本会議は、6月 21日(木)〜24日(日)に京都ガーデンパレスにて下記のとおり開催されます。巽先生とマイケル・コラカチオ先生による基調講演は、二日目と三日目にそれぞれ行われます!
ほかに、二日目のパネル “Poe and Others” にて、大学院 OBの山根亮一先生が “Network Authors of the American South: Edgar Allan Poe and William Gilmore Simms” をご発表され (@Gion 9:00–10:20), パネル “Poe in Japan” にて、大串尚代先生が司会を務められます(@Sakura 10:50–12:10)。また、三日目のパネル “Teaching Poe: A Roundtable Discussion” では、巽先生がポール・ルイス先生と共同司会を務められます(@Gion 1:30–2:50)。
最終日のパネル “Recollecting the Past in Hawthorne” では、大学院 OBの松井一馬先生が “A Picture of the Past: Re/vision of History in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s ‘Old Ticonderoga’”をご発表(@Tachibana 9:00–10:20)。さらに、パネル “Transpacific and Transatlantic Poe: A Roundtable Discussion” では、宇沢美子先生が “‘He was a Poe’: Yone Noguchi and His 1896 Plagiarism Scandal” を、マーク・セルツァー先生が “Poe’s Self-Curved Worlds” をご報告されます(@Gion 10:50–12:10) !
ご関心のある方は、ぜひご来聴ください!
国際ポー&ホーソーン会議
International Poe & Hawthorne Conference
日時: 2018年 6月 21日(木)〜 24日(日)
会場:京都ガーデンパレス
共催:日本ポー学会、Poe Studies Association, 日本ナサニエル・ホーソーン協会、Nathaniel Hawthorne Society
【プログラム】※抜粋です。詳細は HPをご覧ください。
Thursday, June 21st
Registration, Kyoto Garden Palace Hotel, 2nd floor – 4:00-6:00pm (continues Friday at 8:30am)Reception, Kyoto Garden Palace Hotel – 6:00-8:00pm
Friday, June 22nd
Session 1 9:00-10:20
Poe and Others @Gion- Chair: Keiko Noguchi, Tsuda University
- Paul Lewis, Boston College – “From Tamerlane to the ‘Crazyite’ Cabal: Poe’s Complex Relation to Boston”
- Ryoichi Yamane, Tokyo Institute of Technology – “Network Authors of the American South: Edgar Allan Poe and William Gilmore Simms”
- Richard Kopley, Penn State DuBois – “Poe at Saddle Meadows and the Church of the Apostle”
Hawthorne, Influences and Connections @Sakura
- Chair: Mitsuru Sanada, Ryukoku University
- David Greven, University of South Carolina – “Veiled Influence: Shakespeare and Gender in The Blithedale Romance”
- Shinichiro Noriguchi, University of Kitakyushu – “Two Moralists and One Artist: Hawthorne, Melville, and James”
- Magnus Ullén, Karlstad University – “‘Nothing if Not Allegorical’: Daisy Miller, Hawthorne, and the Commodification of American Romance”
Poe, Hawthorne, and Interpretation @Tachibana
- Chair: Taras Sak, Yasuda Women’s University
- Monica Pelaez, St. Cloud State University – “Why Heaven Matters to Poe: A Metaphor for the Value of Poetry in an Age of Science Ascendant”
- Candace Waid, University of California, Santa Barbara – “Poe Paints: Pulsing Light and Metrics Beyond Words”
- Joshua Matthews, Dordt College – “Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Hell: Dante in his 1850s Stories and Novels”
Poe and the Spirit @Kaede
- Chair: Naoyuki Mizuno, Kyoto University
- Christopher P. Semtner, Poe Museum – “Paranormal Poe: Edgar Allan Poe and Spiritualism”
- Barbara Otal, Université Bordeaux Montaigne – “‘In the beginning was God’: Poe’s Happy Cosmogony”
- S. Johnathon O’Donnell, Aoyama Gakuin University – “Desolation into Silence: Deployments of the American Gothic in Spiritual Warfare”
Session 2 10:50-12:10
Hawthorne and Things @Kaede- Chair: Shinichiro Noriguchi, University of Kitakyushu
- Charles Baraw, Southern Connecticut State University – “Hawthorne and Things”
- Shelley Drake Hawks, Middlesex Community College – “Hawthorne’s Challenge to Convention through a Dialogue with Things: House, Art, and Landscape at the Old Manse, 1842-45”
- Chiyo Yoshii, Osaka University – “Humanity as Matter: Hawthorne and Vivacious Materialism”
Poe in Japan @Sakura
- Chair: Hisayo Oogushi, Keio University
