Sunday, 28 August 2011

Performing Identities in American Literature: Programme of Events

Friday 9 September
Ritson Hall, Alington House, 4 North Bailey, Durham

5.30pm – 6.30pm        Early Bird Registration, wine and nibbles

6.30 pm – 8.00pm       Dance response to Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass
                                    Readings by Durham University poets

8.30pm                        Informal delegates’ meal at ASK
                                    (Unit 4 Walkergate, Durham)


Saturday 10 September
ES228, ES229 and ES230
Earth Sciences Rooms, University of Durham Science Labs

9.00am – 9.30am         Registration, tea and coffee (ES228)

9.30am – 10.50am       Panel 1: Staging the Past (ES229)

                                    Thom Addinall-Biddulph (Durham)
Washington in Real Life: Rewriting the First President in Thomas Pynchon’s Mason & Dixon

Soad Nigm (Newcastle)
“There is no Stoppage, and Never Can be Stoppage”: Walt Whitman and America’s Imperialist Identity

Catherine Charlwood (Independent)
“An Almost National American Poet”: Inauguration Poetry, Robert Frost and Memory as Performance

9.30am – 10.50am       Panel 2: The Self in Society (ES230)

Robbie Moore (Cambridge)
“A Lounging Generation”: Long Legs, Modern Architecture, and Jamesian Cosmopolitanism

Rob Lederer (Edinburgh)
Archiving Identity in the Endangered Domestic Spaces of E. L Doctorow’s Homer and Langley and Paul Auster’s Sunset Park

10.50am – 12.10pm    Panel 3: Constructing the American Subject (ES229)

                                    Fraser Mann (York St. John)
                                    Tim O’Brien and the Nature of Vietnam Truth

                                    Mark Sandy (Durham)
“Fiery Particle”: Keats’ Romantic Self-Presences in the Writings of F. Scott Fitzgerald

Ben Robbins (Freie Universität, Berlin)
Faulkner and Marcuse: The Erotic Identities Between Literature and Film

10.50am – 12.10pm    Panel 4: American Mythologies (ES230)

                                    Camilla Dubini (UCL)
Self-Creation in Marianna de Marco Torgovnick’s Crossing Ocean Parkway

Richard Maguire (King’s College/Arcadia)
Witnesses against Our Vanishing: David Wojnarowicz’s Mythopoeia

M. Cooper Harriss (Virginia Tech)
On the Pseudobiblical: The Rhetoric of Biblical Rhetoric and the Construction of African-American Identity

12.10pm – 1.00pm      Lunch (ES228)

1.00pm – 2.20pm        Panel 5: Narratives of Belonging and Exclusion (ES229)
           
                                    Roaa Ali (Birmingham)
Arab-American Playwrights and the Confrontation of Stereotype

Xavier Marco del Pont (Royal Holloway)
“We will never run out of you people”: Marginalised Selves and the Repellence of the Other in Thomas Pynchon’s Inherent Vice

Ery Shin (Oxford)
Kristevan Abjection in Djuna Barnes: Silence, Babble, Narcissism, Animality

1.00pm – 2.20pm        Panel 6: Dissecting the American Aesthetic (ES230)

                                    Michael Heitkemper-Yates (Edinburgh)
Toward the Threshold of Experience: Metafiction, Modal Theory and the High Ironic Mode

Nicola Strazzanti (Universitá degli Studi di Catania)
The Mechanics of Discursive Identity: Translingual Practices in Raymond Federman’s Double or Nothing

Maxwell Minckler (Durham)
Unself, Undress and Unfinish: The Possibilities of Absence in James Tate’s Poetics

2.20pm – 3.40pm        Panel 7: Poetry and Performance (ES229)

Adam Crothers (Cambridge)
“You can’t escape form. Belie / ve me”: Identifying the Offensive in Demske, Muldoon and Seidel

Peter Maber (Cambridge)
Performing the Self and the World in the Poetry of Delmore Schwartz, John Berryman and Sylvia Plath

3.40pm – 4.10pm        Tea and coffee (ES228)

4.10pm – 5.40pm        Keynote lecture from John Beck, Newcastle University 
                                    (ES229)
This lecture will be followed by a round table discussion drawing together the symposium's main themes.    

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