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SCEDHS / CSECS BULLETIN
JANVIER 1999 / JANUARY 1999
Société canadienne d'étude du dix-huitième
siècle
Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies
Rédacteurs / Editors:
Raymond Stephanson
Department of English
University of Saskatchewan
Tel.: (306) 966-5511
Fax: (306) 966-5951
Internet: stephanson@duke.usask.ca
Thierry Belleguic
Département des Littératures
Université Laval
Tél. : (418) 656-2131 (poste 8398)
Téléc. : (418) 656-2991
Internet : Thierry.Belleguic@lit.ulaval.ca
PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE / MOT DE LA PRÉSIDENTE
Il n'est pas trop tard encore pour vous souhaiter, individuellement et comme membre de notre société, une excellente, stimulante, heureuse année 1999, pour terminer en beauté ce premier millénaire. Nous autres, dix-huitiémistes, nous savons d'expérience que les fins de siècle (ou de millénaire) sont en fait aussi de merveilleux débuts, des chances d'ouverture sur le nouveau.
I think it's safe to say that our Society is in good shape, despite the economic restrictions. Our faithful core of long-time members and new participants at each conference have maintained a reasonable level of membership. If, however, each of us succeeded in bringing one new member, the future of the Society will be even brighter at a time when Federation funding seems less sure every year.
La bonne santé, la vitalité de notre société est due essentiellement à la qualité de nos rencontres annuelles. Malgré les montants ridicules des subventions qu'on peut obtenir désormais et les coûts toujours plus élevés, les organisateurs, toujours plus efficaces, inventifs et dévoués, réussissent à relever le défi. Le congrès d'Edmonton, magistralement organisé par Robert Merrett et son équipe, malgré le handicap inattendu d'une grève aérienne de dernière minute, en fut un bel exemple. Régal pour l'esprit, le coeur et le palais (la fameuse dégustation de vin savamment orchestrée par John Rempel !), ce congrès, par l'originalité de sa thématique, réussit, à l'instar de l'Encyclopédie, à orienter notre réflexion collective vers les objets les plus variés et les plus inattendus. De la musique de cour aux goûts culinaires, du manuscrit aux jardins, pour ne retenir que les thèmes des plénières. Jamais, nous n'avons eu autant la chance de nous sentir vivre une semaine au rythme même des Lumières, avec leur diversité et leurs paradoxes.
Our Society is already preparing for the second millenium. Our executive has appointed new people, among them a new secretary-treasurer, Frans DeBruyn, and a new French editor for the Bulletin, Thierry Belleguic. This doesn't mean that Eleanor and Benoît are out of the picture. We will see very soon what Benoît and his team are planning for the next conference in Montreal, and Eleanor has e-mailed recently her wise advice about ISECS Executive elections in Dublin.
C'est sans doute là que la plupart d'entre nous vont se rencontrer avant le congrès de Montréal. Comme l'a judicieusement souligné Eleanor dans son courriel, nous avons la chance que Benoît Melançon ait été retenu sur la liste des postes de l'exécutif de la SIEDS. Il est de la plus haute importance pour nous (et là, c'est la déléguée canadienne à l'exécutif international qui parle) d'avoir un représentant sur place, pour assurer une présence nord-américaine plus conforme à la réalité et aussi étant donné que nombre de décisions prises là, sur le lieu et la date des prochains congrès internationaux par exemple, ont des retombées significatives sur les activités de notre société et de ses membres. Alors, surtout, n'oubliez pas de voter !
As a last comment, I want to say again how proud I am of our Society.
Nombre d'entre nous sont membres d'une ou de la Société américaine. Les congrès y sont intéressants, stimulants, inventifs bien souvent. Nous tâchons aussi, toutes et tous, de prendre part autant que possible à ces immenses "foires dix-huitiémistes" que sont devenus les congrès internationaux. Mais cela ne se compare pas, vous en conviendrez, à nos congrès, à la richesse qu'ajoute le bilinguisme à nos échanges, à cette atmosphère particulière de plaisir et de stimulation intellectuelle que donnent les retrouvailles avec les amis de longue date et la découverte de la "relève" prometteuse.
Merci à toutes et tous de rendre cela possible.
Keep up the good work!
Votre présidente,
M.L. Girou Swiderski
CONGRÈS SCEDHS / CSECS CONFERENCE
Annonce de congrès
Première circulaire
14-16 octobre 1999
Université de Montréal
"Images des Lumières aujourd'hui"
"Images of the Enlightenment Today"
For complete details see "Conferences / Colloques" below.
Pour de plus amples renseignements, veuillez consulter la rubrique "Conferences / Colloques" ci-dessous.
CSECS / SCEDHS Annual General Meeting / Assemblée générale
University of Alberta
19 September / Septembre 1998
Minutes / Procès-verbal
Present: Eleanor Ty, Marie Laure Girou Swiderski, Rob Merrett, Ray Stephanson, Alex Sokalski, Benoît Melançon, Gary Kelly, Lisa Vargo, David Oakleaf, Jane Rush, Isobel Grundy, Mary Térey-Smith, John Rempel, Ursula Rempel, Bernard Andrès, Lorna Clark, Betty Schellenberg, Gordon Fulton, Larry Bongie, Christa Fell, Alison Scott-Prelorentzos, Mark Phillips, Frans De Bruyn, April London, John Baird, Rosena Davison, Olga Cragg, Sante Viselli, Vivien Bosley, Magdy Gabriel Badir, Don Nichol, David Raynor, Peter Sabor, Judith Spencer.
1. Conference President's Report/Rapport du président du congrès.
Robert Merrett was pleased to report that the conference will bein the black. There has been sufficient room nights booked that the conference hotel will waive the rental fee for the meeting rooms. He was able to raise funds for graduate student travel by asking publishers to pay a fee for book displays. The conference charged an all inclusive fee, and he asked the members to comment about this practice. There were 155 registrants, including 25 graduate students paid for by SSHRCC. He felt that the special theme of the conference led to the success of the SSHRCC occasional grant application which contributed greatly to the $45,000 budget of the conference.
2. President's Report/Rapport du président.
Marie-Laure Girou Swiderski thanked the members for coming to the conference despite the hardships caused by the Airline strike.
3. Secretary-Treasurer's Report/Rapport du secrétaire-trésorier.
Eleanor Ty reported a decline in membership. There appears to be a surplus in this year's budget, but this is because we charged slightly higher dues this year and because the Lumen production is three years behind schedule, and expenditures in the near future for 1995, `96, `97 volumes have yet to be paid out. She noted that the SSHRCC grants were declining, and was not sure if there would be another competition for scholarly associations. We have now been designated as a Charity, and she encouraged members to think about making donations.
4. Lumen: Executive Editor's Report/Lumen : Rapport du rédacteur en chef.
Alex Sokalski reported that from January 1997 to 30 June 1998 Lumen earned $963.99 in reprint fees. An article by Kenneth Graham was reprinted, and the Executive voted to split the fee 50/50 with the author. We continue to have healthy amounts in our GIC and chequing accounts.
5. Bulletin: Editors' Report/Bulletin : Rapport du rédacteur.
Ray Stephanson reported that the expenditures for the Bulletin have been kept down due to the contribution made by University of Saskatchewan. There are at present about 125 members who receive the Bulletin electronically, which cuts down on costs. Benoît Melançon announced that he was stepping down as Electronic/French Bulletin Editor. He would still maintain the Website, and keep a close eye on postings.
6. Future Meetings/Congrès futurs.
Benoît Melançon announced the theme of the Montreal conference, "Images des Lumières," which is tentatively scheduled for 14-16 October 1999. He would like participants to think about i) representations of the Enlightenment today, and ii) the values of the 18th century and what kinds of mental images we have of the period.
John Baird announced that the 2000 meeting, organized with the Scottish Studies Association is underway and scheduled for 11-15 October 2000. He asked members if they preferred to be in downtown Toronto or near the Airport, and there was a unanimous murmur for a downtown location.
7. New Executive/Nouveau conseil d'administration.
Secretary-Treasurer: Frans de Bruyn (effective January 1999).
English Representative: Betty Schellenberg.
History Representative: Mark Phillips.
Other Languages: Christa Fell agreed to have her term extended for 1 more year.
Bulletin Editor: Thierry Belleguic.
8. Madoff Prize/Prix Madoff.
Will be announced in the next Bulletin.
9. ISECS and Other Organizations/SIEDHS et autres organisations.
The president would be our official representative to Dublin next year.
Meeting adjourned: 5:30 PM
****
Université d'Alberta
19 septembre 1998
Procès-verbal
Présents : Eleanor Ty, Marie Laure Girou Swiderski, Rob Merrett, Ray Stephanson, Alex Sokalski, Benoît Melançon, Gary Kelly, Lisa Vargo, David Oakleaf, Jane Rush, Isobel Grundy, Mary Téry-Smith, John Rempel, Ursula Rempel, Bernard Andrès, Lorna Clark, Betty Schellenberg, Gordon Fulton, Larry Bongie, Christa Fell, Alison Scott-Prelorentzos, Mark Phillips, Frans De Bruyn, April London, John Baird, Rosena Davison, Olga Cragg, Sante Viselli, Vivien Bosley, Magdy Gabriel Badir, Don Nichol, David Raynor, Peter Sabor, Judith Spencer.
1. Rapport du président du congrès.
Robert Merrett a été enchanté de nous apprendre que le budget du congrès est équilibré. Le nombre de chambres louées a permis l'exonération des frais de location des salles de conférence. Robert a réussi à complémenter le fonds de soutien aux étudiants de 2e et 3e cycles de $800.00 en demandant aux éditeurs désireux de présenter leurs collections au congrès de s'acquitter d'une taxe. Cette année, les frais d'inscription couvraient aussi les repas et autres activités. Robert souhaiterait recevoir des commentaires sur cette nouvelle pratique. 155 personnes se sont inscrites, dont 25 étudiants de 2e et 3e cycles dont les frais d'inscription ont été couverts par les fonds CRSH. Robert considère que le thème attrayant du congrès explique l'obtention de la subvention CRSH, qui a contribué pleinement au budget de 45,000$ du congrès.
2. Rapport du président.
Marie-Laure Girou Swiderski a remercié les membres de la Société d'être venus au congrès malgré la grève aérienne.
3. Rapport du secrétaire-trésorier.
Eleanor Ty a présenté le rapport financier de l'année, qui a montré une baisse du nombre de sociétaires dûment inscrits, baisse qui ne se traduit pas financièrement puisque le montant des cotisations a été légèrement augmenté cette année. Le budget présente un excédent qui s'explique par un retard de 3 ans dans la publication de Lumen. L'excédent contribuera à couvrir les dépenses occasionnées par la publication des volumes 1995, 96 et 97. Eleanor a souligné que les subventions octroyées par le CRSH déclinaient et qu'elle n'était pas sûre du sort désormais réservé aux Sociétés savantes. Notre Société bénéficie dorénavant du statut d'organisation à but non lucratif. Eleanor encourage donc tous les membres à contribuer à la Société sous forme de dons.
4. Lumen : rapport du rédacteur-en-chef
Alex Sokalski nous annonce que Lumen a enregistré un gain de 963.99$ sous forme de frais de réimpression de janvier 97 à juin 98. Il s'agit d'un article de Kenneth Graham qui a été réimprimé et l'Exécutif a décidé de partager ces gains avec l'auteur. L'état des comptes de la revue est excellent.
5. Bulletin : rapport du rédacteur.
Ray Stephanson annonce que les frais d'expédition du Bulletin ont été peu élevés, grâce à la contribution de l'Université de la Saskatchewan. Actuellement, il y a environ 125 membres qui reçoivent leur Bulletin électroniquement, ce qui réduit les coûts.
Après 3 années de bons et loyaux services, Benoît Melançon passe le relai. Il continuera cependant à maintenir le site Web de la Société et suivra de près les annonces paraissant sur internet.
6. Congrès futurs.
Benoît Melançon a annoncé le thème du congrès de Montréal, "Images des Lumières", qui aura lieu du 14 au 16 Octobre 1999. Il propose aux membres de réfléchir aux sujets suivants :
1) Les représentations des Lumières aujourd'hui.
2) La contemporanéité des valeurs des Lumières.
John Baird a annoncé que la rencontre de l'an 2000, organisée en collaboration avec l'association des "Études écossaises", est en train de se mettre en place. Elle est prévue pour les 11-15 Octobre 2000. John a demandé aux membres s'ils préféraient être logés à Toronto Centre-Ville ou bien à côté de l'aéroport, et la réponse a été unanime en faveur de Toronto Centre-Ville.
