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[ecrea] The Return of the Repressed: Gothic Studies Past and Present at UEA Symposium
Tue May 19 15:12:43 GMT 2015
The Return of the Repressed: Gothic Studies Past and Present at UEA
An International Symposium 26-27th June 2015
Venue: The Forum, Norwich
Key Speakers
David Punter
(Bristol)<http://research-information.bristol.ac.uk/en/persons/david-punter(3f3a0efd-f4b4-40ae-9baf-b91daa1b56d9).html>;
Thomas Elsaesser (Amsterdam)<http://www.thomas-elsaesser.com/>;
Peter Hutchings
(Northumbria)<https://www.northumbria.ac.uk/about-us/our-staff/h/peter-hutchings/>;
Helen Wheatley
(Warwick)<http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/arts/film/staff/wheatley/>
Rosemary Jackson
Rebecca Stott (UEA)
Thirtyfive years ago, David Punter published The Literature of Terror:
A History of Gothic Fictions from 1765 to the Present Day (Longman,
1980). The following year Rosemary Jackson published Fantasy: The
Literature of Subversion (Routledge), and, in 1988, Vic Sage published
Horror Fiction in the Protestant Tradition (Macmillan). These three
groundbreaking works were produced while teaching at the University of
East Anglia. Punters, Jacksons and Sages work established the Gothic
as a serious and complex field of study; a position from which it has
now grown to be one of the most popular and theoretically sophisticated
fields of cultural enquiry, encompassing a wide range of forms,
including theatre, film, television, computer games, and contemporary
fashion. Over the years numerous critics of literature and visual
culture more generally working closely with Gothic have been intimately
associated with UEA. Similarly, writers including Angela Carter, Ian
McEwan, and Rebecca Stott have created highly-influential Gothic and
post-Gothic fictions while resident at UEA. This symposium seeks to
mark, celebrate, and commemorate the crucial work of this generation of
Gothic, teachers, writers and critics, associated with UEA. It seeks to
reflect both on the past of Gothic writing and criticism, but also to
speculate about the present and future directions that Gothic studies
may take in a twenty-first century global culture of diverse and ever
expanding media culture of entertainment and information.
Accommodation
Download: Information about hotels and B&B's in and around
Norwich<https://www.uea.ac.uk/documents/429551/8538617/Norwich+Hotel+%2B+B++B+List+March+2015.pdf/b289e59e-ad4d-4870-b292-99389c21150d>
[PDF]
Please note: this information is for reference only - we cannot make
recommendations or make bookings on your behalf. Prices may also be
subject to change.
Registration
Registration is via Eventbrite -
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/the-return-of-the-repressed-gothic-studies-past-and-future-at-uea-tickets-15930231752
Please note: The registration deadline is Thursday 28 May 2015 and
refunds cannot be guaranteed after this date.
Dr Tim Snelson
Lecturer in Media History
School of Film, Television and Media Studies
University of East Anglia
Norwich
NR4 7JT.
Phone: +44 1603 597570
Email: (T.Snelson /at/ uea.ac.uk)
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