|
CONFERENCE SCHEDULE
Friday, February 21st
8:30-9:00 Introduction
Patricia Fumerton
Diana Solomon
9:00-10:15 The Body Beautiful
Chair: Laurie Ellinghausen
Edith Snook
University of New Brunswick
“Aemelia Lanyer, John Milton, and How ‘Beauty is Excelled
by Manly Grace and Wisdom’...or Not”
Severine Genieys
University College Dublin
“Women in the Works of Lady Mary Wroth and Madeleine de Scudéry:
‘Angells’ or ‘Beasts of the Hansommer Sort’?”
Andrea Stevens
University of Virginia
“Anticosmetic Discourse and Abdeker, or The Art of Preserving
Beauty”
10:15-10:30 Break
10:30-11:45 Busybodies
Chair: Bryan Reynolds, UC Irvine
Natasha Korda
Wesleyan University
“Labors Lost: Women’s Work and the ‘All-Male Stage’”
Eric B. Song
University of Virginia
“Bidding Adieu: Eliza and the Banishment of Feminine Anxiety”
Brooke Stafford
University of Washington
“Bodies of Text: Textual Identities in the Mary Carleton Corpus”
11:45-1:00 Lunch
1:00-2:15 Keynote Lecture
Felicity Nussbaum
Department of English
University of California, Los Angeles
“Racial Femininity on the Eighteenth-Century Stage”
Introduction: Bill Warner
2:15-2:30 Break
2:30-3:45 The Body Politic
Chair: Everett Zimmerman
Emilie L. Bergmann
University of California, Berkeley
“Riotous Nurturers: Wetnursing and Social Anxieties in Early
Modern Spain and Spanish America”
Basuli Deb
Michigan State University
“Reclaiming the Subaltern Voice: The Case of Imoinda”
Joshua Eckhardt
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
“The Politics of Anti-Courtly Love Poetry: Frances Howard
Libels in Manuscript”
3:45-4:00 Break
4:00-5:15 Keep Your Laws Off My Body
Chair: Jennifer Hellwarth, Allegheny College
Martine Van Elk
California State University, Long Beach
“Lewd and Idle Bodies: Female Counterfeiting in the Bridewell
Court Records and Rogue Literature”
Marina Leslie
Northeastern University
“Begetting Crimes: ‘Pleading the Belly’ and the
Rhetoric of Female Criminality in Early Modern England”
Albert Sheen
University of Wisconsin-Madison
“Body of Evidence: Elizabeth Canning before the Law in Mid-Eighteenth-Century
London”
5:15-7:00 Reception
Saturday, February 22nd
10:00-11:15 Homebodies
Chair: Richard Helgerson
Marta Straznicky
Queen’s University
“Women and Printed Drama in Early Modern England”
Ellen Kennedy Johnson
Arizona State University
“‘Taking Up Some Work from the Table’: The Rhetoric
of Needlework in Jane Austen's Novels and Letters”
Jennifer Higginbotham
University of Pennsylvania
“Embroidered Texts: Pens and Needles in the Hands of Renaissance
Women”
11:15-11:30 Break
11:30-12:45 Nobodies That Matter
Chair: Michael O’Connell
Kay Young
University of California, Santa Barbara
“Pamela and Bette Davis Play Dress Up”
Jennifer Hellwarth
Allegheny College
“Playing Pregnancy: Social Practices and the Dramatic Representation
of Childbirth in Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale”
Lesley Peterson
University of Alberta
“Somebody Somewhere: Placing Elizabeth Cary”
12:45-2:00 Lunch
2:00-3:15 Bodies and Antibodies
Chair: Bob Erickson
Lexey Bartlett
University of Texas at Arlington
“Pathological Conceptions: Medical Discourse and Disruptive
Rhetoric in Wollstonecraft's A Vindication of the Rights of Women”
Penelope Anderson
University of California, Berkeley
“‘Most True, If Ever Truth Were Pregnant by Circumstance:’
Bodies, Facts, and
Persuasion in The Winter's Tale”
Suzanne Montgomery
University of Utah
“The Embodiment of Truth: Sex Education in L'école
des Filles ou la Philosophie des Dames”
3:15-3:30 Break
3:30-4:45 Bawdy Talk
Chair: Lee Bliss
Caroline McManus
California State University, Los Angeles
“Women and Fools in Trevor Nunn’s Twelfth Night”
Amy Greenstadt
Portland State University
“WILLING SUBJECTS: Sexual Consent and Colonial Conquest in
the Writing of Margaret Cavendish”
4:45- Closing Remarks
Elizabeth Heckendorn Cook
|