7. Nouveau conseil d'administration.
Secrétaire-Trésorier : Frans de Bruyn (à partir de Janvier 1999)
Représentant pour l'anglais : Betty Schellenberg
Représentant pour le l'histoire : Mark Phillips
Autres langues : Christa Fell a accepté de prolonger d'une année son mandat.
Co-rédacteur du Bulletin : Thierry Belleguic
8. Prix Madoff.
Le nom du/de la lauréat(e) sera annoncé dans le prochain Bulletin.
9. SIEDHS et autres organisations.
La Présidente Girou-Swiderski sera notre représentante officielle à Dublin l'année prochaine.
Séance ajournée à 17:30
NEWS FROM MEMBERS / NOUVELLES DES MEMBRES
Publications récentes/Recent Publications
Andrès, Bernard, "Épistolaire et pensée des Lumières au Québec et au Bas-Canada (1784-1793)", dans Benoît Melançon (édit.), Penser par lettre. Actes du colloque d'Azay-le-Ferron (mai 1997), Montréal, Fides, 1998, p. 189-203; "Originaux et détraqués de la fin du XVIIIe siècle québécois", dans "Littérateurs atypiques et penseurs irréguliers. Numéro préparé par Pierre Popovic", Tangence, no 57, mai 1998, Revue publiée par l'Université du Québec à Rimouski, p. 53-71.
Austen, Jane, A Collection of Letters, Edmonton, Juvelinia Press, 1998, xix/44 p. Ill. Édition de Juliet McMaster et al.
Belleguic, Thierry, "Palissot le polémiste ou du scandale comme un des Beaux-Arts", dans États du polémique (A. Hayward et D. Garand, éd.), Nota Bene, Sainte-Foy, 1998, p. 61-84.
Bernier, Marc-André, "Mécanique des sensations et conception du mariage dans Pigmalion ou la statue animée (1741) d'André François Boureau-Deslandes", dans Sexualité, mariage et famille au XVIIIe siècle, Québec, Presses de l'Université Laval, 1998, p. 147-158; "Dossier. La conquête de l'éloquence au Québec. La rhétorique et son enseignement (1712-1800)", The Canadian Journal of Rhetorical Studies/ La revue canadienne de rhétorique, numéro 9, septembre 1998, p. 97-153; édition électronique, Nicolas-Antoine Boulanger, Recherches sur l'origine du despotisme oriental, <http://www.vc.unipmn.it/~mori/e texts/despo.htm> et, à partir de l'hiver 1999, <http://www.voltaire.ox.ac.uk/mirrors/Cet/index_fr.htm>; Compte rendu "Jean Ehrard, L'invention littéraire au XVIIIe siècle, Paris, PUF, 1997"; Eighteenth-Century Fiction, octobre 1998.
Bongie, Laurence L., Sade. A Biographical Essay, Chicago et Londres, The University of Chicago Press, 1998, xii/336 p. Compte rendu électronique : <http://www.granta.com/nyrev/WWWarchdisplay.cgi?19990114019R>.
Bonnel, Roland (édit.), Dalhousie French Studies, 43, été 1998, 172 p. "Orientales".
Boulad-Ayoub, Josiane et M. Grenon, Procès verbaux du comité d'instruction publique de l'assemblée législative et de la convention nationale, (9 volumes), édition nouvelle, présentée, mise à jour et augmentée; préface de Michel Vovelle, 1997, Paris , L'Harmattan. On en trouve des exemplaires à L'Harmattan-Canada, 55 rue St-Jacques, Montréal, H2Y 1K9.
Charles, Sébastien, "L'abbé Raynal, Author of an Unnoticed Review of Berkeley's Dialogues," Berkeley Newsletter, 15, 1998.
Cragg, Olga B. avec la collaboration de Rosena Davison (édit.), Sexualité, mariage et famille au XVIIIe siècle, Québec, Presses de l'Université Laval, 1998, xii/376 p.
Crimmins, James, Utilitarians and Religion (Bristol: Thoemmes, 1998), an anthology of 18th- and 19th-century writings in two parts: Pt. I: Religious Utilitarians, and Pt. II: Secular Utilitarians.
Dierick, A. P., "Pre-Romantic Elements in the Aesthetic and Moral Theories of François Hemsterhuis (1721-1790)", Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 26, 1998, p. 247-271.
Duggan, Maryse, "Le potentiel érotique dans les contes de Mlle de Lubert", dans Olga B. Cragg avec la collaboration de Rosena Davison (édit.), Sexualité, mariage et famille au XVIIIe siècle, Québec, Presses de l'Université Laval, 1998, p. 61-67.
Fields, Polly Stevens, "Mary Davys" in Eighteenth-Century Anglo-American Women Novelists: A Critical Reference Guide. Eds. Saar and Schofield. NY: G. K. Hall and Co., 1997, pp. 118-131.
Fysh, Stephanie, The Work(s) of Samuel Richardson. Univ. of Delaware P., 1997.
Goulemot, Jean M., "Aventures des imaginaires de la dissidence et de la marginalité de Jean-Jacques Rousseau à Jean-Paul Marat", Tangence, 57, mai 1998, p. 12-22. Revue publiée par l'Université du Québec à Rimouski.
Graham, Kenneth W., "Cinderella or Bluebeard: The Double Plot of Evelina", dans Stewart J. Cooke (édit.), Francis Burney's Evelina. Norton Critical Edition, New York, W.W. Norton, 1998.
Haywood, Eliza, Adventures of Eovaai, Princess of Ijaveo, Peterborough, Broadview Press, coll. "Broadview Literary Texts", 1998. Édition d'Earla Wilputte. Including contemporaneous appendices: selections from The Craftsman; and the complete novella The Secret History of Mama Oello.
The Letters of Sarah Harriet Burney, Athens, The University of Georgia Press, 1998, 640 p. Ill. Édition de Lorna J. Clark.
Melançon, Benoît, "Les cataractes de Chassaignon", Tangence, 57, mai 1998, p. 72-86. Revue publiée par l'Université du Québec à Rimouski.
Melançon, Benoît, "La lettre contre : Mme du Deffand et Belle de Zuylen", dans Benoît Melançon (édit.), Penser par lettre. Actes du colloque d'Azay-le-Ferron (mai 1997), Montréal, Fides, 1998, p. 39-62.
Melançon, Benoît, "Présentation", dans Benoît Melançon (édit.), Penser par lettre. Actes du colloque d'Azay-le-Ferron (mai 1997), Montréal, Fides, 1998, p. 7-12.
Melançon, Benoît (édit.), Penser par lettre. Actes du colloque d'Azay-le-Ferron (mai 1997), Montréal, Fides, 1998, 375 p.
Ouellet, Réal, "Sexualité et mariage dans les relations de voyages réels et imaginaires au début du XVIIIe siècle", dans Olga B. Cragg avec la collaboration de Rosena Davison (édit.), Sexualité, mariage et famille au XVIIIe siècle, Québec, Presses de l'Université Laval, 1998, p. 27-51.
Péloquin, Dominique et Marc André Bernier, "Enseignement de la rhétorique au Québec au XVIIIe siècle : présentation bibliographique et critique", The Canadian Journal of Rhetorical Studies/La revue canadienne de rhétorique, 9, septembre 1998, p. 111-140.
Potter, Tiffany, Honest Sins. Georgian Libertinism and the Plays and Novels of Henry Fielding, Montréal et Kingston, McGill-Queen's University Press, à paraître en 1999, 216 p.
Rempel, Ursula M., had six essays and edited music published in Volume III of Women Composers: Music through the Ages. Eds. Sylvia Glickman and Martha Furman Schleifer. New York: G.K. Hall, 1998.
Richardot, Anne, "La secte des anandrynes : un difficile embarquement pour Lesbos", Tangence, 57, mai 1998, p. 40-52. Revue publiée par l'Université du Québec à Rimouski.
Rosenberg, Aubrey, "Rousseau juge de Jean-Jacques : dialogue or monologue ?", Pensée libre, 7, 1998, p. 31-38.
Roulston, Christine, "Choix et accomplissement dans le discours sur le mariage de la fin du XVIIIe siècle", dans Olga B. Cragg avec la collaboration de Rosena Davison (édit.), Sexualité, mariage et famille au XVIIIe siècle, Québec, Presses de l'Université Laval, 1998, p. 185-194.
Runte, Roseann, "Voltaire and Johnson on Shakespeare", Alfa [Actes de langue française et de linguistique], 33-40, 1997-1998, p. 75-88.
Scott, Anne, "La représentation de l'hystérie dans la Religieuse de Diderot. Contribution à la construction du sujet hystérique", dans Olga B. Cragg avec la collaboration de Rosena Davison (édit.), Sexualité, mariage et famille au XVIIIe siècle, Québec, Presses de l'Université Laval, 1998, p. 135-144.
Smith, David, "Les recherches en cours au Canada", dans Alberto Postigliola (édit.), La ricerca sul XVIII secolo. Un panorama internazionale, Rome, Société internationale d'étude du XVIIIe siècle, Socièta italiana di studi sul secolo XVIII, Istituto Italiano per gli Studi Filosofici, Istituto Universitario Orientale, Dipartimento do Filosofia e Politica, coll. "Materiali della Socièta italiana di studi sul secolo XVIII", 1998, p. 137-143.
Stewart, Wendy, "The Poetical Trade of Favours: Swift, Mary Barber, and the Counterfeit Letters", Lumen. Travaux choisis de la Société canadienne d'étude du XVIIIe siècle. Selected Proceedings from the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 18, à paraître.
Ty, Eleanor, Empowering the Feminine: The Narratives of Mary Robinson, Jane West, and Amelia Opie, 1796-1812. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1998; The Victim of Prejudice by Mary Hays, Peterborough: Broadview, 1998 [2nd edition with new Appendix].
Wilputte, Earla, "'Women buried': Henry Fielding and Feminine Absence", The Modern Language Review, à paraître en 2000.
Woodward, Servanne, "Le lait et ses métamorphoses", dans Sylviane Albertan Coppola et Anne-Marie Chouillet (édit.), la Matière et l'homme dans l'Encyclopédie. Actes du colloque de Joinville (10-12 juillet 1995), Paris, Klincksieck, 1998, p. 129s.
AUTRES NOUVELLES / OTHER NEWS
Thierry Belleguic vient de créer, en collaboration avec Éric Van der Schueren, le Cercle sur la République des Lettres, ainsi qu'une collection aux Presses de l'Université Laval, intitulée "La République des Lettres". Du 19 au 25 juillet 1998, il a participé à Bordeaux au Séminaire Est-Ouest organisé par la Société Internationale d'Étude du XVIIIe Siècle autour du thème "Mouvements scientifiques et représentations esthétiques".
Marc-André Bernier; l'équipe de recherche que dirige Marc André Bernier (UQTR; subvention triennale FCAR 1998-2001) sur l'histoire de la rhétorique au Québec présentera trois communications à l'occasion du colloque organisé par le Centre d'études rhétoriques de l'Université Carleton (CERUC, Ottawa) sous le thème "L'histoire de la rhétorique au Canada après 1759" (Carleton University, Ottawa, avril 1999).
Rosena Davison est devenue professeure titulaire au Département de français de l'Université Simon Fraser.
Polly Stevens Fields was promoted to Associate Professor of English, Lake Superior University, Sault Ste Marie, Michigan.
MÉMOIRES ET THÈSES / THESES AND DISSERTATIONS
Aïssaoui, Driss, "Robert Challe écrivain de soi", Ottawa, Université d'Ottawa, Département des lettres françaises, thèse de doctorat, 1998, 390 p. Dir. : Marie Laure Girou Swiderski.
Alliot-Spedini, Florence, "Roman picaresque et roman d'ascension sociale au XVIIIe siècle en France", Montréal, Université de Montréal, thèse de doctorat, en cours. Dir. : Éric Méchoulan.
Barnicoat, Andrew, "Writing the Riot Act: The Sociolinguistic Theories of Swift and Defoe and the Political Control of the Masses in the Early Eighteenth Century," Saskatoon, University of Saskatchewan, M.A., in progress. Advisors: Raymond Stephanson and Larry Stewart.
Bertrand, André, "La figure de la guillotine dans les discours social et littéraire : 18e-20e siècle", Montréal, Université du Québec à Montréal, thèse de doctorat, en cours. Dir. : Bernard Andrès.
Charles, Sébastien, "La figure de Berkeley dans la pensée des Lumières", Ottawa, Université d'Ottawa, thèse en cours. Dir. : David Raynor.