- J. Scott Miller, Brigham Young University – “The Nine (and More!) Lives of Poe’s Black Cat in Japanese”
- Sandy Pecastaing, Central China Normal University – “When Red Turns Black: Reflections on Akira Kurosawa’s Script Based on ‘The Masque of the Red Death’”
- Miguel Rivera, Tufts University – “‘If a week goes by without reading a mystery, I suffer withdrawal symptoms’: From Edgar Allan Poe’s Dupin to Soji Shimada’s Mitarai in The Tokyo Zodiac Murders”
Poe and History @Tachibana
- Chair: Michiko Shimokobe, Seikei University
- Sandra Tomc, University of British Columbia – “Edgar Allan Poe and the Economics of Enmity”
- Maki Sadahiro, Meijigakuin University – “The Birth of American Poe and the Transatlantic Triangular Literary Exchanges”
- Emily Gowen, Boston University – “Poe, Literary Conquest, and the Labor of Cultural Production”
Session 3 1:30-2:50
Hawthorne in Foreign Lands @Sakura- Chair: Pradipta Sengupta, M.U.C. Women’s College Burdwan, University of Burdwan, India
- Leonardo Buonomo, University of Trieste – “In a Foreign Land: Estrangement in ‘Rappaccini’s Daughter’”
- Frank Christianson, Brigham Young University – “Hawthorne’s Transatlantic Legacy of ‘Neutrality’ and the Aesthetics of Abatement”
- Gregory Dunne, Miyazaki International College – “Hawthorne and Travel, Beauty, and Ruin”
Blithedale @Kaede
- Chair: Yoko Sano, Sophia University
- Naochika Takao, Chuo University, Tokyo – “The Blithedale Conspiracy Theory: The Significance of the Narrator Who Knew (But Does Not Tell) Too Much”
- Naoko Uchibori, Nihon University – “Transpacific Intertextuality of Utopian Communities: Gender and Sexuality in The Blithedale Romance and Works on Atarashiki-mura (New Village)”
Hawthorne and Nature @Tachibana
- Chair: Alfred Bendixen, Princeton University
- Samuel Coale, Wheaton College (Massachusetts) – “Whose Woods These Are, I Think I Know: Japanese Forest-Bathing and Hawthorne’s Haunted Forests”
- Naoyuki Nozaki, University of Texas, Arlington – “‘Counterfeit Arcadia’: Rethinking Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Visions of Nature in The Blithedale Romance”
- Katherine E. Bishop, Miyazaki International College – “Hawthorne’s Wondrous Ecology”
Session 4 3:00-4:20
Circularity, Community, and Dialectics in Hawthorne @Tachibana- Chair: Misa Ohno, Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology
- Yoko Kurahashi, Tokai Gakuen University – “The Circular Images in ‘Ethan Brand’ Compared with those in Moby-Dick”
- Fumiko Takeno, Nagoya Gakuin University – “‘Ethan Brand’ and Its Community”
- Masahiro Uehara, Senshu University, Tokyo – “Allegory of Dialectic Reading: An Example of Hawthorne’s Art of Fiction”
★PLENARY LECTURE by Takayuki Tatsumi★
5:00-6:00pm
Saturday, June 23rd
Session 1 9:00-10:20
Hawthorne and the Humanities Today @Gion- Chair: Derek Pacheco, Purdue University
- Mitsuyo Kido, Hiroshima University – “Reading The Scarlet Letter in the 21st Century”
- Christopher Lukasik, Purdue University – “Embodiment and Knowledge in ‘The Birthmark’”
- Ryan Schneider, Purdue University – “Hawthorne as a Model for Re-valuing Labor in the Humanities”
Contemporary Political Issues @Sakura
- Chair: Teruyuki Okamoto, Fuji Women’s University
- Paul C. Jones, Ohio University – “‘A story that tells all we need to know about the moment we live in now’: The Political Work of Poe’s ‘The Masque of the Red Death’ in the AIDS Era”
- Stacey Margolis, University of Utah – “Poe in the Age of Populism”
