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Events Postgraduate

Literature and Visual Cultures Research Seminar: Text and the Moving Image – Wednesday 16 October, 6 pm

Literature and Visual Cultures Research Seminar: Text and the Moving Image

Wednesday 16 October, 6 pm

11 Bedford Square, London WC1B, room F1

Dr Catherine Grant (University of Sussex), ‘“Some new eloquence”? On the written word in audiovisual film studies practice’

Harriet Wragg (University of Oxford), ‘How to Title a Garbo Movie’

For full details, go to http://literatureandvisualcultures.wordpress.com/the-programme/

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP Virginia Woolf: Writing the World – 5-8 June 2014, Chicago

The 24th Annual International Conference on Virginia Woolf, co-sponsored by Loyola University Chicago and Northern Illinois University, will take place in Chicago, USA, 5 – 8 June 2014. “Virginia Woolf: Writing the World” aims to address such themes as the creation of worlds through literary writing, Woolf’s reception as a world writer, world wars and the centenary of the First World War, and myriad other topics.

We invite proposals for papers, panels, roundtables, and workshops on any aspect of the conference theme from literary and interdisciplinary scholars, creative and performing artists, common readers, advanced undergraduate and graduate students, and teachers of Woolf at all levels. (See website for more details.)

Deadline for proposals: 25 January 2014

For more information about the conference, including a detailed CFP and the keynote speakers, go to http://www.niu.edu/woolfwritingtheworld/.

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP 20th Century Women’s Writing and the Capital(s) of Recuperation – ACLA Annual Conference, 20-23 March, 2014

Call for Papers

20th Century Women’s Writing and the Capital(s) of Recuperation

ACLA Annual Conference March 20-23rd, 2014 at New York University

“What would happen if one woman told the truth about her life? The world would split open.” Muriel Rukeyser’s often-cited sentiment unfortunately resonates as strongly today as it did in 1968. In this seminar, we hope to split open and illuminate alternate modes of access to the worlds of capital in order to rethink its human, cultural and political investments in twentieth century women’s literature. While capitals elicit fantasies of a cosmopolitan ethos predicated upon inclusivity and community, we want to trouble this narrative’s simplicity by questioning why women writers of the twentieth century more often than not lacked the cultural purchase to navigate cosmopolitan capitals around the world. We ask how this exclusion was renegotiated and represented in disparate texts. Instead of engaging in debates that can only ever aspire to equality, we want to understand more clearly how exclusion constitutes capital, and, more importantly, how women writers renegotiate and capitalize upon this exclusion.

We hope this line of questioning will invite papers about underexplored women’s literature and underrepresented women writers so that we might also reflect upon the enterprise of recuperation. Can we recuperate previously lost, buried, and out of print texts by women writers of the twentieth century without assimilating differences into a literary history that privileges white, heteronormative patriarchy? How do conditions of literary production and material, social, and cultural contexts inform our understanding of these texts’ vitality? Ultimately, what are we capitalizing upon when we recuperate women writers?

To submit an abstract, please visit the conference website and choose “propose a paper” or click here. You will be prompted to choose a seminar title when you submit your abstract. Be sure to choose “20th Century Women’s Writing and the Capital(s) of Recuperation.”

Abstract Deadline: November 1, 2013

Feel free to email me (sarahcornish@gmail.com or sarah.cornish@unco.edu) or Peter Murray (pmurray24@fordham.edu) with any questions.

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP Reading Animals – 17–20 July, 2014

Reading Animals

An International English Studies Conference

School of English, University of Sheffield, UK

17–20 July, 2014

Abstract deadline: 19 December, 2013.

CFP below

Reading Animals CFP Published

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP: The Country House in Britain, 1914 – 2014‏

The Country House in Britain, 1914-2014
Newcastle University, Friday 6th – Sunday 8th June 2014
Conference Organisers: Faye Keegan and Barbara Williams
http://www.countryhouseconference.wordpress.com
Supported by the Newcastle University Gender Research Group

Keynote Speakers: Deborah Cartmell, Christine Geraghty, Ellie Jones and Alison Light

From Ian McEwan’s Atonement (2001) to Alan Hollinghurst’s The Stranger’s Child (2011), the country house has had a strong presence in British culture of the past decade. This is the culmination of a century’s interest in the spaces and places of the country house, an interest that burgeoned following the break-up of the great estates around the First World War. In texts ranging from P. G. Wodehouse’s Blandings Castle Saga to Elizabeth Jane Howard’s Cazlet Chronicles, and in television series such as ITV ‘s Brideshead Revsited (1981) and Downton Abbey (2010), British culture continues to return to the country house setting in both popular and high culture. Since the rise of the British heritage film in the 1980s and the proliferation of Austen adaptations in the 1990s the country house has played an equally important role in British cinema and continues to gain currency as a national icon. This preoccupation with the country house is fuelled by institutions such as the National Trust and English Heritage, as well as through documentary programmes such as BBC1’s The Edwardian Country House (2002), Channel 4’s Country House Rescue (2008) and Julian Fellowes’s Great Houses on ITV (2013). Often overshadowed by the country house in other centuries such as the seventeenth-century country house poem or the nineteenth-century country house novel, studies of the twentieth and twenty-first century country house are scarce.

