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[UPDATE] DEADLINE APPROACHING - Reclamation and representation: the boundaries of the literary archivefull name / name of organization: University of Exeter contact email: lrs204@ex.ac.uk, crs202@ex.ac.uk Reclamation and representation: the boundaries of the literary archive "Even scholars who are able to globetrot from collection to collection end up relying heavily upon their inadequate memories, notes, photocopies, and photographs to compensate for the distances in time and space between collections. Seeing the original prints, paintings, manuscripts, and typographical works is good in itself; but seeing them in fine, trustworthy reproductions, in context and relation to one another is the scholarly ideal. Difficulty of access to original and reliance on inadequate reproductions has handicapped and distorted even the best efforts... the result has all too frequently been distortions of the record, misconstructions, and the waste of considerable scholarly labor." Confirmed Keynote speakers: Prof. Helen Taylor (University of Exeter) Dr Wim Van Mierlo (University of London) This two day event explores issues of reclamation and representation within literary archive. The event seeks to foreground original archival research into literary legacies and the processes of authorial representation through research. Our main objective is to explore the unique methodological challenges and questions that arise from archival investigation, and how research working with the varied archival materials can both reclaim and re-cast authorial personas and scholarly interpretations of their work. The event will include sessions that use some of the literary papers held in the University of Exeter’s Special Collections as a way of highlighting issues in archival research. Exeter’s collections are particularly rich in archival sources on writers of the South West region—such as Ted Hughes, Daphne du Maurier, Agatha Christie, John Betjeman, Henry Williamson, and TS Eliot—BUT we welcome papers exploring questions which have wider application in archival research. Proposals for individual papers of 20 minutes are invited. Possible topics might include: The challenges of recreating the draft in scholarly writing-- re-representing an author’s works from archival sources We particularly invite papers on writers with connections to the South West, although all contributions are welcome. Please submit 200-300 word abstracts, including a short biographical note, to Lisa Stead (lrs204@ex.ac.uk) or Carrie Smith (crs202@ex.ac.uk). Deadline for submissions: 30th April 2010. Further details can be found at: http://www.sall.ex.ac.uk/content/view/2697/577/ cfp categories: bibliography_and_history_of_the_book cultural_studies_and_historical_approaches ecocriticism_and_environmental_studies humanities_computing_and_the_internet interdisciplinary poetry twentieth_century_and_beyond
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