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Transcript of American Studies & 63rd British Association for … · Panel B4 American Literary Naturalism and...
The Joint 32nd European Association for American Studies & 63rd British Association
for American Studies Conference
4-7 April 2018
Conference Programme
Tuesday 3 April 2018 09:00-15:00 EAAS AGM (Franklin Wilkins Building)
Location information Unless otherwise noted, all numbers refer to rooms in the King’s College London Franklin-Wilkins Building (Stamford Street, London, SE1 9NH). For example, 1.10 refers to room ten on the first floor and 2.42 refers to room 42 on the second floor.
Changes will be noted in red
Please note The conference banquet on Friday 6
April will now take place at the British Library
96 Euston Road, London, NW1 2DB
2
Wednesday 4 April
09:30-11:00 Registration and coffee (Glass Suites 1-3, Ground Floor, Franklin Wilkins Building)
11:00-12:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS A Panel A1 Registration vs. Representation: New Approaches to American
Culture and Capital (1.10) Chair: Myka Tucker-Abramson, University of Warwick Late-Transcendentalism: Literature, Lines of Sight, and Cultural Registration
Benjamin Pickford, Université Lausanne
Call and Response: Transatlantic Emancipatory Politics in Chris Abani’s GraceLand Amy Rushton, Nottingham Trent University
Resisting Liberalism: The Paradigm Problem of early ‘National’ US-based Writing
Stephen Shapiro, University of Warwick
Panel A2 William Gibson's The Peripheral and Alternate Constructions of
Reality (1.17) Chair: Tatiani Rapatzikou, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Post-Temporal, Post-Geographic Cartography in Gibson’s The Peripheral
Katherine E. Bishop, Miyazaki International College Alternate History, Alternative Fact: Detective, Historian, Reader
Glyn Morgan, University of Liverpool ‘Something so deeply earned’: Metaphor, Morals, and Meat in Gibson’s The Peripheral
Keren Omry, University of Haifa
Wed
nes
day
3
Panel A3 ‘We will all fight’: Modes and Narratives of Environmental Protest (1.13) *Please note that this panel will run from 11:00-13:00 Chair: Sue Currell, University of Sussex ‘Botanizing on the Asphalt’: Urban Foraging and/as Environmental Resistance in Rebecca Lerner’s Dandelion Hunter
Shiuhhuah Serena Chou, Academia Sinica Revisiting ‘the Wild’: Transatlantic Visions of Environmental Protest
Michaela Keck, University of Oldenburg
Resisting Climate Change Apocalypticism: Jetnil-Kijiner’s Activist Climate Change Poetry Hanna Straß-Senol, University of Oldenburg
Lynne Tillman, Literary Ecologist: Environmental Sensitivities and Ecological Thinking in American Genius, A Comedy
Eric Dean Rasmussen, University of Stavanger Panel A4 The Art of Protest: Critical Art and Beyond (1.20) Chair: Yuri Stulov, Minsk State Linguistics University The Disquieting Charm of Renée Cox: Transforming Dispossession into Self-Possession
Anna Pochmara, University of Warsaw Justyna Wierzchowska, University of Warsaw
Are We Still Contemporaries of the Communist Hypothesis of the 1968? Artistic Responses to 1968 and Its Reception After the Financial Crisis of 2008
Magdalena Radomska, Adam Mickiewicz University
Panel A5 AIDS, Activism, and Memorialization (1.16) Chair: Anthony Castet, Francois Rabelais University Get (Sur)Real!: Surrealism as Tactic in the Art and Activism of Ronnie Burk
Victoria Carroll, King's College London From Grove to Pier: Memorializing the AIDS Crisis
Wayde Brown, University of Georgia
A Porous City: Reading a Queer New York in the 1970s in Eileen Myles’s Chelsea Girls (1994) and Edmund White’s City Boy (2009)
Vincenzo Bavaro, University of Naples ‘L’Orientale,’ Italy
Wed
nes
day
4
Panel A6 Imperial Entanglements in a Vast Early America (1.11)
Chair: Peter Thompson, University of Oxford Swamping Guns and Stabbing Irons – The Austrian Netherlands and the American Revolution
Marion Huibrechts, KU Leuven Empires on the Edge – The Habsburg Monarchy and the American Revolution
Jonathan Singerton, University of Edinburgh
Congress and the Drift towards a Republican Empire, 1774-1783 Trent Taylor, University of Oxford
Panel A7 Constructing Antebellum Race and Gender (1.60)
Chair: Emily West, University of Reading The Hanging of Pauline, a Bad Slave
Lawrence McDonnell, Iowa State University Between Womanhood and Citizenship: A Conceptual-Historicist Approach to Antebellum Women's Literature of Protest
Iulian Cananau, University of Gävle A Crossdresser and Con Artist in Antebellum New York
Shane White, University of Sydney Panel A8 Facing Disaster: The American Novel at the End of the World
(1.62) Chair: Nicholas Manning, Sorbonne Université Time After the End: Contemporary Post-Apocalyptic Fiction
Diletta De Cristofaro, University of Birmingham
Archiving Post-Apocalyptic Anxieties in Bats of the Republic Danuta Fjellestad, Uppsala University, Sweden
The Disaster of the End: Writing the World in Contemporary North American Fiction Phil Leonard, Nottingham Trent University
Wed
nes
day
5
Panel A9 People, Places, and Predators of (Dubious) Acclaim: Environmental
Celebrity, Status, and Speech in Human and Non-Human North American History (1.21)
Chair: Léna Remy-Kovach, University of Freiburg Embodying Hostility: Robert Redford, Celebrity Environmental Elitism, and the Four Corners Power Complex
Nicholas Blower, University of Kent
‘The legend lives on from the Chippewa on down of the big lake they call Gitche Gumee’: The Celebrity Atatus of the Upper Great Lakes
Colin Elder, University of Kent
The Call of the Wild: Yellowstone’s Wolves, Environmental Celebrity and the Shifting Terrain of Wilderness Mythology in Modern America
Karen Jones, University of Kent Panel A10 Place, Protest, Possibility, and Pedagogy: A Roundtable on Teaching
(1.67) Chair: Elizabeth Duclos-Orsello, Salem State University Re-Making Places in Virtual and Augmented Reality Art
Ingrid Gessner, Vorarlberg University of Education
Palimpsest, Place-Making and Protest in Salem, Massachusetts: Service-Learning and Hands-On Praxis as Introduction to American Studies
Elizabeth Duclos-Orsello, Salem State University Conceptualising (the) Language of ‘the Post-Other: The Balkan(s) and English as a Medium
Bela Gligorova, NOVA International Schools & Center for Culture and Cultural Studies
Barrio Pedagogy: The Battle for Mexican American Studies in Tucson
Claire M. Massey, Saarland University On-/off-line in the High School Classroom: Fostering Global Identity and Social Awareness through Interactive Digital Platforms
Despoina N. Feleki, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Wed
nes
day
6
Panel A11 Visual Representations of American Protest (1.14) Chair: James Deutsch, Smithsonian Institution From the Eastern European Communist Regime to the America of the 1970s: the European Auteur in Hollywood
Agnieszka Gadomska, SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Warsaw
F*society and Rise of the Robot. Traumatized Technophiles as Subversive Subjects.
Pawel Pyrka, SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Warsaw
Hollywood, Red-Baiting and the Second Life of the ‘Commie’ Piotr Skurowski, SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Warsaw
Panel A12 Contemporary American Poetry and Public Space
(Roundtable) (2.42) Chair: Paulina Ambrozy, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań The Cultural Commons and the Poet(h)ics of Appropriation
Paulina Ambrozy, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań Patricia Lockwood's Poetics of Attention
Marta Figlerowicz, Yale University Protest at the Border: Steve Collis and the Poetics of Environmental Space
David Herd, University of Kent
Wanda Coleman's Retro Rouge Anthology as Protest Poems Jerzy Kamionowski, University of Białystok
’I’M A POLLINATOR! I’M A POLLINATOR!!’: Anarchism, Gesture and the Ecology of ‘Extreme Present’ in CA Conrad's ECODEVIANCE: (Soma)tics for the Future Wilderness
Małgorzata Myk, University of Lodz
12:30-13:45 Lunch (Restaurant, First Floor, Franklin Wilkins Building) 12:30-13:45 EAAS President’s lunch (Room 1.71)
Wed
nes
day
7
13:45-15:15 PARALLEL SESSION B Panel B1 New Voices in Jewish-American Literature
(Roundtable) (1.17) Chair: Stephen Shapiro, University of Warwick David Brauner, University of Reading Michael Kalisch, University of Cambridge Joshua Leavitt, Ohio State University Dan O'Brien, University College Dublin Aimee Pozorski, Central Connecticut State University Eva von Loenen, University of Southampton Mike Witcombe, Bath Spa University Panel B2 The (Historical) American City in Video Games (1.60) Chair: Michael Fuchs, University of Graz ‘Documenting’ History in Mafia III: Playing with America’s Difficult Pasts
Adam Chapman, University of Gothenburg Esther Wright, University of Warwick
Bioshock: Infinite’s Columbia: Heaven in the Cloud Emily Marlow, University of Sheffield
The American City Under Attack: Atari’s Missile Command (1980) John Wills, University of Kent
Panel B3 Literary Ecologies (1.62) Chair: Paul Williams, University of Exeter Crafting a New Anti-Ecological Space Inside a Transcendentalist Tradition?
