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Subject:

BARS: 2007 BARS/NASSR - Invited Special Sessions

From:

Sharon Ruston <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Sharon Ruston <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Wed, 11 Oct 2006 09:03:47 +0100

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (287 lines)

2007 BARS/NASSR Conference

Hosted by the Centre for Romantic Studies, University of Bristol

Invited Special Sessions
Scholars wishing to submit a proposal for consideration by the Special 
Session convenor should e-mail an abstract of no more than 300 words by 
November 17, 2006.
All abstracts for the invited special sessions will be vetted by the session 
convenor. Rejected abstracts will then be forwarded to the conference 
committee for vetting as a single abstract.

"Are we free to speak of freedom?" Philosophical and Theoretical 
Articulations
Session Convenor: David L. Clark (Professor, McMaster University)
In what ways is Romanticism the site of philosophical conceptions and 
theoretical articulations in which "freedom" is radically reconsidered? 
Emphasis will be given to those reconsiderations that are arguably still 
underway. Possible topics include: autonomy and automatization; human 
beings, machine-life, and animality; liberty, fraternity, and friendship; 
freedom and/of/from the inhuman; leading strings and thinking for oneself; 
the moral law and other necessities; academic freedom and the
university without condition; unconditional sovereignty and the rights of 
citizens; "the right to say everything, or to keep it secret;" spheres and 
counter-spheres of liberty; judgment and (dis)interested pleasures; 
dependence, habit, and addiction; the culture of discipline and the 
despotism of desire; enslaved, emancipated, and post-autonomous subjects; 
grounds, grounding, and groundlessness; declarations of dependence and 
independence.
"Philosophy" and "theory" are here broadly conceived, ranging from canonical 
philosophical work of the period to non-philosophical texts that are 
characterized by lineages, inflections, questions, and moves that are deemed 
to be "philosophical" and "theoretical."  Proposals from a wide range of 
methodologies, disciplines, and languages are warmly welcomed.  Please send 
300-word abstracts by e-mail to Professor David L. Clark at 
[log in to unmask] by 17 November, 2006.

Charlotte Smith's Posthumous Works
Session Convenor: Jacqueline Labbe (Professor, Department of English and 
Comparative Studies, University of Warwick)
2007 is the 200th anniversary of the publication of Beachy Head: with Other 
Poems and The Natural History of Birds.  Smith's death in 1806 meant that 
her last two works were published without her customary and 
dearly-maintained control over their content and paratexts.  Papers are 
invited that explore the impact of these posthumous works on Smith's 
reputation, then and now; that contend with the texts' concern with science 
and politics; that situate the texts as late Smith and High Romantic; or
other approaches relevant to the conference theme.
Please send 300-word abstracts by e-mail to Professor Jacqueline Labbe at 
[log in to unmask] by November 17, 2006.

The Crisis of Phenomenology
Session Convenor: Tilottama Rajan (Canada Research Chair, University of 
Western Ontario)
1807 saw both the publication of Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit and the 
battle of Jena which destroyed the University of Jena, putting existing 
notions of freedom in doubt. Papers are invited that deal with the 
"Phenomenology", other texts by Hegel (e.g. Aesthetics or Philosophy of 
Nature), or other thinkers in dialogue with Hegel (e.g. Schelling). Possible 
topics include freedom in history; art and freedom; the concept of absolute 
knowledge; the university without condition (in Derrida's
phrase) and the place of philosophy in the post-Kantian university; and 
whether philosophy frees other fields from the discourse networks in which 
they are embedded.
Please send 300-word abstracts by e-mail to Professor Tilottama Rajan at 
[log in to unmask] by November 17, 2006.

Free Blake
Session convenor: Angela Esterhammer (Distinguished University Professor, 
University of Western Ontario)
The 250th anniversary of Blake's birth provides the occasion for a very 
special session in conjunction with the conference theme "Emancipation, 
Liberation, Freedom."  Abstracts are invited on forms and varieties of 
freedom in Blake's work: political, religious, imaginative, generic, 
linguistic, legal, philosophical, interpretative, pedagogical; also, freedom 
of movement, speech, or action in Blake's writing and art.
Please send 300-word abstracts by e-mail to Professor Angela Esterhammer at 
[log in to unmask] by November 17, 2006.

