CFP: C18 Studies and "The Exotic" (Australia) (11/30; APSECS, 3/26/01-3/28/01)

From: Christa Knellwolf (christa.knellwolf@anu.edu.au)
Date: Tue May 30 2000 - 22:38:59 EDT

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    The XIth David Nichol Smith Conference: 'The Exotic'

    26 - 28 March 2001, National Library, Canberra, Australia

    After the resounding success of 1996, the David Nichol Smith Memorial
    Conference will return to Canberra, hosted jointly by the Humanities
    Research Centre and the National Library of Australia. It will once again
    be an occasion for a meeting of the Australasian and Pacific Society for
    Eighteenth-Century Studies (APSECS), with a view to consolidating the
    interdisciplinary network between all those with an interest in the
    Enlightenment and associated fields.

    The theme of the conference is 'The Exotic'. The temporal scope is the long
    eighteenth century (1680s - 1830s). This will be the first in a sequence of
    conferences and events organized throughout 2001 as part of the HRC's theme
    of 'Enlightenment'.

    The conference invites its participants to rethink the idea, scope and
    influence of the exotic in the long eighteenth century. The term 'exotic'
    can be construed broadly. (According to Dr Johnson, it encompasses anything
    that conjures up notions of the 'foreign' or 'strange'). Papers can
    therefore address topics related to the 'exotic' in a non-geographical
    sense, as well as those which traverse exoticism's more familiar
    associations with far-flung geographical, imperial and Oriental domains.

    The conference accompanies an exhibition at the National Library of
    Australia entitled 'Savage Liberty: Omai, Cook, and the Cult of the Pacific
    in Eighteenth-Century Europe'. We therefore particularly welcome papers
    dealing with the cultural impact of eighteenth-century exploration and
    colonization - in the Pacific and elsewhere.

    In addition to leading scholars from Australia and New Zealand, speakers at
    the conference may include Donna Andrew, Linda Colley, Joanna De Groot,
    Robert Maccubbin, Martin Fitzpatrick, Jon Mee, Karen O'Brien, Patricia
    Petrusewicz, Glynis Ridley, and Nick Rogers.

    CALL FOR PAPERS
    Proposals for papers addressing the theme of 'The Exotic' are invited from
    scholars working in English Literature, Art History, Gender and Women's
    Studies, History and Philosophy, Social, Economic and Cultural History, and
    other relevant disciplines. Especially welcome will be papers which are (a)
    interdisciplinary in scope, (b) focus on the relationship between culture
    and the visual arts, and (c) refer to the Australian and Pacific contexts.

    Proposals for papers (of 25 minutes reading time) should consist of a 300
    word abstract. Deadline for submission is 30 November 2000.
    Replies and further questions should be addressed to Dr Christa Knellwolf,
    Humanities Research Centre, ANU. Phone: (02) 6279 8963. Fax: (02) 6248
    0054. Email: Christa.Knellwolf@anu.edu.au

    ------------------------------------------------------------------

    Dr Christa Knellwolf
    Humanities Research Centre
    The Australian National University
    Canberra ACT 0200
    Tel: +61 2 6279 8963

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