International Conference, organized by Anne
Besnault-Levita and Anne-Florence Gillard Estrada Université de Rouen - laboratoire ERIAC : http://eriac.net/beyond-the-victorian-and-modernist-divide/
Beyond the Victorian
and Modernist Divide
Keynote speakers
Professor Michael Bentley, University of St. Andrews
Professor Melba Cuddy-Keane, University of Toronto
Professor Michael Bentley, University of St. Andrews
Professor Melba Cuddy-Keane, University of Toronto
Ezra Pound’s injunction to “make it new!” or Virginia Woolf’s
“on or about 1910” statement have long been used in order no support a version
of modernism as a strictly aesthetic revolution — or crisis — implying an
essential break with Victorian art, culture and ideology. In the last
decade, however, the crucial transition between the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries has been variously reassessed. In the wake of the new
modernist studies and of the recent revaluations of the Victorian period,
a growing body of scholarship now challenges traditional periodisation by
examining the existence of overlaps and unexplored continuities between
the Victorians, the post-Victorians and the modernists. Once separated by a
critical and cultural break, Victorian and modernist scholars have become
preoccupied with a similar search for cultural and aesthetic complexities that
make it possible to move beyond doxic discourses and fixed dichotomies:
the past and the present, outer life and inner life, materiality and
spirituality, tradition and innovation, ideology and aesthetics.
This international conference would like those scholars to join forces and contribute to this new phase in the Victorian-modern debate from a broad range of perspectives across the disciplines: literature, criticism, the visual arts, history, science and philosophy. The emergence or re-emergence of ideas such as the “modern”, the “new” or “change” at the turn of the century is an indisputable fact that we want to acknowledge and re-contextualize by examining the different meanings and practices they encompass. From there, we wish to explore the birth and perpetration of two critical meta-narratives and their interdependence: the myth of “high modernism” and the myth of “Victorianism”. If there is no clear repudiation of history and heritage on the modernists’ part, if “rupture” was a useful fiction, if the challenge to traditional aesthetics and ideology was already a Victorian preoccupation, then we definitely need to remap modernism and Victorianism simultaneously.
The papers that we call for are meant to contribute to a trans-disciplinary publication whose synopsis could be the following, although it is far from being fixed.
This international conference would like those scholars to join forces and contribute to this new phase in the Victorian-modern debate from a broad range of perspectives across the disciplines: literature, criticism, the visual arts, history, science and philosophy. The emergence or re-emergence of ideas such as the “modern”, the “new” or “change” at the turn of the century is an indisputable fact that we want to acknowledge and re-contextualize by examining the different meanings and practices they encompass. From there, we wish to explore the birth and perpetration of two critical meta-narratives and their interdependence: the myth of “high modernism” and the myth of “Victorianism”. If there is no clear repudiation of history and heritage on the modernists’ part, if “rupture” was a useful fiction, if the challenge to traditional aesthetics and ideology was already a Victorian preoccupation, then we definitely need to remap modernism and Victorianism simultaneously.
The papers that we call for are meant to contribute to a trans-disciplinary publication whose synopsis could be the following, although it is far from being fixed.
- Periods, words, labels: historicizing and contextualizing the idea of the “break”
- Victorian, Edwardian and modernist literature: unexplored lines of filiation
- Art history, aesthetic philosophy and the visual arts across the Victorian/Modernist divide
- Science, philosophy, ideology: landmarks for a new history of ideas
- New approaches to identity, gender and the self: from mid-Victorians to modernist ideologies and practices.
See the selected bibliography as well as the forthcoming information on the conference website: http://eriac.net/beyond-the-victorian-and-modernist-divide/