Liberating music
Session Convenor: Marshall Brown (Professor, University of Washington)
Music of the Romantic decades was breaking into new territory and hence 
often associated with revolutionary sensibilities. Yet the constraints from 
which it was being liberated were often socially signifying practices. 
Absolute music earned the reputation for being above the fray.  I welcome 
submissions concerning these two aspects of music, separately or in tension 
with one another: as liberating discourse and as liberated from discourse. 
Papers may focus on musical works, musical aesthetics,
or cultural milieus; they should in any event be in dialogue with and 
addressed to scholars from the various disciplines represented in 
NASSR/BARS.
Please send 300-word abstracts by e-mail - in either Word or WordPerfect for 
PC - to Professor Marshall Brown at: [log in to unmask] by November 17, 
2006.

Liberating Beethoven
Session Convenor: Daniel Chua (Reader in Music Theory and Analysis, King's 
College London)
Beethoven's music is almost synonymous with freedom. Yet the nature of this 
freedom has been ambiguous, with opposing ideologies adopting Beethoven's 
music as their mouthpiece. In the early nineteenth century, for example, the 
Parisian audiences heard the victorious finale of the Fifth Symphony as 
their revolution, whereas a hundred years later the National Socialists in 
Germany heard it as their Führer. Is freedom, then, merely an empty concept 
or does it specify something about the music and
its cultural reception? I welcome historical, philosophical or music 
analytical papers that deal critically with these issues.
Please send 300-word abstracts by e-mail to Dr Daniel Chua at 
[log in to unmask] by November 17, 2006.

Liberating Gothic
A Special Session organised by the German Society for English Romanticism
**proposals welcome from everywhere**
Session Convenor: Franz Meier (Professor, Department of English Literature 
and Culture, University of Braunschweig)
The Gothic genre, due to its popularity, has often been considered as 
culturally affirmative and politically conservative. As early as 1800, on 
the other hand, the Marquis de Sade (in his "Idée sur les Romans") 
associated the Gothic Novel with the political ideals of the French 
Revolution and its cultural climate of upheaval and excess. This session is 
not limited to such political connections, however, but also aims to 
investigate the broader relationships between the Gothic and concepts of
liberation, emancipation and freedom. Papers are therefore invited from a 
wide range of theoretical positions to investigate the liberating and 
potentially subversive aspects of a popular genre in the fields of class, 
religion, power, censorship, race, gender, sexuality etc. - and need not be 
limited to the literary genre of the novel.
Please send 300-word abstracts by e-mail to Professor Franz Meier at: 
[log in to unmask] by November 17, 2006.

Madame de Staël and the invention of 'Romanticism'
Session Convenor: Caroline Franklin (Professor, University of Wales Swansea)
 'The first female writer of this, perhaps of any age', as Byron described 
her, was the most celebrated avant garde French theorist of the year 1807: 
philosopher, artist, political intriguer and exiled intellectual. Her 
extraordinary novel Corinne, ou L'Italie set the agenda for the new century 
in debates on whether there was necessarily any relationship between 
national culture and the state; the role of woman in society; and concerning 
its extravagant self-portrait of the suffering artist.
Could it be argued that Staël and her circle invented the concept of 
'Romanticism'? How did her writings test the limits of individual freedom? 
To celebrate the bi-centenary of the publication of Corinne, ou L'Italie, 
we invite 20-minute papers  re-assessing the significance of  Madame de 
Staël and exploring topics such as:

marriage      enthusiasm       conversation       suicide       liberalism 
national character      travel writing       epistolary fiction 
representations of Italy      salon culture       the novel of sentiment 
Rousseau      Napoleon      female friendship       the novel of ideas 
literary influences       art history    cosmopolitanism       the north and 
the south       spontaneity
Please send 300-word abstracts by e-mail to Professor Caroline Franklin at 
[log in to unmask] by November 17, 2006.

"Public Romanticism: A Session to Honour Paul Magnuson"
Session Convenor:  Nicholas Halmi (Associate Professor, University of 
Washington)
This session, honouring the memory of Paul Magnuson, will address the 
subject of his last monograph, British Romantic poetry as a contribution to 
public discourse in the period. Submissions are invited on all aspects of 
the ways in which Romantic poems and their particular modes of publication 
(inlcuding "paratexts" such as prefaces and notes) refer to and constitute 
part of a larger public discourse of (in Paul's words) "politics and 
aesthetics, nationalism and domesticity, morality and
sexuality, law and legitimacy."
Please email 300-word abstracts (no attachments, please) to Nicholas Halmi 
at [log in to unmask] by 17 November 2006.

