Archive for calls, December 2012

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[ecrea] CFP: Neo-Victorian Cultures: The Victorians Today

Wed Dec 05 21:23:14 GMT 2012



We are delighted to announce "Neo-Victorian Cultures: The Victorians Today", a conference which will be held at Liverpool John Moores University, 24-26 July 2013. Attached and copied below are the Call for Papers and the conference poster. We welcome submissions from a wide range of fields, including those beyond the arts and humanities, so please circulate to anyone you think may be interested. We appreciate your support!

All the very best,

Nadine Muller, Lucinda Matthews-Jones, and Jonathan Cranfield

Dr Nadine Muller
Lecturer in English Literature&  Cultural History
Liverpool John Moores University
Dean Walters Building
1 St. James Road
Liverpool
L1 7BR

Email:(n.muller /at/ ljmu.ac.uk)<mailto:(n.muller /at/ ljmu.ac.uk)>
Twitter: @Nadine_Muller
Website:www.nadinemuller.org.uk<http://www.nadinemuller.org.uk/>



Neo-Victorian Cultures: The Victorians Today


24-26 July 2013, Liverpool John Moores University


Keynote Speakers:

Prof. Margaret Stetz (University of Delaware)

Dr. Helen Davies (Teesside Univeristy)


www.neovictoriancultures.org.uk



Call for Papers


While aesthetic, political and artistic returns to the Victorians have been prevalent throughout the twentieth century, the last decade has seen a particular surge in scholarly work addressing the seemingly ceaseless desire to reassess and adapt Victorian texts, theories, ideas and customs. Such work has focused in particular on manifestations of the neo-Victorian on page and on screen; this conference seeks to build on but also expand these debates by bringing together writers, practitioners and researchers working on the lasting presence of the Victorians since 1901 in a wide variety of realms, ranging from art and architecture to science, politics, economics, fiction and film. In doing so, the event aims to further expand the vibrant field of neo-Victorian studies both within and beyond the arts and humanities through an examination of the Victorians’ continuing influence on twentieth and twenty-first century culture. We therefore welcome and encourage abstracts from post
graduate students, academics and independent researchers from all academic realms in the hope of capturing the diverse work being done on Victorian afterlives across a wide spectrum of disciplines and across traditional disciplinary boundaries.


Topics may include, but are by no means limited to, the following:


* the ethics, politics and aesthetics of adaptation

* the gender and sexual politics of neo-Victorianism

* neo-Victorianism on page, screen and canvas

* neo-Victorian subcultures

* the Victorians in contemporary architecture, art and design

* neo-Victorian journalism/ the Victorian press and contemporary journalism

* the Victorians in contemporary science and medicine
* the neo-Victorian canonteaching neo-Victorianism
* the neo-Victorian marketplace; consuming and marketing the (neo-)Victorians
* Steampunk


Presentations should take the form of 20-minute papers. We also welcome proposals for fully-formed panels or roundtables. For individual papers, please submit a 300-word abstract as well as a short biographical note. For panel and roundtable proposals, please provide a brief outline of the session’s aims together with abstracts and biographical notes for each speaker and for the proposed panel chair or discussant. All proposals should be emailed to the organisers (atorganisers /at/ neovictoriancultures.org.uk)<mailto:(organisers /at/ neovictoriancultures.org.uk)>  no later than 1 March 2013. Please do not hesitate to email us if you have any questions about the event. You can also find more information about the conference atwww.neovictoriancultures.org.uk.


We look forward to receiving your proposals and hope to welcome you to LJMU in July!



The Organisers


Nadine Muller, Lucinda Matthews-Jones, and Jonathan Cranfield




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