Drouin, Sébastien, "La savante éloquence d'une statue. Matérialisme et libertinage dans Pigmalion ou la statue animée (1741) d'André-François Boureau-Deslandes", Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières, mémoire en cours. Dir. : M.A. Bernier.
Harper, Heather, PhD on the works of Elizabeth Boyd (fl. 1726-45), Edmonton, University of Alberta, in progress. Advisor: Isobel Grundy.
Lamonde, Éric, "Rhétorique et théorie figurative du sens chez Bernard Lamy et Étienne Simon de Gamaches", Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières, mémoire en cours. Dir. : M.A. Bernier.
Laquerre, Marie-Lise, "Ingenium et représentation de la perception dans la Vie de Marianne de Marivaux", Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières, mémoire en cours. Dir. : M.A. Bernier.
Malo, Saunya, "Le statut littéraire de l'almanach au Québec. Louis Plamondon (1785-1828) : Almanach des dames, pour l'année 1807, Par un jeune Canadien (1806)", Montréal, Université du Québec à Montréal, mémoire de maîtrise, en cours. Dir. : Bernard Andrès.
Mitchell, Trent, "Communicating Electricity in Eighteenth-Century Britain: The significance of the physical and social siting of experimental discourse," Saskatoon, University of Saskatchewan, Department of History, M.A. Completed September 1998. Advisor: Larry Stewart.
Nahrebecky, George, "Maîtres et disciples : les enjeux de la supériorité dans les Liaisons dangereuses", Kingston, Queen's University, thèse de doctorat, 1992.
Parsons , Sarah Watson, "The Arts of Abolition: Enlightenment, Agitation, and Representation in Britain, 1765-1807," University of California, Santa Barbara, Art History. Advisor: Ann Bermingham.
Péloquin, Dominique, "Libertinage et art de la conversation dans Margot la Ravaudeuse de Fougeret de Monbron", Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières, mémoire en cours. Dir. : M.A. Bernier
Person, Alain, "Des Bijoux indiscrets à la Religieuse : les procédés satiriques dans deux romans de Denis Diderot", Ottawa, Université d'Ottawa, mémoire de maîtrise, 1998. Dir. : Pierre Berthiaume.
Pickard, Richard, "Augustan Ecology: Environmental Attitudes in Eighteenth-Century Poetry", Edmonton, University of Alberta, Department of English, Ph.D. dissertation, 1998. Dir.: Isobel Grundy.
Saint-Germain, Annie, "L'héroïsation dans le discours épistolaire et l'autobiographie : le cas de Pierre Du Calvet (1736-1786)", Montréal, Université du Québec à Montréal, mémoire de maîtrise, en cours. Dir. : Bernard Andrès.
Stewart, Wendy, "'Protected by the Good and Great': Patronage and Community in Mary Barber's Poems on Several Occasions", Hamilton, McMaster University, thèse de doctorat, en cours. Dir. : Peter Walmsley.
Tazouti, Rabia, "Rhétorique du regard : perception et hiéroglyphe dans La lettre sur les sourds et muets (1751) de Denis Diderot", Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières, mémoire en cours. Dir. : M.A. Bernier.
Thellen, Isabelle, "Le théâtre de la Révolution française. Étude du théâtre comme médiation de la mémoire culturelle", Montréal, Université de Montréal, mémoire de maîtrise, en cours. Dir. : Benoît Melançon.
Villalobos, Gisel, "Diderot lecteur de Montaigne : Montaigne dans l'Essai sur les règnes de Claude et de Néron", Montréal, Université de Montréal, Département d'études françaises, mémoire de maîtrise, juin 1998, v/116 p. Dir. : Benoît Melançon.
SÉMINAIRES / GRADUATE CLASSES
Isobel Grundy taught a graduate course in the autumn entitled "Studies in Literary Genres: Augustan Poetry."
Eleanor Ty is teaching a graduate course on "Revolutionary Feminism: Women Novelists of the 1790s" at Wilfrid Laurier University.
RESEARCH GROUPS / SOCIÉTÉS SAVANTES
Eighteenth-Century Studies at the University of Saskatchewan
ECS at U of S programming for the academic year has so far included Peter Sabor (Laval) on "Illustrating a Best-Seller: Joseph Highmore's Paintings of Richardson's Pamela, 1740-1745," Ellis Sandoz Louisiana State) on "Tradition, Novelty, and Character in the American Founding," Allison Muri and Lisa Vargo (Saskatchewan) on "The Anna Letitia Barbauld Web Page," Timothy Fulford (Nottingham Trent) on "Exploration, Headhunting and Race Theory: The Imperial Networks of Sir Joseph Banks," and Barbara Taylor (Royal Holloway College) on "Feminism and Misogyny: The Case of Mary Wollstonecraft." Future speakers include David Oakleaf (Calgary), Ron Love (Saskatchewan), Paul Rice (Memorial), and Gordon DesBrisay (Saskatchewan). Contact: Alexander Sokalski (French) at sokalski@duke.usask.ca or Raymond Stephanson (English) at stephanr@duke.usask.ca.
University of Calgary Eighteenth-Century Studies Group
The 1998-99 program includes Beatrice Fink (University of Maryland), "The Staff of Life (Bread in 18th-Century France)," September 22; Robert Marshall (Brandeis University), "J.S. Bach and Mozart's Artistic Maturity," October 2; Raymond Stephanson (University of Saskatchewan), "Male Organs of Generation and the Poetical Character in the Eighteenth Century," November 3; Tiffany Potter (English), "Honest Sins: Henry Fielding's Libertinism," February 11; Douglas Peers (History) and Barbara Belyea (English), "Discussion-Debate of Greg Dening's ´Mr. Bligh's bad language: passion, power, and theatre on the Bounty,'" March. Contact: Glen W. Campbell at gcampbel@acs.ucalgary.ca.
Centre de Recherche sur la Littérature des Voyages
(Université de Paris-Sorbonne)
96, boulevard Raspail. 75006 Paris
Tél. : (33) (0)1 45 48 14 20
Téléc. : (33) (0) 1 45 48 12 04
Secrétariat général : Sophie-Jenny Chipon-Linon
Secrétariat : Annie Cartoux
Directeur : François Moureau
Tél : (33) (0)1 40 46 25 31
Téléc. : (33) (0)1 40 46 25 12/ (0)1 45 26 57 67
Courriel : Francois.Moureau@paris4.sorbonne.fr
ANNONCES DE COLLOQUES / APPELS À COMMUNICATIONS
CONGRÈS DE LA SCEDHS / CSECS
14-16 octobre 1999
Université de Montréal
"Images des Lumières aujourd'hui"
"Images of the Enlightenment Today"
Bilingue et interdisciplinaire, la Société a été fondée en 1971 et le congrès de Montréal sera le vingt-cinquième de son histoire. Ce sera la troisième fois que la Société se rassemblera à Montréal, après 1981 (Université de Montréal) et 1989 (Centre canadien d'architecture). Le congrès de 1999 est placé sous la responsabilité de Benoît Melançon (Études françaises). Le comité dont il est entouré est constitué de membres choisis dans tous les secteurs de la Faculté des arts et des sciences de l'Université de Montréal.
Autour de ce thème, il s'agira de réfléchir collectivement à deux questions centrales. La première est celle de la place qu'occupe le Siècle des lumières dans la culture contemporaine. Comment expliquer la vague récente de romans, de pièces de théâtre ou de films qui prennent le XVIIIe siècle pour cadre ? (On trouvera une liste partielle de ces manifestations culturelles sur le site WWW du congrès: <http://tornade.ere.umontreal.ca/~melancon/exemples.tdm.html>). La deuxième est celle de la présence (ou de l'absence) des valeurs des Lumières dans les débats actuels sur la tolérance, les rapports de la science et de la culture, les nationalismes, etc. De John Saul (les Bâtards de Voltaire. La dictature de la raison en Occident, 1992) à Jean-Paul II (encyclique Fides et Ratio, 1998), le statut de la raison, pour ne prendre que cet exemple, paraît agiter les esprits. Pourquoi ? Comment ?
Conformément à la tradition de la Société, les communications libres (c'est-à-dire ne traitant pas directement de la problématique principale) sont également les bienvenues et trouveront place dans le programme.
La Société canadienne d'étude du dix-huitième siècle s'est notamment donné pour mission de favoriser les études supérieures, et la participation des étudiants y est encouragée de plusieurs façons : présence aux séances, présentation de communications, inscription au prix Mark-Madoff remis annuellement à la meilleure communication étudiante présentée au congrès.
Lumen, la publication annuelle de la Société, regroupera une sélection des travaux présentés dans le cadre du congrès.
Les propositions d'atelier sont à soumettre avant le 25 février 1999.
Les propositions de communication sont à soumettre avant le 10 avril 1999.
Il faut indiquer dès le dépôt d'une proposition les besoins prévus en matériel (projecteur, magnétoscope, ligne Internet, etc.). Cela est indispensable pour la gestion du budget du congrès.
Seuls les membres en règle de la Société peuvent présenter une communication lors de ses congrès. Pour obtenir le formulaire d'inscription à la Société, prière de s'adresser à :
Frans De Bruyn
Department of English
University of Ottawa
PO Box 450 Stn A
Ottawa, On K1N 6N5
fdebruyn@uottawa.ca
Internet : <http://tornade.ere.umontreal.ca/~melancon/csecs.formulaire.html>
Conference Announcement
Annual meeting of the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies
(CSECS)
October 14 to Saturday, October 16, 1999
Université de Montréal
"Images of the Enlightenment Today"
The Montréal meeting will be the 25th organized by CSECS, a bilingual and multidisciplinary organization founded in 1971. It is the third time that the meeting has taken place in this city: it was held at the Université de Montréal in 1981 and at the Centre canadien d'architecure in 1989. On this occasion, Benoît Melançon (French Literature) is the conference president and he has recruited the organizing committee from across the Faculty of Arts.
Under this broad heading, we would like to discuss two principal issues: i) the representation of the Enlightenment in today's culture. What is the meaning of the current trend of setting novels, plays, or movies in the long eighteenth century? (A tentative list of examples can be found on the conference website at <http://tornade.ere.umontreal.ca/~melancon/exemples.tdm.html>); ii) the place of Enlightenment values in contemporary discussions about tolerance, science, the rise of nationalisms, and so forth. From John Saul (Voltaire's Bastards: The Dictatorship of Reason in the West, 1992) to Pope John Paul II (Fides et Ratio encyclical, 1998), the status of reason seems to preoccupy very different people. Why? In what ways?
In accordance with the tradition of the Society, papers not dealing directly with the theme of the conference are welcome and will be included in the program.
Because CSECS is committed to fostering the work of graduate students, scope for their participation is considerable. The Society also presents an award to the best graduate presentation in memory of the late Mark Madoff.
The Society's refereed annual, Lumen, will feature selected presentations from the conference in article form.
The session proposals are to be sent before February 15, 1999.
The paper proposals are to be sent before April 10, 1999.
Please include with your proposal the nature of the material you will need (projector, VCR, Internet line, etc.) as this is indispensable with regard to the conference budget.
The only accepted proposals are those from members of the Society.
Membership forms may be attained from:
Professor Frans De Bruyn
Department of English
University of Ottawa
PO Box 450 Stn A
Ottawa, On K1N 6N5
fdebruyn@uottawa.ca
Internet: <http://tornade.ere.umontreal.ca/~melancon/csecs.formulaire.html>
Information en français : Jacqueline Chammas <chammasj@ere.umontreal.ca>
Information in English: Susan Dalton <daltons@magellan.umontreal.ca>
Président/President : Benoît Melançon <benoît.melancon@sympatico.ca>
Website/Site WWW : <http://tornade.ere.umontreal.ca/~melancon/csecs.tdm.html>
Adresse postale/Postal Address :
SCEDHS/CSECS 1999
Département d'études françaises
Université de Montréal
C.P. 6128, succ. Centre-ville
Montréal (Québec)
Canada H3C 3J7Télécopieur/Fax : 514-343-2256
Entre théorie et passion : les figures des passions aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles
Lucie Desjardins (Département d'études littéraires, UQAM), Daniel Dumouchel (Département de philosophie, Université de Montréal), Thierry Belleguic (Département des Littératures, Université Laval) et Marc-André Bernier (Département de français, UQTR) organisent un colloque intitulé "Entre théorie et passion : les figures des passions aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles", dans le cadre du Congrès de l'ACFAS (Ottawa, 12-14 mai 1999). Pour plus d'informations, contactez Lucie Desjardins, UQAM, Département d'Études littéraires, CP 8888, succ. Centre-Ville, Montréal, H3C 3P8; tél. : 514-987-3000 (4283); téléc. : 514-987-8218; courriel : desjardins.l@uqam.ca
De la sympathie sous l'Ancien Régime : discours, savoirs, société
Université Laval
Département des littératures
6 - 9 octobre 1999
Appel à communications
La réflexion que nous proposons ici sur la sympathie relève de deux prémisses :
1) la première pose, au-delà de différences évidentes, l'unité de ce que l'on pourrait appeler la culture de la République des Lettres.