- Jaqueline Pierazzo, University of Porto, Portugal – “Mapping Edgar Allan Poe’s Terror: A Digital Humanist Approach to Poe’s Oeuvre”
Emerson in Translation: A Roundtable Discussion @Tachibana
- Chair: Sarah Wider, Colgate University
- Yoshiko Fujita, Nara Women’s University Atsuko Oda, Mie University
- Anita Patterson, Boston University
- Fan Shengyu, Australian National University
Session 2 10:50-12:10
Teaching Hawthorne: A Roundtable Discussion @Gion- Chair: Sandra Hughes, Western Kentucky University
- Jason Courtmanche, University of Connecticut, Storrs – “High School-College Partnerships and the Teaching of Nathaniel Hawthorne”
- Rosemary Fisk, Samford University – “Teaching Hawthorne in Current Contexts: My Kinsman, Major Molineux and the White Supremacist Mob”
- Masahiko Narita, Senshu University – “Lost or Gained in Translation? Teaching Hawthorne in Japanese Universities”
Remediation, Disintegration, and Prognostication @Kaede
- Chair: David Farnell, Fukuoka University
- Jonathan Elmer, Indiana University – “Poe and the Origin of the ‘Special Effect’”
- Yuji Kato, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies – “Policing in Poe: Disintegration, Dreams, and Detection”
- Lee Rozelle, University of Montevallo – “Prognostic of Death: Poe and the Southern Ecogothic”
Poe and the Visual Arts II @Tachibana
- Chair: Natsuo Chiyoda, Kagoshima University
- John Gruesser, Kean University – “Illustrating Poe’s Detection”
- M. Thomas Inge, Edgar Allan Poe Museum/Randolph-Macon College – “Masters of the Macabre: Edgar Allan Poe, Richard Corben, and Graphic Adaptation”
- Nathan Timpano, University of Miami – “Illustrating Horror: Edgar Allan Poe, Aubrey Beardsley, and the Art of the Macabre”
Session 3 1:30-2:50
Teaching Poe: A Roundtable Discussion @Gion- Co-chairs: Paul Lewis, Boston College, and Takayuki Tatsumi, Keio University
- Sandra Hughes, Western Kentucky University – “‘The Twins’: Teaching Paired Tales by Poe and Rampo in the Undergraduate and Graduate Classroom”
- Yoko Ikesue, Otani University – “Teaching Poe in Japan—Past and Present”
- Satoshi Kanazawa, Kyoto Women’s University – “Literary Treasure Hunting and Beyond: Reading ‘The Gold-Bug’ with Students”
- Cristina Pérez, Universidad Complutense de Madrid – “Teaching Poe and Science”
Fiction of Poe and Hawthorne @Sakura
- Chair: Shoko Tsuji, Matsuyama University
- Nozomi Fujimura, Asia University – “Representations of the Female Body and Narratives of Male Subjectivity: Short Tales of Hawthorne and Poe”
- Simone Turco, University of Genoa, Italy – “‘Subtile Exquisiteness’ and ‘Supreme Madness’: Wines, Carnivals, and Underground Paganism in Hawthorne’s and Poe’s Dark Imagery”
- Brian Wall, University of Nevada, Las Vegas – “‘Mansions of Gloom’: Inheritance and Degeneration in The House of the Seven Gables and ‘The Fall of the House of Usher’”
Word and Image in Poe and Hawthorne @Tachibana
- Chair: Takuya Nishitani, Kobe University
- Zachary Tavlin, University of Washington – “Hawthorne’s Glance: Eclipsing the Camera Obscura”
- Kohei Furuya, Kanagawa University – “The Photo Negatives of the Nation: Italy, War, and Hawthorne’s Writings after 1860”
- Ugo Rubeo, Sapienza University of Rome – “‘Turning for Help to Europe’: Visual Arts in Poe and Hawthorne”
Authority, Performance, and Original Sin @Kaede
- Chair: Takaaki Niwa, Kyoto University
- Rachel B. Griffis, Sterling College – “‘Freer Breath than our Native Air’: Authority and Imitation in Hawthorne’s The Marble Faun”
