Sunday, December 29, 2019

Slavic Panels at MLA 2020


Below is information about the panel sessions at the upcoming MLA Convention in Seattle, Washington (9-12 January, 2020) sponsored by the MLA Executive Committees of the Russian and Eurasian Forum and the Slavic and East European Forum; plus a couple of additional panels of interest to our membership.  We hope to see you there!

104 - Colonial Pacific Northwest
Thursday, 9 January 2020
3:30 PM - 4:45 PM
WSCC - 213
Presider: Angelina Del Balzo
Bilkent U

Presentations:

‘Satisfied with Her Condition’: Russian Women’s Captivity Narratives in the Pacific Northwest
Jeffrey Glover, Loyola U, Chicago
‘We Showed Them the Burning Fuses’: Shelekhov’s Bomb and Performances of Cultural Contact in the Northern Pacific
Simon Huff, Indiana U of Pennsylvania
‘Split-Lipped Ladies’: Misreading Facial Texts of Haida Women in George Vancouver’s and Ella Rhoads Higginson’s Colonizing Pacific Northwest Narratives
Laura Laffrado, Western Washington U
The Photographic Imagination: Contextualizing Ella Higginson’s Portrayal of the Pacific Northwest
Karoline Schaufler, Western Washington U

157 - Being Human in Dostoevsky
Thursday, 9 January 2020
7:00 PM - 8:15 PM
WSCC - 213
Presentations
Sublime Anxiety: The Petersburg Text and Dostoevsky’s Gothic City
Katherine Bowers, U of British Columbia, Vancouver
Dostoevsky and Early Russian (Anti)Feminist Literary Journalism
Katya Jordan, Brigham Young U, UT
Dostoevsky’s The Idiot as a Critique of the Limits of Personhood
Brian Armstrong, Augusta U
Session Information
Allied Organization: International Dostoevsky Society
Program: Allied Organizations
Subject: Slavic and East European Literatures


241 - Central Asian Literature: Subjects and Worlds
Friday, 10 January 2020
10:15 AM - 11:30 AM
WSCC – 212
Presider: Naomi Caffee, Reed C
Presentations
The Radical of Representation: Persianate Epideictic Verse, Stalinist Mass Politics, Samuel G Hodgkin, U of Chicago
Deconstructing Soviet Literary Construction: The Making of Uzbek Socialist Realism’s First Classic, Hamza Hakimzoda Niyoziy’s The Rich Man and the Servant (1918–39), Christopher Fort, American U of Central Asia
Minor Literatures and Intra-Soviet Translations: The Case of Nisso, Emily Laskin, U of California, Berkeley
An Inheritance of Paper: The Art of Anuar Alimzhanov, Christopher Baker, American U of Central Asia


284 - Bad Art
Friday, 10 January 2020
12:00 PM - 1:15 PM
WSCC - Skagit 4
Description: Panelists deal with the borders of aesthetic judgment—the critical approach to and aesthetic standing of texts that are unsuccessful, obnoxious, unintended, and so on. Case studies include Stalinist prose, the Portsmouth Sinfonia (an orchestra whose members had no prior training with their instruments), terrorist literature, the discourse of judgment and intention around visual art, and nonaesthetic documents incorporated into aesthetic texts.
Presider: Jacob Emery, Indiana U, Bloomington
Speakers:
Christopher Chiasson, U of Pittsburgh
Karen Sullivan, U of Queensland
Benjamin Massey Sutcliffe, Miami U, Oxford
Chris Reeves, U of Illinois, Chicago
Irina Meier, U of New Mexico, Albuquerque
Respondent: Julia Vaingurt, U of Illinois, Chicago


423 - Deoccidentalizing Postcolonial Studies
Saturday, 11 January 2020
8:30 AM - 9:45 AM
WSCC – 618
Presider: Jonathan Stone, Franklin and Marshall C
Presentations:
Japan’s Triangulated Imperialism, Robert Tierney, U of Illinois, Urbana
Russia’s Empires and What They Bring to Postcolonial Studies, Edyta M. Bojanowska, Yale U
Reconsidering the Ottoman Decline: Melancholy and Mystification of Imperial Sovereignty
Arif Camoglu, Northwestern U


510 - “On Theme” / “V Teme”: Sex and Text on the Soviet Periphery
Saturday, 11 January 2020
12:00 PM - 1:15 PM
WSCC – 213
Presider: Leah Feldman, U of Chicago
Respondent: Vitaly Chernetsky, U of Kansas
Presentations:
Uncovering the Queer: An Exploration of Gender and Sexual Relations in the Early-Twentieth-Century Russian Novel, Devin McFadden, U of Kansas
Queer Approaches to Periodical Studies: Mitin zhurnal between the Soviet Underground and Transnational Queer Literature, Philip Gleissner, Ohio State U, Columbus
Everyday Life and the (Post-)Soviet Gay Experience in Klāvs Smilgzieds’s Erotic Stories, Karlis Verdins, Washington U in St. Louis

