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Events

Science is Fiction: The films of Jean Painlevé

Science is Fiction: The films of Jean Painlevé

 

Prof. Dawn Ades CBE FBA (Art History, Essex) will introduce a screening of a selection of Jean Painleve’s short nature films, followed by a roundtable discussion. Confirmed roundtable speakers are Prof. Dawn Ades (Essex), Dr. Will Abberley (English) and Dr. Omar W. Nasim (History).

 

Tuesday 13 May 2014, 5.15-7pm

Lecture Room 6, New College

 

All welcome. Wine and soft drinks will be served.

Convenors: Dr. Lee-Von Kim (lee-von.kim@mod-langs.ox.ac.uk) and Dr. Nicole Sierra (nicole.sierra@ell.ox.ac.uk)

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Events Postgraduate

London Modernism Seminar – May 10

The final London Modernism Seminar of this academic year will take place on Saturday May 10, 2014 in Senate House, room G37, 11:00-13:00. The topic is Modernism and Ethics and we’re very pleased to welcome as speakers Shane Weller and Iain Bailey. Their titles are:
Shane Weller (Kent), ‘The Ethics of Late Modernism’
Iain Bailey (Manchester), ‘Ern Malley and Affirmative Culture’
Please see below for abstracts and biographies of the speakers. The seminar is open to everyone interested in modernism.
Shane Weller, ‘The Ethics of Late Modernism’
Far from having exclusively aesthetic implications, late modernism’s response to what it takes to be the catastrophic implications of modernity is highly relevant for any critique of the contemporary world and its institutions, shaped as that world is by the globalization of the Enlightenment project and the consequent integration of various forms of alterity, at once political, cultural, ethnic and religious. Taking the work of Samuel Beckett as my primary case study, I argue in this paper for a conception of late modernism as primarily a post-Second World War phenomenon characterized by what I describe as an ‘anethical’ attitude, which is reflected in a particular approach towards language.
Biographical Note
Shane Weller is Professor of Comparative Literature, Co-Director of the Centre for Modern European Literature, and Head of the School of European Culture and Languages at the University of Kent. His publications include Beckett, Literature and the Ethics of Alterity (2006), Literature, Philosophy, Nihilism: The Uncanniest of Guests (2008), and Modernism and Nihilism (2011).
Iain Bailey, ‘Ern Malley and Affirmative Culture’
This paper takes as its point of departure the Ern Malley affair, a literary hoax perpetrated on the editors of an Australian literary journal in 1944. Its principal focus will be on the rhetorical work that follows in the wake of the poems’ publication and seeks to account for them, either in enjoyment of the hoax itself or to recuperate for the poems an independent aesthetic value. The paper will look at the way aesthetic and ethical judgments run together in these efforts; more specifically, it will examine the different ways in which they accord value to rationalisation, not only by negotiating with questions about intention, but also in foregrounding the problem of tone.
 
Iain Bailey is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the University of Manchester. He has published essays on Samuel Beckett, intertextuality, tone and the archive; his book, Samuel Beckett and the Bible, was published by Bloomsbury earlier this year. With Ben Ware, he is co-organising ‘Modernism and the Moral Life’, a 1-day symposium in Manchester on 30 May.
Categories
Events Postgraduate

Modernist Criticisms – programme announced

http://modernistcriticismsconference.wordpress.com/

Programme

09.30 – 10.00 Registration & Welcome: Natalie Wright
10.00-11.15 Panel 1: Conceptions of Criticism 

Andrew Atherton (University of Kent): The Two Eliots: Effort and Passivity in the Critical Prose of T. S. Eliot

Mimi Winick (Rutgers University): ‘On that bridge, emotionally, I halt’: Jane Harrison’s Ritual Scholarship

Michael Jolliffe (University of Leicester): ‘Gas Bombs and Smoke Screens’: The Collateral Damage of Emanuel Carnevali’s Cultural Criticism

11.30-12.45 Panel 2: Criticism and Pedagogy 

George Potts (University College London): The ‘self-explanatory or critical poet’: Eliot, Empson and Poetic Notation

Benjamin Poore (Queen Mary, University of London): Why Leonard Bast had to be Killed

Natalie Wright (University of Cambridge): ‘scientific, experimental, and observational work’: Edith Morley’s Professorial Criticism

12.45-13.45 Lunch
13.45-15.00 Panel 3: Modernist Critical Contexts 

Maciej Jakubowiak (Jagiellonian University): A Question of the Law: Modernist Discussions on Copyright

