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RECONNECTING TEXT AND WORLD:RE-READING THE BRITISH EXPERIMENTAL NOVEL AT POST-WAR. UNE RELECTURE DU ROMAN EXPÉRIMENTAL BRITANNIQUE DE L’APRÈS-GUERRE.
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE
PROGRAMMETHURSDAY, 18th APRIL 2019
9h30 | WelcomeProfessor Marie-Françoise Alamichel (Université Paris Est)
10h00 | IntroductionDr. Andrew Hodgson (Université Paris Est)
Focus on: B. S. Johnson
10h30 | Getting it all Down: Disintegration and Integration in B. S. Johnson’s The Unfortunates.Dr. Ben Winsworth (University of Orléans)
11h00 | Re-reading B.S. Johnson’s Christie Malry’s Own Double Entry as a Post-modern Menippean SatireSabina Sosin (Jagiellonian University, Kraków)
11h30 | ‘Another Ballsup’: The Discarded Opening of Albert Angelo and the Unspeakable Loves and Losses of the 1960s Avant-GardeDr. Chris Clarke (Independent)
12h00 | “Evolving form” – from the objective correlative in Albert Angelo to the fictionalized self in The Unfortunates by B. S. JohnsonKatarzyna Biela (Jagiellonian University, Kraków)
12h30 | Questions and Discussion
13h00 | Lunch
Focus on: Reflections on Empire
14h30 | Chosisme and the End of Empire: Alain Robbe-Grillet in the British Literary FieldDr. Adam Guy (Wadham College, University of Oxford)
15h00 | Christine Brooke-Rose’s Out: Humanism’s White DeathPatrick Burley (University College, University of Oxford)
15h30 | Questions and Discussion
15h50 | Coffee break
Focus on: J. G. Ballard
16h10 | J.G. Ballard: Visuality and the Novels of the Near FutureDr. Natalie Ferris (University of Edinburgh)
16h40 | Poet of Decay: The Eschatological Turn in J.G. Ballard’s FictionDr. Marcin Tereszewski (University of Wrocław)
17h10 | Questions and Discussion
17h30 | The Writer’s Action Group and the Fight for Public Lending RightDr. Joseph Darlington (Future Works Media School, Manchester)
18h00 | Questions and Discussion
FRIDAY, 19th APRIL 2019
Focus on: Aesthetics and Social reflection
09h30 | The Aesthetics of Anarchy in Anna Kavan’s IceDr. Victoria Walker (Queen Mary, University of London)
10h00 | “I draw the line as a rule between one solar system and another”: The Confrontation and Disassociation of the Self in the Novels of Christine Brooke-RoseDr. Stephanie Jones (Independent)
10h30 | Airports and Experiments: Christine Brooke-Rose and Brigid BrophyDr. Carole Sweeney (Goldsmiths, University of London)
11h00 | Questions and Discussion
11h30 | Coffee break
Focus on: Representations of Women in the Experimental Novel
11h50 | Experimental consent: Theorising female agency through representations of sexual violenceNell Osborne (University of Manchester)
12h20 | Questions and Discussion
12h30 | Lunch
14h00 | ‘Dykily Psychotic, Crippled, Creepish Women’s Writing’: Muriel Spark’s Refusalist FictionsDr. Sarah Bernstein (University of Sheffield)
14h30 | Questions and Discussion
14h40 | ‘A very special sort of unreadable book’: Subverting the British campus novel in Christine Brooke-Rose’s ThruDr. Hannah Van Hove (Vrije Universiteit Brussel)
15h10 | Questions and Discussion
Focus on: Ann Quin
15h20 | Ann Quin and the ‘infuriating’ British experimental novel of the 1960s/70sDr. Nonia Williams (University of East Anglia)
15h50 | Ann Quin’s Berg & Stewart Home’s 69 Things to do with a Dead Princess: Détournement & SchizophreniaDr. David Vichnar (Charles University, Prague)
16h20 | The limits of looking: conceptualising the frame in Christine Brooke-Rose’s Out and Ann Quin’s BergHilary White (University of Manchester)
16h50 | The Goldsmiths Prize and Its Conceptualisation of the Experimental British NovelDr. Wojciech Drąg (University of Wrocław)
17h20 | Questions and Discussion