juin (matin et après-midi/ Friday 26th June (morning and afternoon)

Vincent Ferré, Université de Paris Est Créteil

Titre à confirmer / Title to be confirmed

Lydia Davis, Translator, Du côté de chez Swann (Penguin 2002), Author

Hammers and Hoofbeats

James Grieve, Translator, A l’ombre des jeunes filles en fleurs (Penguin, 2002), Author, Visiting Fellow, Australian National University

Voix proustiennes à l’anglaise. L’Idiolecte des personnages de la Recherche en traduction.

Lydia Davis, James Grieve

Translators’ round table / Table ronde des traducteurs

Colloque organisé par le groupe de recherche Confluences du CREA (Centre de recherches anglophones) dans le cadre du séminaire Sounds Foreign, avec le soutien de l’UFR LCE et de l’Ecole Doctorale Langues, Lettres et Spectacles de l’Université de Paris Ouest Nanterre

APPEL À ARTICLES / CALL FOR ARTICLES

Une publication bilingue est prévue à l’issue du colloque. En plus des contributions des participants, nous accueillons des propositions d’article sur cette question. Un résumé peut être envoyé à Emily Eells dès maintenant (emily.eells@u-paris10.fr)

Papers will appear in a bilingual publication following the conference. Please note that we welcome submissions of additional articles on this question for inclusion in the final volume. Abstracts should be sent to Emily Eells (emily.eells@u-paris10.fr).

INSCRIPTION/REGISTRATION

Inscription gratuite et obligatoire auprès d’Emily Eells and Naomi Toth (emily.eells@u-paris10.fr, ntoth@u-paris10.fr)

There is no fee for attending the conference, however participants should register beforehand by sending an email to Emily Eells and Naomi Toth (emily.eells@u-paris10.fr, ntoth@u-paris10.fr)

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP: Aftermath: The Cultural Legacies of WW1 — conference at King’s College London, 21-23 May 2015

AFTERMATH: the Cultural Legacies of WW1
The Arts & Humanities Research Institute at King’s, in conjunction with the Institute for the Arts and Humanities at the University of North Carolina, is staging a major international conference on the Cultural Legacies of World War I, to be held at King’s from 21-23 May 2015.

The conference will cover a wide range of aspects of how the First World War changed the world, such as its geopolitical aftermath (and its current repercussions in the Middle East); how people thought about future wars; the war’s impact on social history, the arts and popular cultures, and on science, technology, nursing and medicine.

Confirmed Keynote speakers include:

Dr Santanu Das, Department of English, King’s College London

Prof. David Edgerton, Director, Centre for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine, KCL

Dr Kate McLoughlin, University of Oxford

Anne Marie Rafferty, Professor of Nursing Policy at the Florence Nightingale School of Nursing and Midwifery,KCL

Dr Eugene Rogan, Director, The Middle East Centre, St Antony’s College, Oxford

Prof. Sir Simon Wessely, Vice Dean for Academic Psychiatry at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, KCL

Please send proposals (not more than 300 words) for papers of 20-25 minutes to:

max.saunders@kcl.ac.uk and laura.douglas@kcl.ac.uk

by 1 February 2015.

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP: Digesting Modernity: An Interdisciplinary Study of Food

 

Postgraduate Conference ‒ Announcement and Call for Papers

St Mary’s University, Twickenham, London

will host a one-day Postgraduate Conference entitled

‘Digesting Modernity: An Interdisciplinary Study of Food’

on

Saturday 18th April 2015

 

Food sustains a discussion about historical, sociological, anthropological and political changes in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries both in Britain and abroad. Throughout the nineteenth century food production in England declined and the importation of foodstuffs from the colonies increased. This change in what and how food was eaten created anxieties about the role of women, inherent attitudes towards other races and the European perception of itself as the bastion of civilization. One unforeseen extension of importing food from distant lands was the growing problem of cannibalism through the shipwreck of merchant ships, a phenomenon which questioned societal codes of conduct and Victorian perceptions of morality. Food was used as a tool through which to examine political anxieties such as anarchy and capitalism, liberty and revolution. Food changed the status of women throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, establishing them as moral agents of good cooking. Food crosses boundaries not just of race, class, nationality and gender, but across academic disciplines. This conference aims to bring together new and established views on how food can contribute to Modernist Studies.

