The 22nd Annual International Conference of the English Department,
Literature and Cultural Studies Section
Re-writing / Re-imagining the Past
4–6 June, 2020
The Faculty of Foreign Languages and Literatures,
Str. Pitar Moş 7–13, Bucharest, Romania
The English Department of the University of Bucharest invites proposals
for the Literature and Cultural Studies section of its 22nd Annual
International Conference:
“I am all for putting new wine in old bottles,
especially if the pressure of the new one
makes the old bottles explode.”
Angela Carter in “Notes from the Front Line”
Rewriting historical and canonical texts has been a persistent tradition
in literature; looking backwards – towards the past – was a hallmark of the
Renaissance, Neo-Classicism, Romanticism, Victorian literature, Modernism and
Postmodernism. Nancy Walker posits that “the practice of appropriating existing
stories in one’s own work – borrowing, revising, re-contextualizing – has a
long and distinguished history” (The Disobedient Writer: Women and Narrative
Tradition, 1995). Some works that reimagine the past do so overtly, others
covertly, but in both cases they inevitably “both obscure and encode other
stories” (Molly Hite, The Other Side of the Story: Structures and Strategies of
Contemporary Feminist Narratives, 1989). One accusation levelled at texts
rewriting the past is that they are simply derivative and unoriginal, but in
their act of revising, writers do not simply look back: they see with fresh
eyes, use the lens of new critical directions and offer new dimensions to the
past (Adrienne Rich, “When We Dead Awaken: Writing as Re-Vision”, College
English 34, 1972). A.S. Byatt has talked about interesting paths that can be
explored while telling stories about secrecy, delving deeper into what the past
had to hide and revealing the baggage of history (‘Forefathers’, On Histories
and Stories: Selected Essays, 2001).
Much recent scholarship has fruitfully traced the ways in which we
construct narratives of the past and fill them with contemporary content or
bend them to contemporary values. There remains, however, ample room for
further exploring the afterlives of the past as constructed in the present.
Re-imagining the past, as such, explores the imaginative reconstruction of the
past in the writing of historians and in works of historical fiction. Rewriting
reveals traces of the original, as interpreted by the author. It is a remnant
of something that once was or has passed, but which continues to exist as
echoes, relics, memories, or ghosts.
To paraphrase David Lowenthal in The Past is a Foreign Country Revisited
(2015), some texts turn the past into a backdrop for imaginary characters, while
others use the lives of actual historical figures or even omit, distort or add
to the past. Some fictional versions of the past are paradigms of the present,
others are strikingly different; both invent pasts for the readers' delight,
yet also strive to help readers feel and know the past in an effort to shed
light on new ways of reconceptualizing our relationship with the past. Such
works often aestheticize the experience of cultural and historical
displacement, and propose alternative forms of continuity and identity.
As such, we ask scholars to consider engagements with the past in terms
of ongoing processes of reinvention, reproduction, and revision, as well as the
reason why we choose to retell / rewrite / reimagine stories of the past. This
conference invites papers that consider new ways of seeing the past, leading to
a strengthening of or challenge to our understanding of the past, and
productive and experimental ways of retelling, remaking and rebooting,
resulting in new imaginaries that reconnect us to the past and are revealing
for the present.
Possible topics may include (but are not limited to) the following:
- Re-Imagining/re-writing various types of fiction / genres
- Retellings of canonical texts
- Intertextuality
- Adaptation
- Narrative approaches to the past
- Afterlives of characters or authors
- Reinvention and reproduction
- Counter-narratives
- Musical, visual, film retellings
- Hauntology
- Historical narratives in comics, film, and/or games.
- Redefining identities through retelling, re-enactment, and revisionist histories (national identity, race, gender, and sexuality)
- Appropriation, white-washing, and erasure in retelling
- Recycling and re-imagining tropes and stereotypes
- Remakes vs. sequels vs. reboots
- The question of originality and artistry in adaptation
- Memory and nostalgia
- The social, political, and cultural implications of reinvention
- Reimagining genres and aesthetics
- Remixing and re-appropriation
- The politics of remembering and representations of memory
- Revising/Revisiting History
- Historical fiction
- Memory and Re-memory
- Historiographic Metafiction
- Revisitings of myth in reworkings, re-appropriations, and contestations of mythical tropes and figures
- Writing Back from (or into) the Past: Literature, History and ideology
- Historical drama/history plays, opera, and other historical re-enactments
Conference presentations should be in English, and will be allocated 20
minutes each, plus 10 minutes for discussion. Prospective participants are
invited to submit abstracts of up to 200 words. Proposals should be in .doc or
.docx format, and should also include (within the same document) name and
institutional affiliation, a short bio (no more than 100 words), and e-mail
address. Proposals for panel discussions (to be organized by the participant)
will also be considered.
We look forward in particular to hosting a panel organized by the
Romanian Studies Association of America, applying a Romanian Studies perspective
to aspects of the conference theme.
A selection of papers from the conference will be published in
University of Bucharest Review (ISSN 2069–8658) – listed on Erih Plus, Scopus,
EBSCO (Literary Reference Centre Plus), CEEOL and Ulrichsweb. See the guidelines for contributors.
Deadline for proposals: 29 March 2020
Please send proposals (and enquiries) to conf.eng.litcult@lls.unibuc.ro
The conference fee of 50 euro (or 200 lei if paid in Romanian currency) is
payable in cash on registration, and covers lunches and refreshments during the
conference, but not evening meals.
Further details and updates.
(Enquiries regarding the Theoretical and Applied Linguistics section of
the conference, which will be running at the same time, should be sent to
bucharest.aiced22@gmail.com.)
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