2) la seconde tient au parti pris théorique de penser ensemble
épistémologie, rhétorique, esthétique et histoire des mentalités, la mise en partage de ces domaines d'investigation divers mais souvent afférents permettant d'esquisser une configuration qui rende compte de la complexité même du phénomène.
Cette réflexion pourra revêtir plusieurs formes :
I- Épistémologie de la sympathie
Des "sympathies célestes" aux "affinités électives", de la théorie des humeurs aux théories mécaniste, organiciste, phrénique et vitaliste, il s'agira d'interroger les discours épistémologiques qui ont informé les représentations (discursives et iconographiques) de la sympathie. Une telle réflexion permettra de mettre en évidence les caractéristiques épistémiques générales qui sous-tendent ces représentations.
II- Rhétorique, poétique, sémio-pragmatique de la sympathie
De la rhétorique classique du pathos au pathétique des Lumières, nous serons amenés à nous interroger sur l'importance de la sympathie comme élément d'une théorie des effets qui repose sur une sémiotique, qu'il s'agisse de signes linguistiques, iconiques ou corporels.
III- Politique et éthique de la sympathie
Il s'agira d'envisager les enjeux politiques, mais aussi
pédagogiques et plus généralement éthiques de la sympathie, non dans la perspective d'une mécanique causale, mais dans la saisie d'une complexe interaction entre l'épistémique et l'anthropologique.
Nous invitons toute étude consacrée à l'une ou l'autre de ces
manifestations, tout en encourageant les approches interdisciplinaires et/ou diachroniques. Prière d'expédier un projet de 250 mots (accompagné d'une brève bio-bibliographie) au :
Cercle d'étude sur la République des lettres (C.E.R.L.)
Université Laval
Département des littératures
Faculté des lettres
Pavillon Charles-De Koninck
Québec, QC
G1K 7P4, Canada
Téléc. : 418- 656-2991.
Internet : Thierry.Belleguic@lit.ulaval.ca
Organisateurs : Thierry Belleguic, Éric Van der Schueren.
Date limite de réception des propositions : 1er mars 1999.
Portrait des lettres et de l'éloquence au Québec (1760-1840)
Avec la collaboration d'André J. Delisle (Directeur général du Musée du Château Ramezay), Marc André Bernier (Département de français, UQTR), Bernard Andrès (Département d'études littérairtes, UQAM), Robert Derome (Département d'histoire de l'art, UQAM) et Yvan Lamonde (Département de langue et littérature françaises, Université Mc Gill) organisent pour avril 2000 un colloque intitulé "Portrait des lettres et de l'éloquence au Québec (1760-1840)" qui aura lieu à la Salle de Nantes du Musée du Château Ramezay. Ce colloque s'inséra dans un programme d'activités qui comprendra notamment la représentation d'un opéra de Joseph Quesnel et une exposition de tableaux et de portraits québécois de la fin du XVIIIe siècle (Musée du Château Ramezay). Pour plus d'informations, contactez :
Marc André Bernier
Département de français
Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières
CP 500
Trois-Rivières, QC
marc-andre_Bernier@uqtr.uquebec.ca
ASECS 1999
The thirtieth annual meeting of the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies will take place in Milwaukee WI, 24-28 March 1999. For information, contact Jeffrey Merrick, History, UW-Milwaukee, PO Box 413, Milwaukee WI 53201. Internet: jmerrick@csd.uwm.edu or 414-229-4924.
ASECS Meeting 2000
CFP American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, April 12-16, 2000,
Philadelphia
The American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (ASECS) is announcing early its annual meeting to be held in Philadelphia on April 12-16, 2000.
The theme for the conference is "The Eighteenth Century Seen Around the World," and the Society intends to use this conference to invite and encourage participation in ASECS by scholars with research specialties accross the globe. Philadelphia was the second largest city in the eighteenth-century British empire, and to this day its libraries are among the finest in the country for the study of the period. The Library Company is among the most famous and it will be one of our hosts.
With the Philadelphia meeting, the Society wishes to expand further its integrative tradition by encouraging the submission of papers and panels from scholars working in Asian, African, Middle Eastern, and American traditions during the long eighteenth century (late seventeenth to early nineteenth centuries). The Society especially wishes to encourage the submission of panels that include papers representing diverse cultures and geographic regions, and also, but not necessarily, papers and panels focusing upon interaction between the Euro-American world and other parts of the world.
Formal details on the submission on panels and papers will be announced in the spring of 1999. At present we would welcome preliminary submissions so that the program committee may better gauge the strength of interest within various regions and fields. For further information on ASECS, please see our website at: <http://calliope.jhu.edu/associations/asecs/>. Submit ideas to asecs@wfu.edu or to 2000@ccat.sas.upenn.edu which will reach the present organizing committee.
Archipelagic Identities, 1485-1707
9-10 April 1999
University of Oxford, U.K.
Devolution in Scotland and Wales, the Stormont Agreement in Northern Ireland, and proposals for regional assemblies in England... Britishness isn't what it used to be. Or is it? Can the new notions of nation, region and identity fermenting at the close of the twentieth century shed new light on the past? And can the study of the formation and interrelation of national, regional and other identities in the early modern period help us to grasp what is happening today in the British Isles (or, more neutrally, the "Atlantic Archipelago")?
Proposals for panels and individual papers are invited for a conference exploring literature and identity in the Atlantic Archipelago (or "British Isles") between the years 1485 and 1707. "Literature" and "Identity" are broad terms, and participants are invited to interpret them broadly. We anticipate a conference program ranging from recusants in Rutland to puritans in the Pale, from the Matter of Britain to the Maid of Kent, and from the moors to the Moors. In addition to papers devoted to the literatures and languages of England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, and Cornwall, papers examining the experience of immigrants to the archipelago are most welcome.
Plenary speakers will include Andrew Hadfield of the University of Wales, Aberystwyth.
Suggested topics and keywords:
Nation and Region
Borders and Borderlands
Beyond the Pale
Centres and Peripheries
Sexing the Nation
Antiquarian Identities
Translators and Tourists
Regional Risings
Dark Corners of the Land
Abstracts should be submitted to:
Simon Mealor,
Hertford College,
Oxford OX1 3BW,
U.K.
email: hert0215@sable.ox.ac.uk
1799: Endings and Beginnings
The Department of English at the University of Bristol is hosting the Eighth One-Day Romantic Studies Conference on Saturday, 13 November 1999. This conference is scheduled to take place near the end of the year, the decade, the century and the millenium. This provides an appropriate moment to consider the way in which the 1790s were regarded by those who lived through them. In particular, contributors are encouraged to explore the ways in which writers of this period were concerned with endings, with new beginnings, with the formal challenges presented by the consciousness of this phase in history, and with the anxieties generated by a fin de siècle. Comparisons between the 1790s and other final decades or years are invited. Papers on 1799 itself would be particularly welcome, and should be 20 minutes.
Send proposals for papers by 29 October to: Professor T. Webb, Romantic Correspondence, Department of English, University of Bristol, 3/5 Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1TB. Fax: 0117 9288860. Internet: D.J.Blackmore-Squires@bris.ac.uk
These and further details will be posted at <http://www.bris.ac.uk/Depts/English/>.
John Lee: j.lee@bristol.ac.uk
North American Conference on British Studies
Northeast Conference on British Studies
1999 Annual Meeting, Boston
The North American Conference on British Studies (NACBS) will hold its annual meeting in conjunction with the annual meeting of the Northeast Conference on British Studies (NECBS) in Boston, MA, from Friday November 19th to Sunday November 21st 1999.
The NACBS, the main organization for British Studies in Canada and the United States, and its Northeast affiliate, the NECBS, seek participation by scholars in all areas of British Studies. In particular, they solicit proposals for interdisciplinary panels that draw on the work of historians, literary critics, and scholars in other disciplines whose focus is on Britain. The NACBS and NECBS also welcome panel proposals on medieval Britain. North American scholars, scholars from overseas, and graduate students are all encouraged to submit proposals to the Program Chair of the NACBS. Proposals for entire panels on a common theme will be given priority, although individual paper proposals will also be considered if several of them can be assembled to create a viable panel. Proposals for roundtable discussions of a topical work or issue are also welcome. The typical panel will include three papers, each lasting twenty minutes, a chair, and a separate commentator. No participant will be permitted to take part in more than one session, and no more that one proposal will be considered from each applicant. Committed to the principle of ensuring the broadest possible participation of scholars of all facets of British Studies, the program committee will give priority to proposals submitted by individuals who did not read papers at the last two consecutive meetings. North American paricipants in the meeting will ordinarily be expected to be members of the NACBS.
Proposals should include a 200-300 word abstract of each paper to be read and a one-two page curriculum vitae for each participant, including the chair and commentator. Under normal circumstances, the role of the chair and commentator should be filled by two different individuals. The address, phone number, and e-mail address of EACH participant (including chairs and commentators) must be included in the proposal. For entire panel proposals, the name of the principal contact person should be noted clearly.
In order to be considered, all proposals MUST be received by the NACBS program committee by FRIDAY FEBRUARY 12th, 1999, at the very latest.
Please MAIL your proposals to:
Chris Waters
NACBS Program Chair
Department of History
Stetson Hall
Williams College
Williamstown, MA 01267
voice: 413.597.2524
fax: 413.597.3673
e-mail: Christopher.M.Waters@williams.edu
Visit the new NACBS website: <http://www.nacbs.org/NACBS/>.
Women Writing 1550-1750
La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia.
July 10- 11, 1999
Convenors: Kate Lilley (Sydney University); Paul Salzman (La Trobe University).
This two day conference will explore all aspects of women's writing from 1550 to 1750. We welcome offers of papers from people working in any discipline and hope to include one or two colloquia which will specifically address interdisciplinary issues. Contributions from postgraduate students are welcome. Please send a brief outline for either a 20 minute paper or a five minute contribution to a colloquium by 1 December 1998: Paul Salzman, School of English, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia, 3083. Internet: P.Salzman@latrobe.edu.au.
Conference web site: <http://www.latrobe.edu.au/www/english/wwconf.html>.
Conversions and Conversations: Writing and the British Empire: 1660-1800
The English Department of McMaster University cordially invites all interested Eighteenth-Century studies scholars to attend the John Douglas Taylor Conference, to be held in Hamilton, Ontario on March 12, 1999.
The conference will explore how British and Colonial literatures engaged with the issue of empire. Papers will focus on the depiction of native cultures, imperial wars, plantations, missionary work and trade, navigation and slavery in a wide range of texts.
Guest speakers will be Nandini Bhattacharya, Linda Colley and Robert Markley.
For more information contact Dr. Peter Walmsley or Nanette Morton via e-mail at: mortonnj@mcmail.cis.mcmaster.ca or walmsley@mcmail.cis.mcmaster.ca.
The British Women Writers Conference
Albuquerque, New Mexico
September 24-26, 1999
I invite paper proposals for a special panel on women's autobiographical writing. The tradition of women's autobiographical writing becomes increasingly important in the seventeenth century and continues to this day. In this tradition, a woman learns to tell a narrative about herself that outlines and frames her identity, operating as a language of self-definition within which she becomes a speaking subject. Yet, although each tells her own story, she tells it according to a pre-determined pattern of narrative, conforming to prescribed notions and generic patterns of life experience as she tailors her identity to fit her culture's patterns of perceiving and organizing experience.
This panel invites papers that address the autobiographies of eighteenth and nineteenth-century women of diverse racial and economic backgrounds, and which examine the ways in which women's stories about their lives are constructed in relation to their culture's perception of them -- a standard that they may attack, subvert, accept, reject, or amend but never ignore.
Send proposal by January 15 to Sara Gadeken, Department of English, Texas Tech University, Box 43091, Lubbock TX 79409 3091
Annual Meeting. Florida Conference of Historians
Ft. Myers, Florida, April 15-17, 1999
Papers covering all historical fields, complete sessions, and workshops are welcome from scholars, researchers, professionals, and graduate students from throughout Florida and the Americas. (There is no travel money available, but scholars from throughout the world are welcome.) (The Florida Conference of Historians represents scholars in all areas of history and is not limited solely to the study of Florida history.)
Individuals interested in serving as chairs/commentors should also contact the Conference Chair below.
Deadline for Paper Proposals: February 10, 1999.
Lodging available at Holiday Inn Sunspree Resort Riverwalk and Marina (conference room rate $52.00 per night plus tax, single or double).
Banquet and speaker, Friday, April 16, 1999. Banquet fee is $12.00 for registered participants.
Registration: $45.00 prior to Conference $ 55.00 at Conference. Student Registration: $40.00 prior to Conference; $45 at Conference. Registration Charges include FCH membership dues.
Send paper proposals (a one-page abstract accompanied by a brief c.v. or panel proposal with one page abstracts for each paper and brief c.v. for each participant) and/or to obtain conference information, please contact:
Dr. Irvin D. Solomon, FCH President Elect and Conference Chair
Florida Gulf Coast University
10501 FGCU Blvd., South
Ft. Myers, FL 33965-6565
Phone: 941-590-7176
E-Mail: irvs@fgcu.edu
53rd Annual Rocky Mountain MLA Convention in Santa Fe, NM
14 - 16 October 1999
DoubleTree Hotel
Now available on RMMLA web site: <http://rmmla.wsu.edu/rmmla>. Deadline for submission of paper proposals = March 1, 1999
Also available on this site: membership information/form, a preview issue of the new online version of the Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, information on how to propose special topic sessions for the Santa Fe convention, as well as updates on all RMMLA activities. For more information on RMMLA, please contact the Executive Director, Joan Grenier-Winther, at grenierj@wsu.edu or (509) 335-4829.
Challenging Rhetorics: Cross-disciplinary Sites of Feminist Discourse
A conference at the University of Minnesota, October 7-9, 1999
<http://femrhet.cla.umn.edu>
The Center for Interdisciplinary Studies of Writing at the University of Minnesota is pleased to announce that the Second Biennial International Feminism(s) and Rhetoric(s) Conference, "Challenging Rhetorics: Cross-Disciplinary Sites of Feminist Discourse," will be held October 7-9, 1999 on the Minneapolis campus of the University of Minnesota. This conference will give feminist scholars, students, and community leaders the opportunity to share theories about and examples of new discourse practices that are emerging as a result of feminist scholarship. The conference will emphasize the cross-disciplinarity of feminist rhetorics and will attract international scholars, artists, activists, and leaders in fields such as feminist theory, literacy theory, rhetorical theory, speech communication, creative writing, literary theory, women's studies, education, composition, linguistics, history, and postcolonial theory. Featured speakers include: Judith Butler, Deborah Cameron, Evelyn Fox Keller, Janice Gould, Suzette Haden-Elgin, Florence Howe, Robin Lakoff, Julia Penelope, Dale Spender, Lorraine Code, Lisa Ede, Janet Emig, Janet Eldred, Elizabeth Flynn, Jane Gallop, Cheryl Glenn, Judith Halberstam, Susan Jarratt, Nan Johnson, Gesa Kirsch, Andrea Lunsford, Arabella Lyon, Joyce Irene
Middleton, Susan Miller, Peter Mortensen, Louise Wetherbee Phelps, Krista Ratcliffe, Joy Ritchie, Kate Ronald, Jacqueline Jones Royster, C. Jan Swearingen, Barbara Warnick, Kathleen Welch, Lynn Worsham, and many others.
We invite proposals on the rhetorical intersections of gender with race, class, age, sexuality, and ability; interpreting the academy, disciplinarity, and professional identities from a feminist perspective; reclaiming lost or marginalized voices of women (e.g. rhetors, writers, teachers, artists, workers); analyzing the rhetoric of historical depictions of women; the rhetoric of the feminist movement and feminist backlash; males and men's studies scholarship in relation to feminism; analyzing the rhetoric of historical depictions of women; revising canonical theories of rhetoric, literature, and the atts from a feminist perspective; revising linguistic theories from a feminist perspective; extrapolating theory from the everyday (e.g. etiquette manuals, cookbooks, diaries); the rhetoric of feminist public policy; the rhetoric of women's spirituality; the rhetoric of women's aging and developmental stages; the rhetoric of feminist research methodologies; the rhetoric of gender in schooling; theories of feminist fiction writers; the rhetoric of gender in science; gendered readings of technology; the rhetoric of feminist performance; and the rhetoric of the body and reproduction.
Though we accept traditional presentation formats, we also encourage participants to create alternative formats that go beyond the genre of delivering a read-aloud academic paper. Interactive sessions that promote lively exchanges among presenters or between presenters and audiences such as discussions, dialogues, and performances are especially welcome. Only one proposal per applicant may be submitted. Time allocations for formats include: workshops and roundtables (1 _ hours); 3-4 member panels (1 1/2 hours); individual presentations (20 minutes); with any creative formats you might imagine fitting into these time frames.
For individual presentations:
Submit three copies of a 250-word description of the presentation and title. In a concluding paragraph in your description, please indicate the format of your presentation. Will it resemble a traditional scholarly paper, a performance, an audience discussion, or other alternative form? On a separate cover page, provide the title of your proposal and a brief (25 word) description or abstract. Also list your name, address, phone, fax, e-mail, and institutional affiliation.
For group presentations:
Please submit three copies of a 250 - 750-word description of the presentation and title, indicating the role(s) of each participant. In a concluding paragraph in your description, please indicate the format of your presentation. What sort of traditional or alternative format will it resemble? On a separate cover page, provide the title of your proposal and a brief (50 word) description or abstract. Also list the names, addresses, phones, faxes, e-mails, and institutional affiliations of all participants. Be sure to specify one member to serve as a contact.
In order to encourage diversity, we invite graduate students who are presenting for the first time and who are from historically underrepresented groups (African Americans, Asian Americans, Mexican Americans, Puerto Ricans and other Latino and Latina Americans, and American Indians) to apply to the conference for special funds. To be considered, include a nominating letter from your advisor along with your proposal.
For more information, contact Hildy Miller at mille299@tc.umn.edu.
The 21st Annual Mid-America Conference on History
The 21st Annual Mid-America Conference on History will be held on September 16-18, 1999 at the Sheraton Hawthorn Hotel and Conference Center in Springfield, MO. The Conference is hosted by Southwest Missouri State University. Proposals for papers and sessions from all areas welcome. Deadline for proposals is May, 14, 1999. For details contact, Tom Dicke, Department of History, Southwest Missouri State University. E-mail: TomDicke@mail.smsu.edu.
The International Fasch Society
The International Fasch Society and the city of Zerbst will be co-hosting the Sixth International Fasch Festival from 15 to 18 April 1999 in Zerbst. Concerts will feature works by J. F. Fasch, C. F. Chr. Fasch and contemporaries. An international scholarly conference will take place on 16 and 17 April, the general topic being "Carl Friedrich Christian Fasch (1736-1800) and contemporary musical life in Berlin". For further information contact Dr. Barbara Reul. Internet: IFaschG@t-online.de or <http://www.islandnet.com/~fasch>.
Les Femmes et la culture en transition/Women and Cultural Change
The department of French at the University of Virginia is hosting the fourth symposium on Early Modern French Women Writers, to be held on September 23-25, 1999 in Charlottesville, VA. We welcome communications on all aspects of the social, literary, religious and political role played by women's writing from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century. Issues of publication and institutional politics are particularly welcome. Papers may be in English or in French.
Please send a one page abstract to:
Elena Russo, Department of French
University of Virginia
302 Cabell Hall
Charlottesville, VA 22903
Fax: 804-924-7157
Tel.: 804-924-3924
Brothers in the Muse: Burns, Fergusson and the Vernacular Revival
The University of Strathclyde proposes to host a 2-day conference on 14-15 January 2000 to mark the 250th anniversary of the birth of Robert Fergusson. The conference will address the issues in Scottish literature and language arising out of the eighteenth century in general and out of the relationship of Fergusson and Burns in particular. It is anticipated that addresses will be given by major scholars in fields such as: The Language of Fergusson and Burns; Fergusson's Poetry; Radicalism in Fergusson and Burns; Irish and Scottish Revolutionary Writing; Jacobitism and Jacobinism; Fergusson and Irish Tradition; The Burns Canon; Ramsay, Fergusson, Burns and the Song Tradition and Scottish and Irish literary relations in the eighteenth century.
A 100-word abstract for papers of 30 minutes should be sent to Dr Ken Simpson (Centre for Scottish Cultural Studies, Livingstone Tower, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow G1 1XH) or Professor Murray Pittock (Scots-Irish Research Network, Dept of English Studies, Livingstone Tower, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow G1 1XH) by 28 February 1999. Refereed publication of selected papers is anticipated, and it is intended that the conference be held under the joint auspices of the Glasgow-Strathclyde School of Scottish Studies.
Cities of Culture: Aesthetics and Urban Identity in the European Enlightenment.
13 March 1999
University of Warwick
A one day interdisciplinary conference that will consider the relationship between location and the formation of a cultural aesthetic. Aimed at the cultural and urban historian of the eighteenth century, its remit is to provide a forum to discuss the presence, in non-metropolitan cities, of a cultural aesthetic which is both distinctive and distinguishing, and which thus contributes to a unique urban identity.
Contributors: Peter Borsay (University of Wales Lampeter); Matthew Craske (Oxford Brookes University); Paul Elliot (University of Leicester); Denise Fowler (University of Warwick); Deborah Graham (University of Warwick); Craig Horner (Manchester Metropolitan University); Katie Scott (Courtauld Institute of Art); Jenny Uglow (Independent Scholar).
For further information and a booking form contact: Sue Dibben, Humanities research centre, University of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK. Tel.: 01203 523401. Internet: hrc@warwick.ac.uk.
Annual Conference 1999. French History Conference
The next Annual Conference will be held at the University of Edinburgh from Monday 29th to Wednesday 31st March 1999. It has been invited to Edinburgh to mark the retirement of Maurice Larkin from his chair after 23 years, and will begin on Monday evening with a public lecture in his honour by Prof. James McMillan, followed by a reception at which the Edinburgh History Department will welcome delegates.
The rest of the conference will follow the usual form, and an attractive list of papers is being compiled. Plenary speakers from France will include Daniel Roche and Herve Le Bras, and others already lined up include Sian Reynolds, David Hopkin, Olwen Hufton, Roger Mettam, Julian Jackson, and Dale Van Kley. The conference also coincides with the annual conference of the Society for French Studies at the same venue: a joint workshop has been arranged, and there will be plenty of opportunities for informal interaction.
This year you will need to stay for two nights, but we hope that you will find this worthwhile in order to enjoy the social and tourist attractions of Edinburgh. Quite cheap rail fares (under £40 return) are available from English centres with advance booking.
Details of the programme will be posted to members in December or January, but meanwhile details can be obtained from the local organizer:
Prof. Robert Anderson
Department of History
University of Edinburgh
William Robertson Building
50 George Square
Edinburgh EH8 9JY
Tel.: 0131 650 3786
Fax: 0131 650 3784
Email: R.D.Anderson@ed.ac.uk
France: Histoire et histoires/France: History and Story
Chamberlain Hall, University of Birmingham
1er au 3 juillet 1999
Une investigation interdisciplinaire du concept d'identité nationale française : sa genèse et sa représentation. Le colloque vise un double objectif : approfondir la connaissance historique des transformations de ce concept et élargir les considérations théoriques concernant les points de convergence entre histoire et culture que son étude fait émerger. Les ateliers seront organisés par thèmes et nous sollicitons des contributions de collègues travaillant dans les domaines de l'histoire, de l'histoire de l'art, de la littérature et de la civilisation touchant à cette question, sur toute période allant des débuts de l'époque moderne au postcolonialisme et traitant de thèmes comme : Mémoire et histoire, commémoration, révolution et contre-révolution dans l'identité nationale, émigrés et exilés, guerre franco-française, politiques de la culture, héritage et patrimoine, topographie de la nation (frontières et limites, centre et périphérie, urbanité/ruralité, bâtiments publics et espaces privés), iconographie, culture visuelle (peinture, photographie, cinéma, télévision), démographie et nation, éducation et nationalité, représentations de l'identite françaisé dans la publicité, les Francais et leur langue, la France en Europe, etc.
Colloque organisé par l'Université de Birmingham, Département de Francais, en liaison avec des collègues d'histoire et d'histoire de l'art et avec la collaboration de l'Ambassade de France à Londres.
Le Barber Institute organisera, pour la durée du colloque, une exposition spéciale de peintures et dessins francais issus de sa propre collection : "Images de France de Callot à Cézanne."
Outre les conférences, il est prévu diverses présentations en ateliers. Si vous souhaitez présenter une contribution (20-30 minutes) sur l'un quelconque des thèmes cités ci-dessus ou sur un sujet similaire, ou si vous souhaitez de plus amples informations, veuillez contacter l'organisatrice du colloque : Professor Jennifer Birkett, French Department, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT. Tel: 0121-414-5964. Fax: 0121-414-5966. Email: j.birkett@bham.ac.uk.
Paul Rowe
Language Instructor
Department of French Studies
University of Birmingham
B15 2TT
Tel.: (0121) 414 5980 / 5964
Fax: (0121) 414 5966
Web: <http://artsweb.bham.ac.uk/artsFrenchStudies/Rowe.htm>
MWASECS 1999
30th Annual Meeting
Co-hosted by Stephens College and University of Missouri-Columbia
7-9 October 1999
"At the Century's End: New Horizons in 18th-Century Studies"
Please contact:
Tom Dillingham
Department of Language and Literature
Stephens College, 1200 E. Broadway
Columbia, MO 65205
Internet: tomdill@wc.stephens.edu
WSECS 1999
Cal State, San Bernardino,
February 19-21, 1999
There will be four plenary talks (from David Gies, University of Virginia; Dena Goodman, Louisiana State University; Susan Lanser, University of Maryland; and Maximillian Novak, UCLA;) twenty-six concurrent sessions in six rounds, including a session honoring Donald Greene, with papers from Paul Korshin, Melvyn New, and Howard Weinbrot; a presentation and demonstration of bibliographical databases (including the ESTC); a performance of Mozart's Requiem; and a period fashion show addressing the question, "What Was Under All That?"
Programs and registration forms have been sent to participants and to ASECS members in the Southwest. If you haven't received these materials and would like to, please send me your address. These materials are also available on our website: <http:\\flan.csusb.edu\wsecs\wsecs.htm>.
Ted Ruml, Co-Chair, 1999 WSECS Conference
Dept. of English, Cal State, San Bernardino
5500 University Parkway
San Bernardino, CA 92407-2397
Internet: truml@csusb.edu
Rousseau Association
(North America Association for the Study of Jean-Jacques Rousseau )
Eleventh Biennial Colloquium
"Rousseau and the Ancients"
Duke University
20-23 May 1999
Though the prehistorical "man of nature" is out of reach, every written trace of the premodern man is of potential importance to Rousseau, who constantly drew on the thought and moral model of the Ancients. In particular, the Greeks and Roman heroes, philosophers and legends appear frequently in Rousseau's writings, often through the prism of more recent mediators, notably Plutarch and Montaigne. To that one must add the Biblical culture -- again, in terms both of original sources and modern interpretation -- that so informed the thought of this former Calvinist. All dimensions of the relationship, mediated or direct, between Rousseau's writings and the ancient world are appropriate subjects for this colloquium. For information: Philip Stewart, Professor of French and Literature Department of Romance Studies, Duke University, Durham NC 27708-0257. Tel.: 919 660-3122. Fax: 919 493-9598. Internet: jjrousseau@duke.edu.
Association Rousseau
(Association nord-américaine des études Jean-Jacques Rousseau)
"Rousseau et les Anciens"
Duke University
20-23 mai 1999
Quoique l'homme préhistorique à "l'état de nature" soit hors de portée, toute trace écrite de l'homme pré-moderne est potentiellement importante pour Rousseau, qui puisait constamment dans la pensée et le modèle moral des Anciens. Les héros, philosophes et légendes grecs et romains en particulier apparaissent fréquemment dans ses écrits, souvent à travers le prisme de médiateurs plus récents, notamment Plutarque et Montaigne. Il faut y ajouter la culture biblique -- encore, en termes à la fois des sources originales et des interprétations modernes -- qui informa tant la pensée de cet ancien Calviniste. Toutes les dimensions du rapport, direct ou médié, entre les écrits de Rousseau et le monde antique fait matière appropriée pour ce colloque.
Pour tout renseignement : e-mail: jjrousseau@duke.edu.
<http://www.duke.edu/~pstewart/rousseau.htm>
Philip Stewart
Professor of French and Literature
Department of Romance Studies
Duke University
Durham NC 27708-0257
Tel.: 919 660-3122
FAX 919 493-9598
Internet: jjrousseau@duke.edu
ECASECS 1999
"Death, Taxes and Other Sensitive Subjects"
Please contact:
Linda V. Troost
Department of English
Washington and Jefferson College
Washington, PA 15301-3543
Internet: Ltroost@washjeff.edu
Institutional Culture in Early Modern Europe: Histories and Anthropologies
King's College London
July 8-10, 1999
Employing new methods of anthropological and cultural history, this conference seeks to go beyond the boundaries of individual institutional histories to explore comparatively the rituals, propaganda, and internal workings of a wide variety of early modern institutions. It will allow scholars from widely differing fields and interests in European and British history to compare their insights about institutional culture in an important period of institutionalization. The exciting program will culminate in a round table discussion by John Brewer, Anthony Grafton, Olwen Hufton, and Keith Wrightson.
For more information and registration forms, please contact Robert Frost and Anne Goldgar, History Department, King's College London, Strand, London WC2R 2LS, U.K. Tel.: +44-171-836-5454. Fax: +44-171-873-2052. Internet: robert.frost@kcl.ac.uk or anne.goldgar@kcl.ac.uk. A website (including a registration form) will be posted as a link on the King's History Department site, <http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/history/ top.html>.
Art and Culture: The Shaping Forces Of History, Empire And Gender
Annual Meeting of the Aphra Behn Society
Philadelphia, PA
November 11-14, l999
Emphasizing the contributions of women to European and American culture and the arts, this conference aims to explore the means (material, social and historical) by which men and women came to terms with the forces of artistic and literary representation, imperial expansion, political unrest, religious crisis, social identity and gender relations in the long eighteenth century (l660-l830). The deadline for submissions is 15 April 1999. Suggested topics for papers include: literary history, genre and gender (transforming and establishing conventions in the novel, biography, poetry, and drama); l8th-century innovations in theater, painting, music, devotions, printing, science and the home; women making history (queens, prostitutes, writers, musicians, painters and activists); the public and private lives of women; women as travellers and travel writers; slavery at home and abroad; trade and consumerism in literature and culture (clothes and fashion; food and diet; style and the foreigner); intersections of political history and the arts; race, class, gender and sexuality in the arts.
For more information, see the Society's web page: <http://prometheus.cc.emory.edu/behn/>.
Submit one page abstracts for individual papers and detailed abstracts for organized panels to:
Susan B Iwanisziw, President
Aphra Behn Society
729 North 3rd Street
Philadelphia, PA l9l23
Internet: siwanisziw@aol.com
Woman in the Eighteenth Century
The 33rd Annual Texas Tech University
Comparative Literature Symposium
January 27-29, 2000
Plenary Speakers: Carol Blum (SUNY-Stonybrook), Felicity Nussbaum (UCLA)
This conference seeks to offer a forum for discussing eighteenth-century woman across the disciplines (literature, history, art, political science, philosophy, etc.). The symposium will focus on women throughout the world. Select papers will be published in Intertexts. One-page abstracts and all inquiries should be sent by November 1, 1999 to:
Sharon Diane Nell
Director, Program in Comparative Literature
Department of Classical and Modern Languages and Literatures
Texas Tech University
Lubbock, Texas 79409-2071
Internet: SherryD@ttacs.ttu.edu
The UK Kant Society Annual Conference
17-19 September 1999
"Strawson and Kant"
The 1999 Conference, hosted by the Department of Philosophy at the University of Reading, will include invited speakers Henry Allison, Graham Bird, Quassim Cassam, Eckart Förster, Peter Hacker, John Hyman, Peter Strawson, and Barry Stroud.
The committee invites proposals for four other papers under the followingheadings: Kant Exegesis, Analytic Kantianism and Other Strawsonian Themes.
Those interested in reading a paper to the Conference are requested to send an abstract (no longer than two A4 sheets) to the undersigned as soon as possible, to arrive no later than Tuesday, 6th April 1999. Those who submit proposals will be notified in May 1999.
A full programme and registration form for the conference will be circulated in May 1999.
Dr. Hans-Johann Glock
Department of Philosophy
The University of Reading
Whiteknights, Reading RG6 6AA
Fax: 0ll8 931 8295
(Please mark all correspondence pertaining to the Conference "Strawson & Kant")
The Society of Early Americanists [Sea] Conference
March 4-7, 1999, Charleston, SC
Members of C18-L engaged in transatlantic studies will be interested in the list of sessions requesting paper submissions for the 1999 SEA Conference. It appears on the SEA homepage: <http://www.hnet.uci.edu/mclark/SEAConf.html>.
The Society of Early Americanists is an interdisciplinary association of scholars interested in the cultural history of north America from the onset of European settlement to 1820. It treats Francophone, Hispanic, Native American, Dutch Colonial, and British American cultural developments.
Deadline for the submission of abstracts to session chairs is Sept. 31, 1998. Addresses of these chairs is included in the Topic list of the Call for Papers.
David S. Shields
Vice-President, Society of Early Americanists
ANNONCES / ANNOUNCEMENTS
American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies Fellowships at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
McMaster University Library announces that it grants two postdoctoral fellowships annually in Eighteenth-Century Studies. These fellowships are funded jointly by the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies and McMaster University.
The William Ready Division has major resource strengths in British and European literature and society of the eighteenth century (with additional special strengths in topics such as British social history, French drama, music and serial publications).
The Fellowships are for the Canadian equivalent of $1,750 US each.
Fellows are expected to spend four weeks at McMaster University.
For an application, write the Chairman, ASECS Fellowship Committee, William Ready Division of Archives and Research Collections, McMaster University Library, 1280 Main Street W., Hamilton, ON, Canada L8S 4L6.
Applications should be received before January 31 annually.
Internet: stewch@mcmaster.ca
Intermédiaire des casanovistes
Rédaction:
Helmut Watzlawick
22, chemin de l'Esplanade
CH 1214-Vernier
Suisse
Internet : wtzwick@vtx.ch
Furio Luccichenti
146, via Vittorio
Veneto
I 00187-Rome
Italie
Internet : F.Luccichenti@agora.stm.it
Comité d'éditeurs : Marco Leeflang (Utrecht), Furio Luccichenti (Rome), Marie-Françoise Luna (Grenoble), Enrico Straub (Berlin), Antonio Trampus (Trieste), Tom Vitelli (Salt Lake City), Helmut Watzlawick (Genève-Vernier).
Cette revue annuelle est consacrée à l'étude de la vie, de l'oeuvre et du "monde" de Giacomo Casanova (1725-1798). Elle a été créée en 1984 par plusieurs anciens collaborateurs du biographe et bibliographe de Casanova, J. Rives Childs, pour succéder à sa revue Casanova Gleanings (fondée en 1958, dernier numéro paru en 1980), répondant ainsi à la demande de nombreux casanovistes à la recherche d'un nouveau moyen d'information, d'échange et de contact.
La revue publie des études, résultats de recherches, documents inédits, informations diverses et suppléments bibliographiques annuels. Selon les préférences des auteurs, les contributions sont publiées en français, en anglais ou en italien. Les propositions de contribution (limite pour les articles : 3500 mots) sont à adresser à la rédaction (H. Watzlawick).
Quatorze cahiers ont été publiés depuis 1984. Un petit stock des numéros VII à XIV est encore disponible. Le numéro XV (1998) -- parution en novembre 1998 -- est une édition spéciale consacrée au bicentenaire de la mort de Casanova.
La revue est imprimée à Rome. Le volume des cahiers annuels varie entre 50 et 70 pages, le tirage entre 200 et 250 copies dont deux tiers sont destinés aux abonnés. Un index des volumes I à X a été publié en 1994. Il est mis gratuitement à la disposition des nouveaux abonnés de la revue. La revue encourage aussi la publication séparée d'inédits importants par ses collaborateurs (correspondances, documents divers). Plusieurs inédits ont déjà été publiés dans le cadre d'une série intitulée "Documents casanoviens".
Les éditeurs et les abonnés de la revue ne sont pas regroupés dans une association formelle; toutefois, la rédaction s'emploie à faciliter les recherches sur l'oeuvre et le monde de Casanova et sert de centre d'information et de contact aux chercheurs, érudits et autres amateurs du Vénitien.
La publication de l'Intermédiaire des casanovistes est assurée à titre privé et volontaire par ses éditeurs qui ne poursuivent aucun but lucratif. Le financement de la revue est assuré par les souscriptions annuelles de ses abonnés et les contributions volontaires de ses éditeurs; les auteurs fournissent leurs contributions sans rémunération.
Le coût de chaque cahier (port compris pour les abonnés) est de Francs suisses 23 (Francs français 92), à régler après réception. Les commandes et paiements sont à adresser à la rédaction (H. Watzlawick, Vernier).
"The Politics of Print Culture, 1700-1900."
Beginning in September 1999, the Department of English at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, BC, will offer a new Master's specialization entitled "The Politics of Print Culture, 1700-1900." The program will offer students the opportunity to focus on the changing role of printed texts in an emerging commercial society. The program is designed to rethink "literariness" and to examine material textuality as it is formed through the relations of production, dissemination, and reception of printed, visual, and aural works. By integrating a variety of theoretical methods with a wide range of historical contexts and resources, the program will introduce students to existing critical debates in ways that will challenge them to develop their own interpretive skills and interests. Courses will take into account the mutually defining relations between textuality and a variety of cultural fields. These fields include the aesthetic, the literary, the public sphere, sexuality, gender, religion, class, race, and the nation. For further information contact the Graduate Studies Office, Dept. of English, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, V5A 1S6. Tel.: 604-291-4614. Internet: print-culture@sfu.ca; website: <http://www.sfu.ca/print_culture>.
Telemann and Fasch CD
A compact disc featuring obscure vocal and instrumental works by Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767) and Johann Friedrich Fasch (1688-1758) has recently been released by Metrix Classic. Performers: Friederike Holzhausen, soprano; Bettina Denner-Brueckner, mezzo; Axel Koehler, alto; Martin Krumbiegel, tenor; Dirk Schmidt, bass; University Chorus Halle and the Johann Friedrich Fasch Ensemble, dir. Jens Lorenz. The CD booklet was prepared by Dr. Barbara Reul, Zerbst, and Brit Reipsch, Telemann Research Centre Magdeburg. For further information (orders, etc.) please write to Collegium Musicum der Martin-Luther-Universitaet Halle-Wittenberg, 06099 Halle. Fax: +49-345-4427173.
Mellon Resident Research Fellowships, 1999 - 2000
The American Philosophical Society Library is accepting applications for short-term residential fellowships for conducting research in its collections. The Society's Library, located near Independence Hall in Philadelphia, is a leading international center for research in the history of American science and technology and its European roots, as well as early American history and culture. The Library houses over 6.5 million manuscripts, 190,000 volumes and bound periodicals, and thousands of maps and prints. Outstanding historical collections and subject areas include the papers of Benjamin Franklin; the American Revolution; 18th and 19th-century natural history; western scientific expeditions and travel including the journals of Lewis and Clark; polar exploration; the papers of Charles Willson Peale, including family and descendants; American Indian languages; anthropology including the papers of Franz Boas; the papers of Charles Darwin and his forerunners, colleagues, critics, and successors; history of genetics, eugenics, and evolution; history of biochemistry, physiology, and biophysics; 20th-century medical research; and history of physics. (The Library does not hold materials on philosophy in the modern sense.)
The fellowships, funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, are intended to encourage research in the Library's collections by scholars who reside beyond a 75-mile radius of Philadelphia. The fellowships are open to both U.S. citizens and foreign nationals who are holders of the Ph.D. or the equivalent, Ph.D. candidates who have passed their preliminary exams, and independent scholars. Applicants in any relevant field of scholarship may apply. The stipend is $1,900 per month, and the term of the fellowship is a minimum of one month and a maximum of three, taken between June 1, 1999 and May 31, 2000. Fellows are expected to be in residence for four consecutive weeks during the period of their award. There is no special application form and this notice provides all the essential information needed to apply. Applicants should submit the following: (1) cover sheet stating a) name, b) title of project, c) expected period of residence, d) institutional affiliation, e) mailing address, f) telephone numbers, and e-mail if available, and g) social security number; (2) a letter (not to exceed three single-spaced pages) which briefly describes the project and how it relates to existing scholarship, states the specific relevance of the American Philosophical Society's collections to the project, and indicates expected results of the research (such as publications); (3) a c.v. or résumé; and (4) one letter of reference (doctoral candidates must use their dissertation advisor). Published guides to the Society's collections are available in most research libraries, and a list of these guides is available on request. Applicants are strongly encouraged to consult the Library staff by mail or phone regarding the collections.
Address applications or inquiries to: Mellon Fellowships, American Philosophical Society Library, 105 South Fifth St., Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386. Telephone: (215) 440-3400.
Applications must be received by March 1, 1999. Notice of awards will be mailed by May 1, 1999.
Joseph-James Ahern
Library Technical Assistant
American Philosophical Society
Internet: jjahern@amphilsoc.org
<http://www.amphilsoc.org>
Lyrical Ballads by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge
To commemorate the 200th anniversary of the first publication of the Lyrical Ballads by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Ronald Tetreault and Bruce Graver have great pleasure in announcing the Lyrical Ballads Bicentenary Project website. This project contains e-text and images of the familiar London issue of the first edition, along with text and images of two distinct copies of the prior Bristol issue which is less well-known.
We have gathered facsimiles of these rare volumes in one virtual space where they can now be examined together. The first Bristol Lyrical Ballads, based on the copy in the Firestone Library at Princeton, contains the poem "Lewti" and Cottle's advertisements. The second, based on a copy in the British Library, contains "Lewti" along with the poem that replaced it, "The Nightingale". These volumes can be compared with one another or with the London issue, as you the reader choose, at <http://www.dal.ca/etc/lballads/ welcome.html>.
We welcome your comments on this project, corrections of our inevitable errors, and suggestions for further development.
Ronald Tetreault
Department of English
Dalhousie University
Halifax, Nova Scotia
B3H 3J5 Canada
Tel.: (902) 494-3494
Fax: (902) 494-2176
Home Fax: (902) 453-4786
Internet: tetro@is.dal.ca or Ronald.Tetreault@Dal.Ca
The Religious History Society
The Journal of Religious History would like to announce the creation earlier this year of The Religious History Society. I hope that the new society will be of interest to colleagues working in many areas of history were religion and religious identity plays a major part,
The Religious History Society:
* promotes the study of all fields of religious history.
* encourages research in Australasian religious history.
* organizes a regular conference in association with the Australian Historical Association.
* produces a regular newsletter
For further details visit the Society's pages at: <http://www.newcastle.edu.au/department/hi/rhs/>.
For further details of The Journal of Religious History visit the Blackwell
Publishers website at: <http://www.blackwellpublishers.co.uk>.
Gary D. Nelmes,
Marketing Controller,
Blackwell Publishers,
108 Cowley Road,
Oxford OX4 1JF.
Tel.: +44 (0)1865 382312
Fax: +44 (0)1865 381312
email: gnelmes@blackwellpublishers.co.uk
Eighteenth-Century Studies Groups of Canada
This cartel was formed by several local groups who want to cut travel costs for visiting speakers through collaboration and exchange of programming plans. Other local groups are welcome to join. Contacts: Jane Rush (McMaster, jrush@mcmail.CIS.McMaster.CA); Rob Merrett (Alberta, rmerrett@gpu.srv.ualberta.ca); Betty Schellenberg (SFU, schellen@sfu.ca), Glen Campbell (Calgary, gcampbel@acs.ucalgary.ca), and Raymond Stephanson (Saskatchewan, stephanr@duke.usask.ca).
The Garrick Club Collection
Purchased in 1972 from the Library of the Garrick Club in London, this collection comprises over 2,000 French and English plays from the eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries. Most of the English plays represented in this collection are from the Lacy and French Acting Editions, or Dick's Standard Plays. Moreover, a number of the plays have been used as prompt copies with some complete in their original paper wrappers. The collection of French plays includes 175 volumes of the Repertoire General du Theatre Francais which appears to be a later and more extensive edition than the one in the British Museum, and 102 volumes of miscellaneous original works published between 1760 and 1820. Significant in the collection are not only the more prominent dramatists of the period, but also minor figures of the English and French theatre about whom little has been accomplished due to a paucity of material. For more information contact Apollonia Lang Steele, Special Collections Librarian, University of Calgary Library. Internet: asteele@ucalgary.ca.
New Annual Forthcoming: Eighteenth-Century Novel
Eighteenth-Century Novel will be an annual refereed publication dedicated to critical examination of the prose fiction of the "long" eighteenth century, roughly 1688-1830. At present we are especially interested in articles dealing with works written after 1730.
Requests for further information or manuscripts of 750-1,500 words (notes) or 7,000-14,000 words (articles), prepared in compliance with the rules and procedures outlined in The Chicago Manual of Style (14th ed.) should be submitted to
Professor Susan Spencer, Editor
Eighteenth-Century Novel
16 East Constance Avenue
Santa Barbara, CA 93105
E-mail inquiries should be sent to sspencer@aix1.ucok.edu.
Submissions should consist of scholarly research based on primary sources and engage in significant critical dialogue with existing scholarly interpretations. Contributors need not limit their discussions to works that are part of any traditional canon; this publication welcomes fresh perspectives on a wide range of works and authors.
The editor asks that contributors keep professional jargon to a minimum, as the annual's intended audience includes the interested general public and advanced undergraduates as well as professional scholars. Authors of articles dealing extensively with works not written in English must ensure that these works are readily available in translation; such articles should offer clear connections to meaningful aspects of the Anglophone novel-tradition.
Manuscripts with an interdisciplinary approach are welcome, although their primary concern should be the interpretation of literary works.
Unsolicited book reviews will not be accepted, but those who are interested in reviewing a book for this journal should write to the above address or e-mail the book review editor, Margo Collins: margo@jove.acs.unt.edu.
Eighteenth-Century Novel will be published by AMS Press, 56 East 13th Street, New York, NY 10003.
LE XVIII E SIÈCLE SUR INTERNET / EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY STUDIES AND THE INTERNET
The "Berlinische Monatsschrift"
This German periodical of the Enlightenment (1783 to 1811) is now availabe on the web at: <http://www.ub.uni-bielefeld. de/diglib/Berlinische_Monatsschrift/> There is an English language interface at: <http://www.ub.unibielefeld.de/diglib/Berlinische_Monatsschrift/index-e.htm>.
This digital reconstruction combines the contents of all 58 volumes of the periodical (including the succeeding Berlinische Blätter and Neue Berlinische Monatsschrift).
Published by Johann Erich Biester and Friedrich Gedike, the periodical quickly reached supraregional significance. It became important as the mouthpiece of the "Berliner Mittwochsgesellschaft," an elite group endeavouring reforms, formed by members of bourgeoisie and aristocracy including Friedrich d. Gr. It became well-known as the place where the discussion "Was ist Aufklärung?" ("What is Enlightenment?") was argued out. It was also the preferred periodical of Immanuel Kant. The successor "Neue Berlinische Monatsschrift" was published by Friedrich Nicolai, another representative of the Enlightenment from Berlin, and was influenced by his numerous contributions. The periodical contains 2,574 articles on 30,626 pages.
ARTFL Encyclopedie
Released to all ARTFL subscribers is the preliminary version of Diderot and d'Alembert's Encyclopedie, ou Dictionnaire raisonne des sciences, des metiers et des arts, including all seventeen volumes of text and eleven volumes of plates from the first edition. This release is also our first production implementation of a new search and document server, which contains many improvements on our previous systems, and supports full hypertext navigation of cross references (renvois) and access to all plate and page images.
Access is on WWW at: <http://humanities.uchicago.edu/ARTFL/projects/encyc/>.
I encourage comments, complaints and suggestions! We will be correcting the text and technical implementations in the future, so feedback from users is particularly important.
Mark Olsen
ARTFL Project
Internet: mark@barkov.uchicago.edu
<http://humanities.uchicago.edu/ARTFL/>
Walpole Library
Information on Fellowship and travel grant awards for the next fiscal year is available at: <http://www.library.yale.edu/Walpole/fellowsh.htm>.
The Library's book catalogue is now available in full on Yale University's ORBIS on-line catalogue. This can be found on the web at <http://webpac.library.yale.edu/>. Other connection options will be found on the Yale University Library web-site at <http://www.library.yale.edu>.
Our web-site has been up-dated and expanded, with a range of new material. The web address is: <http://www.library.yale.edu/Walpole>.
General information includes brief information on the collection, information on visiting the Library and directions to the Library, the names and addresses of library staff, information on the Library's 18th- century buildings, and links to 18th-century resources.
