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UPDATE: The Politics of British Literary Collections (12/15/05; collection)full name / name of organization: Pruitt, John contact email: jpruitt@uwc.edu Deadline extended: CALL FOR PAPERS Deadline for abstracts: December 15, 2005 Editors: Interested Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Press Scholarship in literary and cultural studies has recently expressed a great deal of interest in the practice of collecting. With her seminal study Making the Modern Reader, Barbara Benedict introduced us to the complexities of anthologies of poetry and prose, collections uniting readers in part by "recontextualizing literature to neutralize political messages." Following Benedict, a number of scholars in museum studies, history, and literature have demonstrated that collecting in a variety of contexts is actually steeped in ideology, either reinforcing or undermining dominant political and social categories. In Susan Pearce's words, "Like all activities, [collecting] is embedded in culture, but through its reflexive nature, it is active within culture." For this collection of essays, we welcome proposals considering the politics (in all meanings of the word) at work in the production and consumption of British literary collections from medieval manuscript anthologies to the seventh edition of The Norton Anthology of English Literature: The Major Authors (2000). Topics might include, but are certainly not limited to: -public or private literary collections Examples of submissions currently under consideration: -"Chaucer 'Polyced': The Reformation of Manners and the Politics of 'Collected Works'" Please forward cv and abstract of 250-300 words by December 15, 2005, preferably by e-mail, to: Dr. John Pruitt - jpruitt_at_uwc.edu ========================================================== cfp categories: professional_topics
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