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9.15-10.00 <br> 9.15-10.00 <br>
''Keynote speech:''<br><br> ''Keynote speech:''<br><br>
-*Ewa Kraskowska (AMU, Poznan) and Brygida Helbig-Mischewski (Szczecin University):<br> +*[http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Ewa_Kraskowska Ewa Kraskowska] (AMU, Poznan) and [http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Brygida_Helbig-Mischewski Brygida Helbig-Mischewski] (Szczecin University):<br>
**[[One day in Pozna?]], or how Maria Komornicka became Piotr "the Changeling" W?ast <br><br> **[[One day in Pozna?]], or how Maria Komornicka became Piotr "the Changeling" W?ast <br><br>
Line 39: Line 39:
**[[A supranational glance]] at women’s equality in the writings of Eliza Orzeszkowa <br><br> **[[A supranational glance]] at women’s equality in the writings of Eliza Orzeszkowa <br><br>
-*Ursula Phillips (UCL, London, Great Britain): <br>+*[http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Ursula_Philips Ursula Phillips] (UCL, London, Great Britain): <br>
**[[Narcyza ?michowska in Translation]]: Transgressing Gender in a Transnational Literary Context<br><br> **[[Narcyza ?michowska in Translation]]: Transgressing Gender in a Transnational Literary Context<br><br>
Line 46: Line 46:
14.30-16.00 <br> 14.30-16.00 <br>
-*Adriana Kovacheva and Lucyna Marzec (AMU, Poznan):<br>+*[http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Adriana_Kovacheva Adriana Kovacheva] and [http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Lucyna_Marzec Lucyna Marzec] (AMU, Poznan):<br>
**Poznan as a Transnational Women Writers’ Space. Visiting places connected with the life of Greater Poland Women Writers. ''Guided walk through Poznan''<br><br> **Poznan as a Transnational Women Writers’ Space. Visiting places connected with the life of Greater Poland Women Writers. ''Guided walk through Poznan''<br><br>
Line 91: Line 91:
**[[Experimental Visualization]] as a Research Tool<br><br> **[[Experimental Visualization]] as a Research Tool<br><br>
-*Jan Rybicki (Jagiellonian University, Kraków, Poland)<br>+*[http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Jan_Rybicki Jan Rybicki] (Jagiellonian University, Kraków, Poland)<br>
**[[Visualizing the femininity]] of the Chawton House corpus<br><br> **[[Visualizing the femininity]] of the Chawton House corpus<br><br>
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**[[Trans-perspective]]: life and work of Ida Verona (1865, Braila, Romania, - 1925, Pr?anj, Kotor, Montenegro) and Ana Maria Marovi? (1815, Venice, Italy – 1887 Venice, Italy)<br><br> **[[Trans-perspective]]: life and work of Ida Verona (1865, Braila, Romania, - 1925, Pr?anj, Kotor, Montenegro) and Ana Maria Marovi? (1815, Venice, Italy – 1887 Venice, Italy)<br><br>
-*Tanja Badali? (University of Nova Gorica, Slovenia): <br>+*[http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Tanja_Badalic Tanja Badali?] (University of Nova Gorica, Slovenia): <br>
**[[The Slovenian author Pavlina Pajk]] and her transcultural activity<br><br> **[[The Slovenian author Pavlina Pajk]] and her transcultural activity<br><br>
Line 115: Line 115:
''Session 5: International Travelling of Women Authors (and how to visualise it)'' <br><br> ''Session 5: International Travelling of Women Authors (and how to visualise it)'' <br><br>
-*Magdalena O?arska (Jan Kochanowski University, Kielce, Poland): <br>+*[http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Magdalena_O%C5%BCarska Magdalena O?arska] (Jan Kochanowski University, Kielce, Poland): <br>
**[[?ucja Rautenstrauchowa’s Travelogue Encyclopaedi]]a with a Novelistic Twist<br><br> **[[?ucja Rautenstrauchowa’s Travelogue Encyclopaedi]]a with a Novelistic Twist<br><br>

