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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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Summer courses in Cambridge, July 2019

Lectures, seminars, tutorials, excursions, with leading scholars.

Virginia Woolf’s Gardens, 14–19 July 2019
https://www.literaturecambridge.co.uk/woolf-2019/

Fictions of Home: Jane Austen to contemporary Refugee Writers, 21–26
July 2019
https://www.literaturecambridge.co.uk/home-2019/

Early bird discount for bookings made by 15 November 2018.

Literature Cambridge
www.literaturecambridge.co.uk

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Registration open: Modernist Archives in Context: Periodicals and Performance, 22–24 November, Reading

Modernist Archives in Context: Periodicals and Performance

Celebrating the 30th Anniversary of the Beckett International Foundation

Beckett Week at the University of Reading, 2018

22 – 24 November 2018

We are pleased to announce that registration is now open for Modernist Archives in Context: Periodicals and Performance. We would like to thank those who submitted abstracts and will be publishing a full programme on our website and Facebook page shortly. During the conference, there will also be an exhibition with paintings by Avigdor Arikha, Henri Hayden, Geer van Velde, and Matias, as well as artists’ books and a selection of notebooks and letters from the archive. Our two keynotes will be delivered by Professor Andrew Thacker (Nottingham Trent University) and Dr Jonathan Herron (University of Warwick). The two workshops will be led by Dr Adam Guy (University of Oxford), who will be talking about periodical cultures in transition, and by Dr Matthew McFrederick (University of Reading and University of the Arts London), who will be using the Billie Whitelaw collection to talk about staging Beckett.

On Thursday 22 of November there will be a reception to celebrate the exciting Creative Fellowship programme launched by the University of Reading’s Samuel Beckett Research Centre, and also the 30th anniversary of the establishment of the Beckett International Foundation (BIF). All conference delegates are invited to attend. This event will feature a Q&A with the award-winning novelist Eimear McBride, the first recipient of a Beckett Creative Fellowship. The Beckett International Foundation will be holding a seminar on Saturday 24 of November, with invited speakers Dr Julie Bates (Trinity College Dublin), Dr Lucy Jeffery (University of Reading), Dr Pim Verhulst (University of Antwerp), and Professor Shane Weller (University of Kent). A separate registration for the BIF seminar will be available in due course.

To find out more about the conference fees and register to attend the conference please follow the link: https://www.store.reading.ac.uk/conferences-and-events/faculty-of-arts-humanities-social-science/english-literature-department/modernist-archives-in-context

Please note that a separate registration for the BIF Seminar will appear in due course.

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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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Richard Hoggart Lecture: Rachel Bowlby, Goldsmiths, 16 October

The Uses of Shopping: Richard Hoggart Goes to Woolworth’s

Tuesday 16 October, 6.30pm

From The Uses of Literacy all the way to the many autobiographical works of his retirement years, Richard Hoggart wrote about shops and shopping. Quietly resituating the adverse stance of the literary world to all things consumerly, Hoggart, it seems, was never happier than hanging around at the checkout. This lecture will look at the changing shopping experiences that Hoggart describes, and the distinctiveness of this lifelong enthusiasm for a man of his time and places.

This event is free, but please reserve tickets by emailing Anna De Maria-Nelson: a.demaria-nelson@gold.ac.uk

Search for the event: gold.ac.uk/calendar

Richard Hoggart Building, RHB 137a
Goldsmiths, University of London, New Cross, London SE14 6NW

 

Rachel Bowlby has written several books on consumer culture including Carried Away (on the history of supermarkets), Shopping with Freud, and, most recently, Talking Walking: Essays in Cultural Criticism. Rachel is a Professor of Comparative Literature at UCL, where she was also, for ten years, Northclife Professor of English.

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Transatlantic Women in the Archives, 25 September, National Library of Scotland

Transatlantic Women in the Archives

2–4 pm, 25 September, National Library of Scotland, Edinburgh

This event, part of the Transatlantic Literary Women series, explores the legacies of twentieth-century women writers. Four speakers will discuss their experiences of recovering the works and lives of women with connections to, and identities shaped by, both sides of the Atlantic. Join us to learn about Scottish explorer Isobel Wylie Hutchison (Jenni Calder); American novelist Edith Wharton (Donna Campbell); Jamaican poet and broadcaster Una Marson (Imaobong Umoren); and The Second Shelf, a rare book dealership specialising in works by women (A. N. Devers). This thought-provoking afternoon will discuss how female writers are represented in libraries, archives, the literary canon, and the publishing world.

