Storytelling in the Millennium:
Finding Meaning through Narrative after Post-Modernism
Department of English, Baylor University
Co-Sponsored by the Baylor Department for Oral History
Waco, Texas, 9-10 February 2001
How is meaning found and transmitted through narrative,
through story-telling, in the wake of the post-modern
project? How has narrative in the past as well as the
present changed and developed with the loss of cultural
metanarratives?
Keynote Speaker: Scott Russell Sanders, Distinguished
Professor of English and Director of the Wells Scholars
Program at Indiana University at Bloomington, author of
eight fiction works, including The Invisible Company,
Fetching the Dead, and Wonders Hidden; nine nonfiction
works include Writing from the Center, Staying Put:
Making a Home in a Restless World, and Hunting for Hope.
He has also written several children’s books, and his
writing appears in Harper's, the New York Times, and Best
American Essays among many other publications. He is
especially concerned in his writing with our relation to
nature, issues of social justice, the character or
community, and the impact of science on our lives.
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Possible paper and/or panel topics:
- Finding a language: Creating Universality through Narrative without a Common Myth
- Moral Formation and Storytelling
- Telling Old Stories in New Ways
- Telling the Stories of our Lives
- Meaning after Post-Modernism in the Stories Poems Tell
- Reclaiming the American Oral Tradition
- Effects on National or Global Culture(s) of the Loss of Metanarratives
- Spiritual Journeys in Narrative
- Local and Regional Histories
- Binding the Generations through Storytelling
- Storytelling and the Changing Canon
- The Changing Text: Intersections of Narrative with
Technology
- The Child’s Voice in Narrative
- The Fantastic: Fairy Tales, Science Fiction, Magical Realism and Narrative
- Popular Culture, Technology, and the Stories we Tell
- Education: Deconstructed Literature and the Post-Modern Student
- Critical Approaches to Narrative after Post-Modernism
- Narrative Form and the Transmission of Meaning
- Narrating Faith in a Post-Modern Culture
- Narrative and the Importance of Place
Mail or email abstracts (50-100 words) of papers suitable
for a 20 minute presentation and/or panel proposals no
later than 2 October 2000.
Send abstracts to the address or e-mail address below.
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