691 - Teaching Texts in Translation: Theoretical and Pedagogical Approaches
Sunday, 12 January 2020
10:15 AM - 11:30 AM
WSCC - 211
**For related material, write to grecog@pdx.edu**
Presider: Gina L. Greco
Portland State U

Presentations

Rethinking Translation; or, The Problem of Foreign Words
Brian James Baer, Kent State U, Kent
Teaching the Translator: Constance Garnett and Milena Jesenská
Michelle Woods, State U of New York, New Paltz
Teaching Literary Works in the Context of General Education and Honors Courses
Cassio de Oliveira, Portland State U
Translation Theory in the Early French Literature Classroom
Gina L. Greco, Portland State U


733 - Representing the Camps: The Problem of Genre
Sunday, 12 January 2020
12:00 PM - 1:15 PM
WSCC – 616
Presider: Naomi Caffee, Reed C
Presentations:
The Present Demands of the Past: Genre and Exceptional Experience in Camp Literature, Benjamin Paloff, U of Michigan, Ann Arbor
The Home and the Camp: Curating Holocaust Memory in the Balkan Novel, Drago Momcilovic, U of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Genre, Trauma, and the Ethics of Silence in Japanese American Internment Literature, Heather Hathaway, Marquette U

Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Calls for Papers: MLA 2020

The 2020 MLA Convention will be held in Seattle, 9–12 January 2020.

Below is a list of CFPs for the panels currently being constituted in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian studies.  Please note the specific submission requirements, deadline, and contact person(s) for each panel.

'On Theme'/'V teme': Sex and Text on the (Post-)Soviet Periphery
This panel explores textual representation of queer sexualities in Russian and East European contexts, from the early twentieth century to the present. Abstract (200-300 words) and CV.
Deadline for submissions: Friday, 15 March 2019
Vitaly Chernetsky, U of Kansas (vchernetsky@ku.edu ); Leah Feldman, U of Chicago (feldman.leah@gmail.com )

De-Occidentalizing Postcolonial Studies
How can cultures of modern non-Western empires (such as Russian, Ottoman, or Japanese) revise or enrich traditional postcolonial models?  200-word abstract and 3-page CV by March 15; Edyta Bojanowska (edyta.bojanowska@yale.edu)
Deadline for submissions: Friday, 15 March 2019
Edyta M. Bojanowska, Yale U (edyta.bojanowska@yale.edu )

Eurasian Indigeneity
This panel explores the literatures, cultures, and experiences of indigenous peoples of Eurasia in local, global, and comparative contexts. 300-word abstracts and 2-page CV invited by 15 March 2019; Ann Komaromi (a.komaromi@utoronto.ca)
Deadline for submissions: Friday, 15 March 2019
Ann L. Komaromi, U of Toronto (a.komaromi@utoronto.ca )

Eurovision!
Subversive camp or commercial kitsch? Nationalist propaganda or multicultural manifesto? Postwar relic or the future of entertainment? Music or theater? Neither? Both? What’s YOUR Eurovision? 200-word abstract and CV by March 15; Benjamin Paloff (paloff@umich.edu)
Deadline for submissions: Friday, 15 March 2019
Benjamin Paloff, U of Michigan, Ann Arbor (paloff@umich.edu )

Central Asian Literature: Subjects and Worlds
A panel on Central Asian literature and its explorations of subjectivity, identity, nation-building, ideology, and postcolonial worlding.
Deadline for submissions: Friday, 8 March 2019
Naomi Caffee, Reed College (caffee@reed.edu )

Bad Art
This panel invites critical and theoretical work on the borders of aesthetic judgment—the critical approach to and aesthetic standing of texts that are unsuccessful, obnoxious, unintended, et cetera.
Deadline for submissions: Friday, 15 March 2019
Jacob Emery, Indiana U (jacemery@indiana.edu )

Representing the Camps: the Problem of Genre
A panel on fictionalization of camp experiences, the ethical implications of genre, the relationship of postwar documentary prose to the novel (realist, soc-realist, modernist). 200-word abstract and CV.
Deadline for submissions: Friday, 15 March 2019
Emily Van Buskirk, Rutgers U, New Brunswick (evanbusk@rci.rutgers.edu )

Rise of the Russian Right
This panel explores the politics and aesthetics of the literary imaginaries of the New Right in Russia and across the former Soviet Union more broadly. 200-word abstract and CV.
Deadline for submissions: Friday, 15 March 2019
Leah Feldman (feldman.leah@gmail.com)

and also of note:

Colonial Pacific Northwest
Scholars interested British/American, Russian, Spanish, and especially indigenous literatures are invited to submit 300-word abstracts that consider the Pacific Northwest with studies of European colonialism during the 18th and early 19th centuries.
Deadline for submissions: Friday, 15 March 2019
Angelina Del Balzo, U of California, Los Angeles (adelbalzo@ucla.edu )