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RSVP News
2015 Robert and Vineta Colby Scholarly Book Prize – Winner Announced!
The Research Society for Victorian Periodicals is delighted to announce the winner of the 2014 Robert and Vineta Colby Scholarly Book Prize – Caroline Bressey, author of Empire, Race, and the Politics of Anti-Caste (Bloomsbury, 2014). The Colby Prize is awarded to the scholarly book that most advances the understanding of the nineteenth-century British newspaper or periodical press. The selection committee praised Caroline Bressey’s book as innovative and conceptually engaging, citing its challenge to metropolitan-centric modelings of transnational and trans-Atlantic traffic in ideas, people, and publications and its careful contextualization of a pair of periodical case-studies. In engaging prose, the beautifully illustrated book makes original and powerful use of two micro-histories to address a big-picture issue – 19th c. antiracial activism in and beyond Britain and the US. Noting the multiple ways that ideas of geography shape the structure and inform the discourse of the book, the committee singled out its attention not only to periodical communities but also to the social networks supporting these periodical communities.
The committee awarded an “honorable mention” this year to Martin Hewitt, author of The Dawn of the Cheap Press in Victorian Britain: The End of the ‘Taxes on Knowledge,’ 1849-1869. The committee praised Hewett’s wonderfully researched study for its meticulous documentation of “the changes and challenges wrought by the legacy of repeal” of taxes on knowledge in the mid century.
REMINDER: CFP deadline approaching for the Annual RSVP Conference
A reminder that the deadline for proposals for the annual conference of the Research Society for Victorian Periodicals is February 1. RSVP welcomes proposals on any aspect of 19th-century magazines and newspapers, but the specific topic for the 2015 conference is “Life and Death in the 19th-Century Press.” The conference will be held in Ghent, Belgium, on July 10 and 11. For more information please visit our Conference News area of the website.
cfp Margaret Oliphant in Context 6 July 2015
Margaret Oliphant in Context
6 July 2015
Victorian Studies Centre
University of Leicester
A conference on the Victorian novelist, biographer, literary critic and historian Margaret Oliphant (1828-97) is being held at the Victorian Studies Centre, University of Leicester, to celebrate the publication of the 25 volume Selected Works of Margaret Oliphant, (Pickering and Chatto, 2011-16) under the general editorship of Joanne Shattock and Elisabeth Jay. See www.pickeringchatto.com/oliphant
Margaret Oliphant was a Victorian woman of letters, who wrote across multiple genres: fiction, literary criticism, history, travel writing, and biography. Her Autobiography (1899) is justly celebrated as a unique writing life. In her reviewing and in her wider journalism, her subjects included literature in English and European languages, philosophy, theology, art and current social issues, especially those affecting women. She was also a translator and a series editor.
Papers are invited on all aspects of Oliphant’s writing from her subject matter to her use of a variety of genres. Comparisons with other Victorian writers are encouraged. Topics might include but are not confined to:
serial fiction; the short story ; life writing; journalism; reviewing ; travel writing; translation; literary history; social history; the supernatural; independent women; Scotland; the prolific writer; the professionalization of literature
Deadline for paper and panel proposals 2 March 2015
Please submit a 250-300 word proposal to victorianstudies@le.ac.uk . Papers will be limited to 20 minutes. Proposals for panels of two or three papers are welcome.
Cfp Networks of Media and Print in the Age of Imperialism
23 April 2015, University of Warwick
This conference will examine the means by which imperial networks of print and media helped fashion individual and collective identities across national and proto-national boundaries in the eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Aiming to be a comparative conference, it will consider the ways in which media and publishing networks connected European and Japanese colonial powers to their respective colonies in Asia, Africa, Australasia and the Americas, forging and extending imperial ideologies. While reader demand, as well as the changing colonial power dynamic, played a part in determining representations of imperialism and the colonized ‘other’, the conference aims at exploring how such print technologies and networks were used conversely by colonized peoples in efforts to formulate national or transnational identities, as well as to imbibe, renegotiate or contest matrixes of imperial power. Additionally, it will address how media and print produced by various imperial powers and their colonized subjects transcended their specific regional contexts by interacting with and informing other imperialisms or colonized regions, and by extending to what were considered non-colonized and non-imperial power spaces.
Papers are welcome on the following topics:
- Visual representations of empire/imperialism
- Imperialist and anti-imperialist print culture
- Material aspects of colonial and anti-colonial literature (book design, illustration, publication, posters and advertising)
- Newspapers, periodicals, pamphlets and ephemera
- Colonial editions; colonial libraries/imperial club libraries
- Imperial adaptations and appropriations
- Technologies of print in colonies
- Long-distance correspondence between authors, editors, agents, and publishers
- Post-colonialism and book history
Please send an abstract of up to 500 words and a brief biographical note (100 – 150 words) to: Tara Puri (T.Puri@warwick.ac.uk) and/or Ashok Malhotra (A.P.Malhotra@warwick.ac.uk).
Two travel bursaries are available for postgraduate students. If you would like to be considered, please submit a short outline of your research along with the abstract.
Deadline for abstracts: 16 January 2015. Decisions will be announced at the end of the month.
http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/cross_fac/ias/current/grf/puri/imperialprintnetworks/
CFP: Media 19 Conference. The press and journalists in the 19th century: identities and modernities (Paris, 8-12 June 2015)
The French-Quebecker Media 19 project, funded by the Agence nationale de la recherche (France) and the Fonds de recherche québécois – Société et culture (2011-2015) is now completing its first phase. Devised around the www.medias19.org digital platform, the project serves as a frame for developing critical thinking on journalistic practices in the 19th century, on the promotion and analysis of corpuses, as well as on the study of media culture development within the Francophone space. This conference is an opportunity to both assess past activities (using the Medias 19 platform data) and to invite researchers to discuss ongoing projects. The conference will last five working days and revolves around five main axes, which have determined scientific research as conducted by Medias 19.
The conference will be in Paris, at the Canadian Cultural Center (5, rue de Constantine, 7th arrondissement). Paper presentations are 20 minutes long. Proposals (250 words, a short bio, full contact addresses, home institution) must be sent to congresM19@gmail.com by January 1, 2015.