Tagged: MWCBS

CFP: NACBS/MWCBS ANNUAL MEETING | MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA NOVEMBER 7-9, 2014

minneapolis skylineThe NACBS and its Midwest affiliate, the Midwest Conference on British Studies, seek participation by scholars in all areas of British Studies for the 2014 meeting. We will meet in Minneapolis, Minnesota, from November 7-9, 2014. We solicit proposals for panels on Britain, the British Empire and the British world. Our interests range from the medieval to the modern. We welcome participation by scholars across the humanities and social sciences. We invite panel proposals addressing selected themes, methodology, and pedagogy, as well as roundtable discussions of topical and thematic interest, including conversations among authors of recent books and reflections on landmark scholarship. We are particularly interested in submissions that have a broad chronological focus and/or interdisciplinary breadth. North American scholars, international scholars and Ph.D. students are all encouraged to submit proposals for consideration.

Panels typically include three papers and a comment, and ideally a separate chair; roundtables customarily have four presentations, as well as a chair; proposals which only include papers will be less likely to succeed. We are not able to accommodate individual paper proposals; those with paper ideas may search for additional panelists on lists such as H-Albion or at venues such as the NACBS Facebook page. Applicants may also write to the Program Chair for suggestions (nacbspogram@gmail.com). All scholars working in the field of British Studies are encouraged to apply for the 2014 conference. Panels that include both emerging and established scholars are encouraged: we welcome the participation of junior scholars and Ph.D. candidates beyond the qualifying stage. To foster intellectual interchange, we ask applicants to compose panels that feature participation from multiple institutions. No participant will be permitted to take part in more than one session.

The submission website at http://www.nacbs.org/conferences.html will open in mid­ January; submissions will close as of March 1, 2014. If you have questions about the submission process or suggestions for program development, please contact

Susan D. Amussen
NACBS Program Chair
Professor of History University of California, Merced
Email: nacbsprogram@gmail.com

CFP: MWCBS 2013

Chicago MontageThe Midwest Conference on British Studies is proud to announce that its 60th Annual Meeting will be hosted by DePaul University in Chicago, October 11-13, 2013.  

The keynote speaker will be Professor Robert Bucholz of Loyola University of Chicago, and the plenary address will be given by Professor Jonathan Rose of Drew University. The MWCBS is also pleased to celebrate the career of Professor Walter L. Arnstein at this year’s meeting.

The MWCBS seeks papers from scholars in all fields of British Studies, broadly defined to include those who study England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, and Britain’s Empire and the Commonwealth. We welcome scholars from a broad spectrum of disciplines, including but not limited to history, literature, political science, gender studies and art history. Proposals for complete sessions are preferred, although proposals for individual papers will be considered. We welcome roundtables (of four participants plus chair) and panels (of three participants plus chair/commentator) that:

* offer cross-disciplinary perspectives on topics in British Studies

* situate the arts, letters, and sciences in a British cultural context

* examine representations of British and imperial/Commonwealth national identities

* consider Anglo-American relations, past and present

* examine new trends in British Studies

* assess a major work or body of work by a scholar

* explore new developments in digital humanities and/or research methodologies

After positive responses to recent roundtables on teaching and employment, we would particularly like to receive proposals for teaching roundtables that discuss collaborative or innovative learning techniques in the British Studies classroom and for professional development roundtables dealing with research, publication, or employment. We are also pleased to announce a session on holdings available to scholars conducting research in the Chicago area.

The MWCBS welcomes papers presented by advanced graduate students and will award the Walter L. Arnstein Prize for the best graduate student paper(s) given at the conference. A limited number of graduate travel scholarships will be available, and all graduate students are encouraged to apply. Please see the MWCBS website for further details: https://mwcbs.edublogs.org/

Proposals must:

–       Include a 200-word abstract for each paper and a brief, 1-page c.v. for each participant, including chairs and commentators.

–       For full panels, include a brief 200-word preview of the panel as a whole.

 

Please place the panel proposal, the accompanying paper proposals and vitas in one file and send it as a single attachment. Also identify within the email the contact person for the panel.

All proposals should be submitted electronically by April 15, 2013, to the Program Committee Chair, Jennifer McNabb at JL-Mcnabb@wiu.edu .

Program Committee: Martin Greig, Ryerson University; Phil Harling, University of Kentucky; Robin Hermann, University of Louisiana at Lafayette; Isaac Land, Indiana State University; Jennifer McNabb, Chair, Western Illinois University; and Cathryn Spence, University of Guelph.

 

 

Midwest Conference on British Studies Graduate Student Travel Grants

Due to the generosity of donors to the Midwest Conference on British Studies, we will be able to give out a limited number of $200 grants to support graduate student travel to the MWCBS 2015 in Detroit.