Alexandra Lyons (University College London): ‘Age of Experiment’: Katherine Mansfield’s Work in The Athenaeum

David Miller (Birkbeck University): ‘Uncreativity’ and the Gendered Production of Art in Olive Moore’s The Apple is Bitten Again (Self-Portrait) (1934)

15.15-16.30 Panel 4: Alternative Critical Modes 

Sarah Barnsley (Goldsmiths, University of London): Mary Barnard and Ezra Pound: A Critical Correspondence

John Dunn (Queen Mary, University of London): The ‘Night’ and ‘Day’ of Literary Criticism in Maurice Blanchot’s Thomas the Obscure

Katarzyna Trzeciak (Jagiellonian University): Making Radical Criticism by Sculptural Concepts: T. E. Hulme and his Influence on Imagists and Vorticists

16.45-18.00 Keynote: Professor Tim Armstrong (Royal Holloway, University of London):Reframing Modernism after 1926: Hammersmith Modernism and its Manifestos
18.00-19.00 Drinks Reception

You can register to attend using our booking form. Entry is £10 (£5 students).

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Events Postgraduate

Ethnography and American Culture in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, 1870-1920

Registration is Open! 

 

The University of Kent is hosting a one-day symposium on 19th May 2014, entitled‘Ethnography and American Culture in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, 1870-1920′.

The symposium is being organised by Dr Michael J. Collins (University of Kent) and it will include Plenary Lectures byProfessors Nancy Bentley (University of Pennsylvania)and Brad Evans (Rutgers, New Jersey). It will attempt to unite literary studies and print culture with intellectual history, anthropology, the history of science and visual culture studies in order to explore how mainstream media related to emergent social-scientific disciplines in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era United States.
To register for Ethnography and American Culture in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, 1870-1920 click here.
Full Programme
  • 9.00 – 9.30 Registration
  • 9.30 – 9.15 Welcome and Opening Remarks
  • 9.15 – 10.45 Keynote Lecture – Nancy Bentley UPENN
  • 10.45 -11.00 Coffee
  • 11- 12.30 Panel 1: Documenting Difference and The Making of American Modernity
“Cultural Encounters in The Southwest: George Wharton James and the American Indian” – Martin Padget, (Aberystwyth University)
“At Home With…”Celebrity Interviewing as Ethnography in the Gilded Age” – Rebecca Roach (New College, Oxford)
“Harlem’s Magician: Charles S. Johnson and the Ironies of Urban Race Relations from Riot to Renaissance” – Cheryl Hudson (Vanderbilt University)
  • 12.30 – 1.30: Buffet Lunch
  • 1.30 – 3.00 Panel 2: Memorialisation and Material Culture – Ethnography on Display
“Ethnography and the Progressive Era: The ‘Memorial’ to the American Indian” –Danielle A. Fleming (University of Glasgow)
“To Amuse as Well as to Instruct: The Display of Humans at America’s Western World’s Fairs, 1894-1914” – Emily Trafford (University of Liverpool)
“Curious Objects: The Still-Life Paintings and Amateur Ethnography of William Harnett” – Nika Elder (Princeton University)
  • 3.00 – 3.15 Coffee
  • 3.15 – 4.45 Panel 3: Performance and Parody in the Ethnographic Imagination
“The Three R’s of Show Biz – Gags, Singing and a Time Step! The Marx Brothers Go to School” – Rick DesRochers (Long Island University)
“Black Ice: Blackface, Plantation Songs and the Myth of Old Dixie During Polar Exploration” – Tomek Mossakowski (King’s College, London)
  • 4.45 – 6.30 Drinks and Canapes
  • 6.30 – Film Screening and Q&A
Screening of ‘In the Land of the Headhunters’ with Introduction and Q&A by Brad Evans (Gulbenkian Cinema)
Based on recent archival research, in 2008 a collaborative team led by Aaron Glass (now at the Bard Graduate Center), Brad Evans (Rutgers), and Andrea Sanborn (of the U’mista Cultural Centre in BC) oversaw a new restoration of the film that returned the film’s original title, title cards, long-missing footage, color tinting, initial publicity graphics, and original musical score—now thought to be the earliest extant original feature-length film score in America. http://www.curtisfilm.rutgers.edu/
Sponsored by The School of English, Centre for American Studies, and Kent Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities

 

