UPDATE: [Cultural-Historical] Replications
Replications: Performing and Re-staging America at Home and Abroad
Co-conveners:
Barbara Lewis, University of Massachusetts, Boston
Susan Tenneriello, Baruch College, CUNY
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Replications: Performing and Re-staging America at Home and Abroad
Co-conveners:
Barbara Lewis, University of Massachusetts, Boston
Susan Tenneriello, Baruch College, CUNY
Replications: Performing and Re-staging America at Home and Abroad
Co-conveners:
Barbara Lewis, University of Massachusetts, Boston
Susan Tenneriello, Baruch College, CUNY
Call for Papers: eResearch and Australian Literary Culture Symposium
Sponsored by Australian literature @ the University of Sydney and AustLit.
4-5 December 2008
The University of Sydney
On 4-5 December 2008, Australian Literature @ the University of Sydney will
host a symposium on eResearch and Australian Literary Culture. Plenary
speakers include digital humanities specialist Professor Hugh Craig,
University of Newcastle, NSW.
Limited funding to assist early career researchers may be available on
application to the convenors.
Call for Papers: eResearch and Australian Literary Culture Symposium
Sponsored by Australian literature @ the University of Sydney and AustLit.
4-5 December 2008
The University of Sydney
On 4-5 December 2008, Australian Literature @ the University of Sydney will
host a symposium on eResearch and Australian Literary Culture. Plenary
speakers include digital humanities specialist Professor Hugh Craig,
University of Newcastle, NSW.
Limited funding to assist early career researchers may be available on
application to the convenors.
Call for Papers: eResearch and Australian Literary Culture Symposium
Sponsored by Australian literature @ the University of Sydney and AustLit.
4-5 December 2008
The University of Sydney
On 4-5 December 2008, Australian Literature @ the University of Sydney will
host a symposium on eResearch and Australian Literary Culture. Plenary
speakers include digital humanities specialist Professor Hugh Craig,
University of Newcastle, NSW.
Limited funding to assist early career researchers may be available on
application to the convenors.
American Conference for Irish Studies: Southern Region 2008
Savannah, GA
March 6-8, 2008
On 17 June 1904, Molly Bloom reminisced, "yes I said yes I will Yes."
Around eighty years later Ian Paisley protested, "Ulster Says No," a
partial echo of "No Surrender" (the cry during the late-seventeenth-
century Siege of Londonderry). Assertions of "yes" and "no"â€"and acts of
assent and dissentâ€"play prominently in Irish experience: past and present;
at home and abroad. Our conference welcomes proposals on any aspect of
Irish Studies, but it especially invites proposals that elaborate the
theme, Ireland: Assent and Dissent.
Call for Papers: eResearch and Australian Literary Culture Symposium
Sponsored by Australian literature @ the University of Sydney and AustLit.
4-5 December 2008
The University of Sydney
On 4-5 December 2008, Australian Literature @ the University of Sydney will
host a symposium on eResearch and Australian Literary Culture. Plenary
speakers include digital humanities specialist Professor Hugh Craig,
University of Newcastle, NSW.
Limited funding to assist early career researchers may be available on
application to the convenors.
CFP: A REMINDER: Visions of Tomorrow: Science and Utopia in German
Culture
Workshop to be held at the 11th International Conference of ISSEI, the
International Society for the Study of European Ideas, from 28 July â€" 2
August 2008 at the University of Helsinki, Finland. Conference theme:
Language and the Scientific Imagination.
Chapter-length submissions are invited for a collection of articles on
nineteenth-century American sentimentalism in the novel, short fiction,
sketch, autobiography, and poetry. Our interests include, but are not
limited to, sentimentalism as a negative or positive attribute within
individual works; differences in individual authors’ construction and use
of sentiment within their works; differences in male and female authors’
construction and use of sentiment; cross-gender and interracial dialogue;
sentimentalism in the captivity, slave, or conversion narrative;
sentimentalism and social criticism; blurrings or distinctions between
empathy and sentiment that are fresh and original; types of
Call for Papers: Woolf Studies and Periodical Studies
For the Seventeenth Annual Conference on Virginia Woolf
(University of Denver, June 19-22, 2008), I am seeking papers for a panel
that looks at ways of bringing the insights and methodologies of recent
work in early twentieth-century periodical studies to bear on the life
and work of Virginia Woolf. Possibilities include papers that examine
Woolf’s contributions to periodicals as an essayist, short story writer,
or reviewer; Woolf’s interventions in contemporary debates about
journalism and the public sphere; reviews of Woolf and her circle as
evidence of “reception.†In any case, though, papers should engage with
Conception and Consumption
University of Washington
Graduate Conference for Interdisciplinary Studies
May 8-9, 2008
Speaker: TBA
CALL FOR PANELS AND PAPERS
31st Annual New Jersey College English Association Conference
Saturday, March 29, 2008
Seton Hall University, South Orange, NJ 07079
Keynote Speaker: Edward Halsey Foster
The New Jersey College English Association is soliciting papers
considering a broad range of literary and composition topics for its
annual conference. The NJCEA brings together those interested in
language, literature, pedagogy, and other aspects of the teaching and
study of literature and writing.
The 20th Annual Stony Brook Manhattan Graduate Conference
Sifting Through Lies: Toward an Aesthetic Impunity
February 15th and 16th, 2008
Stony Brook Manhattan Campus
Featuring a showing of "a/k/a Mrs. George Gilbert" by Coco Fusco
Keynote Speaker: Arlene Dávila, Professor of Anthropology, Social and
Cultural Analysis at NYU, Friday, February 16th at 6 p.m.
The 20th Annual Stony Brook Manhattan Graduate Conference
Sifting Through Lies: Toward an Aesthetic Impunity
February 15th and 16th, 2008
Stony Brook Manhattan Campus
Featuring a showing of "a/k/a Mrs. George Gilbert" by Coco Fusco
Keynote Speaker: Arlene Dávila, Professor of Anthropology, Social and
Cultural Analysis at NYU, Friday, February 16th at 6 p.m.
The 20th Annual Stony Brook Manhattan Graduate Conference
Sifting Through Lies: Toward an Aesthetic Impunity
February 15th and 16th, 2008
Stony Brook Manhattan Campus
Featuring a showing of "a/k/a Mrs. George Gilbert" by Coco Fusco
Keynote Speaker: Arlene Dávila, Professor of Anthropology, Social and
Cultural Analysis at NYU, Friday, February 16th at 6 p.m.