Categories
CFPs Postgraduate

CFP: Berlin panel at The Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association

The Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association invites proposals for papers about any aspect of the culture of Berlin for presentation at the 2015 RMMLA convention, Oct. 8-10 in Santa Fe, NM.

The Berlin panel at RMMLA includes scholarly presentations on literature, film, language, culture and history related to Germany’s metropolis, among other possible approaches. Presentations are approximately 15 minutes in length. An abstract (1 page) is requested no later than April 1, 2015.

Please submit proposals electronically to session chair Dr. David Caldwell: david.caldwell@unco.edu . Requests for additional information and other questions may also be directed to the chair at this e-mail address.

Membership in RMMLA ($35 faculty dues) will be expected of participants. Conference registration fees will also apply.  Other information about the RMMLA and the 2015 convention in Santa Fe is available at the organization’s website:  http://rmmla.innoved.org/conferences/conf15SantaFe/default.asp
Keywords: Berlin, Germany, literature, film, culture

Categories
Events Postgraduate

LitVisCult: Prof. Laura Marcus, Wednesday 18 March

The next session of the Literature and Visual Cultures Research Seminar will take place on Wednesday 18th March, 6.00-7.30pm, Senate House, London, room 261.

We’re very pleased to have Professor Laura Marcus join us to give a paper entitled, ‘Silence, sound and city films and fictions of the 1920s and 1930s’.

Abstract:
This talk uses examples of late silent and early sound films (including F.W.Murnau’s Sunrise and Paul Fejos’s Lonesome) to explore the relationship between the visual and the aural in the cinema of the period, and the charged role played by representations of urban modernity in this context. It closes with brief discussion of novels (including works by Woolf, Graham Greene and Patrick Hamilton) in which relationships between silence and sound are played out in literary terms.

Laura Marcus is Goldsmiths’ Professor of English Literature at the University of Oxford. Her book publications include The Tenth Muse: Writing about Cinema in the Modernist Period (2007) and Dreams of Modernity: Psychoanalysis, Literature, Cinema (2014). Current research projects include a study of the concept of ‘rhythm’ in interdisciplinary contexts (with a focus on the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries) and a book on literature and the cinema, which looks in particular at the relationship between writing and the silent/sound transition in film.

For more details and for information about other sessions, see: https://literatureandvisualcultures.wordpress.com. You can also follow us on Twitter @Litviscult.

Sarah Chadfield and Sophie Oliver

(Royal Holloway, University of London)

Categories
Events Postgraduate Registration open

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

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

22-24 April 2015

Institute of Historical Research, London

http://www.qmul.ac.uk/being-modern/

Join distinguished historians of literature, design and culture exploring how the complex interpretations of science affected the re-creation of what it was to be modern early in the 20th century.  Programme at http://www.qmul.ac.uk/being-modern/docs/145310.pdf

For those attending the conference there willl a limited number of places for an exciting performance of the  Opera ‘The Three Tales’ by Steve Reich at the Science Museum, London. Performances will take place on the 22nd and on the 24th of April. To claim your free ticket, please write to research@sciencemuseum.ac.uk stating your preferred date of attendance. Please note that we are only able to offer one ticket per attendee. Places are limited and will be allocated on a first come first served basis.

Categories
Call for submissions Postgraduate

THRESHOLDS Feature Writing Competition

We are now inviting submissions

to the 2015 THRESHOLDS International Short Story Forum

Feature Writing Competition

1st Prize of £500

2 x Runner-up Prize of £100

DEADLINE:
29 April 2015, 11:59pm (BST)

 

THRESHOLDS is the only online forum dedicated to the reading,
writing and study of the short story form. Entries are welcome in either of the following feature categories:

Author Profile: exploring the life, writings and influence of a single short story writer.

We Recommend: personal recommendations of a collection, anthology, group of short stories or a single short story.

One overall winner will be chosen, followed by two runners-up. The judges hope to see a range of styles and approaches in the feature essays. They will be looking, above all, at the quality of the prose in each feature submitted, the insights offered, and the author’s ability to engage his/her readers. The winning and runner-up essays and shortlist will be published on the THRESHOLDS Forum during 2015.