Categories
CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP Deadline Extended: Anna Kavan Symposium, 16 MAY 2014

CALL FOR PAPERS – DEADLINE EXTENDED TO 16 MAY 2014

ANNA KAVAN: HISTORICAL CONTEXT, INFLUENCES AND LEGACY

11th September 2014

A one-day symposium at the Institute of English Studies in association with Liverpool John Moores University Research Centre for Literature and Cultural History and Peter Owen Publishers

Anna Kavan’s publication history spans from her early novels under the name Helen Ferguson in the late 1920s and early 1930s to her last work which won Brian Aldiss’ prize for ‘Sci-Fi Novel of the Year’ in 1967.  Her own life story has been widely reported in magazine articles, book reviews and popular biography, but there has been little serious scholarly attention to her writing.  The often sensationalized focus on Kavan’s biography, particularly her adoption of her own fictional character’s name, her long-term heroin addiction, and her psychological difficulties, has overshadowed serious critical attention to her work.  Yet, her writing continues to be published in English and translation, to hold fascination for new generations of readers, and to interest or influence other writers and artists.  This symposium aims to bring together scholars with an interest in Kavan to promote an increasing academic focus on her work.  The day will be a forum for knowledge sharing, with the broad aims of historicizing Kavan’s work, situating her within the literary and intellectual context of her times, and charting her legacy as a writer.  The symposium will close with a public event in the evening at which leading contemporary writers will discuss Anna Kavan’s work in relation to their own writing.

The symposium will primarily focus on Kavan’s fictional writing, but also welcomes those working on her biography, her journalism, her little-studied artwork and her philosophical or intellectual influences.  Papers might include the following topics:

  • Comparative readings of Kavan’s fiction with her contemporaries and the authors who have admired her since (e.g. Doris Lessing, J G Ballard, Anais Nin, Maggie Gee).
  • Connections/differences between her writing as Helen Ferguson/ Anna Kavan.
  • High Modernist influences on Kavan’s work.
  • Readings of Kavan’s fiction that historicize her writing in the context of the Second World War, the Cold War and 1960s counterculture.
  • Kavan’s theoretical or philosophical influences.
  • Feminist readings and reassessments of Kavan’s work.
  • Examination of the (post-)colonial aspects of Kavan’s fiction and journalism.
  • Kavan’s engagement with visual cultures, including her own artwork.
  • Studies of Kavan’s use of form (especially the short story) and narrative style (especially her distinctive uses of first and third person narrative).
  • Theories of autobiography and fiction and their impact on the reception of Kavan’s life and work.
  • Kavan’s writing of madness, asylum incarceration and opiate addiction.
  • Kavan’s literary networks (e.g. her friendships with Rhys Davies, Kay Dick, Sylvia Townsend-Warner and others, and her associations with Cyril Connolly and Jonathan Cape).
  • Issues of genre including interpretations of Kavan’s work as ‘Science Fiction’.
  • Kavan’s journalism (in Horizon) and its relation to her fictional writing.
  • Other writers’ engagement with Kavan and the legacy of her work.

Presentations should take the form of 20-minute papers. Please send proposals of no more than 300 words toinfo@annakavan.org.uk by 16 May 2014.  For further information visit http://annakavansymposium.wordpress.com/

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Events Postgraduate

Katherine Mansfield Society Annual Birthday Lecture 2014, Sunday 12 October 2014, 2.00pm, London

KATHERINE MANSFIELD SOCIETY ANNUAL BIRTHDAY LECTURE 2014
SUNDAY 12 OCTOBER 2014, 2.00PM
VENUE, TBC:
BIRKBECK, UNIVERSITY OF LONDON
 ‘KATHERINE MANSFIELD AND LIFE WRITING’
PROFESSOR LAURA MARCUS, University of Oxford

To order tickets, please go to:

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/katherine-mansfield-society-annual-birthday-lecture-2014-tickets-11439902055

For further details, please go to our website: http://www.katherinemansfieldsociety.org/birthday-lecture-2014/
or contact the KMS:  kms@katherinemansfieldsociety.org
KMS MEMBERS: £15
NON MEMBERS: £20
TO INCLUDE A SOUVENIR BOOKLET OF THE LECTURE, WINE AND BIRTHDAY CAKE
Categories
CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP Word into Image Symposium. 10th July 2014: Tactic Gallery, Cork.

