UVA English Graduate Conference 2013
“Subject to Change: Nature, Text, and the Limits of
the Human”
Friday - Sunday . March 22-24
Monroe Hall
Official Schedule
**All room numbers
refer to rooms in Monroe Hall, unless specifically noted otherwise
Friday, March 22
2:00 pm . Registration
opens (Monroe Hall lobby)
3:00-4:15 . Panels (1)
1a. Room 116: “Stars, Sex, and Signs: Articulating
Renaissance Materialism(s)”
William Rhodes, “Speculative Allegories”
Liz Steinway, “Complicating Chastity: Elizabeth I
and Ermines in Book III of The
Faerie Queene”
Aaron Greenberg, “Life and Death Matters in the
Renaissance”
1b.
Room 134: “Poems and Things”
Mande Zecca, “The Combined Refraction of Everything
Else: John Ashbery’s
Objects”
Joe Albernaz, “William Blake’s Apocalyptic
Ontology: An Encounter Between
Blake and Object-Oriented Philosophy”
Kevin Holden , “Allotropic Series (Poetics,
Ontology, Emergence)”
Tyler Babbie & Kateyln Kenderish,
“Anthologizing the Landscape: Poetics of
Plants and Places”
4:30-5:45 . Panels (2)
2a. Room 116: “Human/Animal”
T. Nodin De Saillan, “Becoming-Other, More,
Same : The Human-Other Alliance
and the Search for Identity in Haruki Murakami’s Kafka
on the Shore”
Ashley Faulkner, “Beastly Queer: The Unmanly Woolf”
Sharon Kunde, “Slimed!: Meshy Baptisms in Elizabeth
Bishop’s ‘At the
Fishhouses’”
Erica Schauer, “The Human Animal and the Polite
Physicality in fin-de-siècle
Paris”
6:00 . Keynote
Address by Professor Timothy Morton (Rice University)
“The Dark Side of the Household
Object”
Monroe Hall, Room 130
9:30 . Conference Bar
Night at Zocalo (on the Downtown Mall)
Saturday, March 23
8:00 am . Registration
opens (Monroe Hall lobby)
9:00-10:15 . Panels (3)
3a. Room 124: “Conspicuous Object Consumption”
Harriet Calver, “Reality effects: Graham Greene’s Insincere
Accessories”
Grace Tirapelle, “A Blueprint for Health: Spa
Architecture and the Construction
of Middle-Class Subjectivity in The Road to
Wellville”
Whitney DeVos, “Stilettos of Meat: Agency and
the Ur-Fetish in Lara Glenum’s
‘Sign of the Goat [Icky’s Song]’”
3b. Room 134: “Ecopoetics”
Michelle Menting, “Residence Time—The Memory
of Water: Poems”
John Trevathan, “The Mouth of Literature:
Experimental Ecological Poetry in
Galicia”
Amanda Montei,
“Transcorporeality & Ecological Critique in Hannah Weiner’s
The Fast”
Kaushik
Viswanath, “Animating the Inanimate: An Ecological Reading of Arun
Kolatkar’s Poetry”
10:30-11:45 . Panels
(4)
4a.
