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EUROPEAN-SOCIOLOGIST  March 1999

EUROPEAN-SOCIOLOGIST March 1999

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Subject:

A MILLENNIUM OF UTOPIAS (fwd)

From:

"MicroLab 2 @ SOC, UEA, UK" <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

MicroLab 2 @ SOC, UEA, UK

Date:

Wed, 31 Mar 1999 15:16:48 GMT

Content-Type:

TEXT/PLAIN

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Parts/Attachments

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CONFERENCE
A MILLENNIUM OF UTOPIAS
THE THEORY, HISTORY AND FUTURE OF UTOPIANISM
UNIVERSITY OF EAST ANGLIA, JUNE 23 - 26, 1999
PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME
WEDNESDAY JUNE 23

2:00-3:30
A. Mark Bevir (University of Newcastle), ~William Morris: The Modern Self, Art,
     and Politics.~
Laurence Davis (National University of Ireland, Galway), ~Is Utopian Political
     Thought Necessarily Totalitarianism?~

B. Utopias Dystopias and the Hispanic World (Roundtable)
     Margarita Carretero (University of Granada)
     Annette Gomis van Heteren (University of Almeria)
     Celia Wallhead (University of Granada)

C. C. N. Smith (University of East Anglia), ~Thomas More~s Utopia: Paradigms 
and
     Perspectives.~
Tanya Wood (University of Toronto), ~Exile, Dissolution, and Instability: 
Utopian
     Writing by English Women 1611-1668.~

D. Shulamit Almog (University of Haifa), ~Literary Legal Utopias.~
Miguel ~ngel Ramiro Avils (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid), ~The Legal
     Normative System in the Ideal Society Models, with Special Reference to 
the
     Utopian Model.~

3:30-4:00 Tea

4:00-5:30

A. Filio Diamanti (Open University), ~The Treatment of the ~Woman Question~ in
     Radical Utopian Political Thought.~
Lawrence Foster (Georgia Institute of Technology), ~Sex and Prophetic Power in
     Religious Utopian Communities.~

B. Brian Baker (University of Liverpool), ~The Map of the Apocalypse: War and 
the
     Space of Dystopia in American Science Fiction.~
Marleen Barr (Montclair State University), ~Barry Malzberg~s Beyond Apollo 
Beyond
     Itself: Dystopian Space Flight and Unfulfilled Utopian Technological
     Potential.~

C. Artur Blaim (Uniwersytet Marii Curie Sklodowskiej), ~The Institution of 
Utopian
     Literature~1934.~
Daniel Meyer (Ecole Normale Suprieure de Fontenay-Saint-Cloud), ~German
     Utopian Fiction of the Early 20th Century.~
C. Henry Near (Oranim), ~Blazing the Utopian Trail: Pioneering in Israel and 
North
     America.~
Francis Shor (Wayne State University), ~The Dilemmas of Utopianism and 
Radicalism
     in Reforming America.~

Dinner 6:30-8:00 at Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, UEA. Welcome from 
Pro-Vice
Chancellor Colin Davis

Evening
8:00-9:30
A. Andy Wood (University of East Anglia), ~The English Utopia and the English
     Peasantry: The Politics of the 1549 Rebellion Reconsidered.~ 
George McKay (University of Central Lancashire), ~Countercultures of the 
English
     Countryside.~

B. Colin Cook (Oxford Brookes University), ~Utopias and Meta-utopias in the
Political Thought of Oswald Mosley.~
T. J. Hooley (Leicester University), ~Visions of a New Jerusalem: Utopian 
Fiction in
     1940s Britain.~

C. Nicole Pohl (Nene College of Higher Education), ~~The House of the Mouse~: 
The
     Disneyfication of the Villa Surbana in Disney~s Celebration, Florida.~
Darko Suvin (McGill University), ~Disneyfication as the Primary 
Anti-utopia/nism of
     the Post-Fordist Age.~

D. Lucy Jayne Kamau (Northeastern Illinois University), ~Anti-Structure and
     Community: Liminality and Communitas in Intentional Communities and
     Nonwestern Societies.~
Avraham Yassour (University of Haifa), ~Rawls~s Well-ordered Society and the
     Kibbutz-Utopian Experience.~

