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CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP: Humanity and Animality in 20th and 21st Century Culture

Call for papers:

 

University College London (UCL)

Joint Faculty Institute of Graduate Studies

 

HUMANITY AND ANIMALITY IN 20TH AND 21ST CENTURY CULTURE:

NARRATIVES, THEORIES, HISTORIES. AN INTERDISCIPLINARY CONFERENCE

 

15 September, 2014

 

This interdisciplinary conference takes up an important debate in a field of growing importance in the humanities, where animal studies, post-humanism, and eco-criticism have surged in recent years. The definition of mankind seems necessarily to pass through an understanding of what constitutes the animal. Philosophically, what distinguishes, or indeed brings together humanity and animality has been the subject of debate from Aristotle’s understanding of man as ‘zôon logon echon and from Kant’s view of man’s treatment of animals as an insight into the true nature of humankind, Derrida’s seminars on ‘the beast and the sovereign’, up to Agamben’s recent theory of ‘bare life’ as the breakdown of the barrier between man and animal.

Artists, authors and filmmakers, such as Kafka, Dalí, Borges, Coetzee, Primo Levi, Margaret Atwood, Karl Appel, Paula Rego, Werner Herzog (‘Grizzly Man’), and Benh Zeitlin (‘Beasts of the Southern Wild’) to name but a few, have also grappled with the significance of the divide or symbiosis of humanity and animality. Donna Haraway, Rosi Braidotti and Andrew Benjamin are also redefining ways in which humanity and animality can be thought together, or apart. The violent upheavals of the 20th century, with its global wars, unprecedented genocides and totalitarian experiments led to a re-evaluation of notions such as humanism and humanity, which has made way for new hopes and anxieties relating to the subhuman and the post-human.

By hosting a varied programme of papers and debates chaired by high-profile contributors to this emerging field of inquiry, this conference aims to establish a forum for researchers throughout the UK to discuss this important theoretical issue.

 

Topics of discussion may include but are not limited to the following questions/topics:

 

  • Is it possible, or even desirable to distinguish between animality and humanity?
  • In which ways does the dialectic of ‘human’ and ‘animal’ shape our identities, culture and morality?
  • Why is the comparison with animal world so important for our culture?
  • Shame, pride, sorrow, fear, anxiety, fascination, awe: how do emotions acknowledge the relation between humanity and animality?
  • How do literature, art, evolutionary theory, philosophy and other disciplines negotiate the changes undergone by the concept of the ‘human’ in the last century?
  • How have our perceptions of ‘humanity’ and ‘animality’ changed in relation to violent and extreme events such as genocide, widespread atrocity, world war etc.?
  • What does the persistence of the fascination with animals suggest about specific cultural and historical moments?
  • Are we really a Darwinian species, or do technology, morality and creativity separate us from the rest of the natural evolution?
  • How can we rethink the binary opposition between humanity and inhumanity?
  • Have we entered into a post-human era?
  • Evolutionary theory and the human condition
  • Human-Animal studies
  • Humanity and Animality in Art, Literature, Science, Philosophy, Cinema, Religion, etc.

 

 

Deadline for Abstracts: 

 

Please send an abstract (300 words maximum) and a short biography (50 words maximum) to s.bellin.12@ucl.ac.uk byAugust 1st, 2014.

 

A selection of the papers will be published.

 

Confirmed speakers (other speakers will be announced soon):

 

Martin Crowley (Cambridge; University)

Robert S. C. Gordon (Cambridge University)

Pierpaolo Antonello (Cambridge University)

Florian Mussgnug (UCL)

Kevin Inston (UCL)

other speakers will be announced soon

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

Australian Modernist Studies Network Conference, ‘Transnational Modernisms’

Call for Papers

 

AMSN2: Transnational Modernisms

Australian Modernist Studies Network Conference

Hosted by the University of Sydney

15-16 December 2014

 

Confirmed Keynote Speakers:

Professor Paul Giles (University of Sydney)

Professor Ira Nadel (University of British Columbia)

Professor Sue Thomas (La Trobe University)

 

 

The ‘Transnational turn’ in literary studies has been the focus of intense debate and sustained reflection in recent years, as have critical re-evaluations of Modernism’s transnational scope. Scholarly interventions by Paul Giles (Transnationalism in Practice), Wai Chee Dimock (Through Other Continents: American Literature Across Deep Time), Jahan Ramanzani (A Transnational Poetics), and Paul Jay (Global Matters: The Transnational Turn in Literary Studies), among many others, establish the viability of transnationality as a disciplinary focus. Transnational Modernismsaims to provoke fresh thinking about the particular resonances between Transnationalism and Modernism, including the ongoing critical review of Modernism’s traditional Transatlantic focus.