Outline of the Conference

The conference will take the form of an interdisciplinary programme reflecting the diversity of current postgraduate work in food studies; it encourages contributions from new and established scholars working in the field of modernism who are eager to share their thoughts and research.

Papers considering food in literature, art, history, film, theatre or theological studies are welcome. Conference panels might include:

‘Food and Film’: Food as a cinematic motif, occasions of eating in film

‘The Politics of Food’: Vegetarianism/Veganism/Cannibalism

‘Economies of Food’: Famine/Gluttony

‘Aesthetics of Food’: Metaphorical eating, the art of food

‘Theology of Food’: The Eucharist, sacred food, sacrifice, religious symbolism of food

‘Food and Modern Literature’: Woolf, Joyce, Conrad, Zola, Hardy, Orwell, James

‘Food in the Media’: Journalism, advertising, cook books

Call for Papers

The School of Arts and Humanities invites proposals for papers for a Postgraduate Conference on ‘Digesting Modernity: An Interdisciplinary Study of Food’ to be held at St Mary’s University, Twickenham, London.

Proposals for papers of 20 minutes and for panels on all topics related to the representation of food in Modernism are invited.

Abstracts of about 300 words should be sent no later than 30th January 2015 in MS Word format to the conference organizer: kim.salmons@btinternet.com.

Confirmation of acceptance will be communicated within one week of the closing date.

Cost: The conference fee is £25 and includes lunch, tea and coffee.

Payment details: to be advised.

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Events Postgraduate

Evelyn Waugh and his Circle

Evelyn Waugh and His Circle:
Reading and Editing the Complete Works

24-26 April, 2015

Hosted by the University of Leicester at College Court, Leicester, UK.
Kindly supported by the Arts and Humanities Research Council.

Registration is now open for the international conference, Evelyn Waugh and his Circle. This conference is a celebration and integral part of the Complete Works of Evelyn Waugh project, which is based at the University of Leicester. From the 24-26 April we will be welcoming Waugh scholars from around the world, who will present research alongside many of the project’s own editors. We are delighted to host Selina Hastings, Paula Byrne and William Boyd as our keynote speakers, and the project will be introduced by Evelyn Waugh’s grandson, Alexander Waugh.

For more information and to register please visit:http://www2.le.ac.uk/departments/english/news/waughconf

Please email waughconf@le.ac.uk with any queries.

Registration is open until Saturday 28th February 2015.

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP: ‘Perfectly phrased and quite as true’: Aphoristic Modernity, 1890–1950

Call for papers

‘Perfectly phrased and quite as true’: Aphoristic Modernity, 1890–1950

We hold this truth to be self-evident: the conference will take place on the 4th of July 2015, at King’s Manor, University of York

Plenary speakers:
Dr Mark Sandy, Durham University
Dr James Williams, University of York

‘You cut life to pieces with your epigrams’, says Oscar Wilde’s Dorian Gray to Lord Henry. His statement is itself an adept epigram, encapsulating a particular kind of aphoristic writing which is pointed and authoritative, yet retains a hint of frivolity. Although aphoristic and epigrammatic writing hails from antiquity and has always been a diverse and popular literary genre, the final years of the Victorian era saw a surge in the popularity of the aphorism. As the rhythms of life and industry accelerated, along with the consumption of information, aesthetic fashions followed suit, and the aphorism came to encapsulate the condensation, spontaneity and fragmentation of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century modernity. As Henry James’ epigrammatic assessment of the Victorian novel implied, ‘loose, baggy monsters’ were out, economy of language was in, and the art of aphorism was revivified.

