From laurenelkin at gmail.com Thu Nov 2 13:01:14 2023 From: laurenelkin at gmail.com (Lauren Elkin) Date: Thu, 2 Nov 2023 17:01:14 +0000 Subject: [Vwoolf] shell necklaces Message-ID: Hello Woolfians! I'm writing with a request for information about a pair of shell necklaces belonging to Virginia and Vanessa -- the ones that are currently on display at the Charleston *Bring No Clothes* exhibition (photo attached). I'm writing a short essay about them and would love to hear if anyone has come across any information about them -- they are apparently being worn in the picture with Stella (displayed above the necklaces). It seems they may have been bought on vacation in St Ives, or at Studland Beach? For instance one of them appears on the paperback cover of the Penguin edition of the first volume of Woolf's diaries. I don't have that edition so I can't tell where that picture is from or who took it. It seems like it's Vanessa's, judging from the picture? (Virginia's looks longer, possibly looped around twice?) Any further intel would be much appreciated! Many thanks, Lauren -- Dr. Lauren Elkin @: twitter.com/LaurenElkin insta: instagram.com/lauren_elkin _/ web: https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://www.laurenelkin.com__;!!KGKeukY!zQi5l_CU1JtldOLhHwHTNMSUbj7pQ81kPsFTdU8f27hRBcpPeDwx7BbwBEdNEnvdk_Z6qppaGitzHc3yCjIbwXBq$ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: IMG_0653.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 43704 bytes Desc: not available URL: From mc at clarior.net Fri Nov 3 20:25:02 2023 From: mc at clarior.net (Marie Claire Boisset) Date: Sat, 4 Nov 2023 01:25:02 +0100 Subject: [Vwoolf] =?utf-8?q?_=22Capturer_la_beaut=C3=A9=22_Julia_Margaret_?= =?utf-8?q?Cameron_=26_Virginia_Woolf?= Message-ID: Dear all: Just came across several articles about this new exhibition about Julia Margaret Cameron (VW amply quoted & mentioned multiple times) @ le Mus?e du Jeu de Paume, Paris, France - now until 28 Jan. 2024. I will have to you to pardon me for merely pushing the following links to you w/o any comments, & also for missing so many posts (about VW & Shakespeare, the Folger Library, VW & fashion in Vogue, Bloomsbury, Charleston, etc.), as I have not had enough time to delve into any of it almost, even if/as so many seemed *extremely* interesting & fascinating. Life (?!) - blah! So here we go - hope you enjoy these & they brighten your weekend a tad at least, when so much is very dark... Take care - be safe. Thank you, Woolfian friends ?? https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://jeudepaume.org/evenement/exposition-julia-margaret-cameron/__;!!KGKeukY!2h_XoV-P0TxKK65GvfRClEMBTl2BtD91luZC--jqRNl4piTvYjJTmtKEnb2tO39IZUW3mbZCa6f5dQ$ https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://soundcloud.com/jeu-de-paume-paris/capturer-la-beaute-episode-1?utm_source=clipboard&utm_campaign=wtshare&utm_medium=widget&utm_content=https*253A*252F*252Fsoundcloud.com*252Fjeu-de-paume-paris*252Fcapturer-la-beaute-episode-1__;JSUlJSU!!KGKeukY!2h_XoV-P0TxKK65GvfRClEMBTl2BtD91luZC--jqRNl4piTvYjJTmtKEnb2tO39IZUW3mbYw3c7Fpw$ https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://siroenauteur.wordpress.com/2023/10/10/autour-dune-exposition-julia-margaret-cameron-et-virginia-woolf/__;!!KGKeukY!2h_XoV-P0TxKK65GvfRClEMBTl2BtD91luZC--jqRNl4piTvYjJTmtKEnb2tO39IZUW3mbbTdApxhw$ https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.francetvinfo.fr/culture/arts-expos/photographie/julia-margaret-cameron-une-pionniere-de-la-photographie-a-la-recherche-de-la-beaute-au-jeu-de-paume_6155553.html__;!!KGKeukY!2h_XoV-P0TxKK65GvfRClEMBTl2BtD91luZC--jqRNl4piTvYjJTmtKEnb2tO39IZUW3mbbunxpnhw$ Marie-Claire Boisset-Pestourie IMPORTANT: The contents of this email and any attachments are confidential. They are intended for the named recipient(s) only. If you have received this email by mistake, please notify the sender immediately and do not disclose the contents to anyone or make copies thereof. Please consider your environmental responsibility. Before printing this e-mail message, ask yourself whether you really need a hard copy. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From kllevenback at att.net Sat Nov 4 04:57:17 2023 From: kllevenback at att.net (Kllevenback) Date: Sat, 4 Nov 2023 04:57:17 -0400 Subject: [Vwoolf] =?utf-8?q?NYTimes=3A_An_Apparent_Cyberattack_Hushes_the_?= =?utf-8?q?British_Library=E2=80=94not_really_Woolf-related=2C_eh=3F?= References: Message-ID: !-------------------------------------------------------------------| This Message Is From an External Sender This message came from outside your organization. |-------------------------------------------------------------------! ? https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/03/arts/british-library-cyber-attack.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare__;!!KGKeukY!1FfP3sUKQ2KKILNNwbnZeFFgnrAUXthLwHDGZZXLFq06Ak5TiLPgnjnPEJqYLavF82BKvOL0MDH7_GBhIKzICGo$ An Apparent Cyberattack Hushes the British Library Sent from my iPad From virginiawoolfturkiye at gmail.com Fri Nov 3 13:08:51 2023 From: virginiawoolfturkiye at gmail.com (=?UTF-8?Q?Virginia_Woolf_in_T=C3=BCrkiye?=) Date: Fri, 3 Nov 2023 13:08:51 -0400 Subject: [Vwoolf] =?utf-8?b?QmxvZyBQb3N0OiDEsGZyaXRpbiBZYXBhbWFkxLHEn8Sx?= =?utf-8?b?OiDDh2HEn3LEsQ==?= Message-ID: Dear Woolfians, We are thrilled to announce that our first blog post has been published! ?ule ?ilta? has translated Maurice Blanchot's essay "L??chec Du D?mon: La Vocation" on Virginia Woolf in Turkish as "?fritin Yapamad???: ?a?r?" and it is now available on our website. We appreciate ?ule's work and thank her. It is our greatest pleasure to connect Woolfians and scholars who study modernism from all around the world and it melts our hearts to see how supportive this academic community is. To bring together scholars and researchers from Turkey with other scholars and to reinforce the supportive attitude of this community, we are happy to provide a space for people to share their work. Therefore, we would be honored if you consider submitting your essays, translations, creative writing and other forms of writing on Virginia Woolf, the Bloomsbury Group, modernist writing and modernism and other relevant topics. Please find the link for the Blog on our website and we hope that our Turkish readers will enjoy reading ?ule ?ilta?'s translation: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://virginiawoolfsocietyturkey.org/ifritin-yapamadigi-cagri/__;!!KGKeukY!0JCMTOEjeb_u54SmCz3_SSvIJcqskIwZT4yEQqKiWHg5H96bS5RWIBiJ_ilegtQLxYQWwPvlbYr91_mZxKK8aseMSzPE6Q$ Woolfully yours, VWST -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Virginia Woolf Society Turkey" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to virginia-woolf-society-turkey-+unsubscribe at googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/virginia-woolf-society-turkey-/CAGFogF*3DZY6H0Q_*2Bk_DQPd791hvGCrcpMK*3DoeEoCFPAkAium_bA*40mail.gmail.com__;JSUlJQ!!KGKeukY!0JCMTOEjeb_u54SmCz3_SSvIJcqskIwZT4yEQqKiWHg5H96bS5RWIBiJ_ilegtQLxYQWwPvlbYr91_mZxKK8ascjjpTuqA$ . For more options, visit https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://groups.google.com/d/optout__;!!KGKeukY!0JCMTOEjeb_u54SmCz3_SSvIJcqskIwZT4yEQqKiWHg5H96bS5RWIBiJ_ilegtQLxYQWwPvlbYr91_mZxKK8ascFR8zQRQ$ . -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From kllevenback at att.net Sat Nov 4 20:45:50 2023 From: kllevenback at att.net (Kllevenback) Date: Sat, 4 Nov 2023 20:45:50 -0400 Subject: [Vwoolf] =?utf-8?q?NYTimes=3A_Here_Are_the_Most_Anticipated_Films?= =?utf-8?q?_of_the_Holiday_Season=E2=80=94Woolf_sighting=E2=80=94=233?= References: <3D35F6D1-FDFA-47A0-9A51-239D722933E8.ref@att.net> Message-ID: <3D35F6D1-FDFA-47A0-9A51-239D722933E8@att.net> !-------------------------------------------------------------------| This Message Is From an External Sender This message came from outside your organization. |-------------------------------------------------------------------! Orlando. https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/04/movies/holiday-winter-films.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare__;!!KGKeukY!1xGPryBNd1W6ZsZE-UQs6BzI4BKroxF3WxAy7NUWoP9DqRyWQ6KVgMA3pC5atnEGkFuxCEPU_7HwtExKyYUA5No$ Here Are the Most Anticipated Films of the Holiday Season Sent from my iPad From kllevenback at att.net Sat Nov 4 20:47:14 2023 From: kllevenback at att.net (Kllevenback) Date: Sat, 4 Nov 2023 20:47:14 -0400 Subject: [Vwoolf] =?utf-8?q?Fwd=3A_NYTimes=3A_Here_Are_the_Most_Anticipate?= =?utf-8?q?d_Films_of_the_Holiday_Season=E2=80=94Woolf_sighting=E2=80=94?= =?utf-8?q?=234?= References: <3D35F6D1-FDFA-47A0-9A51-239D722933E8@att.net> Message-ID: Actually #4.7 Sent from my iPad Begin forwarded message: > From: Kllevenback > Date: November 4, 2023 at 8:46:19 PM EDT > To: vwoolf at lists.osu.edu > Subject: NYTimes: Here Are the Most Anticipated Films of the Holiday Season?Woolf sighting?#3 > > ?Orlando. > > https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/04/movies/holiday-winter-films.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare__;!!KGKeukY!zH7NISHJJRIUg0SV3MLRaq6Ww0osjhqNuWLE_U2AQjtHlZuxDJrZcy_nx5yOlLqZ_uhIm7c_7gClyXKYj9xapOg$ > Here Are the Most Anticipated Films of the Holiday Season > > > Sent from my iPad -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From fernald at fordham.edu Mon Nov 6 19:30:27 2023 From: fernald at fordham.edu (Anne Fernald) Date: Mon, 6 Nov 2023 19:30:27 -0500 Subject: [Vwoolf] The importance of models Message-ID: Dear Woolfians, There's a Woolf quote that I've been looking for in a desultory way for a while and it's driving me crazy. It's something about suffering from the lack of models--mabye a letter from Vanessa that's about literal models that becomes a story about the importance of models in the sense of literary foremothers? Maybe it?s in a critical essay? My sense was this quote was everywhere, but now I can't find it at all. Can you help? Thanks in advance, Anne Sent from Gmail Mobile -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From neverowv1 at southernct.edu Mon Nov 6 20:52:04 2023 From: neverowv1 at southernct.edu (Neverow, Vara S.) Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2023 01:52:04 +0000 Subject: [Vwoolf] The importance of models In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Dear Anne, Perusing the searchable (almost free) Kindle version of Woolf's oeuvre that supposedly includes all of her published work (https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.amazon.com/Virginia-Woolf-Complete-Works-ebook/dp/B0B4P4877S__;!!KGKeukY!27FcWFlxd8AreOuxDfkUW6jVf4jzoBKTOrKmWNQxnrPw-3OywJ6Afia2L_F8LE-1VeylqYESBktYFsm4bG8HqJpQb_-D$ on Amazon.com) might help. It lists 143 references including "model," "models," "modeling," etc. I've scrolled through some of the list but haven't seen anything that matches closely with your topic, though I have espied a number of references to Vanessa and her models. I hope someone can find the exact phrase! Cheers, Vara Vara Neverow (she/her/hers) Professor, English Department Editor, Virginia Woolf Miscellany Southern Connecticut State University New Haven, CT 06515 203-392-6717 neverowv1 at southernct.edu I acknowledge that Southern Connecticut State University was built on traditional territory of the indigenous peoples and nations of the Paugussett and Quinnipiac peoples. Recent Publications: Lead editor, Virginia Woolf: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2020; with Jeanne Dubino, Kathryn Simpson, and Gill Lowe); Editor, Volume One, 1975-1984, Virginia Woolf: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2020); Co-editor, The Edinburgh Companion to Virginia Woolf and Contemporary Global Literature (Edinburgh, 2020; with Jeanne Dubino, Paulina Paj?k, Catherine Hollis, and Celiese Lypka) ________________________________ From: Vwoolf on behalf of Anne Fernald via Vwoolf Sent: Monday, November 6, 2023 7:30 PM To: vwoolf listserve Subject: [Vwoolf] The importance of models Dear Woolfians, There's a Woolf quote that I've been looking for in a desultory way for a while and it's driving me crazy. It's something about suffering from the lack of models--mabye a letter from Vanessa that's about Dear Woolfians, There's a Woolf quote that I've been looking for in a desultory way for a while and it's driving me crazy. It's something about suffering from the lack of models--mabye a letter from Vanessa that's about literal models that becomes a story about the importance of models in the sense of literary foremothers? Maybe it?s in a critical essay? My sense was this quote was everywhere, but now I can't find it at all. Can you help? Thanks in advance, Anne Sent from Gmail Mobile -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From caroline.webb at newcastle.edu.au Mon Nov 6 23:02:43 2023 From: caroline.webb at newcastle.edu.au (Caroline Webb) Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2023 04:02:43 +0000 Subject: [Vwoolf] The importance of models In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hi Anne, Do you mean the bit about "we think back through our mothers if we are women" because "the ape is too distant to be sedulous"? That's in A Room of One's Own. Regards, Caroline Dr Caroline Webb | Honorary Associate Professor, English & Writing