“The Salon and the Press” was the title of this fun, lively, and informative afternoon session at the 29th Annual International Conference on Virginia Woolf, with chair Zachary Hacker of St. Ursula Academy.
The panel included:
- Alive Staveley of Stanford, “Buying and Selling Modernism: The Hogarth Press Order Books”
- Peter Morgan of Stanford, “Flung into Basements”
- Julie Daoud and students of Thomas More College, “Voices in Bloom in the 21st Century: Reimagining the
Salon’ as
Chat-Room’ and Recasting Voices as if Embedded in the Net-Generation.”
Below are Blogging Woolf’s live tweets from the session.
— Blogging Woolf (@woolfwriter) June 8, 2019
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Alice Staveley, presenting “Buying & Selling Modernism: The Hogarth Press Order Books,” at #Woolf2019 @MountStJosephU is heading up transcription of the books, which are full of data, w/ funding from @Stanford foundation as part of @MAPP_Project pic.twitter.com/OdSnY8gGgl
— Blogging Woolf (@woolfwriter) June 8, 2019
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Peter Morgan @Stanford presents “Flung Into Basements,” on data re: Day to Day Series pamphlets, as documented in Hogarth Press Order Books. Most sold about 1K, with sales ranging from 13 to nearly 10K & were intended to mimic undergrad exams. #woolf2019 @MountStJosephU pic.twitter.com/PWilFtqy3H
— Blogging Woolf (@woolfwriter) June 8, 2019
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Julie and Jill from @ThomasMoreNH ask, “If Bloomsbury members were alive today, how would they engage in a 21st century online chat room guided by these principles from the @burningman exhibit? The audience role plays, using provided script. #woolf2019 @MountStJosephU pic.twitter.com/c4J5kXoEmf
— Blogging Woolf (@woolfwriter) June 8, 2019
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