The NCSA 2016 Conference Call for Papers
The
New and the Novel in the 19th Century/New Directions in 19th-Century Studies
April 13-16, Lincoln, Nebraska
April 13-16, Lincoln, Nebraska
Nineteenth
Century Studies Association
We invite papers and panels that investigate any aspect of
the new and the novel in the long 19th century, including forms and genres
(song cycles, photography, “loose baggy monsters”), fashions and roles (the
dandy, crinoline, Berlin wool work), aesthetics (Pater, panoramas), the old
made new (Graecophilia, dinosaurs), crimes and vices (serial murder, racial
science), faiths (Mormons, Positivists), geographies (frontiers, the source of
the Nile), models of heroism (Custer, Byron, F. Nightingale), times (railroad
tables, the eight-hour-day), psychologies (phrenology, chirology, Freud),
attractions (the Great Exhibition, sensation fiction, Yellowstone), and
anxieties (Chartism, empire). Recent methods in 19th-century studies (digital
humanist approaches and
editing, “surface,” “suspicious,” and “deep” reading) are invited, as are theorizations of novelty itself or epistemologies of the new, and alternate, interdisciplinary, and trans-Atlantic interpretations of the theme.
editing, “surface,” “suspicious,” and “deep” reading) are invited, as are theorizations of novelty itself or epistemologies of the new, and alternate, interdisciplinary, and trans-Atlantic interpretations of the theme.
Please
email 250-word abstracts for 20-minute papers along with one-page CVs to the
program chairs by September 30, 2015, to ncsanebraska2016@gmail.com.
Abstracts should include author’s name, institutional affiliation if any, and
paper title. We welcome panel proposals with three panelists and a moderator,
or alternative formats with pre-circulated papers and discussion.
Please note that submission of
a proposal constitutes a commitment to attend the conference if the proposal is
accepted. All proposals will be acknowledged, and presenters will be notified
in December 2015. Graduate students whose proposals are accepted may submit
complete papers in competition for a travel grant to help cover transportation
and lodging. Scholars who live outside the North American continent, whose
proposals have been accepted, may submit a full paper to be considered for the
International Scholar Travel Grant.