Felix Nicolau, Lund University From the Deep Woods… Trees as Home in Louise Erdrich's Tracks and Four Souls
Gabriela Jeleńska, University of Warsaw
Wed
nes
day
8
Panel B4 American Literary Naturalism and Social Protest (Roundtable) (1.11) Chair: Steven Bembridge, Independent Scholar Donna M. Campbell, Washington State University Steven Bembridge, Independent Scholar Jeanne Campbell Reesman, University of Texas at San Antonio Anita Duneer, Rhode Island College Steven Frye, California State University Bakersfield Eric Carl Link, Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne Lauren Navarro, LaGuardia Community College Keith Newlin, University of North Carolina Wilmington Adam H. Wood, Salisbury University Panel B5 The History of Financial Advice (1.12) Chair: Elena Hristova, University of Minnesota Dreams of Avarice: Popular Investment Advice Before and After the Great Crash of 1929
Paul Crosthwaite, University of Edinburgh
Gilded Age Investment Advice Manuals Peter Knight, University of Manchester
Financial Advice and the Great Compression Nicky Marsh, University of Southampton
Panel B6 Anti-Slavery Networks (1.20) Chair: Teresa Botelho, Nova University of Lisbon Conditional Freedom: US Fugitive Slaves in Mexican Texas, 1821-1836
Thomas Mareite, Leiden University ‘Heroic Souls’: The Memory of Tubman, Truth and black female abolitionists
Charlotte James, University of Nottingham
Wed
nes
day
9
Panel B7 Beyond the Spectacle: Native North Americans in Britain in the Twentieth Century (1.13)
Chair: Reetta Humalajoki, University of Turku An uneven surface; British heritage contact zones
Jack Davy, University of East Anglia
Beyond Buffalo Bill: Mass Mobilization and the Native Warrior Jacqueline Fear-Segal, University of East Anglia David Stirrup, University of Kent
‘A Struggle for the Land’: Environment, Place, and the Transnational Networks of American Indian Activists and Welsh Nationalists
Kate Rennard, University of Kent Panel B8 Indigenous Resistance: From Place-Based Politics to Protest (1.21) Chair: Mercedes Aguirre, British Library Place-Based Body Politics: Reproductive Justice and Indigenous Women
Elizabeth Rule, Brown University The State of Exception and Indigenous Human Rights: Violations of Indigenous Lands and Rights at Muskrat Falls and Standing Rock
Colin Samson, University of Essex Panel B9 Performance and Activism: Environmental and Cultural Action, From
Local Narratives to Global Contexts (1.14) Chair: Léna Remy-Kovach, University of Freiburg Creative Protest: Re-Shaping Storyworlds in Post-Apocalyptic Fiction
Judith Eckenhoff, RWTH Aachen University #NoDAPL: Local, Global, and International Protests for Indigenous Rights and Protection of the Environment
Léna Remy-Kovach, University of Freiburg
Protesting through Heritage Performance: Storytelling in Novels of the Native American Renaissance
Julia Ruff, University of Freiburg
Wed
nes
day
10
Panel B10 President Trump’s First 15 Months: Looking Beyond Each 15 Minutes (PSA American Politics Group Roundtable) (1.10)
Chair: Clodagh Harrington, De Montfort University Mara Oliva, University of Reading Alex Waddan, University of Leicester Iwan Morgan, University College London Andrew Wroe, University of Kent Panel B11 Protest and the Historical Sublime: Metafictional Visions of
Conquest (2.42) Chair: Martina Koegeler-Abdi, University of Copenhagen Literary Historiography and Sublime Politics in Laila Lalami’s The Moor’s Account (2014)
Martina Koegeler-Abdi, University of Copenhagen Trauma and the Historical Sublime: Craig Baldwin’s O No Coronado!
Klaus Rieser, University of Graz Border Paradigms and the Historical Sublime: Karen Tei Yamashita’s Tropic of Orange
Silvia Schultermandl, University of Graz Panel B12 Filmic Framings of Environmental Space (1.67) Chair: Marianne Kac-Vergne, University of Picardie Jules Verne Zoopoetics of/and the Melting Arctic: Framing Environmental Change in Wildlife Film
Michaela Castellanos, Mid-Sweden University Environments of the Road Movie: Easy Rider to The Straight Story
Timo Müller, University of Regensburg Street Food: Environment, Place, and Protest in Urban Farming Documentaries
Alexa Weik von Mossner, University of Klagenfurt
Wed
nes
day
11
Panel B13 The Peculiar Environments of the Slave South (BrANCH) (1.16) Chair: Mikko Saikku, University of Helskini Environments of Abuse: the Farm, the Plantation, and Sexual Violence under Slavery
Elizabeth Barnes, University of Reading
The Climatic Theory of Slavery and the Wilmot Proviso Controversy Matthew Griffin, University College London
The Impact of Hostile Environments on the Parameters of Slavery: The Seminoles and Florida, 1780-1822.
Edward Mair, University of Hull
15:15-16:00 Break 16:00-17.30 PARALLEL SESSION C Panel C1 Placing Digital Humanities in American Studies (Roundtable) (1.20) Chair: Mara Oliva, University of Reading Computational Criticism and Contemporary American Southern Fiction
Michał Choiński, Jagiellonian University, Krakow Maciej Eder, Institute of Polish Language, Polish Academy of Sciences Jan Rybicki, Jagiellonian University, Krakow
Shakespeare Fights the Civil War
Sarah E. Gardner, Mercer University Voices of America: Reading the Federal Writers’ Project
Lauren Tilton, University of Richmond Panel C2 Places of Completion: Textual Geographies of Dion Boucicault,
Theodore Dreiser, and David Foster Wallace (1.13) Chair: Jude Davies, University of Winchester Rewriting The Octoroon. A Digital Research Project
Lisa Merrill, Hofstra University Theresa Saxon, University of Central Lancashire
Place and Publication: Cultural and National Geographies in Theodore Dreiser’s Trilogy of Desire and ‘Mark the Double Twain’
Jude Davies, University of Winchester Carol Smith, University of Winchester
Between Completion and Incompletion: Editing The Pale King
Tim Groenland, University College, Dublin
Wed
nes
day
12
Panel C3 Literary Landscapes and the Making of Nature in 19th Century
America (BrANCA) (1.14) Chair: Steve Gallo, University of Nottingham A Ditch in the Garden: Figuring Out the ‘Irrigation West’
Janet Floyd, King’s College London ‘The Gerfalcon Swoops’: Tomboyism and the American Landscape in E.D.E.N Southworth’s The Mother-in-Law; Or, Married in Haste
Anna Maguire Elliott, University of Sussex Edgar Allan Poe, Landscape Gardening, Creative Practice and ‘The Domain of Arnheim’
Theodora Tsimpouki, University of Athens Panel C4 Materiality, Embodiment, Protest – Interdisciplinary
Perspectives (1.21) Chair: Judith Eckenhoff, RWTH Aachen University Reading Disruption: Jenny Holzer’s Emplaced Textualities
Katharina Donn, University of Augsburg Britain’s Fifth Column: Race and Rape in World War II
Ruth Lawlor, University of Cambridge Exhibiting Subversion? Punk in the Art Gallery
Jade Tullett, University of Winchester Panel C5 Law and Justice in the US: An Interdisciplinary Perspective (1.60) Chair: Olga Akroyd, University of Kent Free Speech in American Courts: The Origins of the ‘Direct Incitement’ Test and Present Day Misconceptions of the Law
Jak Allen, University of Kent Direct Democracy vs. Equal Justice: a Cross-Perspective into Same-Sex Marriage and Religious Freedom
Anthony Castet, Francois Rabelais University To the Dead We Owe The Truth: The Civil Rights and Restorative Justice Project Documenting and Preserving Racial Violence, 1930-1970
Rhonda Jones, Northeastern University
Wed
nes
day
13
Panel C6 Faith and Activism (2.42) Chair: Rachel Williams, University of Hull Resistance Through Education: Irish Catholic Schools in Nineteenth-Century Chicago
Sophie Cooper, Northumbria University From Union Square to Rome: Revisiting the Religious Radicalism of Dorothy Day (1897-1980)
Hans Bak, Radboud University, Nijmegen Protestant Missionaries, American Empire, and the Built Environment in the Philippines, 1898-1920
Tom Smith, University of Cambridge Panel C7 How the South Changed US Politics, 1968-2018: Race, Religion, Partisanship, Demographics (Roundtable) (1.10) Chair: Tomasz Basiuk, University of Warsaw The Changing Partisanship of the South and Its Impact on National Politics
Charles S. Bullock III, University of Georgia New York Sybarite Conquers Bible Belt: Trump as the Apotheosis of Southern Racial Politics
Jeremy D. Mayer, George Mason University The Changing Demographics of the South and Its Impact on National Politics
Susan McManus, University of Southern Florida The Rise of the Evangelical Right in the South and Its Impact on National Politics
Mark J. Rozell, George Mason University Panel C8 Wrapping Radicalism in the Flag: Protest and Patriotism at the Turn
of the 20th Century (1.62) Chair: John Tiplady, University of Nottingham ‘I feel the United States “my country”’: The Paradoxical Patriotism of ‘Red Emma’
Alice Béja, Sciences Po Lille/CERAPS-CNRS) A National Way to Socialism: Daniel De Leon and the Americanisation of the Socialist Labor Party, 1890-1900
Lorenzo Costaguta, University of Birmingham Wendell Phillips, American Radical: From Abolitionism to the Labour Movement
Hélène Quanquin, Université Sorbonne Nouvelle-Paris 3
Wed
nes
day
Wed
nes
day
14
Panel C9 Failure of/as Protest: The Double Legacy of 1968 (1.16) Chair: Sinead McEneaney, St. Mary's University, Twickenham The Electric Kool Aid Watermellon Sugary Acid Test: Renunciation in Tom Wolfe and Richard Brautigan
Martin Klepper, Humboldt-Universität, Berlin The Death of the Auteur. William Greaves’s Performance of Non-Directing
Zuzanna Ladyga, University of Warsaw John Williams: the Fame of a Non-Writer
Krzysztof Rowiński, University of Massachusetts Amherst Panel C10 Epistemic Virtues, 18th Century Science, and Transnational Contact