Along with its subgenera, such as the epigram, the witticism, and the apophthegm, the aphorism expresses the kernel of a truth in surprising ways, while playfully destabilising it – a duality embodied by Friedrich Nietzsche’s Human, All Too Human (1878), one of the first modern works to undermine the systematised nature of western philosophical thought by employing aphoristic writing. On a more quotidian level, with advances in modern media drawing the cult of celebrity into the literary world, modern and modernist writers became celebrated for their bon mots. Accordingly, the nimble one-liner popularised by Wilde and Mark Twain was taken up and turned to different purposes by later public figures such as G.K. Chesterton, Winston Churchill, T.S. Eliot, and Dorothy Parker. As this diverse company suggests, the aphorism can assume as many styles and modes as possible themes, while its airtight economy squeezes and condenses meaning rather than whittling it. Like a quaint contraption ingrained with cryptic clues that slowly spool out meaning, the modern aphorism is ‘neither a truism on the one hand, nor a riddle on the other’, as the late-Victorian journalist, John Morley put it.

This one-day conference aims not only to showcase the distinctive character of aphoristic writing in modernity, but also to rehabilitate the critical status of this miniaturised, ephemeral literary genre. We invite 20 minute papers and panel proposals on any of the following variations upon this theme (although respondents should not consider themselves restricted to these topics):

·         Aphoristic subgenres (epigram, apophthegm, maxim, proverb, sententia, etc.)
·         Aphorisms and politics
·         Celebrity and sound-bites
·         Paradox and/or self-contradiction
·         Technical ingenuity and/or innovation of thought
·         Aphorisms and modernism
·         Aphorisms and decadence
·         The stylistics of aphorisms
·         Witticisms and quips
·         Earnestness and irony
·         Quibbling and wordplay
·         Management of meaning: ambiguity, multiplicity, denseness
·         fel vs mel epigrams
·         The practice of quotation
·         Epigraphs, dedications and other paratextual fragments
·         Aphorisms implanted within larger texts
·         Aphorisms and literary theory
·         Modern aphoristic writing as influenced by antiquity and the Renaissance
·         Anti-aphorisms: platitudes and commonplaces
·         Anti-aphorisms: parody and nonsense aphorisms
·         Conversational and anecdotal aphorisms

Panels will follow the format of three 20-minute papers followed by questions. Abstracts of no more than 250 words are invited by 1st April 2015. Please email submissions to aphoristicmodernity@gmail.com

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP: Writing Literary History: Europe 1900-1950 – Leuven

Writing Literary History: Europe 1900-1950

14-16 September 2015, University of Leuven

This conference is an initiative of the MDRN research lab at the University of Leuven (www.mdrn.be), which focuses on European literature from the (long) first half of the twentieth century. Recognizing that (modern) literary history is currently one of the main sites of theoretical and methodological reflection in literary studies, the conference aims to take stock of recent scholarship and to investigate how literary historical research has modified our understanding of writing between 1900 and 1950. We welcome proposals for papers which consider the following overall research questions and perspectives:

  • Many crucial notions in literary studies have been revalued in recent years in the practice of literary history. These include archive, period, book, event, media, genre, generation, objects, style and the senses. How exactly has this conceptual revaluation affected our view of literature’s and writers’ complex dynamics and functions between 1900 and 1950? What aspects and notions of writing require further attention in future literary histories?
  • Recent decades have seen an explosion of new or revised approaches in literary history. These include digital humanities, media archaeology, cognitive approaches, evocriticism and literary Darwinism, ecocriticism, object-oriented theories, affect theory and many more. Which of these are of special value to the history of literature from the modernist period and why?
  • Our understanding of literature’s ‘context’ has gone through drastic changes in the past decades. Once universally understood as the immediate institutional, economic or political constellation surrounding a text, ‘context’ in present-day literary studies means a lot of things, from the ‘brain’ (in cognitive studies) to the ‘universe’ (in so-called Big History). How can these drastic redefinitions help us to reconceive the history of literature between 1900 and 1950?
  • Place and space always have been said to be of significance to the historical development of European literature. What new approaches to space and place (from translation studies and memory studies to post-socialist research and geologically inspired methods working with concepts like deep time) allow us to reread the regional, national and transnational circulation of European writing during this half century?
  • Which new forms of reading to have gained weight in recent years (from distant reading and uncritical reading to non-reading and beyond) are of relevance to the historiography of literature from the modernist period? Similarly, what new or hitherto neglected aspects of the materiality, reception and production of texts can help us to cast new light on the writing in the period?
  • The first half of the twentieth-century saw the rise of many historiographical methods (from Formalism and early structuralism to neo-Marxism and early Critical Theory) that went on to play a crucial role in literary history. What aspects of these methods still hold potential today? Are there perhaps other approaches in literary history developed during the period have remained largely neglected but still hold promise?