College of Human and Social Futures M: +61 (0)421 418 419 E: Caroline.Webb at newcastle.edu.au W: https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://www.newcastle.edu.au/profile/caroline-webb__;!!KGKeukY!zMhKWSG_DhH5RdubZTUj7IQgFH2ht2kyBIEvj9hIucAF8gsl2zsreuLCFgmBKf_RXS4-kPb9PzS_4aKO8mEUTtwyYZkhK9oG5tU$ The University of Newcastle 10 Chittaway Road, Ourimbah NSW 2258 Australia[The University of Newcastle] I acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of the land in which the University resides and pay my respect to Elders past, present and emerging. I extend this acknowledgement to the Darkinjung people of the land in which the Central Coast campus resides and which I work. CRICOS Provider 00109J ________________________________ From: Vwoolf on behalf of Neverow, Vara S. via Vwoolf Sent: 07 November 2023 12:52 To: vwoolf listserve ; Anne Fernald Subject: Re: [Vwoolf] The importance of models Dear Anne, Perusing the searchable (almost free) Kindle version of Woolf's oeuvre that supposedly includes all of her published work (https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.amazon.com/Virginia-Woolf-Complete-Works-ebook/dp/B0B4P4877S__;!!KGKeukY!zMhKWSG_DhH5RdubZTUj7IQgFH2ht2kyBIEvj9hIucAF8gsl2zsreuLCFgmBKf_RXS4-kPb9PzS_4aKO8mEUTtwyYZkhULE6kMk$ on Amazon.com) might help. It lists 143 references including "model," "models," "modeling," etc. I've scrolled through some of the list but haven't seen anything that matches closely with your topic, though I have espied a number of references to Vanessa and her models. I hope someone can find the exact phrase! Cheers, Vara Vara Neverow (she/her/hers) Professor, English Department Editor, Virginia Woolf Miscellany Southern Connecticut State University New Haven, CT 06515 203-392-6717 neverowv1 at southernct.edu I acknowledge that Southern Connecticut State University was built on traditional territory of the indigenous peoples and nations of the Paugussett and Quinnipiac peoples. Recent Publications: Lead editor, Virginia Woolf: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2020; with Jeanne Dubino, Kathryn Simpson, and Gill Lowe); Editor, Volume One, 1975-1984, Virginia Woolf: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2020); Co-editor, The Edinburgh Companion to Virginia Woolf and Contemporary Global Literature (Edinburgh, 2020; with Jeanne Dubino, Paulina Paj?k, Catherine Hollis, and Celiese Lypka) ________________________________ From: Vwoolf on behalf of Anne Fernald via Vwoolf Sent: Monday, November 6, 2023 7:30 PM To: vwoolf listserve Subject: [Vwoolf] The importance of models Dear Woolfians, There's a Woolf quote that I've been looking for in a desultory way for a while and it's driving me crazy. It's something about suffering from the lack of models--mabye a letter from Vanessa that's about literal models that becomes a story about the importance of models in the sense of literary foremothers? Maybe it?s in a critical essay? My sense was this quote was everywhere, but now I can't find it at all. Can you help? Thanks in advance, Anne Sent from Gmail Mobile -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-The Univer Type: image/jpg Size: 17208 bytes Desc: Outlook-The Univer URL: From mitchoualcrim at gmail.com Tue Nov 7 04:51:10 2023 From: mitchoualcrim at gmail.com (Mitchell Alcrim) Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2023 04:51:10 -0500 Subject: [Vwoolf] The importance of models In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: !-------------------------------------------------------------------| This Message Is From an External Sender This message came from outside your organization. |-------------------------------------------------------------------! Also in Room is the passage in which VW laments that nothing is known of women before the 18th century and writes that ?I have no model in my mind to turn about this way and that.? Mitchell Alcrim From stuart.n.clarke at btinternet.com Wed Nov 8 12:09:15 2023 From: stuart.n.clarke at btinternet.com (stuart.n.clarke) Date: Wed, 8 Nov 2023 17:09:15 +0000 (GMT) Subject: [Vwoolf] shell necklaces Message-ID: <792d9ab9.3792.18bafe8dc12.Webtop.98@btinternet.com> The lovely covers on the Penguins (Mrs Bell also admired them) are photos by Peter Williams and research by Rebecca Greenberg. Good luck trying to contact them. I don't care about shell necklaces, but what we (Stephen Barkway & I) *do* care about is the facsimile of part of a letter on the upper wrapper of vol. 3 to Susie Buchan (later Lady Tweedsmuir). Where's the complete letter? Stuart ------ Original Message ------ From: "Lauren Elkin via Vwoolf" To: vwoolf at lists.osu.edu Sent: Thursday, 2 Nov, 2023 At 17:01 Subject: [Vwoolf] shell necklaces Hello Woolfians! I'm writing with a request for information about a pair of shell necklaces belonging to Virginia and Vanessa -- the ones that are currently on display at the Charleston Bring No Clothes exhibition (photo attached). I'm Hello Woolfians! I'm writing with a request for information about a pair of shell necklaces belonging to Virginia and Vanessa -- the ones that are currently on display at the Charleston Bring No Clothes exhibition (photo attached). I'm writing a short essay about them and would love to hear if anyone has come across any information about them -- they are apparently being worn in the picture with Stella (displayed above the necklaces). It seems they may have been bought on vacation in St Ives, or at Studland Beach? For instance one of them appears on the paperback cover of the Penguin edition of the first volume of Woolf's diaries. I don't have that edition so I can't tell where that picture is from or who took it. It seems like it's Vanessa's, judging from the picture? (Virginia's looks longer, possibly looped around twice?) Any further intel would be much appreciated! Many thanks, Lauren -- Dr. Lauren Elkin @: twitter.com/LaurenElkin insta: instagram.com/lauren_elkin _/ web: https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://www.laurenelkin.com__;!!KGKeukY!17M0URThYZ4R7e7lK8_OgwWAuyOtqFLzaWGVoK5NnCjh3NeJZdQNtCSjkhy_CY3An4B9HAoJ9_9V73GxdDmIpByjdcKamY1gzQ$ _______________________________________________ Vwoolf mailing list Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From eret.talviste at ut.ee Wed Nov 8 12:50:03 2023 From: eret.talviste at ut.ee (Eret Talviste) Date: Wed, 8 Nov 2023 17:50:03 +0000 Subject: [Vwoolf] 'Transnational Modernist Women's Writing' abstract deadline approaching Message-ID: Dear Woolfians, Not directly or only related to Woolf, but hopefully of interest to many people here: A friendly reminder that the deadline to send your wonderful abstracts for ?Borders, Margins, Cartographies: Transnational Modernist Women?s Writing? conference is next Wednesday, November 15. Please send abstracts of 250 words and a short bio of no more than 100 words in one document to both Ruth Alison Clemens at r.a.clemens at hum.leidenuniv.nl and Eret Talviste at eret.talviste at ut.ee with the subject heading ?Transnational Women Submission?. We will notify participants by February 1, 2024. Please find the call for papers attached, and on this link: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://maailmakeeled.ut.ee/en/content/borders-margins-cartographies-transnational-modernist-womens-writing?fbclid=IwAR3Vm3PJ9XzihQcURglY2reY21mze_1sBTNM79P_-Xi1xEDUNfsAne3nsc0__;!!KGKeukY!zOvIe8dc7ecDvHgtHbX9I_appn7U6I7y54jhQdW2uvI7-mE2JFSmrfMyw9FOLRxm1GEep5PxI0gQAmZK4xTJqp5ORA$ The conference runs from 4-5 October 2024 and takes place at the University of Tartu, Estonia. The confirmed keynote speakers are professor Jessica Berman and professor Rosi Braidotti. All my best, Eret Dr Eret Talviste Post-doctoral researcher University of Tartu (pronouns she/her/hers) CV https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.etis.ee/CV/Eret_Talviste?tabId=CV_ENG__;!!KGKeukY!zOvIe8dc7ecDvHgtHbX9I_appn7U6I7y54jhQdW2uvI7-mE2JFSmrfMyw9FOLRxm1GEep5PxI0gQAmZK4xRv-4JhZg$ We are only lightly covered with buttoned cloth; and beneath these pavements are shells, bones and silence. Virginia Woolf -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: CfP_transnational modernism2024.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 125643 bytes Desc: CfP_transnational modernism2024.pdf URL: From neverowv1 at southernct.edu Wed Nov 8 21:28:44 2023 From: neverowv1 at southernct.edu (Neverow, Vara S.) Date: Thu, 9 Nov 2023 02:28:44 +0000 Subject: [Vwoolf] "How Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury group unbuttoned Britain" (BBC article Message-ID: Greetings, A Google Alerts notification just came through: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20231031-how-virginia-woolf-and-the-bloomsbury-group-unbuttoned-britain__;!!KGKeukY!2w_8o7cb64JJRKJRKlSridODQHWdV-vmf8DswDMLlXWuPIdffM-91Se6xsPKRFXWCDkuTh8av9XMvreuy8MBrjmDS0_V$ " [https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://ychef.files.bbci.co.uk/live/624x351/p0gqbt3d.jpg__;!!KGKeukY!2w_8o7cb64JJRKJRKlSridODQHWdV-vmf8DswDMLlXWuPIdffM-91Se6xsPKRFXWCDkuTh8av9XMvreuy8MBrnuLAvW8$ ] How Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury group unbuttoned Britain The Bloomsbury group were radical figures in the early 20th Century. A new exhibition shows how that extended to their wardrobes too, writes Holly Williams. https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://www.bbc.com__;!!KGKeukY!2w_8o7cb64JJRKJRKlSridODQHWdV-vmf8DswDMLlXWuPIdffM-91Se6xsPKRFXWCDkuTh8av9XMvreuy8MBrgHWedMG$ Vara Vara Neverow (she/her/hers) Professor, English Department Editor, Virginia Woolf Miscellany Southern Connecticut State University New Haven, CT 06515 203-392-6717 neverowv1 at southernct.edu I acknowledge that Southern Connecticut State University was built on traditional territory of the indigenous peoples and nations of the Paugussett and Quinnipiac peoples. Recent Publications: Lead editor, Virginia Woolf: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2020; with Jeanne Dubino, Kathryn Simpson, and Gill Lowe); Editor, Volume One, 1975-1984, Virginia Woolf: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2020); Co-editor, The Edinburgh Companion to Virginia Woolf and Contemporary Global Literature (Edinburgh, 2020; with Jeanne Dubino, Paulina Paj?k, Catherine Hollis, and Celiese Lypka) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From kllevenback at att.net Fri Nov 10 04:01:37 2023 From: kllevenback at att.net (Kllevenback) Date: Fri, 10 Nov 2023 04:01:37 -0500 Subject: [Vwoolf] =?utf-8?q?NYTimes=3A_=E2=80=98Orlando=2C_My_Political_Bi?= =?utf-8?q?ography=E2=80=99_Review=3A_A_Collective_Approach_to_Joy?= =?utf-8?q?=E2=80=94Woolf_sighting!?= References: Message-ID: !-------------------------------------------------------------------| This Message Is From an External Sender This message came from outside your organization. |-------------------------------------------------------------------! https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/09/movies/orlando-my-political-biography-review.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare__;!!KGKeukY!z_5E6KwzxGfjw3lMLkb_HPhFvQPy2VJAEIHGVnRMJ5c6dXGWgh6TXet4d4_-OJsag_TB4pnc3O_KQXRxELP_HnI$ ?Orlando, My Political Biography? Review: A Collective Approach to Joy Sent from my iPad From Benjamin.Hagen at usd.edu Mon Nov 13 10:08:21 2023 From: Benjamin.Hagen at usd.edu (Hagen, Benjamin D) Date: Mon, 13 Nov 2023 15:08:21 +0000 Subject: [Vwoolf] "In the Orchard" in NARRATIVE Message-ID: Dear all, Woolfians, bibliographers, and teachers may be interested to learn about a recent (re)publication of a work of Virginia Woolf?s short fiction. An essay by Melba Cuddy-Keane published in last January?s issue of the journal Narrative focuses on two works, one of them Woolf?s ?In the Orchard,? and Jim Phelan, the editor of the journal, decided to include Woolf's text as an accompaniment to the essay. As an appendix, ?In the Orchard" does not have a separate listing in the ToC, so could easily be missed. It?s a fascinating example, however, of multi-version narrative and its two-page spread in the journal makes it readily accessible for use in the classroom. Here?s the citation: Woolf, Virginia. ?Appendix: 'In the Orchard.?? ?Storyminds and Readingminds: Cognitive Plots in David Small?s Stitches and Virginia Woolf?s ?In the Orchard?? by Melba Cuddy-Keane, Narrative, vol. 31, no. 1, 2023, pp. 24?25. Project Muse, https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://doi.org/10.1353/nar.2023.0000__;!!KGKeukY!zQvI_4Epzq890_VFiut7-f_ksIknlGP-VECHJu9EzXkL-fuoyePAI852f_VzWOwY0czIVAjy4tOD8cZdgGgBZfi6zh1PVQ$ . Best, Ben -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mcuddy at chass.utoronto.ca Wed Nov 15 08:20:59 2023 From: mcuddy at chass.utoronto.ca (mcuddy at chass.utoronto.ca) Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2023 08:20:59 -0500 (EST) Subject: [Vwoolf] Woolfian citing Message-ID: !