 

Grants will be awarded according to both financial need and the significance of attending the MWCBS to students’ professional development.

 

If you would like to apply, please fill out this form completely and submit it by 1 September, 2015:

Application for MWCBS Graduate Student Travel Grant 2015

MWCBS 2012 Registration Information

Nathan Phillips Square, TorontoI am pleased to invite you to the annual Midwest Conference on British
Studies, 12-14 October 2012.   Our meeting is at the Delta Chelsea Hotel
(33 Gerard St. West) in downtown Toronto.  Our host is the University of
Toronto.  The Delta Chelsea Hotel is offering a discounted conference rate
for MWCBS attendees.

As with last year’s conference, high levels of interest in the conference
and the quality of the proposals mean that we will run four simultaneous
panels instead of three.  And, like last year, our registration process is
now online.  That way, if you wish to register using your credit card, you
can.  We are using the same system as the North American Conference on
British Studies, so for many of you, the interface should be familiar.

We will hold our annual Friday reception, and our plenary speaker will be
Professor Ian Gentles of Glendon College who will speak on “English
Revolution Studies: The State of Play.”  Professor Gentles has written
many articles and three books on the English Revolution: The New Model
Army in England, Ireland and Scotland, 1645-1653 (1992); Soldiers, Writers
and Statesmen of the English Revolution (1998) and The English Revolution
and the Wars in the Three Kingdoms, 1638-1652 (2007). Professor Gentles is
a fellow of the Royal Historical Society, and recipient of several major
research grants from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
of Canada.

Our Saturday luncheon keynote speaker will be John Gillis, Professor
Emeritus of Rutgers University who will speak on “The Rise and Fall of the
Island Race.”  In addition to his many articles, Professor Gillis is the
author of six monographs: The Prussian Bureaucracy in Crisis, 1840-60
(1971); Youth and History: Tradition and Change in European Age Relations,
1750-Present (1975); Development of European Society, 1770-1870 (1977);
For Better, For Worse: British Marriages, 1600 to the present (1985); A
World of Their Own Making: Myth, Ritual, and the Quest for Family Values
(1996); Islands of the Mind: How the Human Imagination Created the
Atlantic World (2004).  He has been a fellow of the Woodrow Wilson
International Center for Scholars, the Center for Advanced Study in the
Behavioral Sciences at Stanford, and the Swedish Collegium for Advanced
Study in the Social Sciences.

If you would like to see the MWCBS 2012 program, you can download it as a .pdf.  Please keep in mind that while the schedule is confirmed, the program is a draft and there may be a few slight adjustments in the coming weeks.

To register for the conference, please visit the Regonline interface.*
The conference fees are as follows:

Early Registration (through 14 September): $100.00
Regular Registration (after 14 September): $120.00
Early Registration for Graduate Students (through 14 September): $70.00
Regular Registration for Graduate Students (after 30 September): $85.00

Luncheon: $20.00
The reception is open to registered MWCBS attendees

* all panelists are required to register

To reserve a hotel room at the discounted MWCBS rate, call the Delta Chelsea hotel Reservations Department at 1-800-CHELSEA (1-800-243-5732). Be sure to identify yourself as being with the Midwest Conference on British Studies and call before September 11, 2012. The rates in CAD are as follows:

Single OR Double, $119.00 per night
Triple, $139.00 per night
Quad, $159.00 per night

Note that each extra person sharing a room will be charged an additional $20 per
night. There is no charge for children under 18 sharing with parents.

Airport Shuttle Service: http://www.torontoairportexpress.com/schedule.php

As you can see, the MWCBS 2012 will be full of interesting panels.  This
is due to the hard work of our Program Committee.  For their work in
putting together a stellar line-up of panels, I would like to thank Lia
Paradis, Chair of the Program Committee, and the Program Committee
members, Eugene Beiriger, Phil Harling, Robin Hermann, Isaac Land, Jennifer McNabb, and Lisa Sigel.

I would also like to thank our Local Arrangements Chair, Jennifer Mori,
who has accomplished the difficult task of finding a good location,
keeping our registration costs down, and managing the day-to-day logistics
of organizing the conference.  It’s a lot of hard work, so be sure to
thank her when you see her in Toronto.

I very much look forward to seeing all of you in Toronto in October.
Please be sure to contact us if you have any questions.

Best wishes,

Jason

Jason M. Kelly PhD, FSA
President, Midwest Conference on British Studies
Director, IUPUI Arts and Humanities Institute
Associate Professor of British History, IUPUI
IUPUI Arts and Humanities Institute
Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
755 W. Michigan Street UL 1140D
Indianapolis, IN 46202-5195
telephone: 317.274.1689
fax: 317.274.1024
email: jaskelly@iupui.edu

CFP: MWCBS 2012, University of Toronto in Ontario, Canada, 12-14 October

The Midwest Conference on British Studies is proud to announce that its fifty-ninth annual meeting will be hosted by the University of Toronto in Ontario, Canada, October 12-14th, 2012.

The MWCBS seeks papers from scholars in all fields of British Studies, broadly defined to include those who study England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, and Britain’s empire. We welcome scholars from the broad spectrum of disciplines, including but not limited to history, literature, political science, gender studies and art history. Proposals for complete sessions are preferred, although proposals for individual papers will be considered.  We welcome roundtables (of four participants plus chair) and panels (of three participants plus chair/commentator) that:

* offer cross-disciplinary perspectives on topics in British Studies

* situate the arts, letters, and sciences in a British cultural context

* examine representations of British and imperial/Commonwealth national
identities

* consider Anglo-American relations, past and present

* examine new trends in British Studies

* assess a major work or body of work by a scholar

* explore new developments in digital humanities and/or research methodologies

After a very positive response to last year’s first teaching roundtable, we would particularly like to receive proposals for teaching roundtables that discuss collaborative or innovative learning techniques in the British
Studies classroom.

The MWCBS welcomes papers presented by advanced graduate students and will award the Walter L. Arnstein Prize for the best graduate student paper(s) given at the conference.

Proposals must:

–    Include a 200-word abstract for each paper and a brief, 1-page c.v. for each participant, including chairs and commentators.

–    For full panels, include a brief 200-word preview of the panel as a whole.

Please place the panel proposal, the accompanying paper proposals and vitas in one file and send it as a single attachment. Also identify within the email the contact person for the panel.

All proposals should be submitted online by April 1, 2012, to the Program Committee Chair, Lia Paradis at lia.paradis@sru.edu.

Visit the MWCBS website at https://mwcbs.edublogs.org/

CFP (deadline extended to 1 May): Midwest Conference on British Studies, November 4-6, 2011

St Mary's, Terra HauteCALL FOR PAPERS
Midwest Conference on British Studies 57th Annual Meeting
November 4-6, 2011, Terre Haute, IN

The Midwest Conference on British Studies is proud to announce that its
fifty-seventh annual meeting will be hosted by Indiana State University in Terre Haute, IN. The plenary speaker will be Paula Backscheider,
Phillpott-Stephens Eminent Scholar of English Literature at Auburn
University, and author of Eighteenth Century Women Poets and Their Poetry.
Peter Bailey, Professor Emeritus at the University of Manitoba, and the
author of Leisure and Class in Victorian England, will deliver the keynote address. The program will also include panels honoring the career of Hilda Smith, Professor at the University of Cincinnati, and author of All Men and Both Sexes.

The MWCBS seeks papers from scholars in all fields of British Studies, broadly defined to include those who study England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, and Britain’s empire. We welcome scholars from the broad spectrum of disciplines, including but not limited to history, literature, political science, gender studies and art history. Proposals for complete sessions are preferred, although proposals for individual papers will be considered. Especially welcome are roundtables and panels that:

* offer cross-disciplinary perspectives on topics in British Studies

* discuss collaborative or innovative learning techniques in the British Studies classroom

* situate the arts, letters, and sciences in a British cultural context

* examine representations of British and imperial/Commonwealth national identities

* consider Anglo-American relations, past and present

* examine new trends in British Studies

* assess a major work or body of work by a scholar

The MWCBS welcomes papers presented by advanced graduate students and will award the Walter L. Arnstein Prize at its plenary luncheon for the best graduate student paper(s) given at the conference.

Proposals should include a 200-word abstract for each paper and a brief, 1-page c.v. for each participant, including chairs and commentators. For full panels, please include a brief 200-word preview of the panel as a whole. Please place the panel proposal, and its accompanying paper proposals and vitas in one file. Please make certain that all contact information, particularly email addresses are correct and current. All proposals should be submitted online by May 1, 2011, to the Program Committee Chair, Lia Paradis at lia.paradis@sru.edu.

Visit the MWCBS website at <https://mwcbs.edublogs.org>.

MWCBS Program Committee:  Lia Paradis, Chair, Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania; Gene Beiriger, DePaul University; Lori Campbell, University of Pittsburgh; Essaka Joshua, University of Notre Dame; Chris Otter, Ohio State University; Anne Rodrick, Wofford College.

CFP: Midwest Conference on British Studies, 4-6 November 2011

St Mary's, Terra HauteCALL FOR PAPERS
Midwest Conference on British Studies 57th Annual Meeting
November 4-6, 2011, Terre Haute, IN

The Midwest Conference on British Studies is proud to announce that its fifty-seventh annual meeting will be hosted by Indiana State University in Terre Haute, IN. The plenary speaker will be Paula Backscheider, Phillpott-Stephens Eminent Scholar of English Literature at Auburn University, and author of Eighteenth Century Women Poets and Their Poetry. Peter Bailey, Professor Emeritus at the University of Manitoba, and the author of Leisure and Class in Victorian England, will deliver the keynote address. The program will also include panels honoring the career of Hilda Smith, Professor at the University of Cincinnati, and author of All Men and Both Sexes.

The MWCBS seeks papers from scholars in all fields of British Studies, broadly defined to include those who study England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, and Britain’s empire. We welcome scholars from the broad spectrum of disciplines, including but not limited to history, literature, political science, gender studies and art history. Proposals for complete sessions are preferred, although proposals for individual papers will be considered. Especially welcome are roundtables and panels that:

— offer cross-disciplinary perspectives on topics in British Studies

— discuss collaborative or innovative learning techniques in the British Studies classroom

— situate the arts, letters, and sciences in a British cultural context

— examine representations of British and imperial/Commonwealth national identities

— consider Anglo-American relations, past and present

— examine new trends in British Studies

— assess a major work or body of work by a scholar

The MWCBS welcomes papers presented by advanced graduate students and will award the Walter L. Arnstein Prize at its plenary luncheon for the best graduate student paper(s) given at the conference.

Proposals should include a 200-word abstract for each paper and a brief, 1-page c.v. for each participant, including chairs and commentators. For full panels, please include a brief 200-word preview of the panel as a whole. Please place the panel proposal, and its accompanying paper proposals and vitas in one file. Please make certain that all contact information, particularly email addresses are correct and current. All proposals should be submitted online by April 15, 2011, to the Program Committee Chair, Lia Paradis at lia.paradis@sru.edu.

MWCBS Program Committee:  Lia Paradis, Chair, Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania; Gene Beiriger, DePaul University; Lori Campbell, University of Pittsburgh; Essaka Joshua, University of Notre Dame; Chris Otter, Ohio State University; Anne Rodrick, Wofford College.

President’s Letter, 12 September 2010

Dear Friends of the MWCBS:

Please join us for our upcoming conference, to be held in Cleveland from 8-10 October.  Thanks to Prof. Connie Evans and Baldwin Wallace College for hosting the conference this year.  We’ll meet in the Renaissance Cleveland Hotel in Public Square, in the heart of downtown Cleveland with easy access to restaurants, the lakefront, and local attractions (including the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for those who want to see the Beatles exhibit!).

As always, we have a full program of papers representing a wide spectrum of scholarly interests and approaches within British history.  This year’s program features plenary addresses by Prof. Retha Warnicke of Arizona State University and Prof. Martha Vicinus of the University of Michigan.  Continuing the tradition begun at last year’s conference, we will devote several panels to the work of a single scholar; this year’s panels will examine the work of Prof. David Cressy of Ohio State University.

If you have previously attended an MWCBS conference, you know that this is a thought-provoking, convivial gathering of scholars eager to discuss ideas.  If you haven’t yet enjoyed that experience, you’ll be welcomed as warmly as if you had been coming for years.  In either case, we hope you will join us for this year’s conference.  Registration information is available through the MWCBS homepage.

Please consider getting involved in the MWCBS.  We especially welcome participation on the program committee; please contact Prof. Rick Incorvati (rick.incorvati@wittenberg.edu) to express an interest in that committee.  If you would like to host the conference in the future, please contact the incoming president, Prof. Jason Kelly (jaskelly@iupui.ed).

I look forward to seeing you in Cleveland.

With all good wishes,

Carol Herringer

MWCBS 2010 Conference Registration

The registration form for the MWCBS 2010 is now available for download as a Word document here:
https://sites.google.com/site/mwcbs1/conference-programs-1/2010MWCBSRegistrationForm.doc?attredirects=0&d=1

Conference attendees arriving from outside the United States may simply return the registration form (or email Eric Tenbus at tenbus@ucmo.edu), indicating that you will be paying for your registration fee and lunch in cash at the registration table at the hotel.  Please respond by September 21.

To access other information about the conference, including hotel registration and the program, visit the MWCBS 2010 Conference page.

2010 MWCBS Conference Program

The 2010 MWCBS Program is available as a .pdf here

MWCBS 56th Annual Conference

Baldwin Wallace College

8-10 October 2010

Friday, 8 October 2010

9:30-10:30            Registration

Session One

Panels 1-3

10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.

1. Between Hearth and Hedgerow:  Nature, Landscape, and the Critique of

Cultural Boundaries in Victorian Literature The Hopkins Room

Chair:  Daniel Shea (Austin Peay State University)

1.     “’Here I Can Rove at Will’:  Transgressing Boundaries in Harriet Martineau’s Lake District Writings,” Amanda Adams (Muskingum University)

2.     “’Step in the puddle and save your life!’:  Richard Jefferies against the Current,” Daniel Shea (Austin Peay State University)

3.     “’If the hedges are too close round, they may kill the plants’:  Evolving Domestic Landscapes in Olive Schreiner’s From Man to Man,” Hannah Tracy (Seattle University)

2. The Popular Press and Public Consciousness The Holden Room

Chair:  James Sack (University of Illinois at Chicago)

1.     “Jeers, Jingo, and Jesuits:  Britishness, Edmund Burke, and Crises of Empire in Eighteenth-Century Britain,” Johnathan M. Pettinato (Fordham University)

2.      “Libraries, Empire, and Literacy:  How Subscription Libraries Shaped Acculturation in the Colonies of the British Empire,” Sterling Joseph Coleman, Jr. (Central State University)

3.     “From Racial Types to Typography:  Mapping Empire in the Wide World Magazine,” Sigrid Anderson Cordell (University of Michigan)

4.     “’The nearest contacts with truth’:  Authoring and Publishing the British First World War Memoir,” Ian A. Isherwood (University of Glasgow)

3.  Conceiving Romantic-Era Bodies and Relations The Brush Room

Chair:  Rick Incorvati (Wittenberg University)

1.     “From Taxonomy to Family Tree:  The Transformation of the Linnaean system in Earasmus Darwin’s The Loves of the Plants,” Bendta Shroeder (Brandeis University)

2.     “Soulful Sensorium:  The Body in Early (British) Romantic Brain Science,” Lisa Ann Robertson (University of Alberta)

3.     “Sex, Poverty, and ‘Savagery’ in Malthus’ Population Principle and the Condition of England Question,” Jenise R. DePinto (The College of Saint Rose)

4.     “What Disability Studies Can do for Romanticism:  William Wordsworth’s Uncouth Shape,” Essaka Joshua (University of Notre Dame)

12:00-1:30            Lunch (on your own)

Session Two

Panels 4-6

1:30-3:00 p.m.

4. Experience, History, and Prophecy in Early Modern Warfare The Hopkins Room

Chair and Commentator:  Hilda Smith (University of Cincinnati)

1.     “Prisoners, Patients, Trauma, and Survival in the English Civil Wars and the Interregnum, 1640-1660,” Annie St. John-Stark (Thompson Rivers University, British Columbia)

2.     “The Rise of the Phoenicians in British Imperial Historiography, 1676-1726,” Jacob Pollock (University of Pittsburgh)

3.     “The Third Anglo-Dutch War and the War of the Grand Alliance in English Political Prophecy:  A Comparison,” Jennifer Nalmpantis (Lakeland Community College)

5.  Parakeets, Elephants, and Porcupines:  Envisioning the Beast from

Dickens to Lawrence The Holden Room

Chair and Commentator:  Laurel Flinn (Johns Hopkins University)

1.     “Flight and Disease:  Sanitation in the Victorian Aviary,” Erika Olbricht (Case Western Reserve University)

2.     “Imperial Nostalgia and the Zoo-Ideal in Kipling and Wells,” Kurt Koenigsberger (Case Western Reserve University)

3.     “Representing Animals:  D. H. Lawrence’s Creative Evolution,” Raymond Watkins (Case Western Reserve University)

6. Detection and the Marginal Identity The Brush Room

Chair:  Martha Vicinus (University of Michigan)

1.     “In the ‘Great Cesspool’ of Empire:  Examining Fin de Siècle Colonial Masculine Identity in Sherlock Holmes,” Catherine Hart (The Ohio State University)

2.     “Tracking the Woman Detective through the ‘Lead Desert,’” Dagni Bredesen (Eastern Illinois University)

3.     “A Question of Orientation:  Gay Spies and National Security after World War II,” Chet DeFonso (Northern Michigan University)

Session 3

Panels 7-9

3:30-5:00 p.m.

7. Religious Conflict in Early Modern Britain and Europe The Hopkins Room

Chair:  Warren Johnston (Algoma University)

Commentator:  Melinda Zook (Purdue University)

1.     “Assessing the ‘Monster’:  The Depth and Developments of Elizabethan Intelligence on the Holy roman Empire,” David Scott Gehring (University of Wisconsin, Madison)

2.     “Dutch Arminianism through English Eyes, 1608-1630,” Eric Platt (St. Francis College)

3.     “’A Perfect Sinke of All Errours’:  Quakerism and the Debate on Toleration in Scotland and Europe, c. 1688 – c. 1700,” Paul Jenkins (University of Glasgow)

8. Birth, Death, and Morbidity:  Women’s Experience in the 19th Century The Holden Room

Chair:  Lia Paradis (Slippery Rock University)

1.     “Elizabeth Thompson and the Infamy of the Maternal Pelvis,” Pam Lieske (Kent State University at Trumbull)

2.     “’But the Undertakers Urge Her On’:  The Cultural Construction of Mourning in Elizabeth Gaskell’s Mary Barton,” Jennifer A. Swartz (Lake Erie College)

3.     “’The Valley of the Shadow of Books’:  George Gissing and Morbid Female Detachment,” Marisa Palacios Knox (University of California, Berkeley)

9. Romantic Theologies The Brush Room

Chair and Commentator:  Carol Engelhardt Herringer (Wright State University)

1.     “Consumerism, Mourning, and the Picturesque in Romantic Evangelicalism,” Joseph Stubenrauch (Indiana University)

2.     “Original Sinners:  Original Sin and Individuality in Coleridgean Theology,” Christopher Dinkel (Fort Hays State University)

3.     “’Power Dwells Apart’:  A Theology of the Godless Sublime in Shelley’s Alpine Hymns,” Thomas Prasch (Washburn University)

Plenary Address and Reception

Sponsored by the

North American Conference on British Studies

6:30-8:30 p.m.

Shucker’s

Plenary Speaker:  Martha Vicinus, University of Michigan

“Late Nineteenth-Century Nonbelievers and the Search for Spiritual Meaning”

Saturday, 9 October 2010

Session 4

Panels 10-11

8:30-10:00 a.m.

10. The Long Eighteenth-Century Court, the Public Sphere, and the Financial

Revolution The Hopkins Room

Chair: Robert Bucholz (Loyola University Chicago)

Commentator: Marilyn Morris (University of North Texas)

1.     “Affective Relationships and Political Authority in the Commemoration of William III’s Entry into the Hague,” Amy Oberlin (Loyola University Chicago)

2.     “Royal Physicians as Gatekeepers of Information,” Steven Catania (Loyola University Chicago)

3.     “Political Capital:  The Investment Strategies of Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough,” John Krenzke (Loyola University Chicago)

11.  Ideology and Experiments in Nineteenth-Century Fiction The Holden Room

Chair:  Barry Milligan (Wright State University)

1.     “Transnational Americans:  Representing Democracy and Republicanism in Nineteenth-Century British North America,” Oana Godeanu (Miami University)

2.     “Dickens and Utilitarian Time,” John McBratney (John Carroll University)

3.     “Jealousy and Lyrical Excursions in George Meredith’s The Ordeal of Richard Feverel,” Martin J. Fashbaugh (Morris College)

12.  Colonial Identities: 19th and 20th Century Art and Fiction The Brush Room

Chair:  Chet DeFonso (Northern Michigan University)

1.     “Racial Theory and Neoclassicism in Enlightenment Thought,” Jason M. Kelly (Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis)

2.      “Sovereign Anxieties:  Kipling and the Afghans,” Zarena Aslami (Michigan State University)

3.     “Colonial Identities:  Defining Britishness in Catherine Helen Spence’s A Week in the Future,” Lindsy M. Lawrence (University of Arkansas, Fort Smith)

4.     “From Picadilly to the Simla Ridge:  Wooing the Coy Mistress of the Art in the Name of Taste and Country,” Renate Dohmen (University of Louisiana at Lafayette)

Session 5

Panels 12-14

10:15-11:45 a.m.

13. Honoring David Cressy The Hopkins Room

Chair: Michael Graham (University of Akron)

Commentator:  David Cressy (Ohio State University)

1.     “Beyond Description:  How Thomas Hobbes Re-Conceptualized the Social Order,” Lee Beier (Illinois State University, Emeritus)

2.      “Seditious Talk or Sedition?:  Restoring Social History to the Study of Revolutionary Situations in Restoration England,” Newton Key (Eastern Illinois University)

14. Romantic Expression in its Generic and Rhetorical Contexts The Holden Room

Chair:  Jason Kelly (Indiana University-Perdue University, Indianapolis)

1.     “Anglo-French Romantic Anti-Structure: Confessions of an English Opium-Eater and Symphonie Fantastique, Barry Milligan (Wright State University) and Dennis Loranger (Wright State University)

2.     “’Wanting both unity and precision?’:  Thomas De Quincey’s Dialogue with New Rhetorical Textbook Traditions in His Essays on Rhetoric and Style,” Katie Homar (University of Pittsburgh)

3.     ”Sir George Hayter’s Portrait of Lady Caroline Montague,” James E. Bryan (University of Wisconsin-Stout)

15. Bread and Water:  The Politics of Food and Water Supply in Modern

Britain, 1800-1960 The Brush Room

Chair and Commentator:  Eugene Beiriger (DePaul University)

1.      “’Where’ Were Victorian Water Supply Problems and Solutions?:  Employing Actor-Network Theory to Locate the Origins of Municipal Water Systems,” John Broich (Case Western University)

2.     “Constipation, Food Security, and U-Boats:  The Bio-Geopolitics of White Wheat Bread, 1800-1920,” Christopher Otter (The Ohio State University)

3.     “St. Georginas versus the ‘Chemical Dragon’:  The British Housewives League’s Battle for Wholesome Food and Water,” Amy Whipple (Xavier University)

Plenary Address, Business Meeting, and Lunch

12:00-2:00 p.m.

Shucker’s

Plenary Speaker:  Retha Warnicke, Arizona State University

“Anne Boleyn, Anne Stanhope, and Poetic Animal Imagery:

A Hind, a Lion, and a Wolf”

Session 6

Panels 15-17

2:15-3:45 p.m.

16. Honoring David Cressy The Hopkins Room

Chair:  Retha Warnicke (Arizona State University)

Commentator:  David Cressy (Ohio State University)

1.     “Invoking the King’s Ire:  The Dangerous Talk of Sir Francis Bacon and the 1621 Parliament,” Chris R. Kyle (Syracuse University)

2.     “The Dangerous Talk of Clement Coke in the Parliament of 1626,”  Michael Young (Illinois Wesleyan University)

3.     “The ‘Strange Speeches’ of Mr. Melvin:  Dangerous Talk and the Crisis of 1628,” Allastair Bellany (Rutgers University)

17. Platform, Pulpit, and Pedagogy:  Shaping Identity in Victorian England The Holden Room

Chair and Commentator:  Jules Gerhke (Saginaw Valley State University)

1.     “Church Plate and Church Identity:  Spiritualizing Material Goods in Victorian England,” Carol Engelhardt Herringer (Wright State University)

2.     “’Preventing everything from being centred in London’:  The Victorian Lecture Circuit and Provincial Identity,” Anne Rodrick (Wofford College)

3.     “Equal in the Eyes of the Law:  Educational Demands and the Changing Face of Late Victorian Catholic Identity,” Eric G. Tenbus (University of Central Missouri)

18. Configurations of the Boer War The Brush Room
Chair:  Lori Campbell (University of Pittsburgh)

Commentator:  Lia Paradis (Slippery Rock University)

1.     “Constructing Visual Memory:  Photography and the South African War,” David Downs (Northern Illinois University)

2.     “’My African friend or foe?’  Perceptions of the Native Races by Supporters and Critics of the South African War, 1899-1902,” Jodie N. Mader (Thomas More College)

3.     “The ‘Weenen’ and the Reconfiguration of the Anglo-Boer Conflict,” Nicole M. Mares (King’s College, Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania)

Session 7

Panels 18-20

4:00-5:30 p.m.

19. Honoring David Cressy The Hopkins Room

Chair:  Connie S. Evans (Baldwin Wallace College)

Commentator:  David Cressy (Ohio State University)

1.      “Burning Books and Burning Bones in Tudor Cambridge,” Susan Wabuda (Fordham University)

2.     “The Spectre of Clerical Celibacy in Late Stuart England,” Michelle Wolf (Ohio State University)

3.     Summary Reflections, Connie S. Evans (Baldwin Wallace College)

20. Reviewing “Edwardianism” in the Visual Arts The Holden Room

Chair:  Anne Helmreich (Case Western Reserve University)

1.     “Promoting a ‘new internationalism’:  The Significance of the Artist-Designer beyond the London-Paris Axis from c. 1900-15,” Andrew Stephenson (University of East London)

2.     “Human Character at the Edwardian Royal Academy, c. 1910,” Pamela Fletcher (Bowdoin College)

3.     “Reviewing ‘Edwardianism’ in the Visual Arts:  The Case of the Camden Town Group,” Ysanne Holt (Northumbria University)

21. Victorian Subversion and Reform:  Readers and Society The Brush Room

Chair:  Thomas Prasch (Washburn University)

1.     “To Paris, with Sympathy:  Undoing the Myth of Victorian Moral Superiority in Anthony Trollope’s The Way We Live Now,” Kristi N. Embry (Pfeiffer University)

