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Org. [http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Nicole_Pohl Nicole Pohl] and [http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Gillian_Dow Gillian Dow]<br><br> Org. [http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Nicole_Pohl Nicole Pohl] and [http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Gillian_Dow Gillian Dow]<br><br>
-Proposals are invited for a conference focusing on European women’s literary history, organized in the context of this COST Action, at Chawton House Library in Chawton (UK), 3-5 November 2011. +This conference aims to develop the quantitative and transnational data gathered during previous meetings and conferences and to move our methodology to a qualitative approach of the data and relevant case studies. Our aims are twofold:
-Keynote Speakers are: <br>+* As any qualitative approach is multi-paradigmatic in focus, one main question arises: how can we approach the history of women's literature, starting from the material in the database across the period under investigation and across the national/ethnic/cultural boundaries that we have identified? What are the different ideas of femininity, women's writing, and the canon, in different European countries in different historical periods? <br>
-*Prof. Markman Ellis, University of London,<br>+*Does the reception/translation of foreign and perhaps more/less radical women's writing have any measurable impact and how do we evaluate it?
-*Dr. Ursula Phillips, honorary associate at UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London.<br><br>+ 
 + 
 +'''Conference Programme'''<br><br>
 + 
 +Thursday, 3 November 2011<br><br>
 + 
 +9:00 - 10:00 am<br><br>
 + 
 +Introduction<br><br>
 + 
 +Keynote <br>
 +*Ursula Phillips:<br>
 +Join the Action! Polish Women Writers before 1900: Production, Context and Reception <br><br>
 + 
 +10:00 -10:15 am <br><br>
 +
 +*Ele Carpenter:<br>
 +Embroidered Digital Commons<br><br>
 + 
 +The Embroidered Digital Commons is an artwork facilitated by Ele Carpenter as part of the Open Source Embroidery project, utilising social and digital connectivity. We will continue our collaboration from Belgrade here at Chawton.
 + 
 +10:15 -10: 45 am
 + 
 +Break
 + 
 +10:45 – 12.45 am
 + 
 +A. Shifting Paradigms
 + 
 +Chair: Viola Parente-Capkova
 +Magdalena Koch, Is Constantine Brunner right? Concepts of Women’s Writing in Isidora Sekuli?’s essays in Western European and Serbian contexts
 +Alenka Jensterle-Doležal, Božena N?mcov? and her reception in Czech society
 +Nancy Isenberg, Publishing History of Justine Wynne
 +
 + 
 +Going Global
 +Marie-Louise Coolahan
 + 
 +Elisa Müller Adams/Kerstin Wiedemann, The French and English reception of Ida Hahn-Hahn
 +Katja Mihurko Poniz, The reception of foreign women writers in the Slovenian magazine Sloveka
 +Laura Kirkley, The trans-national afterlives of revolutionary feminism
 +Marie Nedregotten Sørbø, England seen from Norway in 1858
 + 
 + 
 +12:45 – 1:45 pm
 + 
 +Lunch
 + 
 +1:45 – 3.45 pm
 + 
 + 
 +Going Global
 +Chair: Kerstin Wiedemann
 + 
 +In?s de Ornellas e Castro, Saints or Writers: Female Reception in European and bibliographic Latin Inventories
 +Marie-Louise Coolahan, The Reception of ‘lost’ women’s texts
 +Astrid Kulsdom, The publication and reception of Ouida’s work in the Netherlands
 +Ramona Mihaila, Silent Voices of 19th-century Romanian Women Writers
 + 
 +Paratexts and the Self –Fashioning of the female author
 + 
 +Anne-Birgitte Rønning
 + 
 + 
 +Biljana Doj?inovi?, Self-promoting writing as networking strategy
 +Nieves Baranda Leturio, Spanish women prologues as silent debate
 +Monica Bolufer, ‘To the fair sex’ or ‘for all kinds of readers’?
 +Marta Souckova, On the Irony in Prose by Božena Slan?iková Timrava
 + 
 + 
 +3:45 – 4:15 pm
 + 
 +Break
 + 
 + 
 +4:15 – 5:30 pm
 + 
 +Shifting Paradigms : Theory and Praxis
 + 
 + Chair: Biljana Doj?inovi?
 + 
 + 
 +Valérie Cossy, Isabelle de Charrière: Les Lumières des Femmes
 + 
 +Elinor Shaffer, Do special factors play a role in the reception of women authors ?
 + 
 + 
 +
 + 
 +5: 30 pm
 + 
 +Tour of Chawton Library and House
 + 
 +Dinner
 + 
 + 
 + 
 + 
 + 
 + 
 +Friday, 4th November
 + 
 + 
 + 9:00 - 9:15 am
 + 
 +Suzan van Dijk, From Milestone I to Milestone II
 +(via Training Schools, Short Time Missions, Thinktank meeting)
 + 
 +9:15 – 10:00 am
 +GertJan Filarski, From a database to a Virtual Research Environment
 +
 +10:00 -11:15 am
 + 
 +Working Group meetings
 + 
 +11:15 -11:30 am
 + 
 +Break
 + 
 +11:30 -12:30 am
 + 
 +Working Group meetings
 + 
 +12:30 -1:30 am
 + 
 +Lunch
 + 
 +1:30 – 2:30 pm
 + 
 +Reports by Working Groups
 +
 +2:30 – 4:00 pm
 + 
 +Management Committee meeting (all WG members invited)
 + 
 +4:00 pm
 + 
 +Coach to Southampton University
 + 
 +5:00 – 6:00 pm
 + 
 +Public Lecture:
 +Markman Ellis, Reading, Writing and Print Publishing in the Elizabeth Montagu Circle
 + 
 +Chair: Gillian Dow
 + 
 +
 +Reception and Dinner
 +
 +
 +Coach back to Chawton
 + 
 + 
 + 
 +Saturday, 5th November
 + 
 + 
 + 
 +9:30 – 11:00 am
 + 
 +Going Global
 + 
 +Chair: Marie Nedregotten Sørbø
 + 
 +Corinne Fournier Kiss, Eliza Orzeskowa’s reception of George Sand
