Dear all,
See below details of this event on 16 May.
Best wishes,
Emily
Dr Emily Jeremiah
Senior Lecturer in German
School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures
Royal Holloway, University of London
Egham Hill
Egham
TW20 0EX
UK
+44 1784 443256
http://tinyurl.com/ejeremiah
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CCWW Cross-Cultural Seminar (see below for PhD student travel bursaries)
Friday 16 May 2014, 2-5.30 pm, room G34, Senate House, University of London
'Paradoxical Languages: Eating Disorders in Contemporary Women's Writing'
Organisers: Francesca Calamita (IMLR) and Gill Rye (IMLR)
Speakers:
Kathryn Robson (French, Newcastle): ‘Recovering (from) Anorexia: Reading Narratives of Eating Disorders in Contemporary French Women’s Writing’
Petra M. Bagley (German, Central Lancashire): ‘The Austrian Art of Starvation as depicted by Anna Mitgutsch and Helene Flöss’
Francesca Calamita (Italian, IMLR-CCWW): ‘Filling the Void: Bulimarexic Characters in Postmodern Italian Women’s Writing’
Victoria Richardson (French, Cambridge/IMLR-CCWW): ‘Anorexia in Contemporary French Women’s Writing: Marie NDiaye’s ‘Le Jour du Président’ [‘The Day of the President’]’
Throughout the history of Western culture the relationship between women and food has often been perceived as a metaphor for something else. From the much debated biblical episode of Eve and the apple to postmodern society, women’s eating habits have been read not only as acts of self-nourishment but also as a display of affection, sexuality and tendency to sin. This multifaceted relationship between women and food reaches its crisis point in the development of contemporary discussion on eating disorders which, however, have existed under numerous guises for centuries. Pathological starvation and binging are an unidiomatic and paradoxical language employed by women – and more recently by men – to communicate their deepest feelings, expressing their identity and protesting about their socio-cultural roles. Since before the medicalization of these pathologies in the late nineteenth century through to the present day, writers across a variety of languages and cultures have depicted the complex meaning of anorexia, bulimia, binge eating and troubled relationships with food and bodies. This cross-cultural seminar seeks to explore the fictional portrayal of these self-destructive yet paradoxically and arguably self-empowering behaviours in recent women’s writing.
All Welcome - If you plan to attend, please advise Gill Rye – [log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>
Travel bursaries:
We are able to offer some small travel bursaries to PhD students wishing to attend the above seminar. If you wish to apply, please email me ([log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>) with your travel costs (cheapest possible), university affiliation and name of supervisor by 30 April 2014. Successful applicants will need to provide tickets/receipts after the event in order for us to be able to process the reimbursement.
Further information:
http://events.sas.ac.uk/imlr/events/view/15231/Paradoxical+Languages%3A+Eating+Disorders+in+Contemporary+Women%27s+Writing
Professor Emerita Gill Rye,
Director, Centre for the Study of Contemporary Women’s Writing,
Institute of Modern Languages Research,
School of Advanced Study,
University of London,
Senate House,
Malet Street,
London WC1E 7HU,
U.K.
[log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>
http://modernlanguages.sas.ac.uk/centre-study-contemporary-womens-writing
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