 

This broader awareness of the sites where Modernism was practiced and transnational connections were initiated (or resisted) prompts a range of compelling questions, including:

 

  •        How might uneven flows of cultural capital between centres of Modernist practice and erstwhile peripheries be understood, accounting for the varieties of geographic and temporal displacement?
  •        Must a global Modernism be co-synchronous, or did it evolve in different phases in different locales and under different socio-economic conditions?
  •        What is to be made of the increasingly intensive scholarly attention given to East Asian Modernism(s) in Western scholarship, and how might this inflect more long-standing work in Asian literary, art historical and musicological studies?
  •        How might an Asian-Pacific Modernism be conceived, and how might this intersect with regional scholarship in literature, visual arts, music, and dance?
  •        How might, for example, Caribbean, South Asian, Brazilian, Latin American, Nigerian or Arab Modernisms be comprised, and reckoned with respect to hegemonic literary and cultural history?

 

This two-day conference will seek to address these and other notions of Transnational Modernisms. Proposals are invited for 20 minute papers or panels of three papers examining any relevant aspect of the conference theme across literature, the visual and plastic arts, music, theatre, and related genres. Proposals from postgraduate students are especially encouraged.

 

Please send abstracts of 300 words and a brief biographical note to mark.byron@sydney.edu.au by 31 August. Notification will be forthcoming by 15 September.

 

Registration and other information will be available soon at the AMSN website, at http://amsn.org.au/

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

Modernism at War – University of Glasgow, Saturday 18 October 2014

SCOTTISH NETWORK OF MODERNIST STUDIES
Modernism at War 
University of Glasgow, Saturday 18 October 2014
 
Keynote speakers:  
Adam Piette (University of Sheffield), ‘War Modernism as Commemorative Trauma’
Randall Stevenson (University of Edinburgh),”Hoarse Oaths that Kept Our Courage Straight”: Language and War, Modernism and Silence’
The Scottish Network of Modernist Studies will be holding a one-day symposium entitled ‘Modernism at War’ at the University of Glasgow on 18 October 2014. Proposals are invited from academics and post-graduates for 20-minute presentations on any topic addressing war in modernist writing and art (including film and other media), the aesthetics and politics of commemoration, trauma and reconstruction, war elegy, anti-war and anti-art, war and the avant garde, war and the archive, war and pedagogy, methodologies for studying war and modernism, or any other related issues and approaches.
Short proposals for papers, expressions of interest and queries should be sent to Vassiliki Kolocotroni  (vassiliki.kolocotroni@glasgow.ac.uk) by Friday 5 September 2014.
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Events

Crossing the Space Between 1914-1945 – London, 17-19 July 2014

The annual Space Between conference “Crossing the Space Between 1914-1945” will take place at the Institute of English Studies, University of London, 17-19 July 2014. Featuring keynote speaker Victoria Stewart (University of Leicester).
Please see the link below for complete information, including full programme:
http://www.ies.sas.ac.uk/events/ies-conferences/SpaceBetween
Those interested in attending should contact Nick Hubble at nick.hubble@brunel.ac.uk for more information.
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Events

Northern Modernism Seminar

The next seminar will be on the theme of

Modernism and Textual Scholarship

It will be held in the Sustainability Hub at Keele University

on Friday 14 November 2014

The event will feature the public launch of the

Richardson Editions Project.

Speakers will include

Wim Van Mierlo (Institute of English Studies)

Daniela Caselli (University of Manchester)

Jo Winning (Birkbeck College)

Scott McCracken (Keele University)

Rebecca Bowler (Keele University)

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Events

‘Word into Image’ Symposium, July 10th – programme

UCC Modernisms Research Centre is delighted to announce the programme for  Word Into Image: a symposium on visual poetry. Accompanied by an exhibition of visual poetry in Tactic Gallery, the symposium directly precedes the annual SoundEye poetry festival (July 11th-13th) in Cork.