This three-day interdisciplinary conference will trace the representation of the country house in British literature and film between 1914 and 2014. The conference will explore how space, class and gender operate in the wealth of filmic and literary texts which have been concerned with the country house throughout the last century, as well as considering how it functions in documentaries, historical monographs and reality television. We invite 300-word abstracts (for 20-minute papers) on any topic relating to the country house; possible topics might include, but are by no means restricted to:

Historical Fictions
The Downton Effect
The Modernist Country House
The Country House Abroad
The Middlebrow and Prize Culture
Costumes and Design
Cycles of Pride and Prejudice
Adaptation
Murder in the Country House
Haunted Homes and the Gothic
The Wartime Country House
Period Drama
Servants and Servitude
Class and the National Trust
Toy Soldiers and the Dolls House
Romance Fiction

Abstracts should be submitted via email to countryhouseconf@ncl.ac.uk by 1 November 2013; successful applicants will be notified by 2014. Send any queries to the above email.

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP: Europe – 19 October 2013, Glasgow

Call for papers: Europe

Keynote speaker: ‘Proust and Wagner on the Beach’, John Coyle (University of Glasgow)

The Scottish Network of Modernist Studies will be holding a one-day symposium entitled ‘Europe’ at the University of Glasgow on 19 October 2013. Proposals are invited from academics and post-graduates for 20-minute presentations addressing: the role and rise of modernism in Europe; the influence of European writers on modernism and modern Anglophone writers; the locations of modernism; and the international or transnational character of modernism, amongst other topics.

This one-day event will also include a general meeting of SNoMS to discuss and plan future events. (There will be a small charge to cover the costs of refreshments.)

Proposals for papers should be sent to Matthew Creasy via email (matthew.creasy@glasgow.ac.uk) by Friday 6 September 2013.

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP: Adaptation and the Novel – 9 November 2013, Keele

Adaptation and the Novel

Saturday 9 November 2013, Keele University

Organisers: Joanna Taylor and Nick Seager

Plenary lectures by Rachel Carroll (Teeside University) and Sarah Wootton (Durham University)

Are novels tainted or legitimated in the process of adaptation? What aesthetic challenges and opportunities does the transition of a story from one genre to another present? And in what cultural, commercial, and artistic contexts have processes or adaptation and appropriation taken place?

This one-day conference invites proposals for 20-minute papers addressing any aspect of adaptation and the novel, from the origins of the genre to the present day. Papers may choose to address one of the following topics:

•Adaptations of prose fiction to the screen (big and small)

• The novel’s presence on the stage – in drama, dance, musicals, and opera

•Textual histories and amendments (abridgement, continuation, translation, rewritings)

• Novels’ visual afterlives, from high art to cartoons, graphic novels, and video games

•The appropriations of novels in fictional reworkings (from The Swiss Family Robinson to Pride and Prejudice and Zombies)

•The production and reception of adaptations

•The relationship of ‘literary’ forms to ‘popular’ cultural ones

•Adaptations for different age groups

•Appropriations across national and cultural boundaries

•Adaptations of other genres into prose fiction

•Theories of adaptation, as these relate to the novel

•The creative practice of adapting to or from the novel

This is far from an exhaustive list and we are open to approaches that engage with adaptation and the novel in literal or in more abstract senses. We are eager to receive proposals that address Anglophone and non-Anglophonenovels, and which reflect the long history of efforts to adapt the novel, efforts which are surely as old as the genre itself and which continue to this day.

Please send a proposal of 300–500 words by 13 September 2013 to j.e.taylor@keele.ac.uk & n.p.seager@keele.ac.uk. Informal enquiries are also welcome. We will notify applicants of the decision on their paper as soon as possible after the deadline, but can possibly also offer earlier notification if you request this.

Two bursaries of £50 are available for current postgraduate students giving a paper, which will defray travel or accommodation costs. Please indicate when you send your proposal that you wish to be considered for these and include a 200-word ‘statement of need’ (specify any current or past funding and any financial support you have received for attending this conference).

The registration fee is £10, which covers lunch and refreshments (the fee is waived for Keele postgraduate students).

