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‘Tools of the Sacred, Techniques of the Secular:
Awakening, Epiphany, Apocalypse and Doubt in
Contemporary English-Language Verse’
| Location: | Belgium |
| Call for Papers Date: | 2009-08-31 (Archive) |
| Date Submitted: |
2009-08-15 |
| Announcement ID: |
170050 |
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‘Tools of the Sacred, Techniques of the Secular:
Awakening, Epiphany, Apocalypse and Doubt in
Contemporary English-Language Verse’
Université Libre de Bruxelles
First Call for Papers
(Brussels, 4 to 7 May 2010)
This international four-day conference to be held in Europe’s capital city wishes to explore the multiple and changing forms of engagement with the sacred and reverence of the secular in English-language verse of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. In its cross-boundary coverage of contemporary verse in English reworking or denying dimensions of the ‘sacred,’ the conference will not privilege any Anglophone poetic tradition in particular. Instead, it invites papers exploring contemporary poetic voices from all areas of the English-speaking world, from North America and Europe to Asia and Australasia.
Poetry will be given precedence over other genres, but papers devoted to texts breaking down the traditional boundaries between prose and verse, or exploring poetry within the framework of multimedia experimentation (including digital and performance poetry), will also be accepted. More theoretically-oriented papers spanning the field of literature and religious studies will likewise be considered. Though the emphasis of the Conference is on twenty- and twenty-first-century poetry, papers on contemporary works preserving or transforming the spiritual legacy of older poetic voices in English are most welcome, as are comparative literature papers. Contributions from active poets addressing the questions of (non-)religious aesthetics and compositional practices trying to voice the ‘sacred’ or its absence are equally encouraged.
Possible topics and areas of investigation for twenty-minute paper submissions include (but are not limited to) the following:
• Whether accepted or denied, how is the ‘sacred’ understood in contemporary English-language verse? What new forms does ‘epiphany’ or ‘apocalypse’ take? What is the balance between preservation and change in today’s poetic approaches to these concepts?
• How are atheism, agnosticism, and humanistic non-belief generally expressed by contemporary English-language voices? What poetic forms does the absence of the ‘ultimate’ and ‘transcendence’ take?
• How do ‘spiritually-inclined’ poets cope with the postmodern uncertainties attached to language and its questionable power of ‘disclosure’? Is ‘visionary’ poetry still possible in this day and age?
• Have these postmodern uncertainties only generated doubt when it comes to the links between poetry and the ‘sacred,’ or have they also opened up avenues for new spiritual possibilities and their expression?
• To what extent does religious violence enter contemporary poetry?
• In particular, what room does postmodern poetry make for spiritual syncretisms?
• How are premodern religious influences reworked in contemporary verse?
• Can postmodernist verse still be linked to shamanism?
• How have emergent or alternative spiritualities influenced contemporary poetic production in English?
• How have older notions of the ‘spiritual’ managed to resist extinction, resurfaced and mutated in contemporary verse?
• When it comes to the great established faiths, what is the balance between preservation and change in the spiritual verse that pertains to their tradition?
• Can we talk about ‘spiritual’ aesthetics in English-language poetry of the twenty and twenty-first centuries?
This First Call for Papers closes on 31 August 2009. Please kindly e-mail abstracts of approximately 250-300 words, together with a short biography, in RTF format to:
Dr. Franca BELLARSI
fbellars@ulb.ac.be
(Université Libre de Bruxelles, Dept. of Modern Languages and Literatures)
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Dr. Franca Bellarsi
Université Libre de Bruxelles, CP 175
Av. Franklin Roosevelt, 50
B-1050 Brussels (Belgium, Europe)
Phone: +32 2 650 67 47
Fax: +32 650 24 50 Email: fbellars@ulb.ac.be
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