in the North American Colonies (1.12) Chair: Marcel Hartwig, Universität Siegen Sowing Salt: Sentience and Slavery in Crèvecœur
Michael Boyden, Uppsala University Exporting the North American Environment: Bartram Boxes, Material Culture and 18th Century Botany
Marcel Hartwig, Universität Siegen Violent Medicine: Abortion and the Non-transfer of Knowledge Between the Old and the New World
Jennifer Henke, University of Bremen Panel C11 Contesting U.S. Power in the Cold War and the War on Terror (1.11) Chair: Helen Laville, Manchester Metropolitan University Dissenting Empire: The Rise of National Security Whistleblowers in the Long 1970s
Kaeten Mistry, University of East Anglia Gore Vidal’s Queer Cold War: Analogy, History, Empire
Mark Storey, University of Warwick
The Aesthetics of Protest Theatre: Dramatizing Suspicion and Surveillance in Post-9/11 American Drama
Teresa Botelho, Nova University of Lisbon
Wed
nes
day
15
Panel C12 Challenging Masculine Norms in Science-Fiction Worlds (1.67) Chair: Klaus Rieser, University of Graz Birth of a Protest: The Spielbergian Hero and the Uterine Challenges of the Digital Revolution
Charles-Antoine Courcoux, University of Lausanne, Switzerland Fatherhood in Post-Apocalyptic Worlds
Marianne Kac-Vergne, University of Picardie Jules Verne Male and Female Masculinities in Cinema’s Fantasy and Future Worlds
Yvonne Tasker, University of East Anglia
Panel C13 Why You Need Indigenous Studies and Indigenous Studies Needs
You (Roundtable) (1.17) Chair: Jacqueline Fear-Segal, University of East Anglia Adam Barker, University of Hertfordshire Emma Battell-Lowman, University of Hertfordshire Reetta Humalajoki, University of Turku Andi Bawden, University of East Anglia Matthew Scobie, University of Sheffield Panel C14 Age and Gender: American Popular Culture as a Site of Protest
(Roundtable) (2.41) Chair: Isabel Durán, Universidad Complutense, Madrid Laura De La Parra Fernández, Universidad Complutense, Madrid Isabel Durán, Universidad Complutense, Madrid Juan G. Etxeberria, Universidad Complutense, Madrid Rebeca Gualberto, Universidad Complutense, Madrid
17:45-19:00: Plenary 1 ‘From King to Trump: The Enduring Legacy of White Supremacy for American Democracy’, Bettye Collier-Thomas, Temple University (B.5 Auditorium)
19:00-20:00: Reception 1 (Sponsored by the University of Sussex and EAAS) (Restaurant, First Floor, Franklin Wilkins Building) 20:00-22:00: Postgraduate Social (Thirsty Bear Pub, 62 Stamford Street, SE1 9LX)
Wed
nes
day
16
Exhibit by Sabina Peck, University of Leeds: Women in BAAS: Exploring and Creating the Archive (First Floor Common Area, Franklin Wilkins Building for the duration of the conference)
In spring 2017, doctoral student Sabina Peck became a Cadbury Library Archive Intern following the creation of a partnership between the British Association for American Studies and the Cadbury Research Library at the University of Birmingham. The partnership aimed to promote use of the BAAS archive, and Sabina’s project examines the history of women and gender in BAAS since its founding in 1955.
The poster exhibition at EBAAS 2018 draws on archival material and new oral histories to provide an examination of the experiences of women – and how they have been represented – within the organisation.
Wed
nes
day
17
Thursday 5 April
09:30-11.00 PARALLEL SESSION D Panel D1 Rethinking Literary Reconstruction (BrANCA Roundtable) (1.62) Chair: Tom Wright, University of Sussex Opening Remarks: Rethinking Literary Reconstruction: Lord Bryce’s American Commonwealth
Gordon Hutner, University of Illinois Respondents:
Stephanie Palmer, Nottingham Trent University Tom Wright, University of Sussex Tomos Hughes, University of Nottingham
Panel D2 Avant Garde as Protest and Experimental Poetics (1.20) Chair: Tatiani Rapatzikou, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Lizzy Pournara, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Feeling the Blanks: Poems as Typographic Scores in the Work of Dennis Cooley
Manuel Portela, University of Coimbra Susan Howe’s Experimental Poetics
Lizzy Pournara, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Subversive City Mappings in bpNichol’s The Martyrology
Tatiani Rapatzikou, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Panel D3 Men, Women, and the Wild in American Fiction (1.21) Chair: William Blazek, Liverpool Hope University To Laugh not to Cry at the Loss of Land and Female Power in Louise Erdrich’s and Susan Power’s Works
Elisabeth Bouzonviller, Université Jean Monnet Saint Etienne, France ‘The Beast is what makes the man’: Cain versus Adam in Goat Mountain (2013) by David Vann
Sophie Chapuis, Université Jean Monnet Saint Etienne, France
Dammed Men: White Masculinity in Crisis and Ecoterrorist Fantasies in Jim Harrison’s A Good Day to Die (1973)
Pierre-Antoine Pellerin, Jean Moulin - Lyon 3 University, France
Thurs
day
Thurs
day
18
Panel D4 ‘Inside / Outside’: Forms of Protest against the Prison (1.11) Chairs: Birte Christ, Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen, and Katharina Motyl, University of Tübingen The Shoreless Ocean of Time: Temporal Experience in Prison
Michael G. Flaherty, Eckerd College Gestures of Resistance: Writing, Standing, Performing against the Prison
Aylwyn Walsh, University of Leeds ‘Everything will be okay’: Prison Wives’ Forms of Resistance in an Era of Mass Incarceration
Andrea Zittlau, University of Rostock Panel D5 Gathering Data and Measuring the Population: Intelligence, Civic
Participation, and Prejudice (1.13) Chair: Joy Porter, University of Hull The Pendleton Act and the Origins of Modern Intelligence
Michael J. Collins, University of Kent
Obscured by Quantification: Women’s Work in Social Scientific Research at the End of World War II
Elena D. Hristova, University of Minnesota - Twin Cities
Measuring and Monitoring Civic Morality in Progressive Era St. Louis Katie Myerscough, University of Manchester
Panel D6 Creating a Movement of Movements: Reconceptualizing Protest
Against the War in Vietnam (1.16) Chair: Cristina Alsina Risquez, Universitat de Barcelona ‘The student movement may, indeed, have flown South – and landed’: Tennessee Campus Anti-War Activism
Kate Ballantyne, University of Cambridge The Anti-War Activism of Carol McEldowney: The Intersection of Welfare, War, and Women
Sinead McEneaney, St. Mary's University, Twickenham ‘If we fight again, it will be to take these steps’: Vietnam Veterans Against the War and the ‘Battle’ to Defend Democracy
Lauren Mottle, University of Leeds
Thurs
day
19
Panel D7 Emigration and Africa (1.12) Chair: Nicholas Grant, University of East Anglia The International Exodusters: Black Emigration from the American South, 1865-1877
Matthew Law, Clark University A Taste of Africa – Florida and the ‘Dark Continent’
Gabriele Pisarz-Ramirez, Universität Leipzig Panel D8 New Perspectives on ‘Massive Resistance’ to the Civil Rights
Movement (1.60) Chair: George Lewis, University of Leicester Women’s Interracial Relationships and ‘The Gentle Weapon’: Social Ostracism as a Weapon of Massive Resistance in Montgomery Alabama
Helen Laville, Manchester Metropolitan University ‘None of you men look like Ku Kluxers’: Gender and Class in the Visual Identity of the White Citizens’ Councils
Bradley Phipps, University of Leicester Mass Media and Massive Resistance: Segregationists’ Televised Response to the Civil Rights Movement
Scott Weightman, University of Leicester Panel D9 Self-Determination and Non-Alignment: Cars, Schools, and
Cosmopolitanism as Sites of Transgression of the Colour Line (2.42) Chair: Cara Rodway, British Library ‘Oh, if I had that Ford V-8!’: Automotivity, Anti-Lynching Campaigns, and Imagined Black Liberation, 1934-39
Helen A. Gibson, GSNAS, Freie Universität Berlin Protest, Education, and Self-Determination: Black Power Schools in Harlem, 1960-1980
Viola Huang, Teachers College, Columbia University/Universität Passau
From Souls of Black Folk to Internationalism: W.E.B. Du Bois and His Comrades of Colour
Jiann-Chyng Tu, Humboldt University Berlin
Thurs
day
20
Panel D10 Petrochemical America (2.41) Chair: Pawel Frelik, Maria Curie-Sklodowska University Petrochemical America: Kate Orff and Robert Misrach's Cartography of Disaster
Caroline Blinder, Goldsmiths, University of London Petro-normativity and Realism in Richard Ford’s Let Me Be Frank (2014)
Rick Crownshaw, Goldsmiths, University of London Resource Fictions of the Future: Peak Oil, the Posthuman and the Postapocalypse in American Science Fiction
Rune Graulund, University of Southern Denmark Panel D11 A Woman’s Place is in the Resistance: Identity as Protest in
US Women’s Writing (1.17) Chair: Katja May, University of Kent ‘Mine is Not a Success Story’: Illness as Protest in Women's Memoirs
Maria Elena Carpintero Torres-Quevedo, University of Edinburgh The Women’s Pages: Inventing the Self in Women’s Newspaper Writing
Niki Holzapfel, University of Edinburgh Elizabeth, Beth, Betsy, and Bess: Examining Multiple Personality Disorder in Shirley Jackson’s The Bird’s Nest (1954)
Vicki Madden, University of Edinburgh Panel D12 American Culture and the Trumpian Moment (1.67) Chair: Paul Crosthwaite, University of Edinburgh ‘Does it make you feel bored or stupid?’: Adam McKay’s The Big Short (2015), Investment Bankers, and the Confounding of Understanding
Wickham Clayton, University for the Creative Arts Life at the Margins: The White Working-Class in Contemporary American Independent Cinema
Gregory Frame, Bangor University
‘I’ll never have the goodwill of the Establishment’: The Cultural Life of Donald Trump
Karen Heath, University of Oxford
Thurs
day
21