Previous winning essays:
2014 winner: Wolves at the Hearthside by Sharon Telfer
2013 winner: A Trio of Irish Short Stories by Nuala Ní Chonchúir
2012 winner: H.P. Lovecraft by Geoff Holder

* PLEASE READ THE COMPETITION RULES (below) AND THE GENERALTHRESHOLDS Submission Guidelines CAREFULLY BEFORE SUBMITTING *

 

Competition Rules:

  • All entries must be submitted by email as a PDF or Word document (.doc, .docx or .rtf only) attachment and sent to thresholds@chi.ac.uk, with the subject line ‘Feature Competition’.
  • Entries must be received by 11:59pm (BST) on 29 April 2015.
  • There is no entry fee.
  • Maximum word count is 2,000, with a minimum of 750. Writers may submit a maximum of 3 essays.
  • Please note: the Competition is open for feature essayentries only. Short story submissions will NOT be accepted.
  • Work should be double spacedand in a minimum of 11 point font. All pages should be numbered.
  • The stories or collections under discussion may be either contemporary or classic, and can be in print or out of print.
  • Entries must be accompanied by a separatetitle page (i.e. saved in a separate document) containing the following information: name and email address of the writer; title of entry(ies); category of each entry — Author Profile or We Recommend.
  • Entries will be judged anonymously. Your name, address, or email address should NOT appear on the manuscript.
  • Entries cannot be altered once they have been submitted.
  • Entries must be original and unpublished. Work that has appeared on the internet (apart from in a personal blog) is considered published and therefore is not eligible. Simultaneous submissions are NOT accepted(i.e. features submitted to multiple journals/magazines simultaneously).
  • The entrant warrants to THRESHOLDS’ editors that the essay is original to him/her, that he/she has the full power to agree to the Competition rules of entry, and that he/she is the sole author of the feature essay.
  • The entrant warrants to THRESHOLDS’ editors that his/her essay is in no way whatsoever a violation of any existing copyright and that it contains nothing libelous.
  • The judges’ decisions are final and no discussion will be entered into once work has been submitted. The judges reserve the right not to make the award if the quality of entries does not merit it.
  • The Competition is open to writers of any nationality writing in English, 16 years old and over at the time of the closing date.
  • University of Chichester staff may not apply.
  • The names of the winners, runners-up, shortlisted and longlisted writers will be published on The Forum.
  • The shortlist will be announced in May, and the winning writer will be notified soon after.
  • Copyright of the submitted essay remains with the author, but THRESHOLDS has the unrestricted right to publish any winning or shortlisted feature essays on its website and in any related material for PR purposes.
  • THRESHOLDS reserves the right to edit the winning, runner-up and shortlisted articles prior to publication, as well as any other pieces selected for publication on the site.
  • By entering the competition, you are deemed to have agreed to the above rules.
Categories
Postgraduate Registration open

Registration now open for ‘Modernist Musics and Political Aesthetics’ conference

8th-10th April 2015, University of Nottingham, UK
Modernist Musics and Political Aesthetics is a three-day conference aiming to explore interfaces between:

  •     cultural modernism (literary and visual, architectural, musical, and/or philosophical)
  •     music, musicality, and musicology in relation to modernism and literature
  •     and the political implications of art and theories of the aesthetic in the twentieth century

The conference remit is intentionally capacious. ‘Modernism’ is open for all speakers and attendees to interpret as any instance of the experimental strategies that emerged throughout cultural life at the turn of the twentieth century, though papers focusing on new interdisciplinary contexts for literary questions are sought in the first instance.

Likewise, the plural use of ‘musics’ is meant to reflect a variety of musical modernisms, but also the fact that ‘music’ as an idea meant many things to different modernist artists and critics.

Above all, the conference organizers seek interdisciplinary papers that will develop scholarly understandings of the convergences between modernism, music, and politics.

http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/conference/fac-arts/english/modernist-musics-and-political-aesthetics/index.aspx

Modernist Music and Political Aesthetics is kindly sponsored by the School of English and the Faculty of Arts at the University of Nottingham, and by the Faculty of Humanities at the University of Manchester.