THURSDAY JUNE 24

9:00-10:30
A. Vincent Geoghegan (Queen~s University of Belfast), ~Religious Narrative and
     Utopia.~
Annette Giesecke (University of Delaware), ~Lucretius and Virgil~s Pastoral 
Dream.~

B. Naomi Jacobs (University of Maine), ~Assent, Dissent, and the Body in 
Nineteen
     Eighty-Four.~
Alex Shishin (Kobe Women~s University), ~Will the Real George Orwell Stand Up 
By
     2003?~

C. Tony Gash (University of East Anglia), ~The Drama of Utopia: Plato, More,
     Shakespeare.~
Lee Cullen Khanna (Montclair State University), ~Renaissance Paradise: Milton 
and
     Cavendish.~


D. Hilke Kuhlman (Universitt Freiburg), ~~You~ve taken the mainspring out of 
the
     watch!~ Work Motivation in Utopian Communities.~
Lucy Sargisson (University of Nottingham), ~Green Utopias of Self and Other.~

10:30-11:00 Coffee

11:00-12:30
A. Lawrence Hough (East Carolina State University), ~The Defense and Protection 
of
     Utopias: Planning and Implementation From Isolation to Infantry.~
Daniel Ogden, Uppsala University, ~Three 18th Century Swedish Utopian
     Documents.~

B. Raffaella Baccolini (University of Bologna), ~Feminist Open/Critical 
Dystopias.~
Tom Moylan (George Mason University), ~Warm and Cold Utopianism:
     Reconsidering Dystopia in the 1990~s.~

C. Gregory Claeys (Royal Holloway, University of London), ~1848 and the
     Transformation of ~Utopian Socialism~.~
Lorna Davidson (New Lanark Conservation Trust), ~Robert Owen~s New Lanark: A
     Milestone on the Road to the Millennium.~

D. Rod Jeffcote (University of Portsmouth), ~Science, Technology @ Utopia.~
David Tulloch (Victoria University of Wellington), ~Science and Utopia in the
     Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries.~

12:30-2:00 Buffet Lunch at Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, UEA

2:00-3:30
A. Peter Fitting (University of Toronto), ~Violence and Utopia: A Contrary View
     (Pat Califia~s Doc and Fluff: The Dystopian Tale of a Girl and Her 
Biker).~
Judy Greenway (University of East London), ~Destroying Genders, Creating
     Utopias: Narratives of Science and Gendered Bodies in Otto Weininger,
     Valerie Solanas, and Kate Bornstein.~

B. Jose Eduardo Reis (Universidade de Tras-os-Montes e Alto Douro), ~The 
Eternal
     Present of Utopianism.~
Toby Widdicombe (University of Alaska Anchorage), ~Max Nettlau~s ~Outline of 
the
     History of Utopia~.~

C. Matthew Beaumont (Linacre College, Oxford University), ~The Spectre of
     Utopianism.~
Ruth Levitas (University of Bristol), ~For Utopia: The (Limits of the) Possible
     Functions of Utopia in Late Capitalist Society.~

D. Jennifer Baumer (San Francisco State University), ~Eve~s Return to the 
Garden:
     Moral Perfectionism and Antebellum Utopias in Sylvester Judd~s Margaret.~
Jackie Stallcup (University of California, Riverside), ~~What a Capital Place 
the
     World Would Be!~ Model Children and Domestic Utopias in Louisa May
     Alcott~s March Family Trilogy.~
3:30-4:00 Tea

4:00-5:30

A. Edward James (University of Reading), ~The Utopian Impulse in Modern Science
     Fiction.~
Paul Pasquarette (Empire State College), ~The Utopian Impulse in Dick and 
Vizenor:
     A Cross Cultural Analysis of Technology, Colonialism, and the 
Environment.~

B. Werner Christie Mathison (University of Oslo), ~The Description of Politics 
in
     Green Utopia.~
Damian White (University of Essex), ~Utopia and Social Ecology: Considering the
     Ecotopian Speculations of Murray Bookchin.~ 

C. Donald F. Durnbaugh (Juaniata College), ~William C. Thurman and His 
Adventist
     Following.~
Robert S. Fogarty (Antioch College), ~A View of the Oneida Community From the
     Inside: Two Diaries.~

D. Eric Kaufman (London School of Economics and Political Science),
     ~Cosmopolitan Utopianism in American Thought: Harbinger of Globalisation.~
Ralph Pordzik (Universt Munchen), ~An African Utopographer: Ben Okri~s Novel
     Astonishing the Gods and the Quest for Post-colonial Utopia.~

E. Jean Pfaelzer (University of Delaware), ~Cinema, Chicana History, and the
     Utopian Imagination: ~Salt of the Earth.~
Brad Whitsel (Pennsylvania State University (Fayette Campus), ~Visions of
     Catastrophe and Renewal on the American Far Right: ~Cultic Novels~ and
     Millennial Violence.~

Evening Session at the Assembly House, Norwich
Drinks Reception in the Music Room 6:30 - 7:15

Dinner 7:15 -9:00 in the Noverre Suite

9:00 - 10:15 in the Music Room
John Carey (Merton College, Oxford University), ~Improving People: Utopian
Schemes.~ 

FRIDAY JUNE 25
9:00-10:30
A. Andy Sawyer (University of Liverpool), ~Consider Their Ways: The Power of
     Emblems in Shaping Story.~
Larisa G. Mihaylova (Moscow State University), ~Academy of Sorrow or Joy: A Way
     to Measure a Utopia by Ivan Yefremov.~ 

B. Val Gough (University of Liverpool), Visions of Communism: The Utopian 
Novels
     of J. Leslie Mitchell.~
Vara Neverow (Southern Connecticut State University), ~Virginia Woolf and the
     Society of Outsiders.~

C. Zorica Djerovic, ~Serbia Between Utopia and Dystopia.~
Brindusa Palade (National School of Political and Economic Administration),
     ~Romanian Utopia: The Role of the Intelligentsia in the Communist
     Implementation of a New Human Paradigm.~

D. Peter G. Stillman (Vassar College), ~Realism and Utopianism in Modern 
Political
Philosophy.~
Carol Weisbrod (University of Connecticut), ~New Views of Utopia: A Comment on
     Human Rights, Insurance and the Ideal Society.~

10:30-11:00 Coffee

11:00-12:30
A. Kirby Farrell (University of Massachusetts, Amherst), ~Titanic Utopia and
     Millennial Catastrophe.~
Tammy Schneider/Louise Davis (Michigan State University), ~Masculine
     Utopia/Feminine Dystopia: The Denial of the Female in American Post-
     Apocalyptic Film.~

B. Jennifer Gillan (Bentley College), ~Broad-shouldered Blueprints for 
Cooperative
     Cities: Wright~s and Gilman~s Utopias.~
Nathaniel Coleman (University of Pennsylvania), ~Utopia and Architectural 
Invention:
     The Next Millennium.~ 

C. Eleanor Kaufman (Cornell University), ~The Question of Community in Marxist
     Utopianism.~
Johan Tralau (Uppsala University), ~The Boundless Self: Utopian Man in the 
Writings
     of the Young Karl Marx.~

D. Hl
ne Greven-Borde (Universit Stendhal), ~Twentieth Century
     Utopian/Dystopian Fiction: From Humanism to Post-Modernism.~
Yoriko Moichi (Japan Women~s University), ~When East Meets West: Japanese
     Utopian Fiction from 1870 to the Present and Some Response to British
     Utopianism.~

E. Saskia Poldervaart (University of Amsterdam), ~The Dutch ~poldermodel~ and
     Current Anti-utopian Thinking and Utopian Practices.~
Amir Helman (Ruppin Institute), ~Radical Changes in the Israeli Kibbutz.~

Lunch not provided, but can be eaten on campus or in the City, followed by a 
free
afternoon to explore Norwich and Norfolk or simply spend time talking, sleeping 
etc.

Dinner 6:30-8:00
Evening Session Reading 8:00-10.00 

Maggie Gee, The Ice People
Brian Stableford, ~The Age of Innocence~
SATURDAY JUNE 26

9:00-10:30
A. Jennifer Boyers (Grand Valley State University), ~Feminist Utopias: Visions 
of
     Subversive Futures.~
Ildney Cavalcanti (University of Strathclyde), ~Utopias of(f) Language in
     Contemporary Feminist Literary Dystopias.~

B. Richard Nate (Universitt Gesamthochschule Essen), ~From Salomon~s House to
     the Open Conspiracy: Scientific Utopianism in Francis Bacon and H. G.
     Wells.~ 
John S. Partington (University of Reading), ~The Death of the Static: H. G. 
Wells
     and the Kinetic Utopia.~

C. Dennis Hardy (Middlesex University), ~~The best utopias were not utopian~: A
     Critical Review of Early Twentieth-century Utopianism in England.~
Stuart Patterson (Emory University), ~Utopia is No Lasting State: Militant 
Optimism
     and the New Deal~s Cumberland Homesteads.~

D. Rita Monticelli (University of Kent), ~Peace and Utopianism: Luce Irigaray~s
     Utopian Process and Sally Miller Gearhart~s Separatist Utopia.~
Conrad Russell (University of Leeds), ~The Time(s) and Space(s) of Desire: 
Utopia
     and the Experience of Modernity.~

10:30-11:00 Coffee

11:00-12:30
A. Jayne Bryson (University of Liverpool), Productive Limitations in the 
Utopian
     Vision of Charlotte Perkins Gilman.~ 
Andrea McVeigh (Queen~s University of Belfast), ~Challenging the Feminist 
Utopian
     Canon: A New Interpretation of Charlotte Perkins Gilman~s Herland.~ 

B. Katherine Levin (State of Minnesota), ~Rhetoric, Hypocrisy, and Greed: 
Utopian
Thought and its Representations in the Nineteenth-Century Novel.~
Patrick Parrinder (University of Reading), ~Utopia after Darwin: Erewhon 
Revisited.~

C. I. F. Clarke (Emeritus Strathclyde University), ~From Space to Time, 1700-
     1871.~
Pere Gallardo-Torrano (University of Lleida), ~The Postmodern Anxiety of the
     Modern Individual: Paris in the 20th Century by Jules Verne.~

D. Megan Stern (University of North London), ~Medical Science and Utopian 
Bodies
     in the Coming Millennium.~
Brian M. Stableford (Author), ~Biotechnology and Utopia.~

                   INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE

                    A MILLENNIUM OF UTOPIAS

         THE THEORY, HISTORY AND FUTURE OF UTOPIANISM

"The utopia, the effort at social imagination, is an area in which specialised 
disciplines can
meet and interpenetrate with a mutual respect for each other, concerned with 
clarifying their
common social context." (Northrop Frye)

The University of East Anglia is hosting an interdisciplinary, international 
conference on
utopianism, 23-26 June 1999. Scholars in such areas as American Studies, 
Architecture, the
Arts, Classics, Communal Studies, Cultural Studies, Development Studies, 
Economics,
Engineering, Environmental Studies, Film Studies, Gender Studies, History, 
Languages and
Literatures, Music, Philosophy, Political Studies, Psychology, the Sciences, 
Sociology, and
Urban Planning will attend. Over 130 proposals for papers have been received 
and it is
expected that the conference will be attended by 120 - 150 participants, of 
whom about two-
thirds are from outside the U.K. This will be a major event in the field of 
utopian studies and
we very much hope that you will be able to participate.

The University of East Anglia is situated on 320 acres of park and woodland, 
with a lake,
on the edge of Norwich. Campus buildings have won over twenty major 
architectural awards
and include the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, which houses a significant 
collection.
Founded in Saxon times, the City of Norwich boasts a magnificent cathedral 
(1096 AD) and
a castle of similar antiquity, now housing a fine museum. Within its precincts 
it contains
more extant medieval churches than any other city in Europe. The City is 
encircled by the
Rivers Wensum and Yare, on which there are regular pleasure cruises. There is a 
famous
open-air market in the town centre, and an extensive pedestrian-only shopping 
area, with
department stores, small shops, and the state-of-the-art Castle Mall complex. 
Within half-an-
hour of Norwich are the renowned Norfolk Broads. Norwich is easily accessible 
by air, rail,
coach and car and KLM has offered discounted fares to conference delegates. 
Details in the
travel section below.

After the conference...Why not spend a few days exploring Norwich and Norfolk? 
The
Norfolk Broads are renowned for sailing, pleasure boating and wildlife. The 
north Norfolk
coast boasts excellent walks, bird sanctuaries and charming seaside villages. 
The Queen's
residence at Sandringham, with spectacular grounds, is open to visitors and is 
about an
hour's drive from Norwich. Brochures with details of all these local facilities 
will be sent to
everyone making a reservation, on request.    

The conference organiser is Barbara Goodwin ([log in to unmask]) and the 
programme
organiser is Lyman Sargent ([log in to unmask] - currently away from UEA and 
not
available by email there until April 1st). The conference secretary is Mrs 
Hazel Taylor
([log in to unmask]). Please direct queries to the appropriate person.

Attached: the draft programme; cost details; information about travel to 
Norwich; registration
form. `A MILLENNIUM OF UTOPIAS' CONFERENCE
Wednesday June 23rd - Saturday June 26th 1999

BOOKING DETAILS
Please read the following notes carefully before booking your place at the 
conference.

-- Payment must be in pounds sterling by credit card (Diner's Card not 
accepted) or
international bankers draft in the case of overseas participants or by credit 
card or cheque
for U.K. participants. 

-- Those booking after May 1st will be charged a late booking fee of 20.

--Postgraduate researchers are offered a reduced rate to assist their 
attendance. The
conference must be self-financing and there are no funds to assist them beyond 
this reduction.


-- In order to keep down the cost of the conference to participants, the number 
of `included'
meals has been kept to a minimum. Hence, lunches on Wednesday (before the 
conference),
Friday (free afternoon) and Saturday (after the conference) are not included. 
On those days,
lunch can be purchased at any of the UEA cafes or restaurants, costing from 
1.30 for soup
or a snack to 3.50 - 4 for a two-course meal.

-- The registration fee of 25 includes morning coffee and afternoon tea 
between sessions.
The cost of breakfast is included in the accommodation cost. 

-- A list of off-campus bed and breakfast accommodation can be provided on 
request. The
university's prices for bed and breakfast are highly competitive and costs 
saved by staying
off-campus would be small or negligible; also, some of the guest-houses on the 
list are some
distance from the university. Please note that the conference organiser and 
conference
secretary cannot assist you with booking off-campus accommodation or travel 
arrangements. 

-- Extra nights' accommodation can be arranged, before or after the conference. 
See booking
form.

-- Dinner on Thursday will take place at the historic Assembly House at 
Norwich, followed
by a talk by Professor John Carey, Merton Professor of English at Oxford 
University and
editor of Faber's forthcoming anthology of modern utopias. Dining space at the 
Assembly
House is limited to 120 and so the first 120 participants to pay in full are 
guaranteed a place.
Other participants are invited to attend the pre-dinner wine reception and to 
rejoin the group
for Professor Carey's talk at about 9pm. Arrangements for dinner (at the same 
cost) will be
made at a good local restaurant for those unable to eat at the Assembly House. 
Dinners on
Wednesday and Friday, and lunch on Thursday, will take place in the Sainsbury 
Centre for
Visual Arts on the UEA campus.

-- Friday from 12.30 to 4.30pm has been left free for conference participants 
to explore
Norwich or the campus grounds if they wish. Lunch can be purchased on campus or 
in one
of the many pubs or restaurants in the City. 

FULL CONFERENCE FEES, STANDARD RATES

CATEGORY 1. STANDARD ROOM -- 200
This price is for a single, standard room - shared bathroom and kitchen on the 
staircase.