Panel D13 Representing Social Struggles: Riots and Racialized Violence in Visual Media (1.14)
Chair: Adina Ciugureanu, Ovidius University Constanta Fighting Racialized State Violence in a Postindustrial Age: Spike Lee’s ‘Radio Raheem and the Gentle Giant’
Luvena Kopp, Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen Organizing the Apocalypse: The Living Dead in the Age of Class Decomposition
Marlon Lieber, Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel ‘The Arm of Criticism Cannot Replace the Criticism of Arms’: On Punching Nazis
Jesse Ramírez, Universität St. Gallen Panel D14 Listening to America: Music and American Studies (Roundtable)
(1.10) Chair: Brian Ward, Northumbria University By Any Means Necessary – and Available: Public Enemy and the Constant Reinvention of Black Musical Activism
Yann Descamps, Université Paris-Est Créteil
Jazz and Everyday Aesthetics Roger Fagge, University of Warwick Nicholas Gebhardt, Birmingham City University
From the Margins: Asians and Asian Americans in American Music Krystyn Moon, University of Mary Washington
Violent Cowboys and Sincere Cowboys: Debating the US Racial Context with American Country Music in Japan
Mari Nagatomi, Doshisha University
Black Life through a Blues Lens: Visions of America through the Blues Christian O'Connell, University of Gloucestershire
Nowhere to Run: Girl Group Transnationalism Gayle Wald, George Washington University
11:00-11:45: Break
Thurs
day
22
11:45-13.15 PARALLEL SESSION E Panel E1 Imagined and Re-Imagined Communities in Nineteenth-Century
African American Culture (BrANCA) (1.13) Chair: Matthew Pethers, University of Nottingham W.E.B. Du Bois’ Scorn: A Romance and Reconstruction’s Counterfactual Forms
Tomos Hughes, University of Nottingham Guerrilla Marginalia: The 1851 Census and Transatlantic Abolition
Bridget Bennett, University of Leeds The ‘Mothering Influence’ in Nineteenth-Century African American Women’s Theory
Gregory Phipps, University of Iceland Panel E2 Intersections of Women, Place and Protest: From Calm Strategies to
Turbulent Years (2.42) Chair: Kate Dossett, University of Leeds Chisholm ’68: Black Protest and Left-Liberal Politics
Anastasia Curwood, University of Kentucky Transatlantic Feminist Reform Networks in the Mid-20th Century
Ann Schofield, University of Kansas African American Women and Washington, DC as a Site of Protest
Kim Warren, University of Southern Denmark T
hurs
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Panel E3 Language’s Protest Against Theory in the American Affective Turn (Roundtable) (1.17)
Chairs: Marc Amfreville, Sorbonne Université, and Nicholas Manning, Sorbonne
Université The Geology of Pain in Rick Bass’s ‘The Lives of Rocks’
Marc Amfreville, Sorbonne Université Patrick McGrath and the Madness of Interpretation
Chiara Battisti, University of Verona ‘A Kind of Shadow Language’: Death, Affect and Words in Zero K (2016) by Don DeLillo
Sylvie Bauer, Université Rennes 2 ‘A Secret Sense of Wonder’: Experiencing Unnameable Affect in Walker Percy’s The Moviegoer
Nicholas Manning, Sorbonne Université Ethical Instability and Textual Irresponsibility in Toni Morrison’s Fiction
Paula Martín-Salván, University of Córdoba The Medical Humanities and the Question of Empathy
Anne Whitehead, Newcastle University Panel E4 The Making of Presidential Image: The Role of Culture (1.10) Chair: Iwan Morgan, University College London Barack Obama: Hip-hop and Hope
Clodagh Harrington, De Montfort University Nixon in China: Tricky Dick as Hero
Mara Oliva, University of Reading American Icon: The Art of John F. Kennedy
Mark White, Queen Mary, University of London
Thurs
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Panel E5 ‘Protest is the new brunch’: American Studies and the (Re)Making of Protest Cultures in the 21st Century (Roundtable) (1.20)
Chairs: Katerina Fackler, University of Graz, and Susanne Leikam, University of
Regensburg Monumental Protest
Ingrid Gessner, Pedagogical University Vorarlberg Black Protest and American Studies
Katharina Fackler, University of Graz Environmental Protest and/in American Studies
Susanne Leikam, University of Regensburg American Studies and Digital Dissent
Judith Rauscher, University of Bamberg Panel E6 Place and the Racial Imagination (1.11) Chair: Nicole King, Goldsmiths University ‘Practically Our Own City’: Duke Ellington’s Visions of Harlem
Daniel Matlin, King's College London Through the Looking Glass: Hawai‘i and the Problem of Race in Postwar American Culture
Sarah Miller-Davenport, University of Sheffield The Contradictory Caribbean in Zora Neale Hurston’s Tell My Horse: Voodoo and Life in Haiti and Jamaica (1938)
Imaobong Umoren, London School of Economics Panel E7 Red Power Rising: The Long 1968 in Native America (1.60) Chair: Léna Remy-Kovach, University of Freiburg Place, Rights and Protest in the Long 1968 of Red Power
György Tóth, University of Stirling Termination as a Catalyst of the Native American 1968: Federal Indian Policy’s Role in Shaping Native American Activism
Reetta Humalajoki, University of Turku
‘If Only I Were an Indian’: 1968, the ‘Noble Savage’ Stereotype, and Strategies of Escapism in the Former Czechoslovakia
Lucie Kýrová, Charles University, Prague
Thurs
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Panel E8 ‘Need for some genuine stimulation’: Revolutionary Vibes Across Genres (1.62)
Chair: Michal Peprník, Czech and Slovak Association for American Studies Revolutionary Vibes and Performance Art
Aleksandra Jovanović, University of Belgrade
Revolutionary Vibes and the American Dream Radojka Vukcevic, University of Belgrade
Revolutionary Vibes and Film
Aleksandra Vukotić, University of Belgrade Panel E9 The Nuclear Age: Activism, Ecology, and the Cold War (1.21) Chair: Bevan Sewell, University of Nottingham Writing Nature in Cold War American Literature: Nuclear Resistance, and Mid-Century American Fiction
Sarah Daw, University of Bristol
‘Introduce sanity into the SANE nuclear policy group’ – John F. Kennedy, Nuclear Testing and the Anti-Nuclear Movement 1960-63
Mark Eastwood, University of Nottingham
Mobilizing for Survival: Sidney Lens and the ‘Rebirth’ of the Nuclear Disarmament Movement, 1975-1977
John Tiplady, Center for the United States and the Cold War Panel E10 World Travels (1.16) Chair: Mahshid Mayar, Bielefeld University Mark Storey, University of Warwick The Tomb of Adam and the Tomb of Ornithorhynchus: Mark Twain, Charles Darwin, and Human Ancestry
George Blaustein, University of Amsterdam Hawthorne's Rome – A City of Evil, Political and Religious Corruption, Violence and Dread
Irene Rabinovich, Holon Institute of Technology Wondering, Wandering, Escaping: Langston Hughes’s and Cedric Belfrage’s World Travels in the 1930s
Kenneth Janken, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Thurs
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Panel E11 Diver-Agent: The Politics and Poetics of Cultural Dissent in America, A Polyphonic Perspective (Roundtable) (2.41)
Chair: Sarah Earnshaw, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München Alice Balestrino, ‘Sapienza’ University of Rome. Claudio de Majo, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich Marta Gara, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milan Virginia Pignagnoli, University of Turin Angela Zottola, University of Napoli Federico II Panel E12 Edith Wharton’s Protest Novel? Rethinking The Fruit of the
Tree (Roundtable) (1.67) Chair: Michael J. Collins, University of Kent Euthanasia Revisited: Edith Wharton’s The Shadow of a Doubt as Source Material for The Fruit of the Tree
Laura Rattray, University of Glasgow Justine Brent, Industrial Novels, and the Limits of Woman Power
Stephanie Palmer, Nottingham Trent University Missing Members: Disability, Print Culture, and Revolution in Edith Wharton's The Fruit of the Tree and Jack London's The Iron Heel
Donna Campbell, Washington State University Protest in Reading the New Woman
Gaby Fletcher, National University of Ireland, Galway Family Money: Wealth, Philanthropy and ‘inherited obligations’ in The Fruit of the Tree
Anna Girling, University of Edinburgh Panel E13 Swinging Life and Swinging Literature: Social and Aesthetic
Protests of the 1960s (1.14) Chair: Olga Nesmelova, Kazan Federal University The Civil Rights Movement and Literary Representation: Politics and Aesthetics
Yuri Stulov, Minsk State Linguistics University Fact versus Fiction Olga Nesmelova, Kazan Federal University Olga Karasik, Kazan Federal University Bob Mellors, Charlotte Bach, and the Evolutionary reason for Sexual Deviation
Tomasz Basiuk, University of Warsaw
Thurs
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27
13:15-14:30: Lunch (Restaurant, First Floor, Franklin Wilkins Building)
13:15-14:30: Women in American Studies Network (WASN) and EAAS Women’s Network joint lunch (Room 1.71)
14:30-16:00: BAAS AGM (B.5 Auditorium)
17:15-18:30: Plenary 2 ‘As Seen From Above: American Poetry in the Jet Age’, Jo Gill, University of Exeter (Logan Hall, UCL Institute of Education, 20 Bedford Way, London, WC1H 0AL)
19:00-20:00: Reception 2 (Co-Sponsored by Adam Matthew Digital) (British Library, 96 Euston Road, London, NW1 2DB)
20:15-22:00: Call Mr Robeson (theatre at the British Library Knowledge Centre)
EBAAS delegates are invited to an exclusive performance of Tayo Aluko's award winning one-man show: a rollercoaster journey through African-American actor and singer Paul Robeson’s remarkable life, highlighting his pioneering and heroic political activism. Features Ol’ Man River and other famous songs, much fiery oratory, and a defiant testimony to the House Un-American Activities Committee.
