Posts Tagged 'American Literature'

Midwest Interdisciplinary Graduate Student Conference

I am looking forward to attending and presenting at “Living Remains,” the Midwest Interdisciplinary Graduate Student Conference at the University of Wisconsin, on February 15-16, 2008.

  • Dr. David Helprin of the University of Michigan will be giving the keynote address, “Tragedy into Melodrama: Towards a Poetics of Gay Male Culture” at 3:30 on Friday, February 15.
  • I will be presenting on the following panel from 3:15 – 4:45 on Saturday, Feb. 16:

Gender, Hybridity and Agency

Chair: Dr. Peter Paik, Comparative Literature

“‘Free will is making a comeback’: Adapting Social and Biological Inheritance in Jeffrey Eugenides’ Middlesex

Toni Magyar—English, Monmouth University

Disease, Madness, and Resistance in Elizabeth Stuart Phelps’ The Silent Partner

Yanmei Jiang and Katie Danner—English, University of Wisconsin

A Compositionist Living the Labored Remains of Femicide in Ciudad Juárez: Writing Against the Incorporation of Female Bodies in Maquiladoras and U.S. Universities”

Dani Goldstein—English, University of Wisconsin

Charlotte Temple, a.k.a the bane of my existence

Last Spring, in Dr. Lisa Vetere’s course, The Cultural Work of Early American Texts, I wrote my seminar paper on Susanna Rowson’s 1794 novel Charlotte Temple.

I was not terribly enthused with the primary texts in this course to be honest: “it just isn’t my thing;” however, the secondary and theoretical texts for this class were AWESOME. (This is a common experience for me.) I picked Charlotte Temple as my primary text for two very basic reasons: 1. It is a novel rather than a travel account, captivity narrative, autobiography, etc.; 2. The amount of existing criticism was substantial enough to give me something to work with, but not too overwhelming to negate the possibility of my being able to read and address it in the time and page #’s I had available to me.

Though it caused me a few headaches, I am pretty pleased with the result. Although there is neither quite enough theoretical muscle nor enough historical information to completely sustain the argument, for a seminar paper, it works because it identifies a formal element of the text, the analepses, which has not been addressed in criticism, and posits a social, historical and formal importance for that feature.

So, my first posted paper is “With Friends Like These: Authority and Analepsis in Charlotte Temple.CHARLOTTE.DOC

* Papers posted on the blog, will also be added to the “Graduate Work” page*

American Literature Association Elizabeth Stoddard Panel

The line-up for the Elizabeth Stoddard Society Panel for the 2008 American Literature Association conference:

Aesthetics and Ideology in the Writings of Elizabeth Stoddard

Organized by the Elizabeth Stoddard Society

Chair: Dawn Keetley, Lehigh University

1. “Escape from Market Relations? Elizabeth Stoddard’s Temple House and the Commodification of the Gothic,” Lisa M. Vetere, Monmouth University.

2. “Gender Scripts and Narrative Frames in the Novels of Elizabeth
Stoddard,” Toni Magyar, Monmouth University.

3. “”Elizabeth Stoddard, Bayard Taylor and Writing Travel,” Wesley
Atkinson, Lehigh University.

Stoddard Call For Papers

Dr. Lisa Vetere and I are organizing the Elizabeth Stoddard Society Panel for the 2008 American Literature Association conference. The Call for Papers for this panel is now posted at the Penn CFP site.

Online Stoddard Texts

Elizabeth Stoddard’s 1861 novel The Morgesons can be found at Project Gutenberg. Other works by Elizabeth Stoddard on Project Gutenberg include Lemourne Versus Huell and Poems.

Stoddard’s 1865 novel Two Men can be downloaded at Google Books

Although I know that the University of Michigan has Stoddard’s 1867 novel Temple House on microfilm, I have not found it online yet.