- John S. Gentile, Kennesaw State University – “Performing Hawthorne: Teaching Hawthorne Through Performance”
- Toshiaki Takahashi, Nihon University – “Hawthorne and the Paradox of the Fortunate Fall: Eden Found in The Marble Faun”
Session 4 3:00-4:20
Poe and the Africanist Presence @Tachibana- Chair: Chitoshi Motoyama, Kyoto University of Foreign Studies
- Taras Sak, Yasuda Women’s University – “Notes from Underground: Poe’s Subterranean Presence in The Underground Railroad”
- Hiroko Shoji, Seikei University – “The Specter of Haiti: Figuring Contagious Blood in Edgar Allan Poe’s ‘The Masque of the Red Death’”
- Kirin Wachter-Grene, New York University – “Subverting an Archetype: Edgar Allan Poe and African American Detective Fiction”
Hawthorne, Race, and Politics @Kaede
- Chair: Kayoko Nakanishi, Kyoto Sangyo University
- Jason Courtmanche, University of Connecticut, Storrs – “James Baldwin Revises Hester Prynne: Race and the Influence of The Scarlet Letter upon Go Tell it on the Mountain”
- Bruce Simon, The State University of New York at Fredonia – “Toward Resolving the Race and Hawthorne Problem: Racialist Aesthetics and Racializing Histories from ‘Old News’ to ‘Mainstreet’ to ‘Chiefly About War-Matters’”
★KEYNOTE ADDRESS by Michael J. Colacurcio★
5:00-6:00pm
Sunday, June 24th
Session 1 9:00-10:20
Poe’s Influence @Gion- Chair: Mikayo Sakuma, Gakushuin Women’s College
- Elina Absalyamova, Université Paris 13 – “Heading to the Extreme Points of Literature: Edgar Allan Poe’s Motives in the Short Prose by ‘the Marxist Tsvetkov’”
- Clark Davis, University of Denver – “Guy Davenport’s ‘1830’: Poe and the Art of Assemblage”
- David H. Evans, Dalhousie University – “Weirdly Similar: Edgar Allan Poe and Haruki Murakami”
Recollecting the Past in Hawthorne @Tachibana
- Chair: Atsuko Oda, Mie University
- Kazuma Matsui, Keio University – “A Picture of the Past: Re/vision of History in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s ‘Old Ticonderoga’”
- Linda Liu, Stanford University – “Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter and Progress/Regress in Early American Space”
- Yu Uchida, Chuo University – “Recollecting Past and Re-Creating Self Anew: Hawthorne’s Insight into the Act of Recollection in The Blithedale Romance”
Session 2 10:50-12:10
Transpacific and Transatlantic Poe: A Roundtable Discussion @Gion- Chair: Shoko Itoh, Hiroshima University
- Keiko Shimojo, Kyushu University – “Manuscripts from the Other Side of the World: Poe, Yumeno, and Message-in-a-bottle Narratives”
- Yoshiko Uzawa, Keio University – “‘He was a Poe’: Yone Noguchi and His 1896 Plagiarism Scandal”
- Mark Seltzer, University of California, Los Angeles – “Poe’s Self-Curved Worlds”
- Shoko Itoh, Hiroshima University – “Sakutaro’s ‘Blue Cat’: Creolization of Transpacific Poe”
Science and Pseudoscience in Poe’s Work @Sakura
- Chair: John Gruesser, Kean University
- Shoichiro Fukushima, Tokyo Denki University – “The (Quasi-) Double and (Pseudo-) Science— Uncertainty, Morality, and Materiality in Poe’s Mesmeric Stories”
- Cristina Pérez, Universidad Complutense de Madrid – “Poe’s Elective Affinities”
- Carole Shaffer-Koros, Kean University – “Red Lions and Black Dogs: Alchemy in The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym”
【関連リンク】
- 国際ポー&ホーソーン会議特別ウェブサイト
- 日本ポー学会
- 日本ナサニエル・ホーソーン協会
- Poe Studies Association
- Nathaniel Hawthorne Society
- 国際ポー&ホーソーン会議(2018/06/21-24)の研究発表応募締切が一ヶ月を切りました(2017/08/01 締切)(CPA: 2017/07/05)
- 国際ポー&ホーソーン会議(2018/06/21-24)のCFPが告知されています!(CPA: 2017/02/28)
- 大学院学位論文リスト