Archive for May 2022

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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Constructing Fantastical Worlds from Antiquity to the Present

Thu May 26 06:56:37 GMT 2022




We are happy to invite you to the *workshop Constructing Fantastical Worlds: From Antiquity to the Present*, which will take place *in Amsterdam on 30 June and 1 July 2022*. This interdisciplinary workshop will explore the construction of fantastical worlds across different media from antiquity to the present. The programme can be found below.

Lunch, coffee, tea, and snacks are provided for all participants. Costs for the conference dinner are €55 euro.

If you want to participate, please*register*by sending an email (toconstructingfantasticalworlds /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(constructingfantasticalworlds /at/ gmail.com)>. Please also specify whether you will attend both days, whether you will join for the conference dinner, and any dietary requirements. The deadline for registration is 16 June.

There is limited availability to join the conference online. If you wish to do so, please send an email (toconstructingfantasticalworlds /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(constructingfantasticalworlds /at/ gmail.com)>.

*_Programme_*

/Day 1 (30 June 2022, 9:00-17:00)/


*Keynote*: Benjamin Stevens - Virgil's Otherworldly Sense of Wonder: Towards a Fractal Geometry of Immersive Fantasy?

*CLASSICAL STORYWORLDS *(/Chair: Mark Heerink/)

Koen Vacano - Worldbuilding from Homer to Star Wars

Greta Hawes (online) - Fictitious Interventions into the Greek Mythic Storyworld in Ps-Plutarch's /On Rivers /

*THE FANTASTICAL WORLDS OF EPIC* (/Chair: Koen Vacano/)

Stephen Joyce - Worldbuilding and Fantasy in Ireland's /Táin Bó Cúailnge /

Frances Foster - Cosmic Junctures and Other Winds: Constructing the Spaces Beyond

*RECEPTION OF FANTASTICAL WORLDS IN MODERN MEDIA* (/Chair: Luuk Huitink/)

Kevin Wong - The Tangled Receptions of Online Fantasy Videogames: Navigating Classics and Comparatism within a Globalised Worldbuilding**

Alice Bolland - /Et in Arcadia ego/: Appropriations and Appearances of the Arcadian Idyll in Classical and Contemporary Literature**

Alexandra Gushurt-Moore - 'Revolving Centuries and Cycles should Glide': Fantasy Worldbuilding in Late Victorian Art**

/Day 2 (1 July 2022, 9:00-17:00)/

*Keynote*: Rutger Allan - Framing Fantasy: Uncanny Encounters in the /Odyssey /

*IMMERSION IN FANTASTICAL WORLDS* (/Chair: Caterina Fossi/)

Dianna Bartlett - The Impact of a 'Magic System' on Immersion in Apollonius of Rhodes' /Argonautica/

Lola Bos - 'A World of Monsters': Narrating the Fantastical World in Sophocles' /Trachiniae/

*FANTASTICAL WORLDS AS A MATTER OF BELIEF* (/Chair: Klazina Staat/)

Caterina Fossi - Narrating Beliefs: Fantastical and Actual Worlds in Plato's Eschatological Myths

Lieke Smits - The Daughter and the King: Fantastical Worlds in Medieval Religious Allegory

**

*REALITY AND FANTASTICAL WORLDS* (/Chair: Merlijn Breunesse/)

Giovanni Piccolo - On the Wild Frontier: a World of Wonders at the Edge of the Empire in Solinus' /Collectanae Rerum Memorabilium/

Bé Breij - The Fantastical World of Sophistopolis**

*Van: *Koen Vacano <(k.vacano /at/ uva.nl)>
*Datum: *maandag 21 februari 2022 om 20:28
*Aan: *"(nico.carpentier /at/ commlist.org)" <(nico.carpentier /at/ commlist.org)>
*Onderwerp: *Re: Call for Papers: Constructing Fantastical Worlds from Antiquity to the Present

Dear Nico,

Thank you for sending our CfP. Could you perhaps also share the following reminder with the list members?

Thanks in advance.

All best wishes,

Koen Vacano

Dear colleagues,

We would like to remind you that the deadline for abstracts for the workshop /Constructing Fantastical Worlds: from Antiquity to the Present/, to be held at the University of Amsterdam on the 30th of June and the 1st of July 2022, is on *15 March 2022*. Abstracts should be anonymous and should not exceed 400 words. They can be sent to *(constructingfantasticalworlds /at/ gmail.com)*. Please find below the (updated) call for papers.