The performance will take place in the Theatre at the British Library Knowledge Centre, immediately following the reception at the British Library. Running time 85 minutes, no interval; followed by optional Q&A.
This performance is being subsidised by the British Association for American Studies. As a result we are able to offer free tickets for students and casualised staff attending EBAAS, and tickets for just £5 for standard rate conference attendees. Tickets available at: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/call-mr-robeson-a-life-with-songs-tickets-39724312488
Thurs
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Friday 6 April
09:30-11:00 PARALLEL SESSION F Panel F1 American Cultural Identities and Their Literary Representations
(1.16) Chair: Tom Wright, University of Sussex Questioning Blacks’ Existence in America: Toni Morrison’s Vision of Black Beauty in God Help the Child
Yapo Ettien, Félix Houphouet Boigny University of Abidjan-Cocody
Dimensions of Identity in Richard Blanco’s Poetry Ignatov Kirill, Lomonosov Moscow State University
White Pole Dilemma in James Baldwin’s Another Country
Agnieszka Łobodziec, University of Zielona Góra
Panel F2 The Domestic Space as a Location of Dissent in American literature (Roundtable) (1.20)
Chair: Cristina Alsina-Rísquez, Universitat de Barcelona ‘The confused large house I never name’: Economies of Sensation in Melville’s Pierre
Michael Jonik, University of Sussex
Willa Cather’s Dwellings: The Case of The Professor’s House Cristina Alsina-Rísquez, Universitat de Barcelona
Holes and Leaks in Herman Melville’s Stories of Domesticity
Rodrigo Andrés, Universitat de Barcelona
What’s the Matter with New York? How NYC Fiction May Be Losing Its Way Thomas Byers, University of Louisville
Home away from Home: Protesting and Protecting the Domestic in Karen Tei Yamashita’s The I Hotel
Carmen M. Méndez-García, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Fri
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Panel F3 Environmental Hostility: Protest, Environment, and Place in Contemporary Muslim/Arab American Writing (1.21)
Chair: Adina Ciugureanu, Ovidius University Constanta Laying the Groundwork for Coalition: The Rejection of ‘honorary whiteness’ in Arab American Fiction
Dima Alzayat, Lancaster University Making Space and Protest in Contemporary American-Muslim Women’s Writing
Hasnul Djohar, University of Exeter Mapping Arab-American Gendered Subjectivities in Post- 9/11 Contemporary Arab- American Women’s Fiction
Nawel Zbidi, Higher Institute of Languages, Moknine
Panel F4 The Power to Resist: Racialized Others and Opposition in
Contemporary African-American Narratives (1.11) Chair: Anastasia Curwood, University of Kentucky Revisiting Resistance: Theft and the Contemporary Immigrant Short Story
Christine Okoth, King's College London ‘You can create whole worlds, girl’: Rethinking Black Arts in Ntozake Shange’s Sassafrass, Cypress, and Indigo
Jessica Houlihan, University of Essex
‘I’ve whispered ‘Racism’ in a post-racial world’: Paul Beatty’s The Sellout as a Protest Novel
Maria-Irina Popescu, University of Essex Panel F5 Money, Mouth and Message: the Style and Substance of Policy
Rollback (PSA American Politics Group panel) (1.17) Chair: Philip Davies, De Montfort University Communicating the President’s Message: De-Obamafication in Words and Deeds
Clodagh Harrington, De Montfort University
Obama, Trump and the Policy and Messaging of Trade Politics Alex Waddan, University of Leicester
Trump and Nixon: Roadblocks to Repeal Mitchell Robertson, University of Oxford
Fri
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30
Panel F6 Prisons, Protest Culture, and Radical Politics (1.13) Chair: Helen Gibson, Freie Universität Berlin Break Down the Walls: The Black Panther Party and the Struggle for Prisoners’ Rights
Zoe Colley, University of Dundee
Freeing Huey P. Newton Joe Street, University of Northumbria
‘We will not become slaves again’: Black Power, Protest and Collective Autobiography in American Women’s Prison Zines
Olivia Wright, University of Nottingham Panel F7 On the Margins: Negotiating Nationhood from the American
West in the Post-Civil War Era (2.41) Chair: Catherine Bateson, University of Edinburgh ‘The Vital Link to Mexico’: Reconstructing a State and National Identity in Post-Civil War Texas
Alys Beverton, University College London
‘The Great Battlefield of the World’: The American West and the Making of Christian America
Andrew Short, University College London
Buoying the ‘Old Ship of Zion’: Economic Self-Sufficiency as a Means of Defiance in Postbellum Utah
James Williamson, Keele University Panel F8 The Crisis of the Confederate Monument (Roundtable) (1.10) Chair: Lydia Plath, University of Warwick Bruce E. Baker, Newcastle University Thomas Brown, University of South Carolina Zoe Hyman, University College London Anthony Stanonis, Queen's University Belfast
Fri
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Panel F9 Embodied Feminisms of Place and Protest: Maria W. Stewart,
Sylvia Plath, Ana Castillo, and Contemporary Female Adventurers (Roundtable) (2.42)
Chair: Myka Tucker-Abramson, University of Warwick Biophilic Representations of Ethnocultural Identity: Narrating Ecoawareness in Ana Castillo’s Massacre of the Dreamers (1994) and So Far from God (1994)
Sophia Emmanouilidou, TEI of the Ionian Islands
Ecologies of Extreme Adventure: Performing Environmental Activism Kristin J. Jacobson, Stockton University and Aristotle University
Tainted Protest: Maria W. Stewart, Visceral Rhetoric, and the Search for an Adequate Witness in Nineteenth-Century America
Vorris L. Nunley, University of California, Riverside
‘This Is My Property’: Race, Place, and Activism in Sylvia Plath Emily Van Duyne, Stockton University
Panel F10 Transnationalism and Nineteenth-Century American Literature
(BrANCA) (1.60) Chair: Katie McGettigan, Royal Holloway, University of London The Legal and the Exceptional: The Interaction Between Exceptionalist Discourse and the Law in The Brothers Karamazov and White-Jacket
Olga Akroyd, University of Kent
John Neal’s American Literary Nationalism and his Response to Irving’s ‘Westminster Abbey’
Ellen Bulford Welch, University of Sheffield
Transpacific and Transatlantic Exchanges in Henry James’s The Europeans Martha Sledge, Marymount Manhattan College
Fri
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Panel F11 Games of Empire: Video Games and the (New) American Empire (1.62)
Chair: Michael Fuchs, University of Graz ‘All your base are belong to us’: Neocolonialism and New Empire in Science Fiction Video Games
Paweł Frelik, Maria Curie-Sklodowska University Fighting Fascists: The (Racial) Politics of Killing Nazis in Wolfenstein II and in Trump’s America
C. Richard King, Washington State University ‘Wild West’ or ‘Weird West’: Western Digital Games and the Re-Narration of the US Empire
Mahshid Mayar, Bielefeld University Panel F12 Globalization and Its Discontents 1: Protest In/Out of Place
(Roundtable) (1.67) Chair: Begoña Simal-González, Universidade da Coruña Afterimages: History, Time, and the Spaces of American Displacement in the 21st Century
Jayson Baker, Curry College (In)visibility and Protest in Yamashita’s Tropic of Orange and Romo’s El Puente/The Bridge
Lucas Martingano, Universidade da Coruña Anti- and Alter-Globalization: Protest, Resistance and Alternative Discourses in American Culture
Begoña Simal-González, Universidade da Coruña Panel F13 Army Wives, Astronauts, and Cowgirls: Gendered Mobility in
American Culture (1.14) Chairs: Katharina Gerund, FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg, and Alexandra Ganser University of Vienna The Astronauts‘ Wife Only? Gendered Mobility in American Astroculture
Alexandra Ganser, University of Vienna, Austria
Military (Im)Mobilities: Women and War in Siobhan Fallon’s Short Stories Katharina Gerund, FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg
Cowgirldom on the Move: The Transnational Performances of Annie Oakley
Stefanie Schäfer, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany)
Fri
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Panel F14 Indian and Non-Indian Relations in the Twentieth Century: Land, Images, and Unlikely Cultural Brokers (1.12)
Chair: Iwan Morgan, University College London Immigration and Indian Reservation Dispossession: Homesteading and Land Sales on the Northern Great Plains, 1904-1934
Karen V. Hansen, Brandeis University
’Working from the Outside In’: John Collier, Jr.’s Photographs of the Amish and the Navajo
Katherine Jellison, Ohio University
The Exhilaration of Indigenous Self-Determination: Richard Nixon and Blue Lake, Gough Whitlam at Wattie Creek
Dean J. Kotlowski, Salisbury University
11:00-11:45: Break
11:45-13:15 PARALLEL SESSION G Panel G1 Literature, Anti-Psychiatry, Psychotherapy: Transatlantic Exchanges
(1.67) Chair: Martin Halliwell, University of Leicester The Barefoot Doctor: The Cultural Preconditions of R. D. Laing’s Rebirthing Workshops
Brian Edgar, University of Exeter
Villa Road – Inishfree – Colombia: Tracking the Atlantis Primal Commune Paul Williams, University of Exeter
Femininity and the False-Self System: Reading Gender and Self in Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar through R. D. Laing’s The Divided Self
