“Was not their mistake once more bred of the life of slavery that they had been living?—a life which was always looking upon everything, except mankind, animate and inanimate—‘nature,’ as people used to call it—as one thing, and mankind as another, it was natural to people thinking in this way, that they should try to make ‘nature’ their slave, since they thought ‘nature’ was something outside them” — William Morris
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Eco-Gothic CFP
Call for Papers
European and Italian EcoGothic in the Long 19th Century
Luigi Capuana; Carlo Collodi; Arthur Conan Doyle; Antonio Fogazzaro; H. Rider Haggard; Henry James; Vernon Lee; J. Sheridan Le Fanu; Cesare Lombroso; Arthur Machen; Paolo Mantegazza; Edgar Allan Poe; Mary Shelley; Bram Stoker; Ann Radcliffe; Matilde Serao; Robert Louis Stevenson; Ugo Tarchetti and the Scapigliati; H. G. Wells (only a list of suggested authors).
Proposals are invited for a special issue of Gothic Studies, to be edited by David Del Principe (Montclair State University) and William Hughes (Bath Spa University) which will consider EcoGothic approaches to European and Italian literature in the long nineteenth century.
The editors seek submissions that employ EcoGothic approaches - in particular, Ecofeminist and Vegetarian Critical theory - to focus on the nonhuman animal, evolving (non-)anthropocentric notions of species identity, especially in relation to flesh consumption, food, gender, and race paradigms, monstrous hybridity, and the construction of nation in the Industrial Era.
Other issues which might be explored within this framework include metaphors of animal slaughter, populational, evolutionary, and criminal discourses as inscribed on the nonhuman body, and agricultural and environmental issues as addressed by reformist ideologies such as spiritualism, antivivisectionism, and temperance.
The editors keenly encourage submissions that bring together works by Gothic authors, such as British and Italian, that are generally not approached from a transnational perspective. Proposals of no more than 200 words should be submitted to both editors by 30 September 2011.
Publication is anticipated in 2013, and a deadline for completed work (5,000-7,000 word articles) will be advised as soon as the issue is finalised. Please send your abstract as an electronic attachment to:
delprinciped@mail.montclair.edu w.hughes@bathspa.ac.uk
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1 comment:
The comment "...metaphors of animal slaughter..." brings to mind a most spectacular architectural design I saw last year done by a 4th year student here at the Architecture School.
He had designed or conflated an abattoir and a restaurant. Totally macabre and fascinating at the same time - very very interesting and very architectural if you know what I mean.
Certainly stuck in the mind. I did ask him one day (he designed this just down the hallway from me) if he was vegetarian but he wasn't.
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