 

Word into Image Symposium: July 10th

Tactic Gallery Auditorium, Sample Studios (Former FAS building), Sullivans Quay, Cork

9.30 – 10.00: Registration

10.00 – 11.30: Panel One

Laura Pomeroy (University College Cork): “Embodied Poetry: Mary Devenport O’Neill’s Bluebeard Ballet”

Natalie Ferris (University of Oxford): ‘I just need a fiction like you to work out ideas in front of – no?’: ‘The Pope of Modern Art’ and Abstract Poetry

Michael O’Sullivan (The Chinese University of Hong Kong): Pound’s image, the Chinese character, and cultural differences in education

 

11.30-11.45: Coffee

11.45 – 12.45: Panel Two

Lila Matsumoto (University of Edinburgh): Poems to cover a page: Serialized source text as performance space in the early works of Vito Acconci

Nicole Sierra (University of Oxford): Concrete Islands: The Visuality of Ballard’s ‘Rough Poetry’.

 

12.45 – 14.00: Lunch

14.00 – 15.30: Panel Three

Simon Perril (De Montfort University): Countering Fantesectomy: an account of a collage novel in progress

Emma Cocker (Nottingham Trent University): Between Close Reading and Liquid Writing: Word Slips Towards Movement and Materiality

Gerry Smith (University of Edinburgh): Northern Venetians: writing the city

 

15.30 – 15.45: Break

15.45 – 17.15: Panel Four

Ellen Dillon (Mater Dei): ‘Blessed by a thousand flecks of foam’: flotsam and foam in Peter Manson’s Mallarmé in English, and English in Mallarmé

Patrica Farrell (Edge Hill University): The expressive tension between text and painting in the collaborative work of Pete Clarke and Robert Sheppard

Juha Virtanen (University of Kent): Writing on: poetry and visuality in the recent work of Allen Fisher and Ulli Freer

 

18.00 – 19.00: Keynote (Supported by Department of French, UCC):

Peter Manson: Species of Spaces in Mallarmé: from page to volume and beyond

19.00 – 20.00: Conference Dinner, Quay Co-op, Sullivans Quay
. All very welcome. Please email modernismsucc[at]gmail[dot]com to book a place.

20.00: Launch of Word into Image Exhibition and The Avant Festival

 

This event is kindly funded by the Department of French and Department of History of Art at UCC.

 

Best regards,

 

On behalf of the UCC Modernisms Research Centre

(Rachel Warriner, James Cummins, Dr Kerstin Fest, Dr Sarah Hayden)

  1. uccmodernismsresearchcentre.wordpress

 

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP: 21st-century Moore, Houston

21st-century Moore.
March 19-22, 2015, University of Houston
Call for Papers: deadline 15 July

In March 2015 the University of Houston will host the first meeting in a
decade to focus on Marianne Moore. In light of the past decade’s work on
Moore, including variorum editions of her early and middle- period work and
a ground-breaking new biography by Linda Leavell, the conference will
examine Moore’s place in the twenty-first century’s understanding of
modernism. Abstracts of 250 words are invited for scholarly and creative
presentations on any aspect of Moore’s work. Please send abstracts with
brief resumé, and MOORE ABSTRACT in the subject line to egregory@uh.edu by
15 July 2014.

Steering committee: Elizabeth Gregory, Fiona Green, Stacy Hubbard,
Cristanne Miller, Heather White.

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Events Postgraduate

Announcement for Sussex Quadrophenia symposium

A reminder that registration is open for our conference:

Here by the Sea and Sand: A symposium on the album and film Quadrophenia

Brighton and the University of Sussex, 10-11th July 2014

Thursday 10th  July:  Franc Roddam (director of Quadrophenia) will discuss Quadrophenia at a showing at the Duke of York’s Cinema, Brighton.

Friday 11th July:  Conference at University of Sussex including talks by James Wood (Harvard University, the New Yorker) and Paolo Hewitt.