Joanna Wilson, University of Edinburgh Panel G2 Narrating the Post-Industrial United States (1.17) Chair: Paul Crosthwaite, University of Edinburgh Ruin Porn & Ragged Dicks: Post-Industrial White Masculinity in HBO’s Hung
Sandra Becker, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Nothing But Flowers, or Glimpsing the Garden After the Machine Tim Jelfs, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Art and Resistance in DeLillo’s Post-Industrial Landscapes
Xavier Marcó del Pont, Independent Scholar
Fri
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Panel G3 Environmental Consciousness in Twentieth-Century American
Literature (1.13) Chair: Michael Boyden, Uppsala University Ursula K. Le Guin’s SF Fictions and Environmentalism
Parisa Changizi, University of Ostrava
Environment and Protest in the Writings of Upton Sinclair James Deutsch, Smithsonian Institution
Literary Environmentalism in California
Petr Kopecky, University of Ostrava
Panel G4 Emotions and American Protest (Roundtable) (1.16) Chair: Nick Witham, University College London Forces Driving Right-Wing Women’s Protests and Campaigns
June Benowitz, University of South Florida Sarasota-Manatee
Visualizing Anger in Murals of the Black Power Movement Hannah Jeffery, University of Nottingham
Mobilizing Support for Climate Change Activism through Emotional Appeal
Melanie Meunier, Institut d’Etudes Politiques
Expressed and Suppressed Emotions in Nonviolent Civil Rights Campaigns of the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s
Rosemary Pearce, University of Nottingham
The Joys of Community Activism Timo Schrader, University of Nottingham
Panel G5 Histories of Exploitation: Extracting People of Colour from Labour
and Wealth in the US (2.41) Chair: Lynn Itagaki, University of Missouri Slavery, Fugitivity, and the Senses: Examining the Haptic Impact of Slave Filmography
Deirdre Cooper Owens, Queens College, CUNY
White Collar Crime: Strategies of Whiteness and the Racial Wealth Gap Devin Fergus, University of Missouri
Tyrannies of the Workplace: The Employee, the Robot Worker and the End of Humanity
Lynn Itagaki, University of Missouri
Fri
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35
Panel G6 The Fabric of Power: Women of Colour, Materialities, and Resistance
in the Americas (1.20) Chair: Shane White, University of Sydney Mujerista Threads: Female Agency and the Rebozo in Chicanx Culture
Eilidh A B Hall, University of Aberdeen
Quilting Legacies of Resistance: The Works of Faith Ringgold and Chawne Kimber Katja May, University of Kent
‘A handkerchief on her head’: Women of Colour and the Material Legacies of the Haitian Revolution
Nicole Willson, University of Kent (sponsored by the Centre for American Studies, University of Kent)
Panel G7 American Studies in Europe: The Experience of Postgraduate
Students and Early Career Researchers (1.11) Chairs: Lorenzo Costaguta, AISNA Graduate Forum, and Katerina Webb-Bourne, King’s College London and BAAS PG Representative Aleksandra Kamińska, University of Warsaw Marta Duro, University of Valladolid Kostantinos D.Karatzas, University of Zaragoza Natalia Kovalyova, University College Dublin Francesca Razzi, University of Chieti-Pescara Caroline Schroeter, University College Cork Panel G8 Interactions with the Nonhuman World in 19th C America (BrANCA)
(1.60) Chair: Linda Freedman, University College London The Science of ‘Civil Disobedience’ and the Democracy of Trees
Michael Jonik, University of Sussex Combustible Man: Commodity (Mis)Identification in Melville's Redburn
Ian Green, Eastern Washington University
Disclosed by Danger: Dickinson, Darwin, Life Amy R. Nestor, Georgetown University, Qatar
Fri
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Panel G9 Keywords for Trump (Roundtable) (1.10) Chair: Clare Birchall, King’s College London Walls
Christine Okoth, King's College London
Sad Clare Birchall, King's College London
Kitsch
Natalia Cecire, University of Sussex
Deal Molly Geidel, University of Manchester
Red Pill
Carleigh Morgan, University of Cambridge
Secular Stagnation Sean O'Brien, University of Alberta
Fascist
Myka Tucker-Abramson, University of Warwick Panel G10 Placing the West (1.62) Chair: Mark Storey, University of Warwick A Landscape of Protest: Mormons, Anti-Mormons, and the Representation of Utah Territory's Natural Environment, 1847-1868
Greg Davies, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow Places, Borders, and Homes - The Story Told by Inscription Rock
Andrea Kokeny, University of Szeged Max Weber on the Oklahoma Plains
Tom Wright, University of Sussex
Fri
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37
Panel G11 Spatial Politics: Culture, Celebrity, and the City (1.21) Chair: Uta Balbier, King’s College London Reimagining New York: Colson Whitehead’s Speculative Cities
Anne-Marie Evans, York St John University
‘The band is really flying tonight’: Creative and Cultural Space in Kristin Hersh’s Paradoxical Undressing
Fraser Mann, York St John University
Booker T. Washington: Up From Slavery and African American Celebrity Stephen Robinson, York St John University
Panel G12 Black Is/Black Ain't: Performing, Scripting and Narrativising
American Blackness (2.42) Chair: Ralph J. Poole, Paris Lodron University of Salzburg Passing Amid Protest: Imitation of Life, One Life to Live, and Passing Narratives in 1968
Janine Bradbury, York St John University
From the Bronx to Germany and Back: Using the Archive to Narrate African American Protest & Patriotism
Nicole King, Goldsmiths, University of London
‘Savages Amongst the Civilized’: Racial Disguise at the Circus and Sideshow Carina Spaulding, University College London
Panel G13 Russian-American Literary Relations (1.12) Chair: Bruce E. Baker, Newcastle University Comrade Wright, Renegade Wright: Richard Wright and the Soviet Union
Olga Panova, Lomonosov Moscow State University ‘As American as April in Arizona’? Vladimir Nabokov’s English Language Oeuvre
Lyndsay Miller, University of Glasgow
Philip K. Dick’s Russian Orbits - Resisting a Time Out of Joint Irina Novikova, University of Latvia
Fri
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38
Panel G14 Space as Literary Protest: Subversions of Traditional Literary Conventions in Digital, Virtual, and Multimodal Texts (Roundtable) (1.14)
Chair: Pawel Frelik, Maria Curie-Sklodowska University Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close and Falling Man: When Photography Becomes an Essential Feature for Interactive Storytelling
Francesco Bacci, University of Macerata
Interacting with Space(s): The Self-Subversive and Self-Reflective Implications of Space in Nick Montfort’s Ad Verbum and Adam Cadre’s Photopia
Evgenia Kleidona, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Landscapes as Sites of Protest: Zachary Thomas Dodson’s Bats of the Republic (2015)
Thomas Mantzaris, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Digital Poetics on the Threshold: Interfacial Exchanges Belén Piqueras, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid
13:15-14:30: Lunch (Restaurant, First Floor, Franklin Wilkins Building) 13:15-14:30: BAAS AND EAAS Postgraduate Lunch (1.71)
14:30-16:00 PARALLEL SESSION H Panel H1 Asian American Narratives (2.41) Chair: Sean O’Brien, University of Alberta Gardens in the Desert: An Ecocritical Survey of Japanese American Incarceration Narratives
Heidi Kim, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill The Intimacies of Three Continents: Food, Colonial Desire and Queer Networks in Monique Truong’s The Book of Salt
Jiachen Zhang, University of Leeds No Man’s Land: A Transnational Metaphor in Chuang Hua’s Crossings
Joe Upton, University of Sussex
Fri
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39
Panel H2 Female Agency and Identity Negotiations in Contemporary
Narratives of Border Crossings (1.20) Chair: Katja May, University of Kent The Dominican-American Scheherazade: The Rhetoric of La Familia and Anxieties of Belonging in Julia Alvarez’s iYo! (1997)
Stefania Ciocia, Canterbury Christ Church University
Crossing Borders in Post-Western Films: Sin Nombre, Frozen River Jesús A. González, University of Cantabria
Hyphenated Identities: Tropes of Belonging and Displacement in Jhumpa Lahiri’s Unaccustomed Earth (2008)
Mercedes Peñalba, University of Salamanca Panel H3 Popular Protest in the Nineteenth-Century United States, Ireland
and Irish America: Comparisons and Connections (Roundtable) (1.21) Chair: Sophie Cooper, Northumbria University ‘If Ye’s Won’t Fight, Don’t Talk Disloyal’: Evaluating Irish American Song Responses to the New York Draft Riots
Catherine Bateson, University of Edinburgh The Greenback and the Green: Agrarian Revolt and the Land Question in America and Ireland
Rian Holland, Northumbria University
‘Revolutionary Warfare’: Agrarian Resistance and Urban Radicalism – The Transnational Career of the Boycott
Andrew Phemister, University of Edinburgh
‘Daylight Sycophants and Moonlight Marauders’: A Comparison of Slave Resistance in the American South and Peasant Resistance in Ireland
Cathal Smith, National University of Ireland, Galway
Fri
day
40
Panel H4 Countercultural Politics and Revisionary Writing (1.10) Chair: Linda Freedman, University College London ‘Energy is Eternal Delight’: William Blake and Ecopoetic Action
Linda Freedman, University College London