-------------------------------------------------------------------| This Message Is From an External Sender This message came from outside your organization. |-------------------------------------------------------------------! Hi everyone, This week saw the announcement of Canada's Scotiabank Giller Prize for excellence in fiction. In the short list of 5 (though not the winner) was this book with the following citation from the jury: ?With stunning restraint and pathos, CS Richardson has given us a portrait of one man?s journey of the soul ? across decades and continents, through loss and grief and hope. Both sweeping and minimalist, All the Colour in the World is Woolfian in its brushstrokes. Quiet moments of being are given as much weight as the chaos of war, and notes on the long history of art balance the depiction of one individual life. As much poetry and mosaic as it is a novel, with not a word out of place, this book is a triumph ? a masterclass in how to paint an entire world.? Seems that Woolf's novels continue to be a masterclass for us all. Feels good, yes? very best, Melba From cfroula at northwestern.edu Wed Nov 15 08:27:42 2023 From: cfroula at northwestern.edu (Christine Froula) Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2023 07:27:42 -0600 Subject: [Vwoolf] Woolfian citing In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <44eb569f-d35a-4fb9-a74b-bb122c670ce3@northwestern.edu> !-------------------------------------------------------------------| This Message Is From an External Sender This message came from outside your organization. |-------------------------------------------------------------------! Lovely, Melba, thanks! On a rather different note, in case any of you are Doc Martin fans, I just saw the episode where the recently widowed Mrs Tishell motors to the Godrevy Lighthouse on a quasi-date with a man from her reading group--a Woolf pilgrimage for them, though the sceptical Mrs T has not gotten past the first page. Fun to be on the boat, on the lighthouse, inside too if that part is actually filmed there. Happy autumn, Christine On 11/15/2023 7:20 AM, Melba CuddyKeane via Vwoolf wrote: > Hi everyone, > > This week saw the announcement of Canada's Scotiabank Giller Prize for > excellence in fiction. In the short list of 5 (though not the winner) was > this book with the following citation from the jury: > > "With stunning restraint and pathos, CS Richardson has given us a portrait > of one man's journey of the soul - across decades and continents, through > loss and grief and hope. Both sweeping and minimalist, All the Colour in > the World is Woolfian in its brushstrokes. Quiet moments of being are > given as much weight as the chaos of war, and notes on the long history of > art balance the depiction of one individual life. As much poetry and > mosaic as it is a novel, with not a word out of place, this book is a > triumph - a masterclass in how to paint an entire world." > > Seems that Woolf's novels continue to be a masterclass for us all. Feels > good, yes? > > very best, Melba > _______________________________________________ > Vwoolf mailing list > Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu > https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf__;!!Dq0X2DkFhyF93HkjWTBQKhk!QVNzcDkuc6SzUe5bq2y21kGczuxuJSIVxkf1_fHkSPlZYOJfL8eJshfHp-cnJhKKhd_KcnaWg1TwxLpIMFKV15uHNg$ From smhall123 at yahoo.co.uk Wed Nov 15 11:00:25 2023 From: smhall123 at yahoo.co.uk (Sarah M. Hall) Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2023 16:00:25 +0000 (UTC) Subject: [Vwoolf] Woolfian citing In-Reply-To: <44eb569f-d35a-4fb9-a74b-bb122c670ce3@northwestern.edu> References: <44eb569f-d35a-4fb9-a74b-bb122c670ce3@northwestern.edu> Message-ID: <486828970.6210089.1700064025946@mail.yahoo.com> I saw this one recently too, Christine! I wasn't convinced that it was really filmed at Godrevy Lighthouse. It seemed a bit cramped, but perhaps the walls are very thick. Mrs Tishell's beau said there were X number of steps: I'm afraid that I don't remember how many, but it was in the hundreds and seemed an unfeasibly high number for a construction that is reportedly 26m/85 feet high. It didn't take them long to get there. Don't know how far the fictional Portwenn is supposed to be from St Ives, but the real village of Port Isaac, where it is filmed, is 54 miles, or a drive of about an hour and a half. Still, it was nice to see Godrevy featured. I think Mrs Tishell should have read the book, but perhaps that's tricky with a permanent neck brace. Sarah Sarah M. Hall Executive Council Virginia Woolf Society of GB Web: virginiawoolfsociety.org.uk Facebook: @VWSGB Twitter: @VirginiaWoolfGB Instagram: @virginiawoolfsociety On Wednesday, 15 November 2023 at 13:28:04 GMT, Christine Froula via Vwoolf wrote: Lovely, Melba, thanks! On a rather different note, in case any of you are Doc Martin fans, I just saw the episode where the recently widowed Mrs Tishell motors to the Godrevy Lighthouse on a quasi-date with a man from her reading group--a Woolf pilgrimage for them, though the sceptical Mrs T has not gotten past the first page. Fun to be on the boat, on the lighthouse, inside too if that part is actually filmed there. Happy autumn, Christine On 11/15/2023 7:20 AM, Melba CuddyKeane via Vwoolf wrote: > Hi everyone, > > This week saw the announcement of Canada's Scotiabank Giller Prize for > excellence in fiction. In the short list of 5 (though not the winner) was > this book with the following citation from the jury: > > "With stunning restraint and pathos, CS Richardson has given us a portrait > of one man's journey of the soul - across decades and continents, through > loss and grief and hope. Both sweeping and minimalist, All the Colour in > the World is Woolfian in its brushstrokes. Quiet moments of being are > given as much weight as the chaos of war, and notes on the long history of > art balance the depiction of one individual life. As much poetry and > mosaic as it is a novel, with not a word out of place, this book is a > triumph - a masterclass in how to paint an entire world." > > Seems that Woolf's novels continue to be a masterclass for us all. Feels > good, yes? > > very best, Melba > _______________________________________________ > Vwoolf mailing list > Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu > https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf__;!!Dq0X2DkFhyF93HkjWTBQKhk!QVNzcDkuc6SzUe5bq2y21kGczuxuJSIVxkf1_fHkSPlZYOJfL8eJshfHp-cnJhKKhd_KcnaWg1TwxLpIMFKV15uHNg$ _______________________________________________ Vwoolf mailing list Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From stuart.n.clarke at btinternet.com Wed Nov 15 11:29:44 2023 From: stuart.n.clarke at btinternet.com (Stuart N. Clarke) Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2023 16:29:44 -0000 Subject: [Vwoolf] Woolfian citing In-Reply-To: <486828970.6210089.1700064025946@mail.yahoo.com> References: <44eb569f-d35a-4fb9-a74b-bb122c670ce3@northwestern.edu> <486828970.6210089.1700064025946@mail.yahoo.com> Message-ID: I thought I wrote to the list a few years ago, saying that they weren?t allowed to shoot inside the lighthouse, so it?s a mock-up. The real, old inside is (supposedly) on display in the Maritime Museum in Falmouth. Stuart From: Sarah M. Hall via Vwoolf Sent: Wednesday, November 15, 2023 4:00 PM To: vwoolf at lists.osu.edu ; Christine Froula Subject: Re: [Vwoolf] Woolfian citing I saw this one recently too, Christine! I wasn't convinced that it was really filmed at Godrevy Lighthouse. It seemed a bit cramped, but perhaps the walls are very thick. Mrs Tishell's beau said there were X number of steps: I'm afraid that I saw this one recently too, Christine! I wasn't convinced that it was really filmed at Godrevy Lighthouse. It seemed a bit cramped, but perhaps the walls are very thick. Mrs Tishell's beau said there were X number of steps: I'm afraid that I don't remember how many, but it was in the hundreds and seemed an unfeasibly high number for a construction that is reportedly 26m/85 feet high. It didn't take them long to get there. Don't know how far the fictional Portwenn is supposed to be from St Ives, but the real village of Port Isaac, where it is filmed, is 54 miles, or a drive of about an hour and a half. Still, it was nice to see Godrevy featured. I think Mrs Tishell should have read the book, but perhaps that's tricky with a permanent neck brace. Sarah Sarah M. Hall Executive Council Virginia Woolf Society of GB Web: virginiawoolfsociety.org.uk Facebook: @VWSGB Twitter: @VirginiaWoolfGB Instagram: @virginiawoolfsociety On Wednesday, 15 November 2023 at 13:28:04 GMT, Christine Froula via Vwoolf wrote: Lovely, Melba, thanks! On a rather different note, in case any of you are Doc Martin fans, I just saw the episode where the recently widowed Mrs Tishell motors to the Godrevy Lighthouse on a quasi-date with a man from her reading group--a Woolf pilgrimage for them, though the sceptical Mrs T has not gotten past the first page. Fun to be on the boat, on the lighthouse, inside too if that part is actually filmed there. Happy autumn, Christine On 11/15/2023 7:20 AM, Melba CuddyKeane via Vwoolf wrote: > Hi everyone, > > This week saw the announcement of Canada's Scotiabank Giller Prize for > excellence in fiction. In the short list of 5 (though not the winner) was > this book with the following citation from the jury: > > "With stunning restraint and pathos, CS Richardson has given us a portrait > of one man's journey of the soul - across decades and continents, through > loss and grief and hope. Both sweeping and minimalist, All the Colour in > the World is Woolfian in its brushstrokes. Quiet moments of being are > given as much weight as the chaos of war, and notes on the long history of > art balance the depiction of one individual life. As much poetry and > mosaic as it is a novel, with not a word out of place, this book is a > triumph - a masterclass in how to paint an entire world." > > Seems that Woolf's novels continue to be a masterclass for us all. Feels > good, yes? > > very best, Melba > _______________________________________________ > Vwoolf mailing list > Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu > https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf__;!!Dq0X2DkFhyF93HkjWTBQKhk!QVNzcDkuc6SzUe5bq2y21kGczuxuJSIVxkf1_fHkSPlZYOJfL8eJshfHp-cnJhKKhd_KcnaWg1TwxLpIMFKV15uHNg$ _______________________________________________ Vwoolf mailing list Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- _______________________________________________ Vwoolf mailing list Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cfroula at northwestern.edu Wed Nov 15 12:03:31 2023 From: cfroula at northwestern.edu (Christine Froula) Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2023 11:03:31 -0600 Subject: [Vwoolf] Woolfian citing In-Reply-To: References: <44eb569f-d35a-4fb9-a74b-bb122c670ce3@northwestern.edu> <486828970.6210089.1700064025946@mail.yahoo.com> Message-ID: Ah, thanks, Stuart. We have no proof that VSW or her family ever saw the inside either, or do we? On 11/15/2023 10:29 AM, Stuart N. Clarke via Vwoolf wrote: > I thought I wrote to the list a few years ago, saying that they > weren?t allowed to shoot inside the lighthouse, so it?s a mock-up. The > real, old inside is (supposedly) on display in the Maritime Museum in > Falmouth. Stuart From: Sarah M. Hall > I thought I wrote to the list a few years ago, saying that they > weren?t allowed to shoot inside the lighthouse, so it?s a mock-up.? > The real, old inside is (supposedly) on display in the Maritime Museum > in Falmouth. > Stuart > *From:* Sarah M. Hall via Vwoolf > *Sent:* Wednesday, November 15, 2023 4:00 PM > *To:* vwoolf at lists.osu.edu ; Christine Froula > *Subject:* Re: [Vwoolf] Woolfian citing > I saw this one recently too, Christine! I wasn't convinced that it was > really filmed at Godrevy Lighthouse. It seemed a bit cramped, but > perhaps the walls are very thick. Mrs Tishell's beau said there were X > number of steps: I'm afraid that > I saw this one recently too, Christine! I wasn't convinced that it was > really filmed at Godrevy Lighthouse. It seemed a bit cramped, but > perhaps the walls are very thick. Mrs Tishell's beau said there were X > number of steps: I'm afraid that I don't remember how many, but it was > in the hundreds and seemed an unfeasibly high number for a > construction that is reportedly 26m/85 feet high. It didn't take them > long to get there. Don't know how far the fictional Portwenn is > supposed to be from St Ives, but the real village of Port Isaac, where > it is filmed, is 54 miles, or a drive of about an hour and a half. > Still, it was nice to see Godrevy featured. I think Mrs Tishell should > have read the book, but perhaps that's tricky with a permanent neck brace. > Sarah > > Sarah M. Hall > Executive Council > Virginia Woolf Society of GB > Web: virginiawoolfsociety.org.uk > Facebook: @VWSGB > Twitter: @VirginiaWoolfGB > Instagram: @virginiawoolfsociety > On Wednesday, 15 November 2023 at 13:28:04 GMT, Christine Froula via > Vwoolf wrote: > Lovely, Melba, thanks! > > On a rather different note, in case any of you are Doc Martin fans, I > just saw the episode where the recently widowed Mrs Tishell motors to > the Godrevy Lighthouse on a quasi-date with a man from her reading > group--a Woolf pilgrimage for them, though the sceptical Mrs T has not > gotten past the first page. Fun to be on the boat, on the lighthouse, > inside too if that part is actually filmed there. > > Happy autumn, > > Christine > > On 11/15/2023 7:20 AM, Melba CuddyKeane via Vwoolf wrote: > > Hi everyone, > > > > This week saw the announcement