 +Kirsi Tuohela, The Reception of the Baltic German Writer Laura Marholm-Hansson in Nordic Countries and Germany
 +Isabel Lousada, Portugese translators of British authors from 1554 to 1900
 +
 + 
 +Paratexts and Self-Fashioning of the female author
 + 
 +Hans Hendrik Schlieper
 + 
 + 
 + 
 +Anne-Birgitte Rønning, Self-positioning and genre-negotiating in female-authored Robinsonades
 +Carme Font Paz, Defending Female Authorship in Elizabeth Poole’s A Vision (1648)
 + 
 + 
 + 
 + 
 +11:00 – 11:15
 + 
 +Break
 + 
 + 
 +11:15-12:00
 +Ele Carpenter, Embroidered Digital Commons
 + 
 +12:00 – 1:00 am
 + 
 +Lunch
 + 
 +1:00 - 2:30 pm
 + 
 +Theoretical Approaches to Quantitative/Qualitative Research
 +
 +Chair: Vanda Anastácio
 + 
 +Alessa Johns, Explicating Cultural Transfer
 +Tania Badalic/Begon Regueiro, Leading Voice – The reception of George Sand in Slovenia, Spain and Germany
 +Kim Heuvelmans and Ton van Kalmthout, The Representation of Women Writers in Textbooks for Literary Education
 + 
 +Carmen Dutu, Toward a (frin)gener perspective within the COST Action
 + 
 + 
 + 
 + 
 + 
 +2:30- 3:00
 + 
 +Break
 + 
 +3:00 - 4:00 pm
 + 
 +Keynote: Vanda Anastácio, Thinking about Women’s Writing: The Challenge of Theory
 + 
 +Chair: Nicole Pohl
 + 
 +4:00 – 4:30
 + 
 +Concluding Remarks
 +
-The aim of this COST Action is to lay the groundwork for a new history of European women’s participation in the literary field of the centuries before 1900, and to further develop the [http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Database_WomenWriters ''WomenWriters'' database] which allows researchers to stock, share and analyze data concerning the contemporary reception of women’s writing, and to apply different research models to these data. <br><br> 
-The conference at [http://www.chawton.org/ Chawton House Library] aims to develop the quantitative and transnational data gathered during previous meetings and conferences and to move our methodology to a qualitative approach of the data and relevant case studies. Our aims are twofold:  
-* As any qualitative approach is multi-paradigmatic in focus, one main question arises: how can we approach the history of women's literature, starting from the material in the database across the period under investigation and across the national/ethnic/cultural boundaries that we have identified? What are the different ideas of femininity, women's writing, and the canon, in different European countries in different historical periods? <br> 
-*Does the reception/translation of foreign and perhaps more/less radical women's writing have any measurable impact and how do we evaluate it? For the conference at Chawton House Library, we therefore welcome paper proposals that use case studies from the database or other repositories to consider: <br> 
-**contemporary (explicit) receptions of texts (= comments) that insist on specific narratives and topoi,<br> 
-**the transnational reception of texts and topoi (comparative approach),<br> 
-**a study of paratextual evidence to think about the intention and positioning of the author,<br> 
-**women’s production and reception networks,<br> 
-**theoretical approaches to qualitative methodologies in literary studies.<br><br> 
This conference represents the “Second Milestone” of the Action - the first one having been presented [http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Madrid%2C_November_2010 last year in Madrid]. This Milestone has been reached, for a large part, thanks to collaborative work carried out, during this second Action year, within two “[http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/First_Training_School Training] [http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Second_Training_School Schools]” (The Hague), and two “Short Time Scientific Missions” ([http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Short_Time_Scientific_Mission Nancy] and Gothenburg). During the Chawton conference, the respective outcomes of these will also be presented.<br><br> This conference represents the “Second Milestone” of the Action - the first one having been presented [http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Madrid%2C_November_2010 last year in Madrid]. This Milestone has been reached, for a large part, thanks to collaborative work carried out, during this second Action year, within two “[http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/First_Training_School Training] [http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Second_Training_School Schools]” (The Hague), and two “Short Time Scientific Missions” ([http://www.womenwriters.nl/index.php/Short_Time_Scientific_Mission Nancy] and Gothenburg). During the Chawton conference, the respective outcomes of these will also be presented.<br><br>
-Proposals are due on '''15 August 2011'''. Please send them for the attention of Nicole Pohl (Oxford Brookes) and Gillian Dow (University of Southampton and Chawton House Library) to [mailto:sw17@soton.ac.uk Sandy White], Chawton administrator at the University of Southampton. +Organisers:
 +*Nicole Pohl (Oxford Brookes)
 +*Gillian Dow (University of Southampton and Chawton House Library)
 + 
 +Conference administration:
 +*[mailto:sw17@soton.ac.uk Sandy White]