Register in advance and the film showing is included in the conference price:http://herebytheseaandsand.wordpress.com/

Read about us in Rolling Stone!: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/quadrophenia-hits-the-quad-20140422

Our line-up of participants include:

Franc Roddam’s numerous films include Quadrophenia, K2, Aria, Lords of Discipline and War Party. He created the phenomenally successful Masterchef . He has won awards for his tv drama Dummy, and his BBC documentaries, Mini and The Family. He will be answering questions after the showing of the film at the Duke of York’s on Thursday the 10th of July.

James Wood is one of our foremost literary critics. His reviews and essays have appeared frequently in the The New Yorker, the New York Times, the New York Review of Books and the London Review of Books. He judged the Booker Prize in 1994, and is a professor of the practice of Literary Criticism at Harvard University. He has published four books of essays and a novel. His collection, The Fun Stuff and other essays includes a killer homage to Keith Moon.

Paolo Hewitt has written, co-written, and edited numerous books on music, style, and Mod culture including The Soul Stylists: Six Decades of Modernism, Small Faces: The Young Mods’ Forgotten Story, My Favourite Shirt: A History of Ben Sherman Style, and The Sharper Image: A Mod Anthology.

Simon Wells has written on film and music for numerous magazines and newspapers including The Guardian; The Times and The Independent. His numerous  books on film and music include Your Face Here- British Cult Movies Since the 1960 , The Beatles: 365 Days and Butterfly On A Wheel, the story of the infamous trial of Keith Richards and Mick Jagger in 1967. His book on Quadrophenia is published with Countdown in June.

Alan Fletcher channelled his obsession with 60s mods into a screenplay based on his own life which found its way to Pete Townshend’s door and led to his involvement with the film, and to his writing Quadrophenia-the novel. The script formed the basis of Brummell’s Last Riff, the first novel in his Mod Crop Trilogy. He has contributed to symposiums on youth culture at Derby, Nottingham and Keele.

Dr. Pamela Thurschwell
Senior Lecturer
Co-director, Centre for Modernist Studies
http://www.sussex.ac.uk/modernist/
School of English
University of Sussex
Falmer, Brighton
BN1 9QN
UK

Here by the Sea and Sand: A Symposium on Quadrophenia
10-11 July 2014, University of Sussex
http://herebytheseaandsand.wordpress.com/

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

David Jones: Christian Modernist?” FINAL DEADLINE 15 JUNE

“DAVID JONES: CHRISTIAN MODERNIST?”
A conference in Regent’s Park College and St Anne’s College, Oxford
1013 September 2014

David Jones’s (1895-1974) rich career as visual artist, poet and critic yokes together two terms, ‘Christian’ and ‘modernist’, which are sometimes considered incompatible. This conference examines the paradoxes of a Catholic artist committed to ‘making it new’ through formal experiment and a large-scale theory of sign, sacrament and civilization. Jones’s case demands an interdisciplinary approach drawing on theology, philosophy and history, as well as a wider rethinking of the critical vocabulary of Modernist Studies. We specially welcome a broad range of contributions from fields beyond Jones Studies, to widen the conversation about his work.

Full CFP and registration: http://modernismchristianity.org/david-jones-conference/
(Please note: Only those registering for college accommodation are guaranteed a place at the conference at this stage. If you need to register without accommodation please contact erik.tonning@if.uib.no in advance.)

The final deadline for registration is 15 June, but early registration is strongly encouraged. Please contact the organisers as soon as possible if you intend to register.

Papers are 20 minutes + 10 minutes for discussion.

Keynote speakers:
Thomas Dilworth (University of Windsor)
Paul Fiddes (University of Oxford)
Alison Milbank (University of Nottingham)
Micheal O’Siadhail (Poet, critic and linguist)
Anne Price-Owen (University of Wales)

Organised by the Centre for Christianity and Culture, Regent’s Park College, Oxford and the ‘Modernism and Christianity’ project, University of Bergen, Norway.
Organisers: Paul Fiddes, Anna Johnson and Erik Tonning.
Contact: erik.tonning@if.uib.no