Whose Freedom?
Session Convenor: Christoph Bode (Professor, LMU Munich)
This session problematizes the relationship between generalized 
philosophical concepts of freedom and their significant qualification and 
reduction in anthropological treatises of the late 18th century. The 
tension, for example, between Kant's three Critiques on the one hand and his 
maybe lesser known speculations about history, anthropology, race or about 
the concrete limitations to aesthetic experience on the other, raises 
questions about the universality of key concepts of the Enlightenment,
about inclusiveness and exclusiveness, and about the possibilities of 
salvaging an undeniably liberating, revolutionary legacy that seems at the 
same time--because of its implicit and sometimes even glaringly obvious 
suprematism--deeply compromised and tinged with a self-justifying 
Eurocentrism. Papers will explore the interfaces of philosophy, 
anthropology, and cultural history and trace the processing of these 
discourses in the literature of the times.
Please send 300-word abstracts by e-mail to Professor Christoph Bode at: 
[log in to unmask] by November 17, 2006.

Visual Freedoms? New Approaches to Romantic Visual Culture
Session Convenor: Luisa Calè (Lecturer, Birkbeck, University of London)
The rhetoric of freedom and its opposites articulates the place of the 
visual in Romantic ideology. No longer 'locked up' and 'confined to the 
apartments of Nobles, or the palaces of Kings', pictures are set loose to 
wander in the new public sphere of art thanks to the dissemination of prints 
and the opening of exhibitions to the general public (1760s-). But despite 
its new venues and publics, the suggestion that such public visual culture 
might participate in the free play of the imagination
has been stifled by the suspicion that its new venues are but sites of 
'panoptic surveillance', 'exhibitionary complexes' for social control and 
reproduction. When the visual is allowed a space of freedom - freedom from 
the limitations of the body, the senses, the materiality of texts or media 
specificity - it opens up a realm of disembodied images, projections, 
simulations, phantasmagorias. This figural space has been sometimes read as 
a Freudian return of the visual, sometimes as the effect
of a disempowered subjectivity passively subjected to heteronomous agency. 
This panel welcomes abstracts on visual freedoms, which take new looks at 
Romantic visual attractions, spectacles, forms, genres, media, skills, 
practices. Topics might include visuality and materiality; visual culture, 
associationism and aesthetic freedoms; visual technologies and machinic 
vision; visual artefacts and displays in museums and galleries; new ways of 
viewing and reading.
Please send 300-word abstracts by e-mail to Dr Luisa Calè at 
[log in to unmask] by November 17, 2006.

Waves of Revolution, Echoes of Revolution.  A Special Session sponsored by 
the European Romantic Review.
Session Convenor: Frederick Burwick (Professor, UCLA)
Rather than appraising the impact of the French Revolution on the literature 
of the period as a single event with only specific nationalist respose, this 
special session intends to examine the literary response to the subsequent 
waves of revolution and reform throughout Europe during the sixty years 
following the storming of the Bastille:  the Bloody Reign of Terror, the 
fall of Robespierre, the rise of Napoleon, the Rebellion in Madrid, the War 
of 1912, the Bourbon restoration, the German
Constitutions, the Greek-Turk War, the Independence of Poland, and the 
revolutionary efforts of 1848/49.  Of particular interest is the ways in 
which later spokespersons for reform echo the earlier ones:  Marx cites 
Hegel, Engel cites Coleridge, Dohm cites Wollstonecraft (or on the other 
side of the political ledger:  Metternich cites Burke).
This panel invites abstracts for papers from scholars of American, British, 
and Continental Romanticism. International and comparative proposals are 
especially welcome. The deadline for proposals to special sessions is Nov. 
17, 2006.
Please send 300-word abstracts by e-mail to Frederick Burwick at 
[log in to unmask] by November 17, 2006.

How to submit your proposal

For information on how to submit your proposal including access to online 
submission please visit the conference website at:
https://www.bris.ac.uk/romanticstudies/events/2007callforpapers.html

All those attending the conference must be members of either BARS (The 
British Association of Romantic Studies) or NASSR (North American Society 
for the Study of Romanticism).

----------------------
John Halliwell
Research Assistant
Centre for Romantic Studies
Department of English
University of Bristol
3-5 Woodland Road
Bristol, BS8 1TB
----------------
[log in to unmask]
http://www.bristol.ac.uk/romanticstudies

*********************************************************

British Association for Romantic Studies



http://www.bars.ac.uk



To advertise Romantic literature conferences, publications, jobs, or

other events that the BARS members would be interested in, please

contact Sharon Ruston <[log in to unmask]>



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