of Canada's Scotiabank Giller Prize for > > excellence in fiction. In the short list of 5 (though not the > winner) was > > this book with the following citation from the jury: > > > > "With stunning restraint and pathos, CS Richardson has given us a > portrait > > of one man's journey of the soul - across decades and continents, > through > > loss and grief and hope. Both sweeping and minimalist, All the Colour in > > the World is Woolfian in its brushstrokes. Quiet moments of being are > > given as much weight as the chaos of war, and notes on the long > history of > > art balance the depiction of one individual life. As much poetry and > > mosaic as it is a novel, with not a word out of place, this book is a > > triumph - a masterclass in how to paint an entire world." > > > > Seems that Woolf's novels continue to be a masterclass for us all. Feels > > good, yes? > > > > very best, Melba > > _______________________________________________ > > Vwoolf mailing list > > Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu > > > https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf__;!!Dq0X2DkFhyF93HkjWTBQKhk!QVNzcDkuc6SzUe5bq2y21kGczuxuJSIVxkf1_fHkSPlZYOJfL8eJshfHp-cnJhKKhd_KcnaWg1TwxLpIMFKV15uHNg$ > > > _______________________________________________ > Vwoolf mailing list > Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu > https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > _______________________________________________ > Vwoolf mailing list > Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu > https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf > > > _______________________________________________ > Vwoolf mailing list > Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu > https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf__;!!Dq0X2DkFhyF93HkjWTBQKhk!Q4A7Rgotka7Cp-UKWmQzwxHiVB1GpnL-VU7epiihvLWxO3DR9nQObLkSLwNXAxhDzWWkY-T0HsFLbyuCloWCkI6JrA$ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From smhall123 at yahoo.co.uk Wed Nov 15 12:19:31 2023 From: smhall123 at yahoo.co.uk (Sarah M. Hall) Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2023 17:19:31 +0000 (UTC) Subject: [Vwoolf] Woolfian citing In-Reply-To: References: <44eb569f-d35a-4fb9-a74b-bb122c670ce3@northwestern.edu> <486828970.6210089.1700064025946@mail.yahoo.com> Message-ID: <490814312.6266477.1700068771090@mail.yahoo.com> Thanks, Stuart. Another on the list to visit (though not at the moment, as it's having a refit). Sarah On Wednesday, 15 November 2023 at 16:30:04 GMT, Stuart N. Clarke via Vwoolf wrote: I thought I wrote to the list a few years ago, saying that they weren?t allowed to shoot inside the lighthouse, so it?s a mock-up. The real, old inside is (supposedly) on display in the Maritime Museum in Falmouth. Stuart From: Sarah M. HallI thought I wrote to the list a few years ago, saying that they weren?t allowed to shoot inside the lighthouse, so it?s a mock-up.? The real, old inside is (supposedly) on display in the Maritime Museum in Falmouth.?Stuart?From: Sarah M. Hall via Vwoolf Sent: Wednesday, November 15, 2023 4:00 PMTo: vwoolf at lists.osu.edu ; Christine Froula Subject: Re: [Vwoolf] Woolfian citing?I saw this one recently too, Christine! I wasn't convinced that it was really filmed at Godrevy Lighthouse. It seemed a bit cramped, but perhaps the walls are very thick. Mrs Tishell's beau said there were X number of steps: I'm afraid that I saw this one recently too, Christine! I wasn't convinced that it was really filmed at Godrevy Lighthouse. It seemed a bit cramped, but perhaps the walls are very thick. Mrs Tishell's beau said there were X number of steps: I'm afraid that I don't remember how many, but it was in the hundreds and seemed an unfeasibly high number for a construction that is reportedly 26m/85 feet high. It didn't take them long to get there. Don't know how far the fictional Portwenn is supposed to be from St Ives, but the real village of Port Isaac, where it is filmed, is 54 miles, or a drive of about an hour and a half. ?Still, it was nice to see Godrevy featured. I think Mrs Tishell should have read the book, but perhaps that's tricky with a permanent neck brace.?Sarah? Sarah M. Hall Executive Council Virginia Woolf Society of GB Web: virginiawoolfsociety.org.uk Facebook: @VWSGB Twitter: @VirginiaWoolfGB Instagram: @virginiawoolfsociety?????On Wednesday, 15 November 2023 at 13:28:04 GMT, Christine Froula via Vwoolf wrote: ??Lovely, Melba, thanks! On a rather different note, in case any of you are Doc Martin fans, I just saw the episode where the recently widowed Mrs Tishell motors to the Godrevy Lighthouse on a quasi-date with a man from her reading group--a Woolf pilgrimage for them, though the sceptical Mrs T has not gotten past the first page. Fun to be on the boat, on the lighthouse, inside too if that part is actually filmed there. Happy autumn, Christine On 11/15/2023 7:20 AM, Melba CuddyKeane via Vwoolf wrote: > Hi everyone, > > This week saw the announcement of Canada's Scotiabank Giller Prize for > excellence in fiction. In the short list of 5 (though not the winner) was > this book with the following citation from the jury: > > "With stunning restraint and pathos, CS Richardson has given us a portrait > of one man's journey of the soul - across decades and continents, through > loss and grief and hope. Both sweeping and minimalist, All the Colour in > the World is Woolfian in its brushstrokes. Quiet moments of being are > given as much weight as the chaos of war, and notes on the long history of > art balance the depiction of one individual life. As much poetry and > mosaic as it is a novel, with not a word out of place, this book is a > triumph - a masterclass in how to paint an entire world." > > Seems that Woolf's novels continue to be a masterclass for us all. Feels > good, yes? > > very best, Melba > _______________________________________________ > Vwoolf mailing list > Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu > https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf__;!!Dq0X2DkFhyF93HkjWTBQKhk!QVNzcDkuc6SzUe5bq2y21kGczuxuJSIVxkf1_fHkSPlZYOJfL8eJshfHp-cnJhKKhd_KcnaWg1TwxLpIMFKV15uHNg$ _______________________________________________ Vwoolf mailing list Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf _______________________________________________ Vwoolf mailing list Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf _______________________________________________ Vwoolf mailing list Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From vrfavre at gmail.com Fri Nov 17 08:41:22 2023 From: vrfavre at gmail.com (=?UTF-8?Q?Val=C3=A9rie_Favre?=) Date: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 14:41:22 +0100 Subject: [Vwoolf] =?utf-8?q?Research_Project_=E2=80=9CA_Room_of_One=27s_Ow?= =?utf-8?q?n=3A_Echoes_and_Circulations=E2=80=9D?= Message-ID: Dear Woolfians, We are delighted to announce the launch of a pluriannual research project on *A Room of One's Own*?s reception, entitled ?*A Room of One?s Own*: Echoes and Circulation.? Nearly a century after its publication, what echo chambers has *A Room of One?s Own* opened up? This research project aims to examine the circulation of Woolf?s essay across disciplinary, geographical, temporal, and cultural boundaries, as well as the various and complex processes through which *A Room of One?s Own* became a global text. Our aim during this academic year is to explore the essay's heritage in the humanities and social sciences, and to analyse its capacity to bring various fields of knowledge into dialogue, by focusing specifically on art history, geography, sociology, literary history, and philosophy. The first session took place in early November. The art historian and heritage curator Camille Morineau explored the connections between Woolf's essay and art history, with a focus on women artists. A brief account of Camille Morineau's lecture is available on our website: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://room.hypotheses.org/__;!!KGKeukY!yHDI99yqjf2kfYJHLb2F-nxiHAfoqla9QstVgylseSmOoZdQUDhGYeYOwVBDD8cOP_2GO9MPZfipCCEWZEI$ The following session will be on 6 December, we will have the pleasure to host Yann Calberac, who will evoke the links between Woolf's essay and geography, the heritage of the room metaphor, and the spatial turn in the humanities and social sciences. You will find this year's full programme below and on our website: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://room.hypotheses.org/category/evenements__;!!KGKeukY!yHDI99yqjf2kfYJHLb2F-nxiHAfoqla9QstVgylseSmOoZdQUDhGYeYOwVBDD8cOP_2GO9MPZfipwJl1FgA$ . The lectures will be delivered in French, and take place in or near Paris (Universit? Paris 1 Panth?on-Sorbonne, Universit? Paris Est Cr?teil), and on Zoom, on Wednesdays (3pm, CET), we would be delighted to be joined by Woolfians around the world. We will publish brief accounts of each session in English on our website to make them ? at least partly ? available to non-Francophones. You can follow us on X (Twitter) and Instagram: @woolfianroom If you have any questions, do not hesitate to contact us at: woolfianroom at gmail.com Warm regards, Val?rie Favre (Universit? Paris 1 Panth?on Sorbonne) & Anne-Laure Rigeade (Universit? Paris Est Cr?teil) 8 November 2023, villa Vassiliev, Paris *A Room of One?s Own *et l?histoire de l?art par Camille Morineau (Art historian & heritage curator) 6 December 2023, Universit? Paris Est Cr?teil (UPEC) & Zoom *A Room of One?s Own* et la g?ographie par Yann Calb?rac (Senior lecturer in Geography, Universit? de Reims Champagne-Ardenne) 7 February 2024, Paris 1 & Zoom *A Room of One?s Own* et la sociologie par Eric Fassin (Professor in Sociology, Universit? Paris 8) 13 March 2024, UPEC & Zoom *A Room of One?s Own* et l?histoire de la litt?rature par Christine Plant? (Emeritus Professor in French Literature and Gender Studies, Universit? Lumi?re Lyon 2) 15 May 2024, Paris 1 & Zoom *A Room of One?s Own* et la philosophie par Jacques Ranci?re (Emeritus Professor in Philosophy, Universit? Paris 8). 29 May 2024, ? Paris 1 & Zoom *A Room of One?s Own* et la philosophie f?ministe par Camille Froidevaux-Metterie (Professor in Political Science, Universit? de Reims Champagne-Ardenne) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sparks at clemson.edu Fri Nov 17 14:57:20 2023 From: sparks at clemson.edu (Elisa Sparks) Date: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 19:57:20 +0000 Subject: [Vwoolf] Drop-in next Friday Message-ID: Dear all? I?m afraid I got pre-occupied and totally forgot to schedule a drop-in for today (Friday the 17th). Hope people would be just as happy to meet next week?a pleasant alternative to frenzied shopping and starting to put out the holiday lights. Usual time: 11:00 AM PST, 2:00PM EST (NYC), 4:00 pm Rio, 7:00 PM London?. Here?s the info: Elisa Sparks is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting. Topic: My Meeting Time: Nov 24, 2023 11:00 AM Pacific Time (US and Canada) Join Zoom Meeting https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://clemson.zoom.us/j/91284934681?pwd=ZFlHc29hdVZnSXlDVTZjTlFwbkFkQT09__;!!KGKeukY!2nqw_QpWrY1sNbZrsv0ezcQu2kTWjyuUsk-pnmsPSzJ4iF5bjmew0apnkLvBi-n1ZObNVZGdnn6Io_Xy2BUFFQqXgXH2XdY$ Meeting ID: 912 8493 4681 Passcode: 959980 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From neverowv1 at southernct.edu Sat Nov 18 12:21:50 2023 From: neverowv1 at southernct.edu (Neverow, Vara S.) Date: Sat, 18 Nov 2023 17:21:50 +0000 Subject: [Vwoolf] Call for Papers for Issue 102 of the Virginia Woolf Miscellany--Submissions accepted through January 31st 2024 Message-ID: Dear Woolfians, Below is the updated version of our Call for Papers for the special topic Twenty-First-Century Perspectives on Virginia Woolf: Feminisms, Genders, Politics, and Patriarchy to be published in Issue 102 of the Virginia Woolf Miscellany. Kimberly Coates and I already have a number of excellent submissions, but we are inviting additional contributions. You may send us a proposal or an essay (as noted below, an essay should not be much longer than 2500 words including the works cited section). Issue 102 of the Virginia Woolf Miscellany Special Topic: Twenty-First-Century Perspectives on Virginia Woolf: Feminisms, Genders, Politics, and Patriarchy Spring 2024 Guest Editor: Kimberly Coates Editor: Vara Neverow Essays should be no longer than 2,500 words. Submissions are now due by January 31, 2024 Please send submissions to both: kimbec at bgsu.edu and neverowv1 at southernct.edu Activists in the twentieth-century Second-Wave feminist movement coined the phrase ?the personal is political? to confront the patriarchy. Today, at least half a century later, the concept still applies, and one must still hold the patriarchy accountable for the marginalization and exploitation of cis-women and trans women alike. In this Call for Papers, we invite a variety of contributions that explore, define, and document a range of topics that cluster around Virginia Woolf?s own viewpoints and texts regarding patriarchy and its impact on girls and women (whether cis-born or trans). These approaches can align or clash with differing contemporary sexual and gender-based politics. Contributions can be in the form of essays, poetry, and artwork (note: the electronic edition of the issue