ASLS ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2014 31 May 2014
TUNES OF GLORY: Scottish Literature and a Century of War
Beacon Arts Centre, Custom House Quay, Greenock
Beacon Arts Centre, Custom House Quay, Greenock
http://asls.arts.gla.ac.uk/AnnConf2014.html
(conference website: http://kaa.ff.upjs.sk/en/event/4/12th-esse-conference)
for the seminar
In Sonnets from Scotland (1984), Edwin Morgan envisioned a national history and potential which has increasingly urgent political application as the referendum on independence approaches in 2014. His poem on the Scottish parliament (2004) stressed connections between literary, cultural and political vitality. This seminar considers the place of poetry in national self-imagining, national self-realisation and continuing critical awareness. We welcome papers examining Morgan’s work in the national context, his relation with his poetic precedent Hugh MacDiarmid, his legacy to contemporary writers, and international connections through his translations from European literatures and through North and South American concrete and postmodern influences.
Seminar conveners:
Alan Riach, University of Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom (Alan.Riach@glasgow.ac.uk)
Silke Stroh, University of Muenster, Germany (Silke.Stroh@uni-muenster.de)
Submission guidelines and planning procedures:
Papers should be up to 15 minutes long and should take the form of an oral presentation, rather than mere readings of finished essays.
Abstracts of proposed papers should be submitted to the seminar conveners by 31 March 2014 [new extended deadline].
Abstracts should be c. 200 words in length. Please also submit a short paragraph of biographical information (including your academic affiliation).
The selection process will be completed by 15 April 2014. Once the programme has been finalised, abridged versions of accepted papers will be circulated among all speakers some time before the conference, to facilitate preparation for the seminar discussions.
The RNLA was founded in 1986. In August of that year the first of a series of biannual international conferences exploring all aspects of nation and region in literatures written in English was held in Aberdeen, Scotland. Since then, as the international network has grown, cities around the world have hosted the conferences: Nottingham, England (1988), Luxembourg (1990), Swansea, Wales (1992), Bratislava, Slovakia (1994), Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada (1996), Germersheim, Germany (1998), Östersund, Sweden (2000), Durban, South Africa (2002), Manchester, England (2004), Manhattan, Kansas, USA (2006), and Aberdeen, Scotland (2008). The 2010 and 2012 conferences were held at Shiga University of Medical Science, Japan, and respectively, at Pécs University in Hungary.
The central theme of the Fifteenth Conference in the series will be Oceans Uniting Regions, Nations, and Literatures
Oceans, lakes, and rivers have often served as natural divides between regions and nations. However, these vitally important water ways have often functioned to unite the people as well, particularly through the literature by the people inhabiting the different land masses. It has been said that if you want to get to know the distinctiveness a people, study their literature. Literature has also played cross-fertilizing and transformative roles across cultures as, for example, the transcultural phenomenon that is Romanticism.
The RNLA invites papers on how oceans – or lakes and rivers — divide and/or unite regions and nations in a literal as well as a metaphorical sense. One approach might explore the symbolism of water—both life-giving and chaotic, creative and/or destructive. One may also discuss how literature affirms the distinctiveness of a single people or distinctiveness of others. Another aspect might be the manner in which literature or literary genres cross boundaries and become instruments of trans-cultural creative transformation. In other words, how does literature (or literary genres) express and/or create socio-politico-economic aspirations across oceans, lakes, and rivers; or, how do literatures in their cultural variety deal with dividing and uniting, domination and liberation across oceans in pre- or post- colonialist eras? Additional reflections might include how literature deals with the theme of hybridity.
THERE IS STILL ROOM ON THE PROGRAMME FOR FURTHER SUBMISSIONS, and traditional individual papers, collaborative efforts, and panel discussions are all invited. And should the above theme be too restrictive, papers on any aspect of regional and national literatures, from any part of the world, will be welcome. As RNLA’s current President has said, “our cosmopolitan credentials are well established, and will assuredly be upheld by the upcoming gathering.”
Send submissions to Karoline (Karrie) Szatek-Tudor at kszatek@curry.edu
The venue of the Conference is the John Carver Inn in Plymouth. Delegates will be accommodated here, and the session meetings, reception dinner, luncheon, and plenary will all take place in the Inn. It is located close to the Plymouth Harbor, restaurants, shopping areas, and sites of historic interest. The social programme will include an excursion to Plimouth Plantation, Wampanoag Village, the Ole Grist Mill and the Mayflower, and a trip to Boston with free time to explore the city.
In Bannockburns: Scottish Independence and the Literary Imagination, 1314-2014 poet and critic Robert Crawford explores in detail the literary-cultural background to Scottish nationalism in the lead-up to the referendum Scottish independence.
Here is an interesting review of the book from TLS: http://www.the-tls.co.uk/tls/public/article1377172.ece
The Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (http://dragon.klte.hu/~hjeas/) is a peer-reviewed journal of the Institute of English and American Studies at the University of Debrecen, Hungary and is available from JSTOR and ProQuest. Editor: Donald E. Morse. Part of volume 21 (2015) will be devoted to Scottish Studies; guest editor: Attila Dósa (University of Miskolc, Hungary).
In Scotland, the last few decades saw two referenda on the decentralisation of political decision-making and the country is now on the doorstep of a third referendum to gain independence. The growing self-confidence in politics has been matched with a growing confidence in fields of cultural production including, most notably, literature. Though political notions of nationalism seem to have been losing ground in certain contexts, it is hard to see the 2014 referendum as other than a wished-for
(at least by some) culmination for the age-old struggle for self-determination. At the same time, literature seems to have entered a post-national phase and critical discourses currently in vogue have been using the rhetoric of hybridism and diversity with an aim to divest it of essentialist or nationalist undertones even though Scottish literature was especially rich in both in the 1970s–1980s. Due to recent changes in politics and an impressive growth of literary production, and with the expansion of the field of Scottish Studies over the borders of Scotland, in the past few decades criticism has followed suit and theoretical structures are being revised or done with altogether at great speed. But where is the field now?
HJEAS invites contributions exploring the present state of Scottish Studies with reference but not limited to the following topics:
Please send a proposal (200 words) accompanied by a short CV to the guest editor, Attila Dósa aitdosa@uni-miskolc.hu
Deadline for proposals: 31 March 2014
Notification of acceptance: 15 April 2014
Delivery of completed papers: 31 August 2014
Contributions should conform to the latest edition of the MLA Handbook. Contributions on history may use the latest edition of the Chicago Manual of Style.
Further information on formatting: http://dragon.klte.hu/~hjeas/submitting-manuscripts.html
Deadline for abstracts: 1 March 2014.
Call for papers: Between.2014 CFP
The conference will take place as part of the New Beginnings.Otwarcia international festival of literature and theatre held in Sopot and Gdańsk from 12 to 18 May 2014. This is the fifth annual festival/conference organized by BETWEEN.POMIĘDZY.
For information on previous festivals/conferences, see http://www.betweenpomiedzy.pl
For further information, contact the organisers at between@ug.edu.pl
Call for papers and more info: http://sfee2014.wordpress.com/call-for-papers/
Organisers:
Prof. dr hab. Aniela Korzeniowska, University of Warsaw
Dr hab. Izabela Szymańska, University of Warsaw
Call for papers and more info: http://www.scotlandineurope.angli.uw.edu.pl/
With globalisation and multiculturalism increasingly influencing modern societies, the issue of identity is gaining new dimensions, and academic research on identity is gaining new momentum. The topic of identity finds its place in a vast array of academic disciplines, including psychology, sociology, ethnology and cultural anthropology, history and political studies, linguistics, literary and cultural studies. The problem of searching for and expressing the identity of individuals and nations surfaces in social and political life, including education, as well as in literature, architecture and the arts.
This volume offers a variety of analyses and views concerning Scottish identity. Scotland may be considered one of the most vivid examples of the issue of identity inspiring academic reflection and research from diverse perspectives due to the country’s intricate political, social, linguistic and literary history, as well as to its troubled relationships with England and its complex relationships with Europe. [from Introduction]
Izabela Szymańska, Aniela Korzeniowska
Introduction: Perspectives on Scottish Identity
Part I. Constructions of Scottish Identity
Piotr Stalmaszczyk
The Linguistic History of Scotland. Focus on Gaelic
Alina Doroch
Scottish Gaelic as a Medium of Upholding National Identity
Katarzyna Kociołek
Virtual Identity of Ulster-Scots
Michał Mazurkiewicz
Sport in Scotland. A Brief Study of a Certain Aspect of Scottishness
Monika Izbaner
Mr and Mrs Scotland Are Not Dead – Restating Scottishness
Part II. Scottish Identity in Literary Discourse
Mario Ebest
Coming to Terms with the Agony of the Highland Clearances – or Not? An Analysis of Two Novels from the Point of View of Traumatisation
Monika Liro
The Quest for Norse Roots. Orkneyinga Saga in George Mackay Brown’s Novels and Short Stories
Dominika Lewandowska
Alasdair Gray’s 1982, Janine and James Kelman’s How late it was, how late as Acts of Literary Resistance
Inside and Outside: Scottishness, Betweenness, and Plurality in Jackie Kay’s Poetry
Part III. Feminist Reinterpretations of Scottish Identity
Ewa Szymańska-Sabala
Genre(s) Revisited by Gender. Janice Galloway’s Constructive Infusion in Foreign Parts
Katarzyna Pisarska
Return from the Underworld: the Hero(ine) Journey in Alan Warner’s Morvern Callar
Glenda Norquay
Representations and the Representative: Twentieth Century Explorations of Gender from North East Scotland
Part IV. Construals of Scottishness
Wojciech Lewandowski
Scotsmen versus Englishmen: Ancient Antagonisms as Depicted in a Belgian Comic Book
Lucyna Krawczyk-Żywko
‘Werewolves in Kilts’: The Not So Steampunked Scotland in Gail Carriger’s Parasol Protectorate Series
Uwe Zagratzki
The Perception of Scotland in Modern Germany
Małgorzata Czajka
Strangeness and Fear: Decoding the Scottishness of Sandy Stranger
Part V. Images of Scotland
Sławomir Wącior
From Slate to Jupiter – Poetic Patterns of Edwin Morgan’s Sonnets from Scotland
Paweł Rutkowski
Scotland as the Land of Seers: the Scottish Second Sight at the Turn of the Eighteenth Century
Andrzej Weseliński
The Supernatural in Scottish Folktales
Markéta Gregorová
Towards a Heterogloin the Scottish Novel