Revision as of 21:13, 18 October 2011


Conference Chawton 3-5 November 2011




NEWW International conference:
Voices in Dialogue::
Ideational production and reception of Women's Writing in Europe
Org. Nicole Pohl and Gillian Dow

This conference aims to develop the quantitative and transnational data gathered during previous meetings and conferences and to move our methodology to a qualitative approach of the data and relevant case studies. Our aims are twofold:

  • As any qualitative approach is multi-paradigmatic in focus, one main question arises: how can we approach the history of women's literature, starting from the material in the database across the period under investigation and across the national/ethnic/cultural boundaries that we have identified? What are the different ideas of femininity, women's writing, and the canon, in different European countries in different historical periods?
  • Does the reception/translation of foreign and perhaps more/less radical women's writing have any measurable impact and how do we evaluate it?


Conference Programme

Thursday, 3 November 2011

9:00 - 10:00 am

Introduction

Keynote

  • Ursula Phillips:

Join the Action! Polish Women Writers before 1900: Production, Context and Reception

10:00 -10:15 am

  • Ele Carpenter:

Embroidered Digital Commons

The Embroidered Digital Commons is an artwork facilitated by Ele Carpenter as part of the Open Source Embroidery project, utilising social and digital connectivity. We will continue our collaboration from Belgrade here at Chawton.

10:15 -10: 45 am

Break

10:45 – 12.45 am

A. Shifting Paradigms

Chair: Viola Parente-Capkova Magdalena Koch, Is Constantine Brunner right? Concepts of Women’s Writing in Isidora Sekuli?’s essays in Western European and Serbian contexts Alenka Jensterle-Doležal, Božena N?mcov? and her reception in Czech society Nancy Isenberg, Publishing History of Justine Wynne


Going Global Marie-Louise Coolahan

Elisa Müller Adams/Kerstin Wiedemann, The French and English reception of Ida Hahn-Hahn Katja Mihurko Poniz, The reception of foreign women writers in the Slovenian magazine Sloveka Laura Kirkley, The trans-national afterlives of revolutionary feminism Marie Nedregotten Sørbø, England seen from Norway in 1858


