MLA '27: Melville and Hawthorne Revisited
MLA 2027: The Melville Society CFP: Melville and Hawthorne Revisited
The relationship between Herman Melville and Nathaniel Hawthorne has received significant attention from scholars over many decades. Their extant letters have been part of critical conversations about their friendship and their writing. Creative projects have engaged with the gaps in that archive, lingering over and drawing out what cannot be known with certainty. Scholars have considered Melville and Hawthorne’s influence on one another, through Melville’s marginalia, for example. Their writings are often put in conversation, of course. And there is the dedication to Moby-Dick. There is “Hawthorne and His Mosses.” This is familiar territory. Yet scholars and creative practitioners alike continue to return to this relationship and to put Melville and Hawthorne’s writings in relation.
Nearly twenty years after the publication of Jana Argersinger and Leland Person’s edited collection Hawthorne and Melville: Writing a Relationship (2008), this panel invites reflections on the continued draw of thinking about Melville and Hawthorne together, as well as fresh approaches to the study of this pair and their writing. Papers might, for example, revisit the work of Melville and Hawthorne in light of recent scholarship on ecocriticism, affect studies, new materialist thought, oceanic studies, settler colonial studies, or nineteenth-century queer literature. Papers that take up less well-known texts or that situate these authors in other constellations of contemporaries are also welcome.
Please submit a 250-word abstract and a c.v. to Melissa Gniadek (m.gniadek@utoronto.ca) by March 9.