Author Archives: cleurope

Information on Accommodation

Have a look at a new page we created on accommodation.

The conference takes place at Birkbeck, University of London, in Bloomsbury. There are literally hundreds of hotels in central London, and many dozens within a short walk of Birkbeck (nearest tube stops: Russell Square; Euston; Goodge Street; Warren Street).

All bookings and queries are to be made directly with the hotels.

The page includes a list of budget accommodation, recommendations from delegates at past events and local hotels.

Book discount

From Literature to Cultural Literacy

Edited By Naomi Segal and Daniela Koleva
Coming September 2014!

Special Offer – 30% off with this flyer!

See the publisher’s website.

About the bookbook-flyer_snippet

In current contexts one can be a literary scholar and yet be working on objects other than poems, dramas or fiction. Something has happened to both the researchers and the discipline that has transformed this humanities domain, bringing it into a sharper focus and investigating the readability of contemporary global social issues. The essays in this book, written by scholars from ten countries, range across this research domain, renamed ‘literary-and-cultural studies’, or LCS.

LCS depends on four key concepts – textuality, fictionality, rhetoricity and historicity – which characterize both the material and the methods of their research. The seventeen essays look at  four broad fields: cultural memory; migration and translation; electronic textuality; and biopolitics, biosociality and the body. The aim of the collection is to deploy and enhance cultural literacy, a way of looking at social and cultural issues – especially issues of change and mobility – through the lens of literary thinking.

Contents

  • Introduction; Naomi Segal

PART I: REMEMBERING AND FORGETTING

  • 1. Section Introduction; Daniela Koleva
  • 2. Visual Recall in the Present: Critical Nostalgia and the Memory of Empire in Portuguese Culture; Isabel Capeloa Gil
  • 3. Textualized Memories of Politics: Turkish Coup d’état Novels; Sibel Irzık
  • 4. Can Developers Learn from Art? Janet Cardiff’s ‘The Missing Voice’ in Spitalfields; Ricarda Vidal

PART II: MIGRATION AND TRANSLATION

  • 5. Section Introduction; Loredana Polezzi
  • 6. Migrant Poet(h)ics; Borbála Faragó
  • 7. Translating the In-Between: Literatures of Performance and the Relationship between Language, Literature and Society; Robert Crawshaw
  • 8. Lost (and Gained) in Migration: the writing of migrancy; Mary Gallagher

PART III: ELECTRONIC TEXTUALITY

  • 9. Section Introduction; Leopoldina Fortunati
  • 10. Non-Consumptive Reading; Susan Schreibman
  • 11. Reading (and Writing) Online, Rather than on the Decline; Kathleen Fitzpatrick
  • 12. I Fought the Law: Transgressive Play and the Implied Player; Espen Aarseth

PART IV: BIOSOCIALITY, BIOPOLITICS AND THE BODY

  • 13. Section Introduction; Ulrike Landfester
  • 14. Human Enhancement: is it ‘Mere’ Science Fiction? The Rise and Rise of Disembodied Ethics; Heather Bradshaw-Martin
  • 15. History in the Gene? How Biohistories are Implicated in Biopolitics and Biosocialities; Marianne Sommer
  • 16. Between Hybrid and Graft; Uwe Wirth