‘Bringing it all Back Home’: E. L. Doctorow's Homer and Langley and Emersonian Transcendentalism in a World of Things
Chris Gair, University of Glasgow
‘Facts are but the Play-things of lawyers’: Thomas Pynchon and the David Irving Trial Rob Turner, University of Exeter
Panel H5 Women at Work from Progressivism to Civil Rights (1.60) Chair: Sinead McEneaney, St. Mary's University, Twickenham Neighbourhood to Nation: School Nurses Pave the Way for a Maternalist Agenda
Heather Furnas, Cornell University Race and the American Working Mother: African American Women’s Social Activism Between the Waves, 1930-65
Lauren Eglen, University of Nottingham Women and the Full Employment Movement: Demanding the Right to Work in the New Deal Era Michael Dennis, Acadia University Panel H6 Black Power (1.11) Chair: Nicole King, Goldsmiths Grace Lee Boggs’s The Next American Revolution: Communitarianism and Sustainability in Place-Based Regeneration
Aneta Dybska, University of Warsaw
Black Power, Black Capitalism? Challenging the Possessive Investment in Whiteness in the 1960s
Simone Knewitz, Universität Bonn ‘The Year of the Panther’: Locating The Black Panther Newspaper in the Context of Revolutionary Pan African Print Culture
Anthony Ratcliff, California State University, Los Angeles
Fri
day
41
Panel H7 Contested Space: Cultural Palimpsests in Latino/a Discourse (2.42) Chair: Ewa Antoscek, Maria Curie-Skłodowska University Ewa Antoscek, Maria Curie-Skłodowska University Raúl Rubio, The New School Grzegorz Welizarowicz, University of Gdańsk Karolina Majkowska, Maria Curie-Skłodowska University Panel H8 African Americans and the Politics of African Diasporan Protest,
1919-1970 (1.13) Chair: Nicholas Grant, University of East Anglia La Langue de nos maîtres : African Americans, Présence Africaine and the Question of Language and Culture
Sarah Dunstan, University of Sydney
Do our Brothers and Sisters Care?: The Response of African Americans to the Nigerian Civil War, 1967-1970
James Farquharson, Australian Catholic University To look and feel like a state: The Pan-African Congress and Interwar Diplomacy
Jake Hodder, University of Nottingham Panel H9 American Radical Periodicals (1890s-1930s): Protest and the Serial
Forms of Democratic Practice (Roundtable) (1.16) Chair: Hélène Quanquin, Université Sorbonne Nouvelle, Paris 3 Radical Self-improvement: Alternative Health Campaigns and Feminist Hygiene in Magazines of the Early 20th-century
Sue Currell, University of Sussex Cécile Roudeau, Université Paris-Diderot
The Myth of America in the Italian-Language Radical Press at the Turn of the Twentieth Century
Stefano Luconi, University of Genoa
‘A Monthly Album of Crazy Fancies’: The Arena, ‘Cranks’ and Radical Magazines in the 1890s
Jean-Louis Marin-Lamellet, Savoie-Mont Blanc
Fri
day
42
Panel H10 Cityspace and its Literary Cartographies (1.17) Chair: Jo Gill, University of Exeter ‘Criminalized’ Space and Hybrid Borderlines: the Chicana Space of Los Angeles
Adina Ciugureanu, Ovidius University Constanta
Heights, Depths and Networks in Colum McCann’s 1974 New York City Nicoleta Stanca, Ovidius University Constanta
Moving from ‘Rabbitland’ to New Prospect, USA: Post – 9/11 Updike and the American City in Terrorist
Eduard Vlad, Ovidius University Constanta Panel H11 Place and Adaptation (1.14) Chair: Mihaela Precup, University of Bucharest Ian Gordon, National University of
Singapore The Italian ‘Buster Brown’: Domesticating an American Comic for Local Audience
Ian Gordon, National University of Singapore
From Protest to Propaganda: How Relocating The War of the Worlds Changed Its Message Charles Shindo, Louisiana State University
Adapting Horror and Translating Fear: Transforming Kairo (Kurosawa Kiyoshi, 2001) into Pulse (Jim Sonzero, 2006)
Valerie Wee, National University of Singapore Panel H12 Using Runaway Slave Advertisements to Teach Slavery
(Workshop) (1.62) Chair: Lydia Plath, University of Warwick ‘But calls himself’: Rereading Runaway Slave Advertisements as Slave Narratives
Antonio T. Bly, Appalachian State University
‘Free that are able and willing’: White Slavery in the Age of the American Revolution Ryan Ingerick, Appalachian State University
‘has a Stammering in his Speech’: the Mental Attributes of Runaway Enslaved
Nelson Mundell, University of Glasgow
A Runaway and a Deserter: Examining the Importance of Networks in Peter and Isaac’s Run from Maine to South Carolina
Nicole Saffold Maskiell, University of South Carolina
Advertising for a ‘Runaway Master,’ or The World Turned Upside Down Billy G. Smith, Montana State University
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Panel H13 Illness and the Environment in American Literature and Cinema
(1.67) Chair: Pascale Antolin, Bordeaux Montaigne University, CLIMAS What the Chaos of Todd Haynes’s Safe (1995) May Add to Illness Narratives
Cecilia Beecher Martins, University of Lisbon, ULICES
Terry Tempest Williams’ Refuge: From Woundedness to Wholeness Through Writing Body and Bird
Isabel Maria Fernandes Alves, Universidade de Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro, ULICES,
‘Half the river red’: Reading the Passaic in Jarmusch and Williams
Ciaran O’Rourke, Trinity College, Dublin
17:15-18:30: Plenary 3 ‘Book Power: Early African American Speculative Fiction and the Future of the Past’, M. Giulia Fabi, University of Ferrara (UCL Institute of Education, 20 Bedford Way, London, WC1H 0AL)
19:00: Conference Banquet (British Library, 96 Euston Road, London, NW1 2DB)
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Saturday 7 April
09:30-11:00 PARALLEL SESSION I Panel I1 The Aesthetics of Resistance in the Mid- to Late-Nineteenth Century
(1.17) Chair: Philip Abraham, Eccles Centre ‘Marching Into The Streets’: Early African American Women Photographers and the Navigation of Public Space
Emily Brady, University of Nottingham
‘An Especial Prize to the Boys’: Patriotic Ephemera and the Union Citizen-Soldier James Brookes, University of Nottingham
Landscapes of Progress: Public Parks and the Modernisation of Postbellum Richmond
Steve Gallo, University of Nottingham Panel I2 From Counter-Cultural Shamans to the Life of the Senses: American
Studies as Aisthesis (1.20) Chair: Michal Peprník, Czech and Slovak Association for American Studies How To Smell Like a Man? Towards a Modal Anthropology of Male US Perfume Cultures
Thomas Clark, Goethe University, Frankfurt
Affect, Protest, and Research: On the Effects of (Seeking) Knowledge on Protest Nicole Hirschfelder, University of Tübingen
On (Film) Bodies and their Senses: Rereading Two African-American Independent Classics
Tomáš Pospíšil, Masaryk University, Brno Panel I3 Placing Protest in an Epidemic: AIDS, Activism, and the Politics of
Place in the United States in the 1980s (1.13) Chair: Joe Merton, University of Nottingham Idiosyncrasies of AIDS in the American Heartland
Katie Batza, University of Kansas
Between Private and Public: AIDS, Health Care Capitalism, and the Politics of Respectability in 1980s America
Jonathan Bell, University College London
AIDS, Homophobic Workplace Discrimination and Activism in the Sunbelt Joshua Hollands, University College London
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Panel I4 African American Memory and Place (1.10) Chair: Nicole Willson, University of Kent Boo, Bull, and Birmingham: To Kill a Mockingbird and Racial Protest in Alabama’s Magic City
Megan Hunt, Edinburgh University African-American History Museums and the Importance of Place
Laura Burnham, Edge Hill University Black Lives Matter and the Battle over Racial Memory
Jenny Woodley, Nottingham Trent University Panel I5 Health Care and Protests in the Obama Era and Trump Era (1.11) Chair: Doug Rossinow, Oslo University Policy Makes Protest? The Role of Policy Feedback on Protests in Support of the Affordable Care Act
Melissa Bass, University of Mississippi Rejecting Freeloaders: the Tea Party Protests Against Obamacare, 2009-2010
Alf Tønnessen, Volda University College Panel I6 Sites and Spaces of Human Rights (1.16) Chair: Axel R. Schäfer, Johannes-Gutenberg-Universität Mainz Empathic Revolutions: Writing from the American Gulag
Doran Larson, Hamilton College ‘Unable or Unwilling’: Genealogies of State Failure in US Humanitarian War
Sarah Earnshaw, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Amnesty International and Letter-Writing as a Form of Protest Matthew Chambers, University of Warsaw
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Panel I7 Nature is the Best Playground: Imagining Nature in Video Games (1.60)
Chair: Michael Fuchs, University of Graz No Longer a ‘Contained and Disciplined Environment’: Urban Nature and Fungal Horror in The Last of Us
Michael Fuchs, University of Graz
(Non-)Playable Scenes of Visionary Enchantment: Romantic American Landscapes and the Sublime in Video Games
Stefan Rabitsch, University of Graz
Mass Effect and the Uses of Nature Anna Warso, University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Warsaw
Panel I8 Remembering Transatlantic Upheavals (1.21) Chair: Peter O’Connor, University of Nottingham Cultural Memory and Transatlantic Solidarity with Native Americans in the Late Cold War
György Tóth, University of Stirling
Krautrock and the Transatlantic Student Movement Ulrich Adelt, University of Wyoming
The US Overseas Military Cemeteries as Sites of Transatlantic Politics and Protests