For further details and updates, please see the website – http://adaptationskeele.wordpress.com/

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

T. S. Eliot Conference – 18 April 2014, Birmingham

Other Eliots: Contemporary Trends in T. S. Eliot Studies

Postgraduate Conference

University of Birmingham, April 18th 2014

Keynote speakers:

Dr Jason Harding (University of Durham)

Prof. Steve Ellis (University of Birmingham)

Call for Papers

In the past decade our understanding of T. S. Eliot and his work has been significantly enhanced by a number of important studies. Most recently, Barry Spurr’s ‘Anglo-Catholic in Religion’: T. S. Eliot and Christianity (2010) helped to clarify the nature and evolution of Eliot’s Christian belief. Elsewhere, in T. S. Eliot and the Cultural Divide (2003), David Chinitz challenged the previous perception of Eliot as a highbrow elitist opposed to popular culture. In addition to the aforementioned seminal works, the commencement of the T. S. Eliot Research Project has granted researchers and academics unprecedented access to archival resources from around the world, including those owned by Mrs Valerie Eliot, the Eliot Estate, and Faber & Faber Ltd. To date, this has resulted in four volumes of correspondence, and scholars now eagerly await the release of new fully comprehensive collections of Eliot’s complete poems, prose and plays. Undoubtedly, this is an exciting period in Eliot studies and as we approach the 50th anniversary of Eliot’s death, this conference seeks to draw attention to the multifarious research into Eliot’s life and work which is currently being undertaken.

We welcome papers from postgraduate and early career researchers which address all areas of Eliot studies, which may include:

• Eliot and Popular Culture

• Eliot and Interdisciplinary studies – art, music, film, theatre, dance etc.

• Psychoanalysis – gender, sexuality and desire.

• Landscape, environmentalism and ruralism

• Eliot and Modernism

• Eliot and anti-Semitism

• Eliot and Publishing

• Eliot and Correspondence

Organisers: Jeremy Diaper (University of Birmingham) and Matt Geary (University of Birmingham)

The format of the day will consist of 20 minute presentations, followed by a discussion of each paper. The conference will be introduced with a keynote speech from Dr Jason Harding and Professor Steve Ellis will conclude the conference with his thoughts on the future of Eliot studies.

Please send 300-400 word proposals along with a brief 100 word academic biography to Jeremy Diaper (jxd668@bham.ac.uk) and Matt Geary (mkg703@bham.ac.uk) by December 1st 2013.

http://othereliots2014.wordpress.com

twitter: @OtherEliots2014

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CFPs Events Postgraduate

CFP Extension: Katherine Mansfield and her Circle (deadline: 31 August)

The deadline for abstract submissions to the Katherine Mansfield Postgraduate Day, which will be held at Birkbeck in London on 23 November 2013, has been extended to 31 August.

Please see the attached CFP for more details.

KMS Postgraduate Day Nov 2013

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Events Postgraduate

T. E. Hulme Colloquium – 14 September 2013, Oxford

T. E. Hulme Colloquium: Revisiting Hulme on the 130th Anniversary of his Birth

14th September 2013

Wolfson College, Oxford

A one-day international colloquium to mark the 130th anniversary of the birth of T. E. Hulme (1883-1917) will be held at Wolfson College, Oxford on 14th September 2013.

Poet, philosopher, political commentator and art critic, Hulme occupies a central position in modernist studies. He was associated with the poetic doctrine that came to be known as ‘Imagism’, was an assiduous proponent of the philosophy of Henri Bergson, an influential defender of modern abstract art, and an early interpreter of Georges Sorel and Wilhelm Worringer. According to T. S. Eliot, Hulme was the ‘forerunner of a new attitude of mind, which should be the twentieth-century mind.’

Recent years have seen a series of major scholarly contributions to the study of Hulme’s work by critics from various disciplines, and his thought and legacy continue to attract the attention of new scholars.

This one-day international colloquium brings together established and emerging voices in the field, enabling their first direct exchange in over a decade; it also seeks to introduce Hulme’s writings to those less familiar with his work. The colloquium will be of particular interest to academics and graduate students working in and around: literary modernism; First World War literature; political philosophy; early 20th-century philosophy of language; history of modern art; theories of propaganda; and 20th-century intellectual history more broadly.

We welcome interest from faculty members and graduate students across the disciplines who wish to participate in an open discussion regarding this seminal and under-celebrated figure. A short selection of writings by Hulme will be disseminated to all attendees prior to the event; graduate students should be able to apply for funding from their departments as participants.

The event is held under the aegis of Wolfson College, Oxford and the Oxford Centre for Life-Writing, with support from St Edmund Hall, Oxford and the English Faculty of the University of Oxford.

Confirmed speakers include:

Patricia Rae (Queen’s, Ontario, Canada)

Robert Ferguson (author and scholar)

Helen Carr (Goldsmiths, London)

Laura Marcus (New College, Oxford)

Rebecca Beasley (Queen’s, Oxford)

Anne Fernihough (Girton, Cambridge)

Finn Fordham (Royal Holloway)

Rachel Potter (UEA)

Oliver Tearle (Loughborough)

Bernard Vere (Sotheby’s Institute of Art)

Christos Hadjiyiannis (Wolfson, Oxford)

Henry Mead (Worcester, Oxford)

The colloquium will conclude with an exhibition on the New Age curated by Matt Huculak (Modernist Versions Project). Jennifer Johnson (St John’s, Oxford) will offer a guided tour of the modern art collection in the Ashmolean on Sunday morning.

For further information, including how to register, please visit: tehulmecolloquium.wordpress.com