[UPDATE/REMINDER] FIRST FICTIONS: CONFERENCE (19-22 JAN 2012); SUBMISSIONS (MARCH 2011)

full name / name of organization: 
Peter Boxall, University of Sussex
contact email: 

FIRST FICTIONS

PLEASE NOTE: DATE FOR CONFERENCE AND FESTIVAL HAS BEEN RESCHEDULED TO JANUARY 2012. AS A RESULT, THE CALL FOR PAPERS HAS BEEN EXTENDED TO MARCH 2011.

Festival and Academic Conference: Thursday 19th - Sunday 22nd January 2012

Confirmed delegates include:
Ian Rankin, Kate Mosse, Jackie Kaye, Elleke Bohemer, Steve Bell, Michael Prodger, Bryan Cheyette, Scott Pack, Nicholas Royle and Isabel Ashdown.

Supported by Myriad Editions, and Textual Practice
We are inviting abstracts for papers for an upcoming conference on innovations in creative and critical writing.
The conference takes place as part of the First Fictions literary festival, and is a collaborative venture between Sussex University, Myriad Publishers, Creative Brighton, and other partners in the creative arts. Conference panels will take place in conjunction with literary events and readings. The event will also include a new fiction competition (winner to be published by Myriad Editions), and a series of creative writing workshops run by new authors. Both conference and festival events will take place in the Pavilion Theatre and the Dome Concert Hall, in the heart of Brighton.

The aim of First Fictions is to explore the production of new thinking, in a range of creative and critical modes. This will involve the reading and discussion of first fictions by new authors, alongside the reflection of established authors on their own early work, and on innovation in fiction more generally.

The discussion and performance of new fiction will take place alongside a series of reflections on the relationship between creative and critical writing, and the role of this relationship in the generation of new creative possibilities.

Areas for discussion might include:
Twenty-First Century Fiction
Modernism Postmodernsim and after
Originality and innovation
The graphic novel
Experimentation and new directions in realism
The novel and the academy
Literary Prizes and the new author
Publishing, markets and creative innovation
New fiction 'after' theory
New directions in fiction, ethics and politics
Fiction in translation
First fictions after 9/11
Reviewing, literary Journalism, and the new author
Early, middle, and late style

Please send abstracts of maximum 500 words to p.boxall@sussex.ac.uk not later than 1st March 2011. Papers will be of 30 minutes duration.
cfp categories:
african-american
american
bibliography_and_history_of_the_book
childrens_literature
classical_studies
cultural_studies_and_historical_approaches
ecocriticism_and_environmental_studies
eighteenth_century
international_conferences
modernist studies
poetry
popular_culture
postcolonial
renaissance
theory
twentieth_century_and_beyond
victorian