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CFP: Romanticism and the City (International Conference on Romanticism @ CUNY)

April 26th, 2009 admin No comments
Romanticism and the City

Romanticism and the City

The fall 2009 meeting of the International Conference on Romanticism will convene in New York City from November 5 to November 8 to address the topic “Romanticism and the City.” The meeting will be jointly hosted by The City College and The Graduate Center of The City University of New York. Submissions engaging with some aspect of the general theme are welcome from all disciplines, including but not limited to literary studies, history, philosophy, and political science.

From Wordsworth’s description of Lyrical Ballads as a response to “the increasing accumulation of men in cities” to Baudelaire’s location of the impetus for his prose poetry in  “la fréquentation des villes énormes,” the history of Romanticism is bound up with a continuous and evolving response to the emergence of the modern city. As work in a range of areas in our own day leads us to reconsider how we think about such oppositions as nature and culture, the organic and the mechanical, wholeness and multiplicity, the urban text or sub-text of Romanticism presents itself not only as a comparatively neglected area of investigation but as a place to pursue this rethinking.

These observations are offered to prompt debate and, above all, to invite a broadened conception of the historical reach of Romanticism in the formulation of proposals. Proposals for individual papers should be limited to 500 words and emailed to icrnyc[at]ccny.cuny.edu no later than May 1, 2009. General proposals for special sessions should be also limited to 500 words, or 1000 words if comprising sub-proposals, and emailed to icrnyc[at]ccny.cuny.edu no later than March 1, 2009.

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Austen and Shelley at this year’s Hugo Awards

April 26th, 2009 admin No comments

Apropos of our recent post on the zombified rewrite of Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, a selection for this year’s prestigious Hugo Awards (science fiction) endeavors to write Frankenstein into Austen’s novel–or vice versa. Up for the best novelette category, John Kessel’s “Pride and Prometheus” chronicles a meeting between Pride‘s bookish Mary Bennet and Frankenstein‘s namesake. One short fan review/reading finds it a worthy selection for its deft metafictional play but has qualms about it’s voice: “[Kessel's] pastiche rings hollow, emulating Austen’s grammar, vocabulary, and sentence structure but lacking the spark that imbued her writing with so much humor.” Luckily, those who are interested can decide for themselves by downloading the pdf from the author’s Web site.

The award winners will be announced in August at the 2009 World Science Fiction Convention (Worldcon) in Montreal, Quebec.