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The University of Southampton
EnglishPart of Humanities

Romance, Revolution and Reform  Event

Date:
13 - 14 January 2021
Venue:
Online

Event details

Romance, Revolution and Reform are delighted to be holding this two-day international virtual conference on all aspects of research on transnationalism in the Long-Nineteenth Century.

Join us for two days of panels with papers from speakers across the world, and the launch of 'Reform', Issue 3 of Romance, Revolution and Reform. Our keynote address will be given by Corinne Fowler (@corinne_fowler), author of Green Unpleasant Lands, and director of the hugely successful Colonial Countryside child-led history and writing project (@ColonialCountr1).

Now, more than ever, it is important to think globally, and to challenge dominant Euro-centric narratives. This interdisciplinary conference will create an open forum where transnational research from around the world, and across the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, can come together.

Schedule - Wednesday 13th January 2020

9.45-10.00 - Registration and Welcome

10.00-11.00 - Panel 1 Travel Writing

Margaret Gray (University of Newcastle) - 'Little wooden shop-fronts, like open cabinets full of shelves': Reframing Eastern Marketplaces as Cultural Exhibitions in Late-Victorian Women's Travel Writing

Haonan Chi (University of Exeter) - Rewriting the Anti-footbinding Movement: Alicia Littles T'ien Tsu Hui and Qiu Jin's Revolutionary New Woman

Nitya Gundu (Jawaharlal Nehru University) - Life Writing and Self-Fashioning in Fanny Parkes' Wanderings of a Pilgrim in Search of the Picturesque

Dr Nadia Butt (University of Giessen) - Encountering the 'Imperial Other': Representations of Occidental Lifestyles in Krishnabhabini Das' Travelogue A Bengali Lady in England

11.00-12.30 - Break

11.30-12.30 - Panel 2: Counternarratives

Faiq Lodhi (Independent Scholar) - Bertha Mason's Transnational Revenants: Othered Women in Victorian Popular Fiction

Rezvan Deyaninajafabady (University of Southampton) - The Iranians' imagology in the mirror of European travellers in the nineteenth century

Olivia Tjon-A-Meeuw (University of Zurich) - A Black Ship on the Caribbean Atlantic: A space for a Counter-Nation in Maxwell Phillip's Emmanuel Appadocca; or the Blighted Life: A Tale of the Boucaneers

Asma Char (University of Exeter) - Debates on Women's Emancipation in the Arab World and Britain at the Fin de Siecle

12.30-13.30 - Break

13.30-14.55 - Keynote Address

Professor Corinne Fowler (University of Leicester) - Colonial Countryside: Country Houses, British History and Contemporary Politics.

14.55-15.00 - Close

Schedule - Thursday 14th January

9.45-10.00 - Registration and Welcome

10.00-11.00 - Panel 3: Matters of Authorship

Helena Drysdale (University of Exeter) - George Bowen and his 1854 Murray Handbook for Greece: Can a critical examination of a brief period in his life provide an enriching route into the past?

Huimin Wang (University of Southampton) - The Transnational, Translingual, and Tradaptational Journey of Romeo and Juliet in the Late Nineteenth-Century China

Joseph Hankinson (University of Oxford) - 'a tropical violence of taste': Robert Browning and the Transnational Grotesque

Chloe Osborne (Royal Holloway) - Robert Louis Stevenson, Albert Wendt and the Romance of 'Tusitala': Resituating critical indigenous thought within Victorian studies

11.00-11.30 - Break

11.30-12.30 - Panel 4: Print Circulation

Stephanie Meek (University of Exeter) - 'New Boxes Come Across the Sea': Exploring the Transnational Victorian Library

Dr Eleanor Hopkins (Independent Scholar) - 'These twelve hours saved by the post from America': Imagining 'British' global travel postally in Jules Verne's Around the World in Eighty Days (1872)

Jasper Heeks (Kings College London) - The spread of 'genus larrikin': news of and overseas responses to deviant and delinquent Australian youth, 1870-1898

Dr Alexander Bubb (University of Roehampton) - The Victorian Global Bookshelf: Asian Classics Translated for the General Reader, 1845-1915

12.30-13.30 - Break

13.30-14.30 - Panel 5: Transatlantic Literatures

Georgia Thurston (University of Cambridge) - Frances Hodgson Burnett and Dialect Novels on the Move

Mashael Alhammad (University of Leeds) - Fanny Fern's Ruth Hall: Textual Portraits of the Female Celebrity in Transatlantic Print Culture

Dr Rachael Isom (Arkansas State University) - Transnational Sensibility in The Woman of Colour (1808)

Robert Laurella (University of Oxford) - Representing Slavery on the Transatlantic Stage: Collins, Boucicault, and Stowe

14.30-15.00 - Launch of Romance, Revolution and Reform Issue 3: 'Reform'

Joining Information

This conference will be held virtually. Joining information will be sent out to all registered attendees closer to the time.

Eligibility

This conference is open to all scholars, academics, Postgraduate students and early career researchers as well as to members of the public.

Tickets

Tickets for each day are sold separately.

Please find tickets for Day 1 

Please find tickets for Day 2 

The conference timetable itself can be viewed on our twitter page (@RRRJournal) or on our website www.rrrjournal.com.

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