12:45 – 1:45 pm

Lunch

1:45 – 3.45 pm


Going Global Chair: Kerstin Wiedemann

In?s de Ornellas e Castro, Saints or Writers: Female Reception in European and bibliographic Latin Inventories Marie-Louise Coolahan, The Reception of ‘lost’ women’s texts Astrid Kulsdom, The publication and reception of Ouida’s work in the Netherlands Ramona Mihaila, Silent Voices of 19th-century Romanian Women Writers

Paratexts and the Self –Fashioning of the female author

Anne-Birgitte Rønning


Biljana Doj?inovi?, Self-promoting writing as networking strategy Nieves Baranda Leturio, Spanish women prologues as silent debate Monica Bolufer, ‘To the fair sex’ or ‘for all kinds of readers’? Marta Souckova, On the Irony in Prose by Božena Slan?iková Timrava


3:45 – 4:15 pm

Break


4:15 – 5:30 pm

Shifting Paradigms : Theory and Praxis

Chair: Biljana Doj?inovi?


Valérie Cossy, Isabelle de Charrière: Les Lumières des Femmes

Elinor Shaffer, Do special factors play a role in the reception of women authors ?



5: 30 pm

Tour of Chawton Library and House

Dinner




Friday, 4th November


 9:00 -   9:15 am	

Suzan van Dijk, From Milestone I to Milestone II (via Training Schools, Short Time Missions, Thinktank meeting)

9:15 – 10:00 am GertJan Filarski, From a database to a Virtual Research Environment

10:00 -11:15 am

Working Group meetings

11:15 -11:30 am

Break

11:30 -12:30 am

Working Group meetings

12:30 -1:30 am

Lunch

1:30 – 2:30 pm

Reports by Working Groups

2:30 – 4:00 pm

Management Committee meeting (all WG members invited)

4:00 pm

Coach to Southampton University

5:00 – 6:00 pm

Public Lecture: Markman Ellis, Reading, Writing and Print Publishing in the Elizabeth Montagu Circle

Chair: Gillian Dow


Reception and Dinner


Coach back to Chawton


Saturday, 5th November


9:30 – 11:00 am

Going Global

Chair: Marie Nedregotten Sørbø

Corinne Fournier Kiss, Eliza Orzeskowa’s reception of George Sand Kirsi Tuohela, The Reception of the Baltic German Writer Laura Marholm-Hansson in Nordic Countries and Germany Isabel Lousada, Portugese translators of British authors from 1554 to 1900


Paratexts and Self-Fashioning of the female author

Hans Hendrik Schlieper


Anne-Birgitte Rønning, Self-positioning and genre-negotiating in female-authored Robinsonades Carme Font Paz, Defending Female Authorship in Elizabeth Poole’s A Vision (1648)



11:00 – 11:15

Break


11:15-12:00 Ele Carpenter, Embroidered Digital Commons

12:00 – 1:00 am

Lunch

1:00 - 2:30 pm

Theoretical Approaches to Quantitative/Qualitative Research

Chair: Vanda Anastácio

Alessa Johns, Explicating Cultural Transfer Tania Badalic/Begon Regueiro, Leading Voice – The reception of George Sand in Slovenia, Spain and Germany Kim Heuvelmans and Ton van Kalmthout, The Representation of Women Writers in Textbooks for Literary Education

Carmen Dutu, Toward a (frin)gener perspective within the COST Action



2:30- 3:00

Break

3:00 - 4:00 pm

Keynote: Vanda Anastácio, Thinking about Women’s Writing: The Challenge of Theory

Chair: Nicole Pohl

4:00 – 4:30

Concluding Remarks



This conference represents the “Second Milestone” of the Action - the first one having been presented last year in Madrid. This Milestone has been reached, for a large part, thanks to collaborative work carried out, during this second Action year, within two “Training Schools” (The Hague), and two “Short Time Scientific Missions” (Nancy and Gothenburg). During the Chawton conference, the respective outcomes of these will also be presented.

Organisers:

  • Nicole Pohl (Oxford Brookes)
  • Gillian Dow (University of Southampton and Chawton House Library)

Conference administration:






SvD, June 2011




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