will include color, but the print version will be in black-and- white format). We hope to examine the evolution of this complex historical moment from multiple perspectives. While we offer a range of rhetorical questions below, we also encourage contributors to feel free to craft their own approaches. * How do Woolf?s works intersect with reproductive rights; reproductive justice; girls, women?s and trans healthcare; and the representation, construction, and control of ?female? bodies whether cis-born or other? * How do Woolf?s political insights play into the current opportunities and constraints of women?s rights in the workplace, in professions, and in labor? * How does Woolf?s advocacy for women?s financial stability and independence intersect with twenty-first variants of exclusion and inclusion of feminisms and womanism? * How can Kimberle? Williams Crenshaw?s diagramming of intersectionality, discrimination, privilege, and marginalization?for example, ablism, ageism, class, gender and sex, race/ethnicity/nationality, religion, physical appearance including skin-tone?be applied to Woolf?s own advocacy? We envision articles that might place Woolf in the context of creative twenty-first-century conversations with feminist writers and advocates from Asia, the Middle East, Eastern Europe, Africa, and the Americas. We also welcome feminist perspectives from the late-nineteenth through to the mid-twentieth century. For example, such British and Western European activists as Josephine Butler, Annie Besant, Sylvia Pankhurst, Millicent Fawcett, Ray Strachey, and Simone de Beauvoir might provide relevant perspectives?but there are many other approaches. Woolf?s own critical reception as feminist and activist evolved at the same time that Second-Wave advocates, scholars, and novelists, primarily in the United States and Canada were expressing their views and offering their insights to a feminist readership. These works published over the years include Valerie Solanas?s SCUM Manifesto (1967), Andrea Dworkin?s Woman-Hating: A Radical Look at Sexuality (1974); Audre Lorde?s Sister Outsider (1984); Margaret Atwood?s The Handmaid?s Tale (1985); Marilyn French?s Beyond Power: On Women, Men and Morals (1986); Patricia Hill Collins? Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment (1990); and bell hooks? Feminism Is for Everybody: Passionate Politics (2000). We are interested in essays that address how these types of perspectives might influence twenty-first century feminisms. Twenty-first century works by such feminist advocates as Roxane Gay, Sara Ahmed, and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie are highly relevant as are essays that focus on the work of feminist activists in such fields as politics and climate change and intersect with elements in Woolf's own oeuvre. Over the decades, generations of feminists (we are now in the Fifth Wave) have addressed the increasingly complex perceptions associated with the evolving intersections of sexuality and gender while also tackling the politics of patriarchy. Similarly, Woolf?s reception has become ever more intricate and more global as patriarchy has continued to encroach on the lives of women and girls, whether cis-born or trans. We welcome multiple approaches. Contributions can be confrontational and passionate but must also speak to collaborative inclusive efforts. We hope that submissions will feature methods, solutions, and possibilities that are centered in Woolf studies and function as counterpoints to the escalating patriarchal and political attacks on feminism, on women and girls, and on trans and queer people in the twenty-first century. Please contact us if you have questions! All best, Vara Neverow neverowv1 at southernct.edu and Kimberly Coates kimbec at bgsu.edu Vara Neverow (she/her/hers) Professor, English Department Editor, Virginia Woolf Miscellany Southern Connecticut State University New Haven, CT 06515 203-392-6717 neverowv1 at southernct.edu I acknowledge that Southern Connecticut State University was built on traditional territory of the indigenous peoples and nations of the Paugussett and Quinnipiac peoples. Recent Publications: Lead editor, Virginia Woolf: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2020; with Jeanne Dubino, Kathryn Simpson, and Gill Lowe); Editor, Volume One, 1975-1984, Virginia Woolf: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2020); Co-editor, The Edinburgh Companion to Virginia Woolf and Contemporary Global Literature (Edinburgh, 2020; with Jeanne Dubino, Paulina Paj?k, Catherine Hollis, and Celiese Lypka) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From claire.davison at sorbonne-nouvelle.fr Sun Nov 19 05:23:08 2023 From: claire.davison at sorbonne-nouvelle.fr (Claire Davison) Date: Sun, 19 Nov 2023 11:23:08 +0100 Subject: [Vwoolf] Leslie Stephen - Conference in Paris CFP Message-ID: Dear friends, colleagues, and fellow Woolfians, The first ever conference on "Leslie Stephen" will be held at Universit? Sorbonne Nouvelle in Paris on 24-25 October 2024. Abstracts of about 300 words, for 25-minute papers in English, together with a short (100-word) author biography, should be sent to the organizers by 31st January 2024 at the following address: leslie.stephen.conference at gmail.com. A selection of peer-reviewed articles based on papers given at the conference will be collected for publication. In case of difficulties tracing Stephen?s works, please contact the organizers, who will be happy to share links and resources. Best Wishes, Claire Davison (Universit? Sorbonne Nouvelle, Paris) Isabelle Gadoin (Universit? Sorbonne Nouvelle, Paris) Marie Laniel (Universit? de Picardie, Amiens) *Leslie Stephen: Thinking With and Against His Time* *International Conference* *24-25 October 2024* *Sorbonne Nouvelle University, Paris* *PRISMES ? EA 4398* *Langues, Textes, Arts et Cultures du Monde Anglophone* *CORPUS ? UR-UPJV 4295* *Conflits, Repr?sentations et Dialogues dans l?Univers Anglo-Saxon* *SEW ? Soci?t? d??tudes Woolfiennes* *Confirmed keynote speakers:* Dr. Jane Potter (Oxford Brookes University) Dr. Trudy Tate (Clare Hall, University of Cambridge) *Call for papers:* Early advocate of evolutionism, one of the first openly declared agnostics, editor of the *Cornhill Magazine*, pioneering mountaineer, moral philosopher, founder and general editor of the DNB: there are so many more facets to Leslie Stephen (1832-1904) than those recorded by his daughter Virginia Woolf, who memorably paid tribute to his ?strong,? ?healthy out of door, moor striding mind?. By unfolding all the contradictions and paradoxes of the character, this first international conference on Leslie Stephen means to reclaim the full complexity of his thought and legacy. Thinking with and against his time, Stephen held a key position at the heart of the Victorian literary scene and was an impressively prolific writer, profoundly engaged with the religious, philosophical and social debates of his age. A highly respected journalist and critic, he edited the *Cornhill Magazine* from 1871 to 1882, publishing works by George Meredith, Thomas Hardy, John Addington Symonds, Henry James and R.L. Stevenson, and was the author of hundreds of essays, published over the course of forty years in periodicals, such as the *Fortnightly Review*, *Fraser?s Magazine*, *Macmillan?s Magazine*, *Mind*, the *National Review*, the *Nineteenth Century, *the *Saturday Review *or the *Pall Mall Gazette*, a vast oeuvre now finally accessible thanks to online databases. His devotion to knowledge and integrity were such that he preferred to break with the academic world of Cambridge rather than compromise with the Church. Heir to the Clapham Sect, Stephen engaged with the theological debates of his time to the point of gradually and publicly embracing agnosticism, a form of radicalism that coexisted from then on with forms of traditionalism. His own prolific output bears witness to his encyclopaedic mind and his boundless curiosity for all the key issues of the day, however polemical: the anti-slavery movement, agnosticism, educational and social reform? Both a man of his time and a pioneer, Stephen explored new epistemological modes in keeping with the expanding frontiers of his age, while remaining profoundly anchored in some of the values and hierarchies of the day. The DNB, his life?s work, and one of his most ambitious projects, is the finest example of his desire to define new modes of classification and new forms of expression for the expanding knowledge of his time. Breaking with the established narratives of the past, he devised a new approach to writing the biography of the nation, doing away with the grandiose tradition of commemoration. In its place, he developed a more archaeological approach, delving into the past and collating the life stories of all those who helped shape the evolution of the country. The same pioneering spirit stoked his passion for the Alps and mountaineering, in which he proved as much a trailblazer as he did in intellectual life. It is this conquering spirit that his close friend Thomas Hardy immortalized in his poem ?The Schreckhorn, With Thoughts of Leslie Stephen? (1897), which extolled his will to ?venture life and limb? as well as the ?quaint glooms? of his personality, when paying tribute to Stephen as the first man ever to ascend this mountain. However daring and rigorous in his endeavours, Stephen was no less a direct heir to the Romantic tradition. An ardent poetry lover, he could quote vast swathes of the poetic canon, from Milton to Wordsworth, Tennyson and Arnold, and would rhythm both domestic life and mountaineering exploits with his recitations. Likewise, despite his allegiance to Victorian models of ?Muscular Christianity?, and the manly world of clubs and fellowships, he would at times indulge in various forms of sentimentalism and melodramatic displays of emotion. These are some of the contradictions that the participants to this conference are invited to explore. Similarly, his vast output deserves to be reconsidered through diverse critical paradigms, such as new materialist History, print culture studies, new sensory studies, phenomenology, affect studies and ethics, gender studies, health and disability studies. We welcome contributions focusing on Leslie Stephen, but also on the following topics, connected with his life and times and shedding light on the larger context of his work: ? Victorian encyclopaedism ? Victorian periodicals, print culture, the publishing industry ? Biography, the DNB, ?hero-worship? ? Stephen?s relations to Victorian sages and prophets ? Letters, epistolarity, literary networks ? Cambridge, academia, education and university reform ? Gentlemen?s clubs, sociability ? 18th century philosophy and literature, the Enlightenment ? Utilitarianism, Science, Evolutionism ? The Clapham Sect, Agnosticism, Scepticism ? War, the anti-slavery movement ? Morality, the ?science of ethics? ? Mountaineering, athletics, walking, nature and travel writing ? Memory, elegy, mourning, the Mausoleum Book, Virginia Woolf & Leslie Stephen -- Claire DAVISON Professeure d'?tudes modernistes Directrice du D?partement du Monde Anglophone UFR LLCSE E.A. PRISMES Universit? Sorbonne Nouvelle 8 avenue Saint-Mand? - Bureau 517 - 75012 T?l. 01 45 87 41 23 Rejoignez-nous : -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From danelljones at bresnan.net Tue Nov 21 18:45:10 2023 From: danelljones at bresnan.net (danelljones at bresnan.net) Date: Tue, 21 Nov 2023 16:45:10 -0700 Subject: [Vwoolf] The Girl Prince is a Hurst Bestseller and 50% off Black Friday Sale Message-ID: <01be01da1cd4$c4844c20$4d8ce460$@bresnan.net> Dear Woolfians, Apparently, The Girl Prince hit the Hurst holiday bestseller list ! This is pretty amazing because I think it is their first Woolf book. (I hope it's not their last!) If you are in the UK and are hoping for a good discount on The Girl Prince: Virginia Woolf, Race and the Dreadnought Hoax , you can get it 50% off during Hurst's Black Friday Sale. Good until December 3rd. If you are in the US, OUP has a 30% discount with discount code ADISTA5. Again, I hope you don't mind my posting this-I think some people might be interested and would love the chance to save a little money. Happy Thanksgiving! Danell -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From danelljones at bresnan.net Tue Nov 21 22:52:01 2023 From: danelljones at bresnan.net (danelljones at bresnan.net) Date: Tue, 21 Nov 2023 20:52:01 -0700 Subject: [Vwoolf] Message on Behalf of Edward Mendelson Message-ID: <01dc01da1cf7$40b78600$c2269200$@bresnan.net> Dear Woolfians, Edward Mendelson is trying to get in touch with Matthew Holliday, the person who worked on the new Granta edition of Woolf's diaries. If anyone can help, would you please contact him at em36 at columbia.edu or pass on this message of Matthew Holliday? Thank you so much! Danell -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mhussey at verizon.net Wed Nov 22 09:10:13 2023 From: mhussey at verizon.net (mhussey at verizon.net) Date: Wed, 22 Nov 2023 09:10:13 -0500 Subject: [Vwoolf] Message on Behalf of Edward Mendelson In-Reply-To: <01dc01da1cf7$40b78600$c2269200$@bresnan.net> References: <01dc01da1cf7$40b78600$c2269200$@bresnan.net> Message-ID: <008101da1d4d$9cffad60$d6ff0820$@verizon.net> Hi Danell, I DM?d Matthew on Instagram (which is how I communicate with him!) and passed on Edward?s email From: Vwoolf On Behalf Of Danell Jones via Vwoolf Sent: Tuesday, November 21, 2023 10:52 PM To: vwoolf at lists.service.ohio-state.edu Subject: [Vwoolf] Message on Behalf of Edward Mendelson Dear Woolfians, Edward Mendelson is trying to get in touch with Matthew Holliday, the person who worked on the new Granta edition of Woolf?s diaries. If anyone can help, would you please contact him at em36@?columbia.?edu or pass on this Dear Woolfians, Edward Mendelson is trying to get in touch with Matthew Holliday, the person who worked on the new Granta edition of Woolf?s diaries. If anyone can help, would you please contact him at em36 at columbia.edu or pass on this message of Matthew Holliday? Thank you so much! Danell -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From neverowv1 at southernct.edu Wed Nov 22 15:24:32 2023 From: neverowv1 at southernct.edu (Neverow, Vara S.) Date: Wed, 22 Nov 2023 20:24:32 +0000 Subject: [Vwoolf] Google Alerts.... Message-ID: Dear all, A few Google Alerts for your review. https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/vanessa-bell-stepped-out-of-virginia-woolf-shadow/__;!!KGKeukY!xh2rPkmmV52Ql5Gf91jFhgdIx4SZgg_hOvOmn0nqiX4H5fj7sw8CWd75BrlGre3_ajPxgiKkoomvuxblCQ7udbps-1P4$ (very supportive of Vanessa; features the superb misspelling of "Rodger" Fry twice): [https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/static/uploads/1/2023/11/How-Vanessa-Bell-stepped-out-of-Virginia-Woolfs-shadow-Art-Far-Out-Magazine.jpg__;!!KGKeukY!xh2rPkmmV52Ql5Gf91jFhgdIx4SZgg_hOvOmn0nqiX4H5fj7sw8CWd75BrlGre3_ajPxgiKkoomvuxblCQ7udTU5lN35$ ] How Vanessa Bell stepped out of Virginia Woolf's shadow Vanessa Bell was often an overlooked figure when compared to her sister, Virginia Woolf, but her contributions to art, match - if not exceed - Woolf's own. faroutmagazine.co.uk ? ? https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://artreview.com/the-bloomsbury-sets-fashion-bring-no-clothes-charlie-porter/__;!!KGKeukY!xh2rPkmmV52Ql5Gf91jFhgdIx4SZgg_hOvOmn0nqiX4H5fj7sw8CWd75BrlGre3_ajPxgiKkoomvuxblCQ7udQXozSsS$ (Here's a sentence from the book review: "Bring No Clothes is a loping gonzo analysis of Bloomsbury dress threaded through with the author?s self-actualisation." The book is available at $20.81/?16.62 on the Blackwell's site: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://blackwells.co.uk/bookshop/product/Bring-No-Clothes-by-Charlie-Porter/9780241602751__;!!KGKeukY!xh2rPkmmV52Ql5Gf91jFhgdIx4SZgg_hOvOmn0nqiX4H5fj7sw8CWd75BrlGre3_ajPxgiKkoomvuxblCQ7udUWXWoBO$ ) [https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://backend.artreview.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Roger_Fry_1866_**B_1934_**B_The_Breakfast_Table_**B_ABDAG000001_-_Aberdeen_City_Council_Archives_Gallery_and_Museums_Collection.jpg__;4oCT4oCT4oCT!!KGKeukY!xh2rPkmmV52Ql5Gf91jFhgdIx4SZgg_hOvOmn0nqiX4H5fj7sw8CWd75BrlGre3_ajPxgiKkoomvuxblCQ7udbQ982a1$ ] The Bloomsbury Set?s Fashion was Another Way of Breaking with Convention / artreview.com ? ? And then there is the Times review of Shakespeare in Bloomsbury: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/shakespeare-in-bloomsbury-by-marjorie-garber-review-wtv2f3mq9__;!!KGKeukY!xh2rPkmmV52Ql5Gf91jFhgdIx4SZgg_hOvOmn0nqiX4H5fj7sw8CWd75BrlGre3_ajPxgiKkoomvuxblCQ7udb1CdZ7B$ (this review is exclusively for those who have a subscription....which I do not have) [https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.thetimes.co.uk/imageserver/image/*2Fmethode*2Ftimes*2Fprod*2Fweb*2Fbin*2Ff5e7f14b-d877-480a-a115-006c355d84a4.png?crop=2771*2C1559*2C0*2C0&resize=1200__;JSUlJSUlJSUl!!KGKeukY!xh2rPkmmV52Ql5Gf91jFhgdIx4SZgg_hOvOmn0nqiX4H5fj7sw8CWd75BrlGre3_ajPxgiKkoomvuxblCQ7udSZrtpXO$ ] Shakespeare in Bloomsbury by Marjorie Garber review: the Bard in WC1 Why Virginia Woolf and her circle were obsessed with Shakespeare https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://www.thetimes.co.uk__;!!KGKeukY!xh2rPkmmV52Ql5Gf91jFhgdIx4SZgg_hOvOmn0nqiX4H5fj7sw8CWd75BrlGre3_ajPxgiKkoomvuxblCQ7udVLbwuxu$ ? ? Signing off, Vara Vara Neverow (she/her/hers) Professor, English Department Editor, Virginia Woolf Miscellany Southern Connecticut State University New Haven, CT 06515 203-392-6717 neverowv1 at southernct.edu I acknowledge that Southern Connecticut State University was built on traditional territory of the indigenous peoples and nations of the Paugussett and Quinnipiac peoples. Recent Publications: Lead editor, Virginia Woolf: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2020; with Jeanne Dubino, Kathryn Simpson, and Gill Lowe); Editor, Volume One, 1975-1984, Virginia Woolf: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2020); Co-editor, The Edinburgh Companion to Virginia Woolf and Contemporary Global Literature (Edinburgh, 2020; with Jeanne Dubino, Paulina Paj?k, Catherine Hollis, and Celiese Lypka) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From contact at spiritualark.com Wed Nov 22 23:52:40 2023 From: contact at spiritualark.com (Spiritual Ark) Date: Thu, 23 Nov 2023 04:52:40 +0000 (GMT) Subject: [Vwoolf] 4 Spiritual Animals to Take Note Of Message-ID: <128847285854137344.0.v2@titan.email> An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sparks at clemson.edu Thu Nov 23 16:37:30 2023 From: sparks at clemson.edu (Elisa Sparks) Date: Thu, 23 Nov 2023 21:37:30 +0000 Subject: [Vwoolf] Zoom reminder for tomorrow Message-ID: <09910331-FD11-4FD3-A033-74ADA4685E24@clemson.edu> Dear Woolf Friends? Hope everyone is having a peaceful, comfortable, and flavorful holiday. This is just a reminder that there will be a Woolf Club drop-in tomorrow (Friday Nov 24) at the usual time: 11:00 AM PST, 2:00PM EST (NYC), 4:00 pm Rio, 7:00 PM London?. Time: Nov 24, 2023 11:00 AM Pacific Time (US and Canada) Join Zoom Meeting https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://clemson.zoom.us/j/91284934681?pwd=ZFlHc29hdVZnSXlDVTZjTlFwbkFkQT09__;!!KGKeukY!z-oRtqp3WqvToLBbgwNFygmhVhDTaul2l7MiVi8O0fzQgvkikRbV66Drbj4JkYP6vdKaxqqKLIEJ8MtX4ltel-pXP4_ffVY$ Meeting ID: 912 8493 4681 Passcode: 959980 Hope to see you then. Best wishes, Elisa -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mhussey at verizon.net Thu Nov 23 22:26:05 2023 From: mhussey at verizon.net (Mark Hussey) Date: Fri, 24 Nov 2023 03:26:05 +0000 (UTC) Subject: [Vwoolf] Zoom reminder for tomorrow In-Reply-To: <09910331-FD11-4FD3-A033-74ADA4685E24@clemson.edu> References: <09910331-FD11-4FD3-A033-74ADA4685E24@clemson.edu> Message-ID: <2129176594.5653884.1700796365225@mail.yahoo.com> Thank you Elisa. In the last stages of moving house tomorrow but appreciate the notice! Xo Sent from the all new AOL app for iOS On Thursday, November 23, 2023, 4:37 PM, Elisa Sparks via Vwoolf wrote: Dear Woolf Friends? Hope everyone is having a peaceful, comfortable, and flavorful holiday. This is just a reminder that there will be a Woolf Club drop-in tomorrow (Friday Nov 24) at the usual time: 11:?00 AM PST, 2:?00PM EST (NYC), 4:?00 pm#yiv9096116448 #yiv9096116448pfptBannerqebb797 {display:block !important;visibility:visible !important;background-color:#CFD3D7 !important;max-width:none !important;max-height:none !important;}#yiv9096116448 .yiv9096116448pfptPrimaryButtonqebb797:hover, #yiv9096116448 .yiv9096116448pfptPrimaryButtonqebb797:focus {background-color:#adb0b4 !important;}#yiv9096116448 .yiv9096116448pfptPrimaryButtonqebb797:active {background-color:#8c8e91 !important;} Dear Woolf Friends? Hope everyone is having a peaceful, comfortable, and flavorful holiday.? This is just a reminder that there will be a Woolf Club drop-in tomorrow (Friday Nov 24) atthe usual time: 11:00 AM PST, 2:00PM EST (NYC), 4:00 pm Rio, 7:00 PM London?. ? Time: Nov 24, 2023 11:00 AM Pacific Time (US and Canada) ? Join Zoom Meeting https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://clemson.zoom.us/j/91284934681?pwd=ZFlHc29hdVZnSXlDVTZjTlFwbkFkQT09__;!!KGKeukY!0F1t1cho9H4MqBJAzRuXsIAZ4occK9oLHFao_KTo5Dhly9ZIoyrgwuPbbqLJtep70idYy08Bsp8hQ1ZZdV3desVTx0DMPKg$ ? ? Meeting ID: 912 8493 4681 Passcode: 959980 ? Hope to see you then. Best wishes, Elisa ? _______________________________________________ Vwoolf mailing list Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From kllevenback at rcn.com Sat Nov 25 09:22:39 2023 From: kllevenback at rcn.com (Karen Levenback) Date: Sat, 25 Nov 2023 09:22:39 -0500 Subject: [Vwoolf] =?utf-8?q?WOOLF_SIGHTINGS_=E2=80=94_From_The_New_Yorker?= =?utf-8?q?=3A_What_if_Nostalgia_Isn=E2=80=99t_What_It_Used_to_Be=3F_+?= Message-ID: <6B54DEB8-E6DB-4632-B03E-36AE9C7B03C7@rcn.com> !-------------------------------------------------------------------| This Message Is From an External Sender This message came from outside your organization. |-------------------------------------------------------------------! Woolf sighting in Thomas Marlon?s story on Nostalgia + the first line of Sigrid Nunez?s new novel, _The Vulnerables_, about involving an interesting pairing during the pandemic, is a repetition of Woolf?s THE YEARS: ?It was an uncertain spring.? Sigrid emphasized her debt to Virginia Woolf at a book signing event at Politics & Prose in Washington, DC, last week. Remember MITZ? Best holiday wishes? Karen Levenback What if Nostalgia Isn?t What It Used to Be? https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/11/27/yesterday-a-new-history-of-nostalgia-tobias-becker-book-review__;!!KGKeukY!xA3sWEIRR-hZcZullNtIscS6ApqluZo9EtFqvBHvpA1oorEOZQqNgsWIuuuQ8GvEApYpaSrmaxaKpldbLiCPH2U$ Get the writers you love, plus your favorite cartoons, on your phone or tablet. Download The New Yorker Today. https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://itunes.apple.com/app/apple-store/id1081530898?pt=45076&ct=App*20Share&mt=8__;JQ!!KGKeukY!xA3sWEIRR-hZcZullNtIscS6ApqluZo9EtFqvBHvpA1oorEOZQqNgsWIuuuQ8GvEApYpaSrmaxaKpldbAaNmPqo$ Sent from my iPad From kllevenback at att.net Sat Nov 25 09:23:33 2023 From: kllevenback at att.net (Kllevenback) Date: Sat, 25 Nov 2023 09:23:33 -0500 Subject: [Vwoolf] =?utf-8?q?Fwd=3A_WOOLF_SIGHTINGS_=E2=80=94_From_The_New_?= =?utf-8?q?Yorker=3A_What_if_Nostalgia_Isn=E2=80=99t_What_It_Used_to_Be=3F?= =?utf-8?q?_+?= References: <6B54DEB8-E6DB-4632-B03E-36AE9C7B03C7@rcn.com> Message-ID: Sent from my iPad Begin forwarded message: > From: Karen Levenback > Date: November 25, 2023 at 9:22:39?AM EST > To: vwoolf at lists.osu.edu > Subject: WOOLF SIGHTINGS ? From The New Yorker: What if Nostalgia Isn?t What It Used to Be? + > > ?Woolf sighting in Thomas Marlon?s story on Nostalgia + the first line of Sigrid Nunez?s new novel, _The Vulnerables_, about involving an interesting pairing during the pandemic, is a repetition of Woolf?s THE YEARS: ?It was an uncertain spring.? Sigrid emphasized her debt to Virginia Woolf at a book signing event at Politics & Prose in Washington, DC, last week. Remember MITZ? > > Best holiday wishes? > Karen Levenback > > What if Nostalgia Isn?t What It Used to Be? > https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/11/27/yesterday-a-new-history-of-nostalgia-tobias-becker-book-review__;!!KGKeukY!yJypHxbqrDg9gNFLtilsRKc-ZXtb6mLBwYV3VCyjmwax_2U-XjAFeDFp-kab7PYFvcdYZxfOyMQYEeW6KCJkFLE$ > > Get the writers you love, plus your favorite cartoons, on your phone or tablet. Download The New Yorker Today. https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://itunes.apple.com/app/apple-store/id1081530898?pt=45076&ct=App*20Share&mt=8__;JQ!!KGKeukY!yJypHxbqrDg9gNFLtilsRKc-ZXtb6mLBwYV3VCyjmwax_2U-XjAFeDFp-kab7PYFvcdYZxfOyMQYEeW6dVzl_ec$ > > Sent from my iPad -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From stuart.n.clarke at btinternet.com Sat Nov 25 14:09:27 2023 From: stuart.n.clarke at btinternet.com (stuart.n.clarke) Date: Sat, 25 Nov 2023 19:09:27 +0000 (GMT) Subject: [Vwoolf] =?utf-8?q?WOOLF_SIGHTINGS_=E2=80=94_From_The_New_Yorker?= =?utf-8?q?=3A_What_if_Nostalgia_Isn=E2=80=99t_What_It_Used_to_Be=3F_+?= In-Reply-To: <6B54DEB8-E6DB-4632-B03E-36AE9C7B03C7@rcn.com> References: <6B54DEB8-E6DB-4632-B03E-36AE9C7B03C7@rcn.com> Message-ID: <309427a8.116de.18c07e3053c.Webtop.114@btinternet.com> Ah,?the?monkey?woman.?If?no?one?knows?the?answer,?here's?a?project?for?an?apt?student.??Which?of?the?22?species?of?marmoset?was?Mitz? Stuart? ------?Original?Message?------ On??Saturday,?25?Nov,?2023?At?14:22,?Karen?Levenback?via?Vwoolf?wrote: Woolf?sighting?in?Thomas?Marlon?s?story?on?Nostalgia?+?the?first?line?of?Sigrid?Nunez?s?new?novel,?_The?Vulnerables_,?about?involving?an?interesting?pairing?during?the?pandemic,?is?a?repetition?of?Woolf?s?THE?YEARS:???It?was?an?uncertain?spring.???Sigrid?emphasized?her?debt?to?Virginia?Woolf?at?a?book?signing?event?at?Politics?