Poetry has long constructed itself as an interface between word and image. At the turn of the twentieth century, Mallarmé and Apollinaire’s experiments with visual poetry launched a new investigation into poetry as image, shaping an area of modernist and avant-garde interest that would develop throughout contemporary poetics. Celebrating the interdisciplinary bent of the avant-gardes, this conference will examine the point at which poetry and image meet. Taking in the long twentieth century up to and including current practices, we will invite speakers to interrogate the nature and effect of works that are both word and image.

 

Areas that papers could explore include:

  • ·       What does it mean to frame poetry as image or image as poetry?
  • ·       The interdisciplinary poet-artist / artist-poet
  • ·       The materiality of language
  • ·       Where the visual meets the digital
  • ·       The artistic and political potentials of visual poetics
  • ·       Illustration
  • ·       Collaborations between visual artists and poets
  • ·       Typographic innovation as visual art practice
  • ·       The printed page as canvas
  • ·       The poetics of the moving image
  • ·       Sound poetry scores

Please send abstracts of 300 words to modernismsucc@gmail.com by Friday 16th May. This symposium will take place in Tactic Gallery, Cork and will accompany the Word into Image exhibition of visual poetry. It will also coincide with the annual SoundEye Poetry Festival which runs from 11-13th July in the Guesthouse, Cork. Word into Image is kindly supported by Tactic Gallery, UCC History of Art Department and UCC Department of French.

UCC Modernisms Research Centre – Dr Kerstin Fest, Dr Sarah Hayden, James Cummins, Rachel Warriner

Categories
Events Postgraduate

Symposium: Twin Practices – Writing and Painting

We are excited to announce the upcoming event Twin Practices: Writing and Painting, presented by the Cultural Institute at King’s in association with Royal Holloway’s Literature and Visual Cultures Research Seminar.

Speakers: Geoff Dyer, Frieda Hughes, Maggie Humm, Roma Tearne and Jane Thomas

Saturday 24 May 2014, 10 am–6.30 pm
King’s College London, Anatomy Museum, King’s Building, Strand, London WC2R 2LS

Scheduled to coincide with the opening of the exhibition ‘Art and Life: The Paintings of Beryl Bainbridge’, curated by Susie Christensen, this symposium will explore the work of figures who – like Bainbridge – cross disciplines. Jane Thomas will begin the day by reflecting on the connections between Bainbridge’s novels and paintings. The event will then consider some remarkable modernist precedents: the creative relationship of Virginia Woolf and her artist-sister Vanessa Bell, the subject of Maggie Humm’s talk, and the little-known canvases of D. H. Lawrence, introduced by Geoff Dyer. Bringing us up to the present, the writers and painters Frieda Hughes and Roma Tearne will describe in their own words what it means to have ‘twin practices’.

Tickets are £7/£5 (students, King’s staff and alumni) and can be booked at:
https://www.kcl.ac.uk/cultural/culturalinstitute/showcase/current/whatson/talksevents/Bainbridge-events-programme.aspx#TwinPractices

Event organised by Susie Christensen, Sophie Oliver and Sarah Chadfield

Categories
CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP Doris Lessing: An International Conference

Date: Friday/Saturday 12/13th September 2014

Venue: University of Plymouth, Devon, UK

 

 

CFP-DORIS LESSING 2014-AN INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

European Network of Comparative Literary Studies – Dublin, 24-28 August 2015

European Network of Comparative Literary Studies (REELC/ENCLS) 6th Biennial

 

Congress. Organised in collaboration with CLAI (Comparative Literature

Association of Ireland)

Themes: “Longing and Belonging”

Places: Dublin City University and National University of Ireland, Galway

Dates: 24-28 August 2015

 


The notion of belonging has often been examined from the perspective of location and of the

politics of relations to space and culture. Literary studies have helped map out and interrogate the

representations of topographical belonging, creating new possibilities for interpreting individual

and collective images. Politics of relations also explore the notion of becoming, as attached to

belonging, and the conditions out of which actions are produced, experience is built and beliefs

emerge. Artists and characters may adhere or resist systems pertaining to spatially, historically or

culturally defined groups, bringing political considerations to the fore, which can in turn entail

stylistic innovation involving transmutation or hybridization of classical approaches.