Allison Wanger, Miami University, Ohio Panel I9 European Ethnicity in the United States (2.42) Chair: Miguel Hernandez, University of Exeter Aspen’s Goethe Bicentennial and the Legacy of the Holocaust
Julia Lange, University of Hamburg The Significance of Becoming Anglo-Saxon: Swedish Immigrants in American Ethno-Racial Hierarchies circa 1900
Dag Blanck, Uppsala University Ethnic Attachments and Transnational Loyalties: Romanian Heritage Festivals in the United States
Raluca Rogoveanu, Ovidius University, Constanta
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Panel I10 Lineages, Legacies & Identities in Chicano (Pop) Culture: Art, Film & Memoir (1.67)
Chair: Gabriele Pisarz-Ramirez, Universität Leipzig Rasquache Reclamation: Taking to the Streets to Take Back a Movement
Caleb Bailey, University of Nottingham
From Teen Angels to Vogue: Protest Through Subcultural Styles in Mi Vida Loca Emma Horrex, University of Hull
Calling Back; Self-Expression and Political Protest in the Memoirs of Luis J. Rodriguez
Josephine Metcalf, University of Hull Panel I11 Girlhood and Popular Culture (1.62) *Please note that this panel will run from 09:30-11:30 Chair: Molly Geidel, University of Manchester Placing Girlhood in Jennifer Egan's Look at Me (2001) and A Visit from the Goon Squad (2011)
Rachael Mclennan, University of East Anglia Against Adulthood: Self-Representations of Girls in Popular Culture
Aleksandra Kamińska, University of Warsaw Preserving the Slut’s Pleasure(s): Zines, Archives and the Power of Sorority’s Healing and Solidarity in Archives
Vanesa Menéndez Cuesta, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid Transnational Protest (Inter)actions: Performances, Guerrilla Girls and the New Media in American and Polish Artivism
Elżbieta Klimek-Dominiak, University of Wrocław Panel I12 Frontier Fiction (1.14) Chair: Katherine Ledford, Appalachian State University Something Wicked Westward Goes: Fanny Van de Grift Stevenson and the Frontier Gothic
Robyn Pritzker, University of Edinburgh Dancing on the Edge of America: Ballrooms as Social Frontiers in the Fiction of John Fante
Michael Docherty, University of Kent
11:00-11:45: Break
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11:45-13:15 PARALLEL SESSION J Panel J1 Redefining Black Mountain Poetry: Before and After Olson (1.20) Chair: Philip McGowan, Queen’s University Belfast M.C. Richards’ Pedagogies
Lucy Burns, University of Manchester
Jonathan Williams’s Occasions Mark Byers, Newcastle University
John Wieners’ Lyric Intensions
Michael Kindellan, University of Sheffield Panel J2 Transatlantic Threads: Little Magazine Networks and the
International Underground (1.11) Chair: Vanesa Menéndez Cuesta, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid Little Magazines and Transatlantic Networks: Jeff Nuttall and My Own Mag
Douglas Field, University of Manchester
The Transatlantic Radical Art of the UCL Small Press Archive Liz Lawes, University College London
The Art of Outflanking: Alexander Trocchi and the Sigma Portfolio
James Riley, University of Cambridge Panel J3 America's Sacrifice Zone: Environmentalism and Protest in
Appalachian Literature (1.21) Chair: Stefan Rabitsch, University of Graz ‘This is my homeplace’: Narratives of Protest and the Fight for Environmental Justice in Appalachian Mountain Literature
Katherine Ledford, Appalachian State University
‘Cant no fire burn me’: Protest Songs in the Coalfields in Denise Giardina’s Storming Heaven
Carmen Rueda, Universitat Rovira I Virgili, Tarragona
‘We’ll keep cutting’: Obstinacy and Disaster in Ron Rash’s Serena Frédérique Spill, Université de Picardie Jules Verne, Amiens
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Panel J4 Protest in American Photography/American Photography in
Protest (1.13) Chair: Kostantinos D.Karatzas, University of Zaragoza Tough Images: Garry Winogrand’s Public Relations and the Paradoxes of Street Photography Simon Constantine, University College London Camera as Weapon: ‘Worker Photography’ in the USA in the 1930s
Barnaby Haran, University of Hull The Same Old Thing Again: Martha Rosler’s Protest
Stephanie Schwartz, University College London Panel J5 The International Dimensions of Postwar American Evangelicalism
(Roundtable) (1.16) Chair: Uta Balbier, King's College London ‘Practicing Global Evangelicalism’: Prayer in the Making of Billy Graham’s Global Evangelical Community
Uta Balbier, King's College London
Evangelicals, Missionaries, and the International Dimension of the Religious Liberty Debate c.1945-1960
Emma Long, University of East Anglia Evangelicals, Religious Politics, and US Cold War Globalism
Axel R. Schäfer, Johannes-Gutenberg-Universität Mainz U.S. and South African Evangelical Responses to Apartheid Melani McAlister, George Washington University
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Panel J6 The 2016 presidential elections as a protest phenomenon (Roundtable supported by Kennan Institute) (1.10)
Chair: Victoria Zhuravleva, Russian State University for the Humanities, Moscow Shifting Focus: Russia as a Target of Protests after Trump Election
Ivan Kurilla, European University at Saint-Petersburg
Protests as Agenda of the 2016 President Elections Alexander Okun, Samara University
Gendered Presidential Election from a Perspective of Women’s Protest
Ludmila Popkova, Samara University
‘A Woman’s Place is in the Resistance’: Female Artists’ Responses to the Politics of Donald J. Trump
Andrea Schlosser, Ruhr University Bochum
Visual Protest: Anti-Trump Discourse in American Political Cartoons Victoria Zhuravleva, Russian State University for the Humanities, Moscow
Panel J7 Rethinking the Southern Colour Line, 1920s-1970s (1.60) Chair: Anastasia Curwood, University of Kentucky ‘Low Type Peons, Catholics and Communists’: The KKK, Mexican Immigration and the 1924 Johnson Act
Miguel Hernandez, University of Exeter
‘We are willing to take their money’: Southern Department Store Managers and Segregation in 1950s America. Vicki Howard, University of Essex ‘White like You’: The Spectacle of Whiteface in the Free Southern Theatre, 1964-1977
Rowan Hartland, Northumbria University Panel J8 Race, Culture, and Activism in New Orleans (1.62) Chair: Anthony Stanonis, Queen’s University Belfast New Orleans in Time: Narrating Disaster
Anna Hartnell, Birkbeck, University of London
The Louisiana Federal Writers’ Project: Representing Race and Voodoo in New Orleans Jennie O'Reilly, Liverpool John Moores
Mardi Gras Indians: From Mutual Aid to Social Activism
Katerina Webb-Bourne, King's College London
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Panel J9 Globalization and Its Discontents 2: Trans-Global, Trans-National,
Trans-Ethnic America (2.42) Chair: Martín Urdiales, Universidade de Vigo Post-ethnicity and Anti-globalization in Chicana/o Science Fiction
Elsa del Campo Ramírez, Universidad de Camilo José Cela
Being True to the Trans-: The Trans-global Science Fiction of Samuel R. Delany José Liste Noya, Universidade da Coruña
Trans-global, Trans-human, Trans-generic, Trans-historical but . . . Trans-eth(n)ic?: Chasing Boundaries in Yann Martel’s Fiction
Martín Urdiales, Universidade de Vigo Panel J10 Contemporary North American Detective Narratives (1.67) Chair: Rachel McIennan, University of East Anglia Marvel’s The Defenders: A Transmedia Detective Narrative
Lyndsay Miller, University of Glasgow
‘As easy to spot as a kangaroo in a dinner jacket’: Animetaphor in Raymond Chandler and Jonathan Lethem
Ruth Hawthorn, University of Lincoln
Thomas Pynchon’s Hardboiled Eric Sandberg, City University of Hong Kong
Panel J11 Degeneration of Settler Colonialism in Contemporary Cinematic Depictions of the US West (1.14)
Chair: M. Elise Marubbio, Augsburg University, Minneapolis The Roots of the Degeneration of Settler Colonialism in The Keeping Room
Matthew Carter, Manchester Metropolitan University
Settler Colonial Disease and Dis-Ease in August, Osage County M. Elise Marubbio, Augsburg University, Minneapolis
Portrayals of Degenerate Religious Leaders in Contemporary Film Westerns
Marek Paryz, University of Warsaw
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Panel J12 Perspectives on New York's Urban Crisis (1.17) Chair: Karen Heath, University of Oxford Urban Lifestyle Magazines and the Ideology of Self-Help in ‘Crisis’-Era New York City, 1969-1985
Joe Merton, University of Nottingham ‘Queer Girl Healthcare is Political’: Women, AIDS, and Healthcare Activism in 1980s and 1990s New York
Emma Day, University of Oxford The Re-Education of John Lindsay Ryan Purcell, Cornell University
13:15-14:30: Lunch (Restaurant, First Floor, Franklin Wilkins Building) 14:30-16:00: 1968 Panel Discussion (Roundtable sponsored by Edinburgh University Press) (B.5 Auditorium) Chair: Martin Halliwell, University of Leicester Penny Lewis, City University of New York Sharon Monteith, Nottingham Trent University Doug Rossinow, Oslo University Stephen J. Whitfield, Brandeis University Nick Witham, University College London
16:00: Conference Ends 16:00: Informal gallery walk for postgraduate delegates
Postgraduate delegates are welcome to join postgraduate representative Katerina Webb-Bourne after the conference for a stroll along the Southbank, to the Tate Modern and back across the river to Somerset House.
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