Room 124: “The Romantic Corpus”
Jonathan Kerr, “‘throwing words
away’: Lyrical Ballads and the Failure of
Enlightenment Anthropology”
Jacob Hughes, “Spontaneous Overflow:
Wordsworth, Byron, and the Borders of
the Romantic Human”
Megan Quinn, “‘a thing such as even Dante
could not have conceived’: The Word,
the Animal Body, and the Thing in Frankenstein
and Transformation”
Adam Neikirk, “The ‘Inspired Charity-Boy’:
Coleridge as Strange Stranger”
4b. Room 134: “Writing at the End, Life at the Limits”
Jacqueline A. Kellish, “‘What thou seest, is
thyself’: Knowledge, Transcendence
and the Unity of Man and Nature in Radi Os”
Gary Grieve-Carlson, “‘No Greek will be able
/ to discriminate my body’: Charles
Olson’s Objectism and the Decentering of the Human
Subject”
Kieran Quinlan, “Walker Percy, the Three
Huxleys, and the Challenges of
Posthuman Subjectivity”
Christina Thyssen, “Post-traumatic McCarthy”
10:30 . Rare Book School
Workshop
“The Lives of Books: Methods for
Interpreting the Publication and Reception of Texts”
(meet
in the lobby of Alderman Library; participation by prior arrangement only)
12:00 pm . Recess for
Lunch
1:30-2:45 . Panels (5)
5a. Room 124: “Bodies Without End: Text and Flesh”
Ann M. Mazur, “Props in Victorian Parlour
Plays: The Periperformative Object”
Barbora Novosadová, “Medium as an Extension
of Human: Boundaries of the
Medias”
Jeroen Nieuwland, “Hybrid Contingencies:
Entanglements of Expression, Text,
and Bodies in Conceptual Poetry”
João Paulo Guimarães, “Malleable Bodies and
Unreadable Beings: Eduardo Kac
and Leslie Scalapino’s Poetics of Unnaming”
5b. Room 134: “Modeling Texts In and Out of History”
Nathan D. Frank, “Breeding Monsters Out of
Nature: How Pedagogy of Inversion
Transforms Humanity in Diderot and Beyond”
Brad Baumgartner, “Apophatic Inorganicism: A
Consideration of Thomas Ligotti
and Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite”
Sand Avidar-Walzer, “Fragments and Scholia:
Notes for a Darwinian History of
Philosophy”
Ted Scheinman, “Didaxis, Translation, and the
‘Natural’ in the Georgics:
Virgil & Dryden Under Fire”
3:00-4:15 . Panels (6)
6a. Room 124: “Life in Light of Science: Enlightenment
Legacies”
Joe Fletcher, “Dead Souls: Priestley,
Swedenborg, and the Challenge of
Materialism”
Adam Jason Miller, “Explaining the
Supernatural: Radcliffe, Realism, and the
Ends of Science”
Lynn Cowles, “Playing Dress-Up: Scriblerian
Satire on the Metaphysics of
Identity and Human Nature”
Elizabeth Bernath, “The Aesthetics of
Scientific Alterity in Frankenstein”
6b. Room 134: “The Language and Politics of OOO”
Luther Cobbey, “VOO Do Ethics? What Could a Verb-Oriented Ontology Do for
Ethics?”
Justin Butler, “Objects, Poetics, Genetics:
Thinking Codes and Rapports in Life
and Non-Life”
Abigail Lowe, “Common wealth and Common form:
The Ethical Project of
Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri”
Callum Ingram, “Democrats in Space: Critical
Geography and Material Efficacy”
4:30-6:00 . Masterclass
(Bruce Holsinger in conversation with Timothy Morton)
“When Sacred Texts Collide”
Room
130
6:00-8:00 . Reception in
the Colonnade Club (Pavilion VII on the Lawn)
Sunday , March 24
8:00 am . Registration
opens (Monroe Hall lobby)
9:00-10:15 . Panels (7)
7a. Room 124: “Complicating Separation: Human and
Non-Human Others”
Valerie Henry, “Condemning Evidence: The
Legal Life of Objects in A Passage to
India”
Angela Aliff, “The Senses Subvert:
Kingsolver’s Avoidance of the Gaze in Prodigal
Summer”
Angela Passafaro, “Anthropocentric
Imperialism and the Formation of the
Colonizer in Tarzan of the Apes”
7b. Room 134: “Making Bodies: The Human Machine”
Carlo Negri, “Posthuman, (Still) Too Human.
Deleuze and the Posthuman
Subject: A Critical Comparison”
Wesley Dalton, “Falling Apart: Bodily
Disintegration and Posthumanity in J.G.
Ballard’s Crash”
Scott Sundvall, “Prostechnics: The Originary
Coupling of Prosthesis and
Technesis in Three Brief Acts”
Tereza Klimešová, “Objectifying Ourselves”
10:30-11:45 . Panels
(8)
8a. Room 124: “Resonance and Reinvention”
Kenneth Lota, “How to Turn a Tragedy into a
Comedy, and How to Turn a
Tragedy into More of a Tragedy: Christopher Moore’s
Fool and Peter
Brook’s
King Lear”
Victor Szabo, “Twilight Music, Resonant
Records”
Brandon Walsh, “Sound Thinking: Narrative as
Audible Event in Ulysses and
Molloy”
8b. Room 134: “Nature in Modernity: Reckoning the Anthropocene”
Jason Eversman, “Locating the Anthropos in
the Anthropocene: Class Struggle &
Climate Change”
Stephanie Bernhard, “Literature and the Tone
of Climate Change”
Ted Howell, “Make it Noö(sphere): Modernism
and the Anthropocene”
Rob Welch, “The Natural Tools of Romanticism:
The Reworking of Barren
Ground for Utility”
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