&?Prose?in?Washington,?DC,?last?week.??Remember?MITZ? Best?holiday?wishes? Karen?Levenback What?if?Nostalgia?Isn?t?What?It?Used?to?Be? https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/11/27/yesterday-a-new-history-of-nostalgia-tobias-becker-book-review__;!!KGKeukY!xA3sWEIRR-hZcZullNtIscS6ApqluZo9EtFqvBHvpA1oorEOZQqNgsWIuuuQ8GvEApYpaSrmaxaKpldbLiCPH2U$? Get?the?writers?you?love,?plus?your?favorite?cartoons,?on?your?phone?or?tablet.?Download?The?New?Yorker?Today.?https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://itunes.apple.com/app/apple-store/id1081530898?pt=45076&ct=App*20Share&mt=8__;JQ!!KGKeukY!xA3sWEIRR-hZcZullNtIscS6ApqluZo9EtFqvBHvpA1oorEOZQqNgsWIuuuQ8GvEApYpaSrmaxaKpldbAaNmPqo$? Sent?from?my?iPad _______________________________________________ Vwoolf?mailing?list Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From neverowv1 at southernct.edu Sat Nov 25 15:03:08 2023 From: neverowv1 at southernct.edu (Neverow, Vara S.) Date: Sat, 25 Nov 2023 20:03:08 +0000 Subject: [Vwoolf] =?utf-8?q?WOOLF_SIGHTINGS_=E2=80=94_From_The_New_Yorker?= =?utf-8?q?=3A_What_if_Nostalgia_Isn=E2=80=99t_What_It_Used_to_Be=3F_+?= In-Reply-To: <309427a8.116de.18c07e3053c.Webtop.114@btinternet.com> References: <6B54DEB8-E6DB-4632-B03E-36AE9C7B03C7@rcn.com> <309427a8.116de.18c07e3053c.Webtop.114@btinternet.com> Message-ID: <37442BA3-DF62-41CB-B8A6-E14F940DFF00@southernct.edu> Adding a tiny bit of information to Stuart?s post, Wikipedia lists the four genera of marmosets, ?Callithrix, Cebuella, Callibella, and Mico. All four genera are part of the biological family Callitrichidae?: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marmoset__;!!KGKeukY!xshHRxFyfo87paQLNgNB9JJhN0BC0dj_wvcLQNggO9MJot6R-GzSimXOODxwjii150dWGQrYkyEUNWD15cCksxw6XNiY$ . (The Wikipedia article does not include any reference to Mitz.) Vara Vara Neverow (pronouns: she/her/hers) Professor of English and Women?s and Gender Studies Editor, Virginia Woolf Miscellany Southern Connecticut State University New Haven, CT 06515 203-392-6717 neverowv1 at southernct.edu I acknowledge that Southern Connecticut State University was built on traditional territory of the indigenous peoples and nations of the Paugussett and Quinnipiac peoples. Recent Publications: Lead editor, Virginia Woolf: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2020; with Jeanne Dubino, Kathryn Simpson, and Gill Lowe) Editor, Volume One, 1975-1984, Virginia Woolf: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2020) Co-editor, The Edinburgh Companion to Virginia Woolf and Contemporary Global Literature (Edinburgh, 2020; with Jeanne Dubino, Paulina Paj?k, Catherine Hollis, and Celiese Lypka) From: Vwoolf on behalf of vwoolf listserve Reply-To: "Stuart N. Clarke" Date: Saturday, November 25, 2023 at 2:09 PM To: vwoolf listserve Subject: Re: [Vwoolf] WOOLF SIGHTINGS ? From The New Yorker: What if Nostalgia Isn?t What It Used to Be? + Ah, the monkey woman. If no one knows the answer, here's a project for an apt student. Which of the 22 species of marmoset was Mitz?Stuart ------ Original Message ------On Saturday, 25 Nov, 2023 At 14:?22, Karen Levenback via Vwoolf Ah, the monkey woman. If no one knows the answer, here's a project for an apt student. Which of the 22 species of marmoset was Mitz? Stuart ------ Original Message ------ On Saturday, 25 Nov, 2023 At 14:22, Karen Levenback via Vwoolf wrote: Woolf sighting in Thomas Marlon?s story on Nostalgia + the first line of Sigrid Nunez?s new novel, _The Vulnerables_, about involving an interesting pairing during the pandemic, is a repetition of Woolf?s THE YEARS: ?It was an uncertain spring.? Sigrid emphasized her debt to Virginia Woolf at a book signing event at Politics & Prose in Washington, DC, last week. Remember MITZ? Best holiday wishes? Karen Levenback What if Nostalgia Isn?t What It Used to Be? https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/11/27/yesterday-a-new-history-of-nostalgia-tobias-becker-book-review__;!!KGKeukY!xA3sWEIRR-hZcZullNtIscS6ApqluZo9EtFqvBHvpA1oorEOZQqNgsWIuuuQ8GvEApYpaSrmaxaKpldbLiCPH2U$ Get the writers you love, plus your favorite cartoons, on your phone or tablet. Download The New Yorker Today. https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://itunes.apple.com/app/apple-store/id1081530898?pt=45076&ct=App*20Share&mt=8__;JQ!!KGKeukY!xA3sWEIRR-hZcZullNtIscS6ApqluZo9EtFqvBHvpA1oorEOZQqNgsWIuuuQ8GvEApYpaSrmaxaKpldbAaNmPqo$ Sent from my iPad _______________________________________________ Vwoolf mailing list Vwoolf at lists.osu.edu https://lists.osu.edu/mailman/listinfo/vwoolf -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From virginiawoolfturkiye at gmail.com Sat Nov 25 17:37:11 2023 From: virginiawoolfturkiye at gmail.com (=?UTF-8?Q?Virginia_Woolf_in_T=C3=BCrkiye?=) Date: Sat, 25 Nov 2023 17:37:11 -0500 Subject: [Vwoolf] Fwd: Leslie Stephen - Conference in Paris CFP In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Dear colleagues, Below is an email from Claire Davison about the first Leslie Stephen conference to be held at Universit? Sorbonne Nouvelle in Paris on 24-25 October 2024. Please contact the organizers for questions regarding the conference. Woolfully yours, VWST ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Claire Davison Date: Sun, Nov 19, 2023 at 5:23?AM Subject: Leslie Stephen - Conference in Paris CFP To: , , < woolfsalonproject at gmail.com>, , < woolfwriter at gmail.com>, Dear friends, colleagues, and fellow Woolfians, The first ever conference on "Leslie Stephen" will be held at Universit? Sorbonne Nouvelle in Paris on 24-25 October 2024. Abstracts of about 300 words, for 25-minute papers in English, together with a short (100-word) author biography, should be sent to the organizers by 31st January 2024 at the following address: leslie.stephen.conference at gmail.com. A selection of peer-reviewed articles based on papers given at the conference will be collected for publication. In case of difficulties tracing Stephen?s works, please contact the organizers, who will be happy to share links and resources. Best Wishes, Claire Davison (Universit? Sorbonne Nouvelle, Paris) Isabelle Gadoin (Universit? Sorbonne Nouvelle, Paris) Marie Laniel (Universit? de Picardie, Amiens) *Leslie Stephen: Thinking With and Against His Time* *International Conference* *24-25 October 2024* *Sorbonne Nouvelle University, Paris* *PRISMES ? EA 4398* *Langues, Textes, Arts et Cultures du Monde Anglophone* *CORPUS ? UR-UPJV 4295* *Conflits, Repr?sentations et Dialogues dans l?Univers Anglo-Saxon* *SEW ? Soci?t? d??tudes Woolfiennes* *Confirmed keynote speakers:* Dr. Jane Potter (Oxford Brookes University) Dr. Trudy Tate (Clare Hall, University of Cambridge) *Call for papers:* Early advocate of evolutionism, one of the first openly declared agnostics, editor of the *Cornhill Magazine*, pioneering mountaineer, moral philosopher, founder and general editor of the DNB: there are so many more facets to Leslie Stephen (1832-1904) than those recorded by his daughter Virginia Woolf, who memorably paid tribute to his ?strong,? ?healthy out of door, moor striding mind?. By unfolding all the contradictions and paradoxes of the character, this first international conference on Leslie Stephen means to reclaim the full complexity of his thought and legacy. Thinking with and against his time, Stephen held a key position at the heart of the Victorian literary scene and was an impressively prolific writer, profoundly engaged with the religious, philosophical and social debates of his age. A highly respected journalist and critic, he edited the *Cornhill Magazine* from 1871 to 1882, publishing works by George Meredith, Thomas Hardy, John Addington Symonds, Henry James and R.L. Stevenson, and was the author of hundreds of essays, published over the course of forty years in periodicals, such as the *Fortnightly Review*, *Fraser?s Magazine*, *Macmillan?s Magazine*, *Mind*, the *National Review*, the *Nineteenth Century, *the *Saturday Review *or the *Pall Mall Gazette*, a vast oeuvre now finally accessible thanks to online databases. His devotion to knowledge and integrity were such that he preferred to break with the academic world of Cambridge rather than compromise with the Church. Heir to the Clapham Sect, Stephen engaged with the theological debates of his time to the point of gradually and publicly embracing agnosticism, a form of radicalism that coexisted from then on with forms of traditionalism. His own prolific output bears witness to his encyclopaedic mind and his boundless curiosity for all the key issues of the day, however polemical: the anti-slavery movement, agnosticism, educational and social reform? Both a man of his time and a pioneer, Stephen explored new epistemological modes in keeping with the expanding frontiers of his age, while remaining profoundly anchored in some of the values and hierarchies of the day. The DNB, his life?s work, and one of his most ambitious projects, is the finest example of his desire to define new modes of classification and new forms of expression for the expanding knowledge of his time. Breaking with the established narratives of the past, he devised a new approach to writing the biography of the nation, doing away with the grandiose tradition of commemoration. In its place, he developed a more archaeological approach, delving into the past and collating the life stories of all those who helped shape the evolution of the country. The same pioneering spirit stoked his passion for the Alps and mountaineering, in which he proved as much a trailblazer as he did in intellectual life. It is this conquering spirit that his close friend Thomas Hardy immortalized in his poem ?The Schreckhorn, With Thoughts of Leslie Stephen? (1897), which extolled his will to ?venture life and limb? as well as the ?quaint glooms? of his personality, when paying tribute to Stephen as the first man ever to ascend this mountain. However daring and rigorous in his endeavours, Stephen was no less a direct heir to the Romantic tradition. An ardent poetry lover, he could quote vast swathes of the poetic canon, from Milton to Wordsworth, Tennyson and Arnold, and would rhythm both domestic life and mountaineering exploits with his recitations. Likewise, despite his allegiance to Victorian models of ?Muscular Christianity?, and the manly world of clubs and fellowships, he would at times indulge in various forms of sentimentalism and melodramatic displays of emotion. These are some of the contradictions that the participants to this conference are invited to explore. Similarly, his vast output deserves to be reconsidered through diverse critical paradigms, such as new materialist History, print culture studies, new sensory studies, phenomenology, affect studies and ethics, gender studies, health and disability studies. We welcome contributions focusing on Leslie Stephen, but also on the following topics, connected with his life and times and shedding light on the larger context of his work: ? Victorian encyclopaedism ? Victorian periodicals, print culture, the publishing industry ? Biography, the DNB, ?hero-worship? ? Stephen?s relations to Victorian sages and prophets ? Letters, epistolarity, literary networks ? Cambridge, academia, education and university reform ? Gentlemen?s clubs, sociability ? 18th century philosophy and literature, the Enlightenment ? Utilitarianism, Science, Evolutionism ? The Clapham Sect, Agnosticism, Scepticism ? War, the anti-slavery movement ? Morality, the ?science of ethics? ? Mountaineering, athletics, walking, nature and travel writing ? Memory, elegy, mourning, the Mausoleum Book, Virginia Woolf & Leslie Stephen -- Claire DAVISON Professeure d'?tudes modernistes Directrice du D?partement du Monde Anglophone UFR LLCSE E.A. PRISMES Universit? Sorbonne Nouvelle 8 avenue Saint-Mand? - Bureau 517 - 75012 T?l. 01 45 87 41 23 Rejoignez-nous : -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Virginia Woolf Society Turkey" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to virginia-woolf-society-turkey-+unsubscribe at googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/virginia-woolf-society-turkey-/CAGFogFnJEXBFLVQc3Zm2cV-5Mt77ZPDBFYxZfxyo4W_jj4ZGzw*40mail.gmail.com__;JQ!!KGKeukY!ydtrFCc4OgrxOgElV2b304_7TMRnK94zSc_oBjYosumiBjfCMrqpqGBrHWnr05us8Azac-pZ0lkA6eKoRejg-UmMu0lcaw$ . For more options, visit https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://groups.google.com/d/optout__;!!KGKeukY!ydtrFCc4OgrxOgElV2b304_7TMRnK94zSc_oBjYosumiBjfCMrqpqGBrHWnr05us8Azac-pZ0lkA6eKoRejg-Unazv8Gww$ . -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From virginiawoolfturkiye at gmail.com Sat Nov 25 17:41:39 2023 From: virginiawoolfturkiye at gmail.com (=?UTF-8?Q?Virginia_Woolf_in_T=C3=BCrkiye?=) Date: Sat, 25 Nov 2023 17:41:39 -0500 Subject: [Vwoolf] 2024 conference of the Feminist inter/Modernist Association (FiMA) Message-ID: Dear colleagues, Below is an email from MSA regarding the F?MA3 conference. In case you are interested. Woolfully yours, VWSY Dear MSA members and friends, The FiMA3 team is extending our deadline for submissions to "Feminist Provocations" to *January 15, 2024*. Please feel free to submit anytime before then, but we recognize that the end of semester and (happy and wonderful) seasonal distractions are upon us. *Submit proposals to our Google form by January 15, 2024: * https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://tinyurl.com/FiMA24__;!!KGKeukY!3sbG4yYNkLzbhqR425zndqCeaVUrdUUDyNdGnvpTZLE8CRZes13ZVQB6DvftzF4MSWAS_T3fWEV9EULtdgsUfQUK_LOjvw$ Looking forward to seeing your proposals! The FiMA3 Team On Monday, November 6, 2023 at 5:47:12?AM UTC-7 Sarah Cornish wrote: *CALL FOR PROPOSALS * *?Feminist Provocations?