For more information on this event please see: https://transatlanticladies.wordpress.com/events/women-in-the-archives-national-library-of-scotland/ (All welcome. This event is free, but tickets should be reserved in advance via this link)

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CFP: Reading and Writing the World: Perception and Identity in the Era of Climate Change, 5–6 April 2019, Montpellier

Reading and Writing the World: Perception and Identity in the Era of Climate Change
An International Conference organised by EMMA (Etudes Montpelliéraines du Monde Anglophone) in collaboration with CECILLE (Centre d’Etudes en Civilisations, Langues et Lettres Étrangères)

5–6 April 2019
Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier 3, France
Site Saint Charles

Keynote speakers:
Thomas Dutoit, Université de Lille 3, France (confirmed)
Sarah Wood, University of Kent, UK (to be confirmed)

Convened by doctoral students: Laura Lainvae (EMMA) Sarah Jonckheere (CECILLE)

The current climate crisis is an ongoing chaotic disturbance that defies teleology, mastery, and control. For the first time in human and planetary history, a species has made an impact so profound and traumatic upon its environment that it has rewritten the earth. The Anthropocene as a scene of eruptions and fractures, of shifting grounds and shaking structures, of de-centering and opening, could, as such, be read as solicitation to set in motion a change in identity: in order to find solutions, our thinking about Earth as well as about our place in it should change. “Politics in the wake of the ecological thought must begin with the Copernican ‘humiliations’ – coming closer to the actual dirt beneath out feet, the actuality of Earth”, Timothy Morton suggests, evoking a shift in perception and hierarchy. Such shifts could be investigated through modernist and postmodernist literary grounds, through various modes of writing that challenge our anthropocentric modes of thinking, decentralizing man, and wondering about the agenda and authority of other beings. As Thomas Dutoit writes about Alice Munro: “Munro’s favourite is the ‘kame, or kame moraine,’ the description of which, in earthly and cartographical shapes, stresses the fact that if ‘geography’ (earth-writing or writing-earth) is the attempt, by man, to write, to describe, to map, the earth, ‘geography,’ by the inverse genitive, is also the earth’s writing, the traces that the earth itself inscribes. This ‘geo-grapher’ — the earth — is a never-stopping arranger, in degree more an earth-writer, a géo-littéraire, than even Alice Munro, even if, in kind, they are molecularly the same.”

This conference will attempt to trace and analyze modes of reading and writing that are not based on human mastery and exceptionalism, but rather make room for different possible viewpoints, while also questioning our identity as well as the objectivity and limits of human perception.[1] The conference is built around the necessity to adopt a different way of reading and writing that shakes the foundations of our thinking about Earth and its various inhabitants, and forces us to see anew a landscape whose very form has been defamiliarised by the forces that traverse it. Such reading and writing might have to come to terms with what Timothy Morton calls “the symbiotic real” – the interconnectedness between species. Sarah Wood, in “Without Mastery: Reading and Other Forces” recognizes such thinking in poetry. She writes: “Browning’s feminine Music does not serve the self in its closeness to itself. We have to go beyond ourselves, to dream and read, to hear her singing.” Today, going beyond ourselves requires learning to reread ourselves and our current environment to understand our vulnerability while assuming responsibility for the endangered planet and non-human species. From encounters with diverse forms of non-human otherness (the planet, animals, forests, …) and one’s otherness within, would emerge an ethics of alterity.

We welcome papers for 20-minute presentations in English on writing and reading (not limited to literature or to humanities only) the Earth/the world/ worlds. Some questions that could be discussed include, but are not limited to:

  • Writing and reading the Earth/the world/worlds in literatures, histories, and arts
  • Undoing the “I”/eye in the climate change era: shifting perceptions of the self from anthropocentrism and narcissism to humility, vulnerability, and empathy
  • The Earth as the other. How do we invent, and are invented by, that other through reading and writing? How is la terre (Earth) irreducible to alter[re]ity?
  • Ecocinema: shifting focus/ changing perceptions
  • Affect theory and climate change
  • Terraformings: writing and reading the Earth in science-fiction
  • Deconstruction and ecocritcism
  • The Earth and law: decentering human rights
  • Ethics of care and climate change
  • Climate change and invisibility: how to read/understand/protect what we cannot see
  • Non-humans in the humanities: hospitality or hostility?
  • Scientist’s gaze
  • Animals studying humans
  • Ecofeminisms
  • Anachronism and spacing: time and space as being out of joint / Geological time and space in fiction
  • Posthumanism and the environment: the posthuman as the post-humus, what comes after the Earth and must take care of the earth

Proposals of about 300 words together with a short biographical note (50 words) should be sent to Sarah Jonckheere (s.jonck@hotmail.fr) and Laura Lainväe (lauralainvae@gmail.com) by November 1st, 2018.

[1] “To constitute an ideal object is to put it at the permanent disposition of a pure gaze,” (78) Derrida writes. The current global climate crisis challenges the very idea of the possibility of a pure gaze. According to one of the most noticeable ecological thinkers of the 21th century, Timothy Clark: “The Earth is not ‘one’ in the sense of an entity we can see, understand or read as a whole. No matter how far away or ‘high up’ it is perceived or imagined, or in what different contexts – of cosmology or physics it is always something we remain ‘inside’ and cannot genuinely perceive from elsewhere. It is a transcendental of human existence, and its final determinations are undecidable. The image of the whole Earth opens upon ‘abyssal dimensions to which we can never suitably bear witness’ (David Wood).”