Information on programs and services comprises: information on fellowships, how to obtain permission to publish items from our collections, photoduplication policies and prices, and information on the Library's accommodation on-site for visiting scholars.
The core information on the Library's collections is under development. At present it includes: a guide to material relating to the study of Horace Walpole, a summary guide to our manuscript holdings, a list of our British 18th-century periodicals and one of our almanac holdings. We will be posting further information in due course concerning other aspects of our holdings: data on the very large and uniquely well-indexed Print Collection of British 18th-century satirical prints, more detailed guides to parts of the manuscript collection, subject-specific guides to various specific strengths such as theater studies, and information on the Library's 100 specialist catalogues and indices. The web address is: <http://www.library.yale.edu/Walpole>
Richard G. Williams
Librarian, Lewis Walpole Library, Yale University
154 Main Street, Farmington CT 06032
Tel.: (860) 677 2140
Fax: (860) 677 6369
Internet: richard.g.williams@yale.edu
Selected Readings Now Available Online!
The address is: <http://www.personal.psu.edu/ special/C18/sr/sr67.htm>. The entire site is now searchable with a new search engine. It's on the main Selected Readings page, <http://www.personal.psu.edu/special/C18/sr/sr.htm>. Or you can get to it from the link on SR67, or at this precise address: <http://www.personal.psu.edu/special/C18/sr/sr.htm# search>.
The William Blake Archive
The editors are pleased to announce the publication of six new electronic editions of Blake's illuminated books: All Religions are One, copy A; There is No Natural Religion, copies B, C, G, and L; Milton, a Poem, copy C. They are available at <http://www.iath. virginia.edu/blake>.
Composed and executed in 1788, All Religions are One and There is No Natural Religion are Blake's first works in illuminated printing, though no copy of either work survives from this date. The ten plates of All Religions were followed quickly by twenty No Natural Religion plates in two antithetical sets (a and b series). Only one copy of All Religions is extant, now in the Huntington Library, printed c. 1795 with and in the same style as There is No Natural Religion, copy L, the only copy consisting exclusively of the ten b-series of plates, now in The Pierpont Morgan Library. The other twelve recorded copies of this book consist of a mixture of the same eight to twelve plates, which appeared to be merely incomplete sets of proofs until it was discovered that six of these copies were 19th-century reproductions. Once the inauthentic impressions were weeded out, it became apparent that what remained was Blake's selection of a and b plates for an abridged version of the work printed around 1794. We present copies B, C, and G of this twelve-plate work, now in the collections of the Yale Center for British Art, Library of Congress, and The Pierpont Morgan Library, respectively.
There are only four copies of Milton, Blake's most personal epic. Copy C, from the New York Public Library, was Blake's own copy. Printed c. 1811, it was later reconfigured and renumbered by Blake when he inserted extra plates, which he appears to have done on at least two different occasions.
All of these editions have newly edited texts and are all fully searchable for both text and images and supported by the unique Inote and ImageSizer applications described in our previous updates.
We now have twenty-two copies of thirteen illuminated books. Over this and next year, we will be adding Blake's last illuminated works, On Homers Poetry [&] On Virgil, The Ghost of Abel, and Laocoon, as well as Milton, copy D, and Jerusalem, copy E. We will also be adding at least six more copies of Songs of Innocence and of Experience, two copies of Songs of Innocence, five copies of The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, four copies of The Book of Urizen, and two copies each of America, a Prophecy and Europe, a Prophecy. In addition, work continues on the SGML edition of David V. Erdman's Complete Poetry and Prose of William Blake.
We will continue to post updates on various lists every few months, but readers interested in the progress of the Archive can subscribe to our Blake Update list, which can be found on the Archive's Contents Page. On this page readers will also find that we have opened the top level of the Contributing Institutions Page, which provides contact information and links to institutions participating in the Archive. In the coming months, we plan to include color-coded and linked lists of each institution's entire Blake collection to indicate what is and is not in the Archive and what is forthcoming.
Morris Eaves
Robert Essick
Joseph Viscomi
Retiarius: Commentarii Periodici Latini
Humanists who collect examples of publications that without the Internet certainly or probably would not exist may wish to record Retiarius: Commentarii Periodici Latini, a early journal publishing articles exclusively in Latin, at <http://www.uky.edu/ ArtsSciences/Classics/retiarius/>. Among the items listed in the collection of links to other things (Et alibi) is Lupa (sub aegide VRomae, <http://www.colleges.org/~vroma/>), a limited area search engine, which is to say, Subsidia interretialia quae ad Romanos antiquos pertinent.
Never very far away, now even from the world of Latin studies, is the Perseus Project, whose e-version of the Lewis and Short lexicon is worth trying out (see <http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/newlatin.html>). If you need examples of applications that are difficult or impossible to accomplish in older forms of publication, note the English to Latin word search facility -- but before you try it, if possible either make a list of all Latin words for a given English one, or what may be better, consult one of the old printed English to Latin dictionaries, such as Riddle and Arnold (1854) or Smith (1870). It is illuminating to reflect on the scholarly difference between consulting such a "reverse" lexicon in print, necessarily by headword, and one in electronic form, by all words in every entry. As an aid to the study of literature, especially poetry (as opposed to the writing of compositions, clearly the purpose of the older printed reverse dictionaries), the new tool represents a significant advance. When pursuing the occurrence of an idea or image in poetry by text-analytic means, do we not want for our vocabulary at least to know about all words that are even tangentially related? Thus, for example, we find "coquo" (cook, etc.) through the reversed Lewis and Short for "burn", and so are pushed to consider as related the idea of ripening, making mature, or the notion of disturbance of mind. A rather different semantic field than the one expected may by this means come into focus.
Dr. Willard McCarty, Senior Lecturer, King's College London
voice: +44 (0)171 873 2784 fax: +44 (0)171 873 5801
e-mail: Willard.McCarty@kcl.ac.uk
<http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/wlm/>
History Highway: A Guide to Internet Resources
We are presently at work on the next issue of the History Highway: A Guide to Internet Resources, which will be released in January 2000 at the AHA annual meeting in Chicago. The first edition of the History Highway, which was a History Book of the Month Club Selection, was compiled by a team of four scholars. The goal of the work is to provide a selective guide to those sites on the Internet that are most suitable for teaching, scholarship, and student use. The work is also aimed at directing interested general readers to quality historical information on the Internet. For this edition, we have decided to solicit signed contributions from area experts, and we are still looking for contributors on several areas: Ancient History, Renaissance and Reformation History, African, General European History, German, Italian, Spanish, Russian and Eastern European, Southern European, Scandinavian, Swiss, Latin American and Caribbean, General American, African-American, Asian American, Native American, Colonial American, Revolutionary American, Canadian, Religious History, Historic Preservation and Conservation, Historic Reenactment, Genealogy, State Historical Organizations, Maps and Image Collections, Historical Organizations, Electronic Text Collections, Sites on Teaching History at College and K12 levels, Archives and Special Collections, Technology Sites for History, Holocaust Studies, History of Science, Technology and Medicine.
The deadline for contributions will be February 1999. If you are interested in working on any of these areas, please contact us for additional information.
Dennis A. Trinkle and Scott Merriman
Editors, The History Highway 2000
Internet: Dtrinkle@depauw.edu
APPEL DE TEXTES / CALL FOR PAPERS
Law and Critique
Law and Critique, the prime international law review on critical legal theory, was established ten years ago by founding members of the Department and is now edited within the Department. The editorial committee of Law and Critique is Costas Douzinas (Convenor), Peter Goodrich, Anton Schutz, Lindsay Farmer and Valerie Hoare. Law and Critique invites the submission of articles in the areas of legal theory, legal history, critical legal studies, law and literature, law and psychoanalysis, feminist legal theory, critical race theory, postmodern jurisprudence, legal phenomenology, law and autopoiesis. Past special issues include: 'Critical Legal Education'; 'The Gender of Law'; 'Law and Postmodernism'; 'Law and Literature'; and 'Law and Postcolonialism'.
Contact:
Ms Valerie Hoare
Birkbeck College
University of London
Malet Street
London WC1E 7HX
UK
Tel.: +44 171 6316507
Fax: +44 171 6316506
Internet: v.hoare@law.bbk.ac.uk
Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Theatre Research
The editor invites submissions for a special issue on Congreve's The Way of the World in celebration of the 300th anniversary of the comedy's premiere. The deadline for this issue is September 20, 1999. Essays should follow MLA style. If possible, a copy on 3 1/2" diskette in WordPerfect or Word format should accompany the hard copy of the essay. Send submissions and queries to Timothy J. Viator, Guest Editor, Department of English, Rowan University, Glassboro NJ 08028.
CSECS / SCEDHS 1998-1999 EXECUTIVE/BUREAU
President / Présidente : Professeure Marie Laure Girou Swiderski, Département des lettres françaises, Université d'Ottawa, 175, rue Waller, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 6N5. margirou@aix1.uottawa.ca (1997-2000)
Secretary-Treasurer / Secrétaire-trésorier : Professor Frans De Bruyn, Department of English, University of Ottawa, P.O. Box 450, Station A, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 6N5. fdebruyn@uottawa.ca (1999-2001)
Lumen Managing Editor / Éditeur : Professor Alex Sokalski, Department of Languages and Linguistics, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7N 5A5. sokalski@duke.usask.ca
Bulletin Editors / Rédacteurs :
Professor Raymond Stephanson, Department of English, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7N 5A5. stephanr@duke.usask.ca (1995-99)
Professeur Thierry Belleguic, Département des littératures, Faculté des lettres, Pavillon Charles-De Koninck, Université Laval, Sainte-Foy, Québec, G1K 7P4. thierry.belleguic@lit.ulaval.ca (1999-2001)
Conference President / Président du congrès : Professeur Benoît Melançon, Département d'études françaises, Université de Montréal, C.P. 6128, Succ. Centre-ville, Montréal, Québec, H3C 3J7. benoit.melancon@sympatico.ca (1999)
Conference Vice-President / Vice-président-congrès : Professeur John Baird, Victoria College, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 1K7. john.baird@utoronto.ca (2000)
Discipline Representatives / Représentants disciplinaires
English Language and Literature / Langue et littérature anglaises : Professor Betty Schellenberg, Department of English, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, V5A 1S6. schellen@sfu.ca (1999-2002)
French Language and Literature / Langue et littérature françaises : Professeur Thierry Belleguic, Département des littératures, Faculté des lettres, Pavillon Charles-De Koninck, Université Laval, Sainte-Foy, Québec, G1K 7P4. thierry.belleguic@lit.ulaval.ca (1997-2000)
Other Languages and Literature / Autres langues et littératures : Professor Christa Fell, Department of German, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, K7L 3N6. fellc@post.queensu.ca (1996-99)
History, Politics, and Economics / Histoire, sciences politiques et sciences économiques : Professor Mark Phillips, Department of History, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6T 1Z1. (1999-2002)
Philosophy, Science, Medicine, and Technology / Philosophie, science, médecine et technologie : Professor James Moore, Department of Political Science, Concordia University, 7141 Sherbrooke St. W., Montréal, Québec, H4B 1R6. (1996-99)
Art, Music, and Theatre / Art, musique et théâtre : Professor Ursula Rempel, School of Music, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, R3T 2N2. urempel@cc.umanitoba.ca (1997-2000)
ISECS / SIEDHS : Professeure Marie Laure Girou Swiderski, Département des Lettres françaises, Université d'Ottawa, 175, rue Waller, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 6N5. margirou@aix1.uottawa.ca (1995-99)
Delegates to Other Organisations / Délégués auprès d'autres associations
ASECS : Professor Alex Sokalski, Department of Languages and Linguistics, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7N 5A5. sokalski@duke.usask.ca (1996-99)
CFH / FCÉH : Professeur David Raynor, Department of Philosophy, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 6N5. (1996-99)
APPEL DE MANUSCRITS POUR LE PROCHAIN BULLETIN /
CALL FOR INFORMATION FOR THE NEXT BULLETIN
Si vous avez quelque chose à faire paraître dans le prochain Bulletin de la Société, veuillez faire parvenir vos textes - sur disquette ou par Internet - à Thierry Belleguic ou à Raymond Stephanson, avant le 15 avril 1999.
Should you want to have something published in the Bulletin,
please note that the next deadline will be April 15, 1999. Information
should be sent to the editors either on disk or through e-mail.
DON'T FORGET TO VISIT OUR WEBSITE! /
VENEZ VISITER NOTRE SITE WEB!
Internet: ici
Retour à la liste des bulletins
de SCEDHS / Back to the list of bulletins of CSECS
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