conference programme

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The Keats Foundation
(Registered Charity: 1147589)
John Keats and his Circle
2-4 May 2014 at Keats House,
Hampstead
To register for the Conference, and pay the conference fee, please go to the Keats Foundation website,
http://keatsfoundation.com/
Click on 'News' and visit 'John Keats and his Circle Conference 2-4 May 2014 Conference Fees' and
follow the Paypal instructions.
Friday 2 May 2014.
4. 30 pm REGISTRATION Keats House, The Chester Room
5. 30 pm The Nightingale Room.
WELCOME
Nicholas Roe, Richard Marggraf Turley, Sarah Wootton (Keats
Foundation and Conference Organisers)
Vicky Carroll (Principal Curator, Keats House, Hampstead)
Giuseppe Albano (Keats-Shelley Memorial Association and Curator,
Keats-Shelley House, Rome)
Stuart Curran (President, The Keats-Shelley Association of America)
PANEL 1: Visual Keats
6 to 7. 30 pm
Grant F. Scott (Muhlenbreg College) scott@muhlenberg.edu
Painting Words: Severn’s Visual Dialogue with Keats in ‘The
Fountain’ (1828)
Sue Brown (Independent Scholar) sueb.arlsq@btopenworld.com
Touch, Smell, Hearing and Seeing: what do they add to a reading of
the printed texts in writing the biography of nineteenth century
figures
Matthew Scott (University of Reading) t.m.l.scott@reading.ac.uk
Henry James and B. R. Haydon’s Final Banishment
Coffee / Tea
8. 00 pm: Lecture 1. Richard Marggraf Turley (Aberystwyth
University) rcm@aber.ac.uk
Keats in Three Crowds
Saturday 3 May 2014. The Nightingale Room.
PANEL 2:
9. 00 am to 10. 30 am
Stacey McDowell (Bristol University) S.McDowell@bristol.ac.uk
Saying too much and not saying enough in Lamia
Jonathan Mulrooney (College of the Holy Cross)
jmulroon@holycross.edu
Keats, Interrupted
Chris Murray (Durham University) chris.murray@durham.ac.uk
Orientalist Keats: Visions of Asia in Lamia
Coffee / Tea
PANEL 3: Keatsian Translations
11 am to 12 noon
Chiara Moriconi (Università La Sapienza, Roma)
mmoriconi.chiara@gmail.com
Isabella; or, The Pot of Basil: Keats, Boccaccio and the ‘Gentleness
of Old Romance’
Emily Rohrbach (Northwestern University)
e-rohrbach@northwestern.edu
Between Schiller and Godwin: Keats Reading Wieland
12.00 Keats Walk
2. 00 pm: Lecture 2: John Barnard (Leeds University)
john_barnard@hotmail.com
Keats’s Forebodings: Margate, Spring 1817
PANEL 4: Medical Keats
3. 00 to 4. 30
Arden Hegele (Columbia University) aah2155@columbia.edu
Wordsworth and the Etiology of Keatsʼs ‘Naked Brain’
Hrileena Ghosh (University of St Andrews) hg27@st-andrews.ac.uk
John Keats’s Guy’s Hospital Poems
Carly Stevenson (Sheffield Universit) cstevenson2@sheffield.ac.uk
Keats and ‘Dying Into Life’
Coffee / Tea
PANEL 5: Keatsian Legacies
5. 00 pm to 6. 15 pm
Stefanie John (University of Münster, Germany)
stefanie.john@uni-muenster.de
Dreaming the ‘Wound-Dresser’s Dream’: Keats and PostRomanticism in Contemporary British Poetry
Meiko O’Halloran (Newcastle University) meiko.ohalloran@ncl.ac.uk
Keats, the Figure of the Poet, and Literary Pilgrimage in Hyperion
and The Fall of Hyperion
Eric Eisner (George Mason University) eeisner@gmu.edu
‘Give me your living hand’: Keats and the Worlds of Contemporary
American Poetry
PANEL 6: Keats Memorialized
6. 15 pm to 7 .30 pm
Ann Wierda Rowland (University of Kansas)
awrowland66@gmail.com
Keats: Made and Memorialized in America
Huey-fen Fay Yao (National Sun Yat-sen University, Taiwan)
fayandflower@yahoo.com.tw
The Poet as Hero: Keats in His Works
Alistair Heys alistair_heys@hotmail.com
The Honey of Earth and the Holocaust: Bloom’s Decadent Reading
of Keats
7. 45 pm Wine reception
Sunday 4 May 2014. The Nightingale Room
PANEL 7: Keatsian Performances
9. 00 am to 10. 30 am
Peter Phillips (Independent Scholar) pierris@btinternet.com
Johnny Keats and Johnny Rotten
Kerry McAuliffe (King’s College London) kerry@mcauliffe.us
Canvas, Window, Screen: Looking into Keats’ Poetry as Visual
Performance
Renee Harris (University of Kansas) harris.trenee@ku.edu
‘Young Poets’ and the Suburban Social Intellect: Lamia in
Conversation with Alastor
Coffee / Tea
PANEL 8: Keats and Shelley
11. 00 am to 12. 15 pm
Madeleine Callaghan (Sheffield University)
m.callaghan@sheffield.ac.uk
‘Curb your magnanimity’: The 1820 letters between Keats and
Shelley
Anthony Howe (Birmingham City University) Tony.Howe@bcu.ac.uk
Keats and the Place of Criticism
Catherine Boyle (london South Bank University) boylec@lsbu.ac.uk
The types of Didot: John Keats and Percy Bysshe Shelley’s
engagement with Enlightenment ideas of the self and historical
progress
1. 30 pm: Lecture 3: Sarah Wootton (Durham University)
s.e.wootton@durham.ac.uk
Keats among Artists and Illustrators
PANEL 9: Keats in Spaces
2.45 pm to 3.45 pm
Mark Sandy (Durham University) m.r.sandy@durham.ac.uk
‘Spaces of Oblivion’: Negative Capable Identity and
Representation in Keats’s Poetry
Figural
Hannah Britton (University of St Andrews) hrb2@st-andrews.ac.uk
‘'The space of life between': Keats's Liminal Poetics
Coffee / Tea
PANEL 10: Keats’s Vocabularies
4. 15 pm to 5. 45 pm
Mark Wiltshire (Oxford University) mark.wiltshire@worc.ox.ac.uk
Conjugality and John Keats
Andrew Hodgson (Durham University) a.j.hodgson@durham.ac.uk
Keats’s Odd Words
Beth
Lau
(California
beth.lau@csulb.edu
Keats’s Library
CLOSING REMARKS
5. 45 pm to 6. 00 pm
State
University,
Long
Beach)
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