Categories
CFPs Postgraduate

CFP: Global Modernism and Civil War (MSA17)

Global Modernism and Civil War

(CFP for ‪#‎msa17‬)

Wyndham Lewis’s Blast is perhaps the most famous modernist declaration of civil war: “We set Humour at Humour’s throat. / Stir up Civil War among peaceful apes.” Lewis himself was named after an eccentric English mercenary who fought in the U.S. Civil War (by his American father, a veteran of the same war), and he returns to the trope in his 1937 autobiography, Blasting and Bombardiering: “You will be astonished to find how like art is to war, I mean ‘modernist’ art…I have set out to show how war, art, civil war, strikes and coup d’etat dovetail into each other.”

This panel proposes extending recent interest in the Spanish Civil War to a comparative, structural, and intertextual analysis of internecine modernism. How does sectional conflict reframe our understanding of nationalism and world war? Papers could return to well-known national narratives, identify less familiar histories of schism, or develop new transnational or inter-historical approaches.

Read more: http://bit.ly/modcivilwar

Contact Ryan Weberling (ryanweb@bu.edu) to discuss possibilities for the panel, or send a 300-word paper proposal by April 10.

Categories
Postgraduate

Raymond Williams Society essay competition

RAYMOND WILLIAMS SOCIETY

FOURTH POSTGRADUATE ESSAY COMPETITION (2015)
(THE SIMON DENTITH MEMORIAL PRIZE)

The annual Raymond Williams Society Essay Competition has been renamed in honour of our late and much-missed colleague, Simon Dentith (1952-2014), former editor of Key Words and competition judge.

The aim of the Raymond Williams Society postgraduate essay competition for work founded in the tradition of cultural materialism is to encourage a new generation of scholars in this area, especially those grounded in discourses and approaches arising from the work of Raymond Williams.

The competition is open to anyone studying for a higher degree (masters or doctoral) in the UK or elsewhere, or who graduated no earlier than 31 July 2013. The prize for the winning entry is 100 GBP and a year’s subscription to the Society. The winning essay will also be considered for publication in Key Words.

Entries should be 5-7,000 words in length, including endnotes, which should normally be kept to a minimum. Entries must follow the Key Words Style Notes for contributors. The Style Notes, and information about previous winning entries, can be found on the Raymond Williams Society’s website: http://www.raymondwilliams.co.uk.

Entries should be sent to Catherine Clay at catherine.clay@ntu.ac.uk.

They should be accompanied by a brief coversheet with the following details:

Name
Postal address
Email address
Institutional affiliation
Current or most recent programme of study
Date of graduation (if applicable)
Title of essay
Word count

Please also ask your supervisor to send us an email confirming your status.

The closing date for entries is 3 June 2015.

Categories
CFPs Postgraduate

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

We invite proposals for papers for the following academic conference, by 1st April 2015:

 

‘Perfectly phrased and quite as true’: Aphoristic Modernity, 1890–1950
4 July 2015, 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 aphorismexpresses 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
Categories
CFPs Postgraduate

CFP: Media and the Unconscious (MLA 2016)

Please consider submitting an abstract for “Media and the Unconscious,” MLA 2016

Seeking papers exploring the unconscious dimensions and/or effects of media (new and historical). 250-word abstract and 1-page CV by March 15; Matthew Schilleman (schilleman@gmail.com)

https://www.mla.org/cfp_review&id=8070&exit_page=cfp_main

Categories
CFPs Postgraduate

CFP: Eliot, Media, and Material Culture (MLA)

The T. S. Eliot Society is sponsoring a panel on “Eliot, Media, and Material Culture”at the January 2016 MLA convention in Austin, TX.  If you are interested in presenting a paper on any aspect of this theme, please send a proposal of 250 words or less, together with an abbreviated CV or short bio, to tseliotsociety@gmail.com by March 17.

Information on the 2016 MLA Convention is available here: http://www.mla.org/convention .

Previously announced
“T. S. Eliot and the Arts”: This panel, also sponsored by the Eliot Society, welcomes papers concerned with Eliot’s life and works. Paper proposals addressing Eliot’s many-sided engagement with the extra-literary arts, the SAMLA 87 theme, are especially welcome. By June 1, please submit a 250-word abstract, brief bio, and A/V requirements to John Morgenstern, Clemson University, atjmorgen@clemson.edu. This year’s South Atlantic Modern Languages Association (SAMLA) conference will be held in Durham, NC, November 13 – 15, 2015. Please see https://samla.memberclicks.net/conference for more information.

The T. S. Eliot Society

Home: http://www.luc.edu/eliot

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tseliotsociety