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Events Postgraduate

Modernist Magazines Research Seminar – June 12th, Senate House

We warmly welcome you to a talk by Gerri Kimber next Thursday in Senate House, Room 224.  Gerri will be talking about Katherine Mansfield and Rhythm – an abstract of the paper that will be presented and Gerri’s biosketch are included below.  Please join us for this engaging presentation, as well as a glass of wine and lively discussion.  There is no need to book and the seminar is free to attend.
Rhythm magazine is available to view as part of the Modernist Journals Project here:http://library.brown.edu/cds/mjp/render.php?view=mjp_object&id=1159905483482363
If participants would like to do some background reading before the evening, they are invited to look at this issue which features an article about Stanislaw Wyspianski by Floryan Sobieniowski: http://library.brown.edu/cds/mjp/render.php?view=mjp_object&id=1159897880678184
Best wishes,
Aimee, Chris and Natasha
Modernist Magazines Research Seminar
http://modmags.wordpress.com/
12 June 2014, Dr Gerri Kimber (Northampton) ‘”The artists sail in stately golden ships over this familiar and adventurous ocean”: Katherine Mansfield, Rhythmand Foreignness’, 6pm to 8pm
Abstract:
Rhythm, established in the summer of 1911, and which ran for 14 issues until its demise in March 1913, was an avant-garde publication with a bias towards Symbolism, the arts and Post-Impres­sionism, the music of Debussy and Mahler and the philosophy of Bergson. The list of contributors, mostly unknown at the time beyond the confines of the Left Bank in Paris, reads impressively today and included Derain, Picasso, Tristan Derème and Francis Carco.
Co-editors John Middleton Murry and his future wife Katherine Mansfield were well read in foreign literature; Murry had spent time in Paris and made many acquaintances within its artistic community and Mansfield had spent almost a year in Bavaria in 1909, where she had befriended a group of Polish writers. Thus there developed an émigré aspect to the contributors of both journals; Mansfield and Carco were both born and brought up in the south Pacific, and Eastern Europe was also strongly represented, with contributions by Floryan Sobienowski, with whom Mansfield had had a liaison in Bavaria in 1909, and who became the magazine’s ‘Polish correspondent’. In addition Mansfield’s passion for the oriental brought foreign contributors such as Yone Noguchi into the Rhythm stable.
This paper will highlight the extent of the émigré creative input into Rhythm and also consider Mansfield’s own contributions, which frequently took émigré subjects as their theme. This influence would manifest itself throughout the pages of Rhythm and its short-lived reincarnation as the Blue Review. As a result, both little magazines could be described as having a transnational identity, with a plethora of international correspondents publicising the new movement of the avant-garde.
[All copies of Rhythm and the Blue Review are now digitised and can be viewed here:http://library.brown.edu/cds/mjp/journals.html ]
Gerri Kimber Biosketch:
Dr Gerri Kimber is a Senior Lecturer in English at the University of Northampton. She is co-editor of Katherine Mansfield Studies, the peer-reviewed yearbook of the Katherine Mansfield Society. She is the deviser and Series Editor of the four-volume Collected Works of Katherine Mansfield (2012-15). She is the author of Katherine Mansfield: The Early Years (forthcoming, 2015), Katherine Mansfield: The View from France (2008), and A Literary Modernist: Katherine Mansfield and the Art of the Short Story (2008). She is also co-editor of the following volumes: Katherine Mansfield and Continental Europe: Connections and Influences(forthcoming, 2015), Katherine Mansfield and World War One (forthcoming, 2014), Katherine Mansfield and the (Post)colonial (2013)Katherine Mansfield and Literary Modernism (2011);Celebrating Katherine Mansfield: A Centenary Volume of Essays (2011); Framed! Essays in French Studies (2007). As well as having published numerous articles, she has contributed chapters in the following books: The Great Adventure Ends: New Zealand and France on the Western Front (2013); Bloomsbury: Inspirations and Influences (2013); Katherine Mansfield and Literary Modernism (2011); Translation and Censorship: Arts of Interference (2008);Companion to the British Short Story and Short Fiction (2007). Gerri is Chair of the International Katherine Mansfield Society and has co-organised numerous international Mansfield conferences and events. In 2014, Gerri was one of three nominees for the title UK New Zealander of the Year, for her services to New Zealand culture.​