Note that, depending on the state of the pandemic, we will consider the option of having a (limited) part of the workshop in a *hybrid format*. We therefore also encourage scholars outside Europe to submit an abstract. If selected, we will attempt to facilitate the delivery of their paper even if it is not possible for them to travel to Amsterdam in June/July.

We are also exploring the possibility of publishing the results of the workshop as a *collected volume*.

**

*Call for Papers *

*Workshop /Constructing Fantastical Worlds: from Antiquity to the Present/*

*University of Amsterdam, Thursday 30^th June – Friday 1^st July 2022*

*Keynote Speakers: *Dr Benjamin Stevens (Trinity University) and Dr Rutger Allan (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)

*Organisers:*Caterina Fossi MA (University of Amsterdam), Dr Merlijn Breunesse (University of Amsterdam), and Koen Vacano MA (University of Amsterdam)

**

This interdisciplinary two-day workshop is devoted to the construction of fantastical worlds across various narrative media from antiquity to the present.

In recent years, media and literary studies have drawn attention to the process of constructing ‘imaginary’ or ‘secondary’ worlds. We define these fantastical universes as fictional worlds that involve creatures and/or events whose existence and/or occurrence is impossible in our actual world. Being often heterotopic and heterochronic and endowed with their own geographies, populations, histories, governments, etc., fantastical worlds may in complex ways reflect, contrast, and/or transcend ordinary reality.

Yet while this phenomenon is generally considered to originate in Tolkien, fantastical worldbuilding can be recognised in antiquity as well. Recent studies in classical literature and receptions have emphasised the fantasy-like quality of classics like Homer’s /Odyssey/, Ovid’s /Metamorphoses/, and Plato’s eschatological myths (Rogers & Stevens, 2017: 8-9; Nightingale 2002a, 2002b), while linguists and narratologists have brought to light literary devices that might be used by ancient authors to construct fantastical worlds and mediate the audience’s experience of them (e.g., Allan 2020; de Jong 2009; Ryan 1991).

Rarely, however, has the connection been made between the classical and contemporary construction of fantastical worlds, let alone between classics and modern media studies. The overarching aim of the workshop is to launch such an interdisciplinary discussion in search of a comparative, diachronic perspective on fantastical worldbuilding.

Principally, the workshop will focus on the *how *of fantastical worldbuilding, i.e.,//on the devices and techniques used in different times and media to create a fantastical world, as well as the ways in which this world is presented as different from yet somehow anchored in reality.

We invite papers that address one (or more) of the following research questions:

 1. What devices do authors or artists use to construct fantastical
    worlds? (E.g., common ground management, deixis, the general
    rendering of time and space)
 2. How are these fantastical worlds anchored to the audience’s actual
    world, and what devices are used to express this relationship?
    (E.g., metalepsis, immersive/enactive devices, shifts in the deictic
    centre)
 3. How do fantastical worlds encourage the audience to reflect on the
    actual world? (E.g., metaphor, metonymy, contrast)
 4. What differences and similarities exist between the construction of
    fantastical worlds in different periods and different media?
 5. How are the devices used by ancient authors to construct fantastical
    worlds reused (consciously or unconsciously) in later times?
We are interested in contributions from a variety of disciplinary backgrounds that discuss the construction of fantastical worlds in or across different media (e.g., written narratives, drama, film, television, video games). Papers may focus on single narratives, authors, and periods, or discuss fantastical worldbuilding techniques more broadly, e.g., from a theoretical, comparative or reception point of view.

The workshop will take place in Amsterdam on the 30^th of June and the 1^st of July 2022.

We invite submissions for 25-minute presentations. To register your interest, please submit an *anonymous* abstract of *max.* *400 words* (excluding references and bibliography) to (constructingfantasticalworlds /at/ gmail.com) by the *15*^th *of March 2022*. Your name and affiliation should be included in the body of your email. We aim to respond no later than the 15^th of April.

Depending on the state of the pandemic, we will consider the option of having a (limited) part of the workshop in a *hybrid format*. We therefore also encourage scholars outside Europe to submit an abstract. If selected, we will attempt to facilitate the delivery of their paper even if it is not possible for them to travel to Amsterdam in June/July.

We are also exploring the possibility of publishing the results of the workshop as a *collected volume*.

Please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions: Caterina Fossi ((c.fossi /at/ uva.nl)), Merlijn Breunesse ((m.r.e.breunesse /at/ uva.nl)) and Koen Vacano ((k.vacano /at/ uva.nl)).

This workshop is generously funded by OIKOS, the National Research School in Classical Studies in the Netherlands, and the gravitation project Anchoring Innovation.

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