[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] Frankenstein 2018 conference
Fri Feb 23 16:30:33 GMT 2018
The deadline for abstracts for the forthcoming conference Frankenstein
2018: two hundred years of monsters, at the ANU and National Film and
Sound Archive, has been extended to 6 April. Details below.
*Frankenstein 2018: two hundred years of monsters*
**
*12-15 September 2018*
*The Australian National University, and National Film and Sound
Archive, Canberra *
**
Nearly two centuries after its anonymous publication on 1 January 1818,
Mary Shelley’s /Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus/ remains as
topical as ever. Its core story—of a recklessly ambitious and naïve
scientist whose artificial human-like creature arouses only horror and
disgust, and escapes control to seek revenge on his creator—has become,
for better or worse, /the /techno-scientific fable of modernity. First
adapted for stage by Richard Brinsley Peake in 1823, and for film by
Edison Studios in 1910, the story has inspired more theatre, film,
television and other adaptations than any other modern narrative, with
more than 50 screen adaptations appearing in the 2010s alone. From Fritz
Lang’s /Metropolis/ to Alex Garland’s /Ex Machina/, and /The Rocky
Horror Picture Show/ to /The Addams Family/, the Frankenstein myth
reaches into every recess of high and popular culture.
We invite proposals for 20-minute papers or 3 x 20-minute panel sessions
from scholars across the humanities, sciences and social sciences that
respond in interdisciplinary ways to this most interdisciplinary of
novels, including, but not limited to:
* Literary studies, especially of the long eighteenth century,
Romanticism, Victorian and neo-Victorian literature
* Re-tellings and re-imaginings of the Frankenstein story in various
modes and genres, e.g. SF, steampunk, speculative fiction, slash
fiction, etc.
* Film, television, theatre and performance, and visual studies
* Digital humanities, reception studies, histories of popular culture
and media ecologies
* Gender studies, queer theory and the history of sexuality
* Disability studies and posthumanism
* The history of medicine, especially reproductive technologies
* Science and technology studies; images and imaginaries of science
and scientists
* The history and philosophy of biology, especially in relation to
vitalism
* Ecocriticism and the Anthropocene
* Affect theory and the history of emotions
* Frankenstein and race, colonialism, empire
* Global and local Frankensteins, e.g. Australian Frankensteins
* Frankenstein and material history
* Cyborgs, robots, artificial intelligence and machine learning
* Synthetic biology, genetic engineering and artificial life
To maintain order among this menagerie of monsters, we propose the
following four overarching themes, each of which will be addressed by
one of our keynote speakers:
*Frankenstein in 1818: historicising the monster*
(Professor Sharon Ruston, Lancaster)
*Frankenstein as scientific fable: from grave-robbing and galvanism to
synthetic biology and**machine learning *
(Professor Genevieve Bell, Australian National University)
*Adaptation and experimentation: Frankenstein in film and other media *
(Assistant Professor Shane Denson, Stanford)
*Frankenstein’s queer family: gender, sexuality, reproduction and the
work of care*
(Professor Julie Carlson, University of California, Santa Barbara)
Please send proposals for papers or sessions—including a title, 250-word
abstract, and brief author biography—to Dr Russell Smith at
(russell.smith /at/ anu.edu.au) <mailto:(russell.smith /at/ anu.edu.au)>.
The deadline for proposals is *Friday* *6 April 2018*. Proposals will be
reviewed by a committee comprising scholars from the humanities,
sciences and social sciences, and we will endeavour to inform applicants
of the outcome within two weeks of the submission deadline. Please note
that we will endeavour to notify overseas applicants earlier if they
submit proposals before the submission deadline.
For further information and updates, as well as information about the
Humanities Research Centre’s annual theme for 2018, *Imagining* *Science
and Technology 200 Years after Frankenstein*, see:
http://hrc.anu.edu.au/2018-annual-theme. Please direct any inquiries to
Penny Brew at (hrc /at/ anu.edu.au) <mailto:(hrc /at/ anu.edu.au)>.
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please
use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at
http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]