* *Feminist inter/Modernist Association* *University of Mississippi, Oxford* *May 16-18, 2024* The 2024 conference of the Feminist inter/Modernist Association (FiMA) celebrates and problematizes modernism as a cultural provocation. At times obnoxious and difficult, erudite and primitive, modernist art works and cultural forms are nothing if not provoking in their apparently cavalier dismissal of conventional aesthetic, sexual, and cultural standards. This trolling of conventional middle-class patrons of the arts extended to conspicuous violations of gender and sexual norms, from Josephine Baker?s cabaret performances to the gender-bending Eton cut that Laura Doan details in *Fashioning Sapphism* to the performative fashion and art of provocateurs like the Baroness Elsa von Freitag-Loringhoven, Katherine Dunham, Claude Cahun, and Marcel Moore. The sexual liberation claimed by writers like Djuna Barnes and Radcliffe Hall, and the calling out of racism and colonialism by writers like Una Marson, Jean Rhys, and Rebecca West, also provoked and unsettled the patriarchal and imperial establishment, some well into the postwar years. We invite explorations of feminist modernism?s many provocations across poetry, fiction, drama, periodicals, music, art, photography, craft, performance, fashion, and dance. We encourage feminist examinations of little magazines, slick magazines, independent presses, and transnational networks and circulations. We seek reconsiderations of the feminist uses of space and place inside and out of established cultural venues (pop-up lectures, public events, and street performances). We invite expansive investigations of multiple modernisms, especially those centering intersectional analyses including race, class, colonialism, sexuality, genders, geographies, and cultural hierarchies, and we encourage proposals that stretch the boundaries of ?modernism,? in period (1870-1970), genre, style, and discipline. We invite individual paper, panel, or roundtable proposals that engage with Provocative and/or Provoking Literary, Artistic, Performative, and other Cultural Forms situated between 1870-1970, such as: - Sexual provocations and liberation - ?Bad? feminist provocations, both artistically and politically - Feminist demands of radicality and revolution - Black art forms? movement from margin to center - Climate, Ecology, and the Anthropocene - Embodied provocations: health, reproduction, contraception, dis/ability, surveillance, imprisonment, technology, pleasure - Agent provocateurs: fighting fascism, racism, and cruel capitalism - Provocative media: photography, film, radio, documentary, visual and plastic arts - Provocative collaborations: friendships, intersectional alliances, organizations - Provoking women: spinsters, witches, lesbians, elders - Provoking affects: anger, rage, irritation, anxiety, animatedness - Provoking the historical record: Archiving women/women as archivists - Provoking literary estates: Archival gate-keeping and literary afterlives - Provoking cultural institutions and their arbiters - Feminist modernist provocations: revising high modernism in light of ?Me Too? and Black Lives Matter Part of FiMA?s mission is to mentor and support graduate students at any level in their professionalization. FiMA encourages graduate students to propose individual papers and full panels with fellow graduate students and/or faculty mentors. Please note, this year, the selection committee will be nominating graduate student proposals for our *?Emergent Voices? Graduate Student Plenary Session*. Graduate students chosen for this session will be mentored and offered the opportunity for a practice panel session pre-conference. If you are a graduate student and would be interested in being considered for this session, please indicate so on your individual proposal. *Individual proposals *should be 250-300 words and include a working title. Please also include a short bio. *Panel proposals (3-4 participants) *should be no more than 600 words and include a panel title and working titles. Please also include short bios for each participant. Rather than reading short papers and running out of time, participants on *FiMA Roundtables* *(5-6 participants) *should *provoke *conversation about a particular topic and include room for generative audience participation. Proposals should be no more than 600 words and include a description of the scope of the roundtable conversation and short bios for each participant. *Submit proposals to our Google form by January 15, 2024: * https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://tinyurl.com/FiMA24__;!!KGKeukY!3sbG4yYNkLzbhqR425zndqCeaVUrdUUDyNdGnvpTZLE8CRZes13ZVQB6DvftzF4MSWAS_T3fWEV9EULtdgsUfQUK_LOjvw$ -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Virginia Woolf Society Turkey" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to virginia-woolf-society-turkey-+unsubscribe at googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/virginia-woolf-society-turkey-/CAGFogFkXsgS*3D*2BS*2BgQNnjeQmhNVo13QQuWkwJR8AKGeB-Zru0dw*40mail.gmail.com__;JSUlJQ!!KGKeukY!3sbG4yYNkLzbhqR425zndqCeaVUrdUUDyNdGnvpTZLE8CRZes13ZVQB6DvftzF4MSWAS_T3fWEV9EULtdgsUfQVM7t8_zw$ . For more options, visit https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://groups.google.com/d/optout__;!!KGKeukY!3sbG4yYNkLzbhqR425zndqCeaVUrdUUDyNdGnvpTZLE8CRZes13ZVQB6DvftzF4MSWAS_T3fWEV9EULtdgsUfQUJD11-bw$ . -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From demetkarabulut62 at hotmail.com Mon Nov 27 14:09:06 2023 From: demetkarabulut62 at hotmail.com (Demet Karabulut) Date: Mon, 27 Nov 2023 19:09:06 +0000 Subject: [Vwoolf] Woolf Seminar - Delia Ungureanu -The Surreal Real: Proust, Woolf, and World Cinema- 8 December 23, 6 pm (Turkey time) Message-ID: Dear colleagues, Virginia Woolf Society Turkey is pleased to announce the upcoming Woolf Seminar featuring Delia Ungureanu with her talk "The Surreal Real: Proust, Woolf, and World Cinema" on 8 December, 2023 at 6 pm (Turkey time). The poster of the talk is attached to the email and you can find the Eventbrite link for registration and meeting link below: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/the-surreal-real-proust-woolf-and-world-cinema-tickets-767153415517?aff=oddtdtcreator__;!!KGKeukY!xTeJR0wAosGUQ9DQkaqG37GpCo9l83WJsni6QkTdXRItF_ooPBx3NMxaf7PzcwJWprSMTeDEf8SiMJcxfFTBs7Ha4cIpUbyx$ In her talk, Delia Ungureanu will trace the hidden legacy of surrealism in world fiction and contemporary film, and she will argue how Proust?s and Woolf?s revolutionizing understanding of time representation and the psychological self are developed within a new version of realism that is very close to the surrealists? and which she will call oneiric realism. She will examine Stephen Daldry?s The Hours and Ra?l Ruiz?s Le Temps retrouv? which take Proust?s and Woolf?s concept of time and the psychological representation of the self to a whole new level through the use of musical and cinematic devices. Delia Ungureanu is Associate Director of Harvard?s Institute for World Literature and associate professor of literary theory in the Department of Literary Studies at the University of Bucharest. She is the author of From Paris to Tl?n: Surrealism as World Literature (Bloomsbury, 2017), and of Poetica Apocalipsei: R?zboiul cultural ?n revistele literare rom?ne?ti (1944?1947) (The Poetics of Apocalypse: The cultural war in Romanian literary magazines, 1944-1947, Bucharest UP, 2012). She has published essays on canon formation, modern poetry and poetics, Shakespeare, and Nabokov, and has coedited with Thomas Pavel Romanian Literature in Today's World, a special issue of the Journal of World Literature. Her most recent book, Time Regained: World Literature and Cinema (Bloomsbury, 2021), redefines the artistic object beyond disciplinary borders with major filmmakers including Andrei Tarkovsky, Akira Kurosawa, Martin Scorsese, Ra?l Ru?z, Wong Kar Wai, Stephen Daldry, and Paolo Sorrentino. By bringing together film with poetry, literature, painting, music and photography, they create a new type of object that no one discipline can do justice to. Together with Gis?le Sapiro she has coedited a special issue of the Journal of World Literature dedicated to the memory and legacy of Pascale Casanova. With Michael Wood, she has coedited a special issue of the Journal of World Literature dedicated to the organic relation between literature and cinema. Here's the link to a folder that includes the films, The Hours and Le Temps retrouv?: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/nbpgcowb69zce3qpnrzlz/h?rlkey=ou9x08izoabs088ae9zax9zfm&dl=0__;!!KGKeukY!xTeJR0wAosGUQ9DQkaqG37GpCo9l83WJsni6QkTdXRItF_ooPBx3NMxaf7PzcwJWprSMTeDEf8SiMJcxfFTBs7Ha4fzrvWSo$ We hope to meet you all online on 8 December, 2023 6 pm (Turkey time). Best to all, Demet -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Delia Ungureanu Woolf Seminar Poster.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 309720 bytes Desc: Delia Ungureanu Woolf Seminar Poster.jpg URL: From virginiawoolfturkiye at gmail.com Sun Nov 26 20:41:01 2023 From: virginiawoolfturkiye at gmail.com (=?UTF-8?Q?Virginia_Woolf_in_T=C3=BCrkiye?=) Date: Sun, 26 Nov 2023 20:41:01 -0500 Subject: [Vwoolf] Woolf Seminar - on 8 December, 2023 at 6 pm (Turkey time) -Delia Ungurenau "The Surreal Real: Proust, Woolf, and World Cinema" Message-ID: Dear colleagues and fellow Woolfians, Virginia Woolf Society Turkey is pleased to announce the upcoming Woolf Seminar featuring Delia Ungurenau (please find her bio below) with her talk *"The Surreal Real: Proust, Woolf, and World Cinema" *on *8 December, 2023 at 6 pm* (*Turkey time*). The poster of the talk is attached to the email and you can find the Eventbrite link for registration and meeting link below: *https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/the-surreal-real-proust-woolf-and-world-cinema-tickets-767153415517?aff=oddtdtcreator__;!!KGKeukY!yGQRMvnGgNKvf5kmRipKL70fS42Cnyh0iF73o4xX4_ixVvoIqnp4hnRxszNClEAqHJtSckXBjxHpTOSznZATkmzuMSZ-lQ$ * In her talk, Delia Ungurenau will trace the hidden legacy of surrealism in world fiction and contemporary film, and she will argue how Proust?s and Woolf?s revolutionizing understanding of time representation and the psychological self are developed within a new version of realism that is very close to the surrealists? and which she will call oneiric realism. She will examine Stephen Daldry?s *The Hours *and Ra?l Ru?z?s *Le Temps retrouv? *which take Proust?s and Woolf?s concept of time and the psychological representation of the self to a whole new level through the use of musical and cinematic devices. *Delia Ungureanu *is Associate Director of Harvard?s Institute for World Literature and associate professor of literary theory in the Department of Literary Studies at the University of Bucharest. She is the author of *From Paris to Tl?n: Surrealism as World Literature *(Bloomsbury, 2017), and of *Poetica Apocalipsei: R?zboiul cultural ?n revistele literare rom?ne?ti (1944?1947) *(The Poetics of Apocalypse: The cultural war in Romanian literary magazines, 1944-1947, Bucharest UP, 2012). She has published essays on canon formation, modern poetry and poetics, Shakespeare, and Nabokov, and has coedited with Thomas Pavel *Romanian Literature in Today's World*, a special issue of the *Journal of World Literature*. Her most recent book, *Time Regained: World Literature and Cinema* (Bloomsbury, 2021), redefines the artistic object beyond disciplinary borders with major filmmakers including Andrei Tarkovsky, Akira Kurosawa, Martin Scorsese, Ra?l Ru?z, Wong Kar Wai, Stephen Daldry, and Paolo Sorrentino. By bringing together film with poetry, literature, painting, music and photography, they create a new type of object that no one discipline can do justice to. Together with Gis?le Sapiro she has coedited a special issue of the *Journal of World Literature *dedicated to the memory and legacy of Pascale Casanova. With Michael Wood, she has coedited a special issue of the *Journal of World Literature* dedicated to the organic relation between literature and cinema. Here's the link to a folder that includes the films, *The Hours* and *Le Temps retrouv?*: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/nbpgcowb69zce3qpnrzlz/h?rlkey=ou9x08izoabs088ae9zax9zfm&dl=0__;!!KGKeukY!yGQRMvnGgNKvf5kmRipKL70fS42Cnyh0iF73o4xX4_ixVvoIqnp4hnRxszNClEAqHJtSckXBjxHpTOSznZATkmyPD1DojQ$ We hope to meet you all online on *8 December, 2023 6 pm* (Turkey time). Best to all, VWST -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Virginia Woolf Society Turkey" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to virginia-woolf-society-turkey-+unsubscribe at googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/virginia-woolf-society-turkey-/CAGFogFkQM8g*3DtrxjYs6j6zdkiELaEiyOe1nL1ubfBLc*3D8kvYrw*40mail.gmail.com__;JSUl!!KGKeukY!yGQRMvnGgNKvf5kmRipKL70fS42Cnyh0iF73o4xX4_ixVvoIqnp4hnRxszNClEAqHJtSckXBjxHpTOSznZATkmykYufMvA$ . For more options, visit https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://groups.google.com/d/optout__;!!KGKeukY!yGQRMvnGgNKvf5kmRipKL70fS42Cnyh0iF73o4xX4_ixVvoIqnp4hnRxszNClEAqHJtSckXBjxHpTOSznZATkmzjGiCzDA$ . -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Delia Ungurenau - Woolf Seminar.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 309661 bytes Desc: not available URL: