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Fourth NEWW November meeting




NARRATION, GENDER, IRONY

As a follow-up of previous NEWW conferences about female narration (Bochum, May 2009), and more specifically about narrative techniques used by 19th-century German female authors (Nancy, June 2010), we intended to organize a meeting where female narration and irony could be discussed and compared the irony of male narrators.

This seemed to be an important item for our research. Vera Nünning, in her introduction to the Bochum conference, had shown which kinds of strategies English women novelists used when it came to describing female experience. In Nancy, different contributors illustrated these for German novelists (such as Louise von François). Irony was clearly one of those strategies.

An important aspect is also that this "female irony" has not always been understood as such by contemporary readers (cf. for instance the incipit of Mme Benoist's novel Célianne and its rewritings by contemporary journalists; Jane Austen as translated in French by Mme de Montolieu).

We considered that, however difficult to realize, we needed means to determine how to recognize supposed irony as used by narrative instances. Stéfan Sinclair suggested to us that electronic tools might be helpful both for tracing irony in narrative texts, and for studying the role irony played (plays) in literary communication. This was what we intended to discuss during this 4th November meeting.

PhD-students of Huizinga Institute were invited to send proposals... We planned to ask them to provide the organizers with a number of relevant (potentially ironic) fragments of texts, to have them treated by the computer, and further discussed in order to possibly prepare a collective presentation in an international conference.

Yet there were no PhD-students working on irony, or sufficiently interested...

We now plan, with some of the NEWW /COST members interested, to collaborate: to put a number of supposedly "ironic" texts together, discuss them, and have them treated. This will be a collaboration with members of the SATOR: the Société pour l'Analyse de la Topique Romanesque, which focuses on computer assisted research on narrative topoi, and with colleagues of the Huygens Institute, The Hague.


Participation of:

  • Madeleine Jeay (McMaster University Canada)
  • Stéfan Sinclair (id.)
  • Daniel Maher (University of Calgary Canada)

Interested? Contact organizers:

SvD, August 2010




  • Conferences > NEWW November meetings > 2010

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