CATEGORY 2. EN SUITE ROOM -- 225
This price is for a single room with en suite bathroom.

CATEGORY 3. STANDARD DOUBLE ROOM, COMPANION NOT ATTENDING
CONFERENCE  -- 242
Twin rooms in Norfolk Terrace: this includes full conference fees for the 
participant and bed
and breakfast for two people, but no other meals or refreshments or 
registration for the
accompanying person.

CATEGORY 4. EN SUITE DOUBLE ROOM, COMPANION NOT ATTENDING
CONFERENCE -- 280 
Twin or double (please specify) en suite rooms (with TV) in Nelson Court: this 
includes full
conference fees for the participant and bed and breakfast for two people, but 
no other meals
or refreshments or registration fee for the accompanying person. 

CATEGORY 5. STANDARD DOUBLE ROOMS, BOTH PEOPLE ATTENDING
CONFERENCE -- 345 
Twin rooms in Norfolk Terrace: this includes bed and breakfast for two people, 
with all
conference meals, refreshments and registration fee for both participants.

CATEGORY 6. EN SUITE DOUBLE ROOMS, BOTH PEOPLE ATTENDING
CONFERENCE  -- 380
Twin or double (please specify) en suite rooms (with TV) in Nelson Court: this 
includes bed
and breakfast for two people, with all conference meals, refreshments and 
registration fee
for both participants.

CATEGORY 7. PARTICIPANTS NOT STAYING ON CAMPUS -- 100
This includes registration fee (25), lunch on Thursday and dinners on 
Wednesday, Thursday
and Friday.

CATEGORY 8. REGISTRATION ONLY, NO MEALS -- 25
Registration fee includes tea and coffee between sessions. Registration fees 
for day
attendance are 10 per day, meals not included.

PLEASE NOTE: Cancellations will incur charges as follows: 
-- cancellations on or after 11th June: the full cost of the conference
-- cancellations from May 20th - June 10th: full room/breakfast costs and a 25
administration fee
-- cancellations from March 19th - May 19th: 75% of room/breakfast costs and a 
25
administration fee.FULL CONFERENCE FEES - POSTGRADUATE RATES 

CATEGORY 1. STANDARD ROOM -- 160
This price is for a single, standard room - shared bathroom and kitchen on the 
staircase.

CATEGORY 2. EN SUITE ROOM -- 185
This price is for a single room with en suite bathroom.

CATEGORY 3. STANDARD DOUBLE ROOM, COMPANION NOT ATTENDING
CONFERENCE  -- 205
Twin rooms in Norfolk Terrace: this includes full conference fees for the 
participant and bed
and breakfast for two people, but no other meals or refreshments or 
registration for the
accompanying person.

CATEGORY 4. EN SUITE DOUBLE ROOM, COMPANION NOT ATTENDING
CONFERENCE -- 240 
Twin or double (please specify) en suite rooms (with TV) in Nelson Court: this 
includes full
conference fees for the participant and bed and breakfast for two people, but 
no other meals
or refreshments or registration fee for the accompanying person. 

CATEGORY 5. STANDARD DOUBLE ROOMS, BOTH POSTGRADUATES
ATTENDING CONFERENCE -- 305 
Twin rooms in Norfolk Terrace: this includes bed and breakfast for two people, 
with all
conference meals, refreshments and registration fee for both participants.

CATEGORY 6. EN SUITE DOUBLE ROOMS, BOTH POSTGRADUATES
ATTENDING CONFERENCE  -- 340
Twin or double (please specify) en suite rooms (with TV) in Nelson Court: this 
includes bed
and breakfast for two people, with all conference meals, refreshments and 
registration fee
for both participants.

CATEGORY 7. PARTICIPANTS NOT STAYING ON CAMPUS -- 80
This includes registration fee, lunch on Thursday and dinners on Wednesday, 
Thursday and
Friday.

CATEGORY 8. REGISTRATION ONLY, NO MEALS -- 25
Registration fee includes tea and coffee between sessions. Registration fees 
for day
attendance are 10 per day, meals not included. 

