UPDATE: Contemporary Irish Fiction (3/31/06; MMLA, 11/9/06-11/12/06)
Updated Deadline: March 31, 2006
Contemporary Irish Fiction Panel
48th Annual Midwest Modern Language Association Convention
November 9-12, 2006
Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, Illinois
Recent decades have witnessed a remarkable flourish (one hesitates to say "bloom") of popular and critically acclaimed Irish novels. Perennial strength in such competitions as the Man Booker Prize is simply one confirmation of this achievement; Irish novelists routinely distinguish international best-seller lists as well. Throughout history Irish writers have wrestled with issues of high and low culture in their works, ranging in subject matter from religion, spirituality, folklore and mythology to contemporary political, cultural, artistic, and sexual mores. Some novelists have sought to express these tensions through experimental structures and prose; others have reinvigorated more traditional forms. Standard constants, of course, include themes of place and identity, however dynamic and fluid in construction.
Proposals (of 200-250 words) are invited on any living Irish novelist and should be sent by March 31, 2006, to Gavin Keulks at keulksg_at_wou.edu. Special attention should be paid to the informal convention theme of "High and Low Culture."
For more information, please consult the M/MLA website at http://www.uiowa.edu/~mmla/
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Gavin Keulks
Associate Professor of English
Western Oregon University
http://www.wou.edu/~keulksg/
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Received on Sat Feb 18 2006 - 10:18:01 EST