Women in The Global Eighteenth Century – Call For Papers

“Women In The Global Eighteenth Century”
The Aphra Behn Society Conference 2015
Seton Hall University, South Orange, N.J.
November 5-6, 2015

Conference Website

Plenary lecture by Dr. Lynn Festa, Associate Professor of English, Rutgers University

In The Global Eighteenth Century, Felicity Nussbaum and her contributors urged scholars to see the eighteenth century as “wide”: a period with a geographical as well as temporal sweep. Such a perspective, Nussbaum contended, would require different, more complex narratives of the people, events, systems, and discourses of the age. In the spirit of our namesake Aphra Behn, whose poetry, drama, plays, and translations reflect a complex awareness of a widening world, The Aphra Behn Society for Women in the Arts, 1660-1830 takes up the challenge posed by The Global Eighteenth Century to invite papers exploring any aspect of women and the arts in this “global eighteenth century.” How does a wider, potentially global, lens change the view of people, places, and things both familiar and strange, domestic and imperial, Us and Other? How does gender affect those views?

The Aphra Behn Society for Women and the Arts invites papers addressing the intersection of gender and the global eighteenth century from a wide variety of disciplines, including but not limited to Literature, History, Art History, Music History, Modern Languages, Philosophy, Religious Studies, and Women and Gender Studies. We welcome papers on this topic from all sub-fields of these disciplines.

Papers might address the following topics:

  • Investigations or representations of “difference” in literature and the sister arts
  • Representations of social and political authority
  • The arts, women, and empire
  • Women and the construction of literary, artistic, domestic, public, national, imperial, and colonial spaces
  • Women and travel writing
  • Women and diaspora
  • Women and the metropole
  • Women and indigenous knowledge
  • Women, genre (textual, visual, musical, etc.), and space/place
  • Notions of performance and gender
  • Notions of gender and race, class, religion, or other markers, perhaps under pressure in a widening context
  • Gender and encountering the Other
  • Women, modernity, and post-colonial situations
  • Women and the colonial or post-colonial Enlightenment

As always, we also welcome abstracts for papers not related to the conference theme.

Send 1-2 page abstracts or panels to aphrabehn2015@gmail.com by May 15, 2015. Please specify in the abstract if you will require audio/visual equipment.

The conference will include a plenary lecture by Dr. Lynn Festa of Rutgers University, a luncheon, a concluding banquet, and exciting papers delivered by scholars from the United States and abroad. The Aphra Behn Society sponsors a graduate student travel award ($150) and a graduate student essay prize ($150 and the possibility of publication in ABO: Interactive Journal for Women in the Arts, 1640-1830). For more information, please contact the conference organizers, Dr. Kirsten Schultz at Kirsten.schultz@shu.edu or Dr. Karen Gevirtz at Karen.gevirtz@shu.edu.

Sponsored by the Aphra Behn Society for Women in the Arts, 1660-1830, the College of Arts and Sciences, and the Women and Gender Studies Program at Seton Hall University.