PLEASE NOTE: Cancellations will incur charges as follows: 
-- cancellations on or after 11th June: the full cost of the conference
-- cancellations from May 20th - June 10th: full room/breakfast costs and a 25
administration fee
-- cancellations from March 19th - May 19th: 75% of room/breakfast costs and a 
25
administration fee.

`A MILLENNIUM OF UTOPIAS' CONFERENCE
Wednesday June 23rd - Saturday June 26th 1999

CONFERENCE REGISTRATION FORM - PLEASE FILL IN AND RETURN

Name.........................................................................
University 
Affiliation..................................................................
Are you a postgraduate student?  YES/NO
Address for Correspondence.........................................
...................................................................
...................................................................
Telephone.............................................................
email address...............................

WHICH CATEGORY OF RESERVATION DO YOU REQUIRE?
Please fill in relevant amount on the right
If booking a double room, please specify preference.............TWIN/DOUBLE 
(Fewer doubles are available, so later applicants may be allocated twin rooms.)

CATEGORY 1. Standard room - 200 (postgraduates 160)..........
CATEGORY 2. En suite room - 225 (postgrads 185) ...........
CATEGORY 3. Standard double, one participant - 242 (postgrads 205) 
...............
CATEGORY 4. En suite double, one participant - 280 (postgrads 
240)....................
CATEGORY 5. Standard double, two participants - 345 (postgrads 305) 
.....................
CATEGORY 6. En suite double, two participants - 380 (postgrads 
340)...................
CATEGORY 7. Registration and meals only - 100 (postgrads 
80)......................
CATEGORY 8. Registration only - 25...................................
[Day registration should be paid in cash on the day]

Rooms will be available before and after the conference.

Do you require additional nights accommodation?  YES/NO
Please specify which nights (e.g. Tuesday 22nd June, Saturday 26th, or other 
nights)
and type of room................................
Cost: 23 standard, 31 en suite, 42 standard double, 49 standard en suite

Total cost of extra 
accommodation.......................................................

Please add 20 if booking after May 1st.

GRAND TOTAL...................................................................
 
Please specify any dietary requirements..............

If vegetarian, do you eat fish?  YES/NO

Have you any medical or mobility requirements? Please
specify...............................................
`A MILLENNIUM OF UTOPIAS' CONFERENCE
Wednesday June 23rd - Saturday June 26th 1999

GRAND TOTAL..................

PAYMENT
Full payment should accompany your registration form. Payment can be made by 
most major
credit/debit cards (not Diner's Card), or by international money order or UK 
cheque made
payable in  sterling to "University of East Anglia".

METHOD OF PAYMENT

I enclose:

UK cheque - amount .............

International money order (please add 10 to remittance if not drawn against a 
UK bank)
Amount ................

Please debit my credit/debit card. Amount ..............

Card type..............

Card No.......................

Expiry date..........

Card holder's name............


Signature..................... 

Date..........................

Please post the registration page and this payment page back to :

Mrs Hazel Taylor,
School of Economic and Social Studies,
University of East Anglia,
Norwich,
NR4 7TJ,
U.K.


Please keep a copy of this registration form in case of queries. 

TRAVEL BY AIR TO NORWICH

KLM flies to Norwich from Amsterdam and has offered discounted fares for 
conference
participants from overseas destinations, via Amsterdam. The Amsterdam - Norwich 
flight
is about 35 minutes and a taxi from the airport to the campus costs about 5. 
Unfortunately,
at the time of sending out these programmes the KLM executive concerned with 
group
discounts is away for 2 weeks and has been unable to supply us with sample 
fares from US
and European destinations. However, she has given a special number for would-be 
travellers
to contact to get prices and make bookings. The number is (U.K.) 0990 359 556. 
If you have
difficulties with this, please contact me (after March 8th) when I shall have 
more news from
the KLM group fares executive. 

The train from London (Liverpool Street) to Norwich takes 1 hr 45m and a taxi 
from the
station to campus costs about 5; buses also run from the station to the campus 
(taking about
25 mins).

Details of how to reach Norwich by car are shown on the accompanying map.

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