Revision as of 11:42, 24 November 2012


Conference Poznan November 2012




Transcultural, Transnational, Trans-disciplinary
Perspectives on Women’s Literary History

International conference presenting the 3rd COST-WWIH Milestone
to be held 26-28.11.2012
at Adam Mickiewicz University, Pozna? (Poland)

Programme

26.11.2012, Monday: “Polish Day”

8.45–9.15
Welcoming and Opening speech

9.15-10.00
Keynote speech:

10.00-10.30

10.30-11.00
Coffee break

11.00–12.30
Session 1: Polish Women Writers and their International Connections

12.30–14.00
Lunch

14.30-16.00

  • Adriana Kovacheva and Lucyna Marzec (AMU, Poznan):
    • Poznan as a Transnational Women Writers’ Space. Visiting places connected with the life of Greater Poland Women Writers. Guided walk through Poznan

16.00-17.30
Working Group meetings

18.30
Dinner in the Hotel



27.11.2012, Tuesday: Milestone 3 Day

9.00-10.00
Session 2: COST-WWIH activities over the last year, in view of collaborative research

10.00-10.15
Coffee break

10.15-12.15
Session 3: Visualizing

  • Suzan van Dijk:
    • Short presentation

  • Gertjan Filarski (Huygens ING) and Astrid Kulsdom (Radboud University Nijmegen and Huygens ING, The Netherlands):
    • Visualizing connections between women writers in influential Dutch critic Conrad Busken Huet’s Literarische Fantasieën en Kritieken (1881-1888)

12.30-14.00
Lunch

14.00-15.30
Session 4: Transnational Perspectives of Women Writers (and how to visualise them)

  • Jelena Baki? (University of Belgrade, Serbia):
    • Trans-perspective: life and work of Ida Verona (1865, Braila, Romania, - 1925, Pr?anj, Kotor, Montenegro) and Ana Maria Marovi? (1815, Venice, Italy – 1887 Venice, Italy)

15.30-16.00
Coffee break

16.00–17.00
Session 5: International Travelling of Women Authors (and how to visualise it)

17.00-18.00
COST-WWIH Management Committee Meeting

[agenda sent to participants]



28.11.2012, Wednesday: “European Day”

9.30-11.00
Session 6: Transgressing Genres and Gender norms

  • Biljana Doj?inovi? (University of Belgrade, Serbia):

11.00–11.30
Coffee break

11.30–13.00
Session 7: Marrying a Foreigner

13.00-14.30
Lunch

14.30–15.30
Session 8: Writing Women’s International Literary History

15.30-16.30
Closing the conference



This conference will constitute the 3rd Milestone of the international COST Action IS 0901 “Women Writers In History: Toward a New Understanding of European Literary Culture”. It is being organized by the Institute of Slavic Studies and the Interdisciplinary Center for Gender and Identity Studies at Adam Mickiewicz University in Pozna?.

The “TRANS” categories are essential ones within the COST Action “Women Writers In History”. They provide in particular a critique of binary oppositions, and take into account the mobility, migration, cross-referencing, nomadism, which characterize women’s writing – more than that of men. Adopting this “TRANS” perspective may be a step towards a new historiography of women’s authorship, allowing approaches other than the chronological, and helping us to understand the complexity of women’s contribution to literature – a complexity resulting from the overlapping of, and contradictions between norms and images regarding women’s behaviour and actual women’s own desires and activities.

This perspective will be adopted in this conference. In order to have the full benefit of the different “TRANS” categories for discussion of the real impact of European female authors, the organizers have invited the speakers to apply these categories to their data, and to test them against their own research questions.

Data and analytical commentary on “TRANS” dimensions lend themselves particularly well to visualization, which is the COST-WWIH Action’s current focus. For this reason contributors have been invited to include reflections on “maps, graphs, trees”, as ways of enhancing understanding.

Organizers:

Contact: magdalena.jolanta.koch[at]gmail.com






SvD, 22 November 2012




  • Conferences and activities > COST meetings > Poznan November 2012

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