2.      “The Fabians and the Fairy Tale:  Socialist and Feminist Subtexts in E(dith) Nesbit Fantasy Books for Children,” Lori Campbell (University of Pittsburgh)

3.     “The Critic as Master:  Ruskin’s ‘liberal education of the artisan,’” David Thiele (University of Mount Union)

4.     “Fighting Doubt and Uncertainty:  Enlightenment Ideology in Bram Stoker’s Dracula,” Sein Oh (University of Illinois at Chicago)

Sunday, 10 October 2010

Session 8

Panels 21-23

8:45-10:15

22. Missionaries, Merchants, and Naturalists:  British Travelers as Global

Agents The Hopkins Room

Chair: Ben Scharf (West Virginia University)

1.     “British Missionaries as Naturalists:  The Dual Role of British Missionaries on 19th Century Madagascar,” Thomas Anderson (University of Pittsburgh)

2.     “Thomas B. Glover:  A British Merchant and the Rise of Modern Japan,” James Hommes (University of Pittsburgh)

3.     “Stranger Communities:  Protestant England’s Reactions to French Protestants,” Thomas Rushford (U.S. House of Representatives)

23. Voices beyond the Pale:  Women’s Discursive Tactics in Nineteenth-Century

Novels The Holden Room

Chair and Commentator:  Michael Blackie (Hiram College)

1.     “The Mistress of Bleak House:  Esther Summerson and the Discourse of the Law,” Kirsten Parkinson (Hiram College)

2.     “Maria Edgeworth, Mary Russell Mitford, and Elizabeth Gaskell:  Authorizing Provincial Women Writers through the Discourse of Natural History,” Martha Bohrer (North Central College)

3.     “’O Thou, the great Unknown, Unseen’:  Anonymity and Invisibility in Hymnbooks Edited by Women,” Alisa Clapp-Itnyre (Indiana University East)

24. Thinking with Feet:  the Meaning of the Foot in British Literature The Brush Room

Chair:  Pam Lieske (Kent State University at Trumbull)

1.      “Fancy’s Boot:  Making Shoes Last,” John Twyning (University of Pittsburgh)

2.     “A shoemaker sell flesh and blood—O indignity!’:  Staging Labor and Artisanal Consciousness in The Shoemaker’s Holiday,” Matthew Kendrick (University of Pittsburgh)

3.     “’This Petty Sort of Theft’:  The Lady Footpad in Defoe’s Moll Flanders,” Julie Beaulieu (University of Pittsburgh)

Session 9

Panels 24-26

10:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m.

25. Troubled Gender Relations in Nineteenth-Century Rhetoric The Hopkins Room

Chair and Commentator:  John McBratney (John Carroll University)

1.     “His and Hers:  Ownership and Victorian Marriage in Dombey and Son and Lady Audley’s Secret,” Katherine Osborne (University of Kentucky)

2.     “Catherine Earnshaw’s Ghost Form:  Displacement and Reclamation on the Heights,” Hannah Freeman (Pikeville College)

3.     “The Troubled Case of Mr. Hyde and the Hermaphroditic Body,” Mary Clai Jones (University of Kentucky)

26. Transatlantic Literature and the Production of National Identities,

1870-1910 The Holden Room

Chair:  Keridiana Chez (CUNY Graduate Center)

1.     “Henry James and the Poetics of Authentic Display,” George Phillips (University of Kentucky)

2.     “The Stars and Stripes and the British Empire:  Anglo-Saxonism and the Problem of the Frontier in Arthur Conan Doyle’s A Study in Scarlet and Bram Stoker’s Dracula,” Joanna Collins (University of Pittsburgh)

3.     “Sharing the White Man’s Burden:  Kipling’s Kim in the American McClure’s,” Leigha McReynolds (George Washington University)

4.     “The Production of Humaneness through the Pet Dog in English and American Literature,” Keridiana Chez (CUNY Graduate Center)

27.  New Approaches to Nineteenth-Century British Women Poets The Brush Room

Chair and Commentator:  Noelle Chao (Ohio State University)

1.     “’Things by their Right Names’:  Sarah Hale, Anna Barbauld, and ‘American’ Literature,” Derek Pacheco (Purdue University)

2.     “’Old Idolatry’:  Letitia Landon’s Ephemeral Hellenism,” Noah Comet (Ohio State University, Mansfield)

3.     “’A vein of melancholy love’:  Felicia Hemans and an Epistemology of Love,” Seth Reno (Ohio State University)

Future MWCBS Meetings

2011:  Champaign, Illinois, hosted by the University of Illinois-Champaign

2012:  Toronto, Canada, hosted by the University of Toronto