Strange Atmospheres: VII International Flann O’Brien Conference

deadline for submissions: 
January 31, 2023
full name / name of organization: 
International Flann O'Brien Society

Strange Atmospheres: The Seventh International Flann O’Brien Conference

The Department of English at Babeş-Bolyai University Cluj, with the International Flann O'Brien Society

27–30 June 2023

 

CONFIRMED SPEAKERS

  • Joseph Brooker (Birkbeck College, University of London)
  • Flore Coulouma (Université Paris Nanterre)
  • Paul Fagan (Maynooth University)
  • Heather Laird (University College Cork)

  

CALL FOR PAPERS 

Since the first, centenary Vienna conference in 2011, this critical conversation has expanded and diversified, turning to the archive, to recontextualizing and rehistoricizing approaches, addressing the aesthetic, political and ethical dimensions of O’Nolan’s/Flann’s/Myles’ experimental texts, as well as their interfaces with questions of agency and authorship, technology and the material world, cultural memory, medicine and epidemiology. During the last decade numerous landmark volumes were added to the corpus available to O’Nolan’s readers—from the short fiction (edited by Neil Murphy and Keith Hopper), to the plays and teleplays (edited by Daniel Keith Jernigan), and, more recently, the Collected Letters (edited by Maebh Long). Reflecting the rapid growth of Flann O’Brien studies, The Parish Review, the first scholarly journal dedicated to this writer’s work, has published articles and special issues on a wide range of topics, including archival studies of O’Nolan’s library, the textual and publishing history of O’Nolan’s journalism, the writer’s fraught relationship with the civil service, as well as O’Nolan’s afterlives in translation, adaptation, and the culture industry. In line with its open-access policy, the journal is hosted by the Open Library of Humanities.

The conference title, ‘Strange Atmospheres,’ foregrounds a concept that sits uneasily on the semantic boundary between environment, embodied space, and mood. Often bending to the fantastic, the uncanny, the fake and unconvincing, O’Brien’s style is itself characterised by a constant apprehension of the ways in which the atmospheric and the literary fertilise each other. The symposium will provide the occasion to reflect more fully on these aspects of his work.

The conference organisers invite proposals for 20 minute presentations on any topic relevant to the symposium theme. Special consideration will be given to the following topics in Flann O’Brien studies:

— Reflections on atmosphere as setting and atmosphere as mood

— Pathetic fallacy and the correspondences between space, place and feeling 

— Ecocritical approaches

— Radio transmissions and wireless communication

— Ideas of extended agency and extended subjectivity

— Politicised environments

— Localised and universal spaces

— Gothic spaces, horror and the uncanny 

— Life without borders

— Apocalyptic overtones

— Ghost cities

— Social, professional and urban spaces

— Literary discourse and the weather

— Modernist environments and ecological thought

— Non-humans and posthumans in O’Nolan’s fiction

 

Please send abstracts and a short bionote to the organisers at seventhflanncluj@gmail.com by January 31st, 2023. Proposals will be read and evaluated by February 15th, 2023. The time of delivery for each paper should not exceed 20 minutes. Selected talks will be published in a special issue of The Parish Review: Journal of Flann O’Brien Studies (open-access at the Open Library of Humanities).

Strange Atmospheres:

The Seventh International Flann O’Brien Conference

 

The Department of English at Babeş-Bolyai University Cluj,

with the International Flann O'Brien Society

 

27–30 June 2023

 

CONFIRMED SPEAKERS

 

Joseph Brooker (Birkbeck College, University of London)

 

Flore Coulouma (Université Paris Nanterre)

 

Paul Fagan (Maynooth University)

 

Heather Laird (University College Cork)

 

 

CALL FOR PAPERS

 

Since the first, centenary Vienna conference in 2011, this critical conversation has expanded and diversified, turning to the archive, to recontextualizing and rehistoricizing approaches, addressing the aesthetic, political and ethical dimensions of O’Nolan’s/Flann’s/Myles’ experimental texts, as well as their interfaces with questions of agency and authorship, technology and the material world, cultural memory, medicine and epidemiology. During the last decade numerous landmark volumes were added to the corpus available to O’Nolan’s readers—from the short fiction (edited by Neil Murphy and Keith Hopper), to the plays and teleplays (edited by Daniel Keith Jernigan), and, more recently, the Collected Letters (edited by Maebh Long). Reflecting the rapid growth of Flann O’Brien studies, The Parish Review, the first scholarly journal dedicated to this writer’s work, has published articles and special issues on a wide range of topics, including archival studies of O’Nolan’s library, the textual and publishing history of O’Nolan’s journalism, the writer’s fraught relationship with the civil service, as well as O’Nolan’s afterlives in translation, adaptation, and the culture industry. In line with its open-access policy, the journal is hosted by the Open Library of Humanities.

 

The conference title, ‘Strange Atmospheres,’ foregrounds a concept that sits uneasily on the semantic boundary between environment, embodied space, and mood. Often bending to the fantastic, the uncanny, the fake and unconvincing, O’Brien’s style is itself characterised by a constant apprehension of the ways in which the atmospheric and the literary fertilise each other. The symposium will provide the occasion to reflect more fully on these aspects of his work.

 

The conference organisers invite proposals for 20 minute presentations on any topic relevant to the symposium theme. Special consideration will be given to the following topics in Flann O’Brien studies:

 

— Reflections on atmosphere as setting and atmosphere as mood

— Pathetic fallacy and the correspondences between space, place and feeling 

— Ecocritical approaches

— Radio transmissions and wireless communication

— Ideas of extended agency and extended subjectivity

— Politicised environments

— Localised and universal spaces

— Gothic spaces, horror and the uncanny 

— Life without borders

— Apocalyptic overtones

— Ghost cities

— Social, professional and urban spaces

— Literary discourse and the weather

—Modernist environments and ecological thought

—Non-humans and posthumans in O’Nolan’s fiction

 

 

Please send abstracts and a short bionote to the organisers at seventhflanncluj@gmail.com by January 31st, 2023. Proposals will be read and evaluated by February 15th, 2023. The time of delivery for each paper should not exceed 20 minutes. Selected talks will be published in a special issue of The Parish Review: Journal of Flann O’Brien Studies (open-access at the Open Library of Humanities).