Adaptation and rewriting (prose, film, graphic novels) can be the vehicles of such action. While

providing new readings of iconic texts, they are intrinsic elements of a cultural heritage which

actualises traditional ideas and representations. This is particularly the case with the treatment of

fairy tales whose new versions have been developing, whether addressed to children or to adults,

in graphic novels, films, stage performances, etc. These transformations involve moving the

location of the original plot and characters to new contexts (realistic, utopian, dystopian or

digital, for example) thus challenging the social or cultural baggage transmitted by canonical

texts over time. They also apply to musical traditions in which the evocation of ancestral places

is of essential importance regarding ideological and aesthetic criteria. Adaptation and rewriting

can indeed operate through songs (operatic or popular), which skilfully describe places,

provoking strong feelings of nostalgia in their listeners, especially if the singers, lyrics or musical

instruments present a certain significance for the audience, resonating with memories and

emotions attached to specific spaces.

Identities are constructed and contested in a wide variety of contexts. Distinctions between

identities, whether cultural or gendered, relate to a sense of belonging to a powerful centre vs an

opposite periphery or minority. These distinctions can either strengthen or undermine the

perceptions of individuals and groups (their auto- and hetero-images). Hierarchical barriers can

also be constructed between affiliations and with regard to the value of certain forms of

knowledge. Authors and artists have often disrupted claims of cultural or national superiority

when grounded in political, racial or geographical specificity. Identities can be refined or

transformed across time and space by both global and local events. However, as different

literatures have revealed, after a sense of liberation from monolithic political systems, nostalgia

can occasionally set in, ideologies having shaped conceptions of self and community. Longing

for an idealised past can prove as painful as longing for a promised land, and artists may find

themselves in sublimated exilic states while seeking either a new home and new identity or a

way to come home to a former identity.

The notions of longing and belonging therefore lend themselves to a comparative exploration

through different disciplines, such as: Geocriticism, Diaspora Studies, Migration Studies,

Imagology, Myth- and Folklore criticism, (Post-) Colonial Studies; Sexuality Studies, Women’s

Studies, Gender Studies, Masculinity Studies; Ekphrasis, Adaptation Studies, Intermedial

Studies, Reception and Reader-response Theory, Children Literature; Literature and

Anthropology, Literature and Science, Literature and Psychology, Literature and Philosophy,

Ethics in/and Literature.

All subjects related to the main theme of the congress are welcome. For instance, avenues of

investigation may include the following:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

· What fields belong to Comparative Literature or does Comparative Literature belong

 

to?

· Belonging to and/or rejection of schools of thought: Comparative Literature as

 

independent practice

· Expressions and manifestations of longing and belonging, and of longing to belong

· Places of (be)longing (fantasy, dream, imagination, virtuality, heterotopia, homeland,

cradle, home, club.)

· Belonging to a nation, group (patriotism, ethnicity, religion, school, subscription,

 

allegiance.)

· Limits imposed or labels attached to individuals and groups

· Forced belonging (subjugation, arranged marriages, colonization, slavery.)

· Perceptions/images/stereotypes of a place, nation, group

· Belonging as catharsis

· Longing for the other/longing for the self

· Belonging to a gender or sexual identity / denegation of same

· Perceptions/stereotypes of gender or sexual identity

· Belonging to a specific art form/ subversion of same

· Text (be)longing to/for image and vice versa

· Denunciation of belonging to a group (religious, political.) or to a community

(including an interpretive community)

· Exile, immigration, emigration and longing

· Possible worlds, digital worlds, and virtual escapism

· Past allegiance (nostalgia, anthropology, mythology, rejection of tradition)

· Longing for inclusion/refusal to integrate

· Being unable to belong/no longer wanting to belong

· Dreaming of belonging/reality and belonging

· Reception as the expression of a desire or rejection.

We welcome proposals for individual papers and for thematic panels. Please send your 300-word

proposals and short biographies to Brigitte Le Juez: Brigitte.lejuez@dcu.ie and Hans-Walter

Schmidt-Hannisa: h.schmidthannisa@nuigalway.ie by October 1st, 2014.
 

Congress registration fees (these will cover coffee-breaks and lunches):

1) Participants presenting a paper

– Early-bird: ?85 (till February 14, 2015, thereafter ?120)

– Student, independent scholar and retired academic: ?75 (till February 14, 2015, thereafter ?100)

2) Participants not presenting a paper:

– By July 25, 2015: ?60 (thereafter ?75)

– Local university students: ?20 (possibility to receive an attendance certificate)

The languages of the congress will be English, French and Irish. However, poster sessions may

be organised in any European language.

The congress takes place on the East and West coasts of Ireland. Cultural visits and events

will be organised in and between Dublin and Galway.