Proposals for 20-minute presentations are welcome before 4 May 2015 and can be sent to: mdrn.wlh@gmail.com. Case-based contributions that can help us to revisit the writings from the modernist period will be considered, but our principal aim is to foster methodological and conceptual debate and to enhance the dialogue between the major literary and historiographical research traditions within Europe and beyond. For that reason proposals on general theoretical and methodological topics in the field of literary historiography (always with an emphasis on the period 1900-1950) will be favored. A selection of papers will be published after the conference.

For more information, visit www.mdrn.be.

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP: For a Materialist Psychoanalysis Conference – Warwick

For a Materialist Psychoanalysis Conference

University of Warwick, May 8-9, 2015

 

Confirmed Keynote Speakers:

Dina Al-Kassim (University of British Columbia)

John Fletcher (University of Warwick)

Conference Organisers:

Daniel Katz and Christian Smith, Department of English and Comparative Literary Studies, University of Warwick

Call for Papers

The purpose of this conference is to consider the usefulness of psychoanalysis for political critique, as well as politically-oriented frameworks for reading cultural phenomena. Rather than view psychoanalysis as a transhistorical, universal paradigm for resolving the mysteries of the human in all their manifestations, the goal will be to explore how psychoanalytic inquiry provides a way into history, rather than an escape from it. In terms of the current global economic predicament, we hope to investigate how psychoanalysis can help us move beyond the limited “rational choice” theories of neo-liberal economics without replacing them with a potentially problematic form of socialist rationalism sometimes embraced by the left. How can we envisage an economically egalitarian, cooperative, and democratic society while acknowledging that the symptom and the unconscious are inexpugnable from all social constructions? How can psychoanalysis help us to respond to the historical lesson of the twentieth century in which so many explicitly Marxist experiments perpetuated relations of domination in other forms and spectacularly failed to produce the transformation of social relations which is anti-capitalism’s greatest promise?

The relationship between psychoanalysis and Marxism has been fraught with tension throughout its history. Some Marxists claim that psychoanalysis is not materialist. However, this assertion suffers from the undialectical assumption that psychoanalysis is a homogeneous system of thought. Nothing could be further from the truth. There are many strands of contending scholarship that fall under the umbrella term psychoanalysis. Some are more materialist than others. In fact, it is possible to imagine that psychoanalysis could be a tool for a critique of contradictions such as that between materialism and non-materialism. Similar to Marxism, psychoanalysis should provide the means for its own auto-critique.

To investigate these broad questions, we intend to examine the history of joint articulations of psychoanaltyic and progressive thought—specifically Marxist—in the hopes of constructing new paradigms for progressive thinking and action. In particular, this conference calls for papers that explore or theorise psychoanalysis as a materialist practice. In this regard, we look forward to work on figures, groupings, and tendencies such as Surrealism, Reich, the Frankfurt School, the Situationists, the Lacanian-Althusserian nexus, schizoanalysis, queer studies, feminism, post-colonial studies, and Žižek, among many others. We would also welcome papers on the relationship between psychoanalysis as an institution and its own left-wing, including the relationship of Freud and his circle to radical politics in Vienna and beyond.

The conference will be comprised of two main components:

1. Conference papers (May 9). Please submit 300-400 word proposals for 30-minute papers to both d.katz@warwick.ac.uk and Christian.Smith@warwick.ac.uk by December 15, 2014.

2. Post-Graduate Student Workshops (May 8, Chaired by Dr. Christian Smith, attended by keynote speakers). These workshops are open to doctoral students and postdoctoral researchers. Papers will be distributed to all before the conference for critical reading. The seminars will consist of short summaries of each paper’s main argument and discussion between participants. One of the conference’s keynote speakers will participate in each discussion. To be considered for this workshop, please send an abstract of approximately 300 words to Christian.Smith@warwick.ac.uk and d.katz@warwick.ac.uk by December 15, 2014.