Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for September 29th, 2024

Note: The deadline for proposals has been extended to Dec. 13, 2024.

The call for papers for the 34th Annual International Virginia Woolf Conference 2025: ‘Woolf and Dissidence’, to be held at King’s College, London: July 4, 2025, and the University of Sussex: July 5-8, 2025 is out.

July 4 pre-conference events at King’s College include a visit to the King’s Archives and a panel discussion on ‘Virginia Woolf: Creative Engagements’ with contemporary writers and artists speaking about their multi-media engagements with Woolf’s writing. The conference itself runs July 5-8 and will be held at the University of Sussex.
Co-organisers are Helen Tyson (Sussex), Clara Jones (King’s) and Anna Snaith (King’s).
We are delighted to bring the Annual Virginia Woolf Conference back to the UK and to two sites – King’s College London and the University of Sussex – with such strong Woolfian connections. – Helen, Clara and Anna

Overview

Virginia Woolf practised a politics of dissent. From her pacifism, deeply held through two World Wars, to her feminism, Woolf continually wrote back to power. She urged transgression and trespass and ‘thinking against the current’, as she wrote in ‘Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid‘).

Dissent takes many forms in her oeuvre from the overt politics of her major essays to her novelistic defamiliarizing of patriarchal, capitalist, imperialist society. Narratologically, too, her writing swerves and undercuts: its experimentation a form of dissident aesthetics.

The organisers of the 34th Annual Virginia Woolf Conference invite paper, panel, workshop and exhibitions proposals that engage with the theme of ‘Woolf and Dissidence’. They seek to foster conversations about the nature and contexts of Woolf’s

Monk’s House sitting room

dissidence or that of her predecessors, contemporaries and inheritors. What are the limitations of her politics? In what ways did she conform?

In the centenary year of the publication of Mrs Dalloway it is fitting that the 34th Annual Virginia Woolf Conference returns to the UK and to two locations with strong Woolfian connections: King’s College London, where Woolf studied as a teenager, and to Sussex, home to Monk’s House and Charleston.

The conference theme also honours the history of the Centre for the Study of Sexual Dissidence, founded by Alan Sinfield and Jonathan Dollimore, at the University of Sussex. The Centre’s pioneering work in sexuality and queer studies provides a fitting context for the Woolf conference.

Possible topics

Possible topics could include exploration of Woolf, her contemporaries and the following:

  • political, sexual, gender dissidence: then and now
  • outsiderness and exile
  • the politics of refusal
  • pacifism
  • dissident ecologies and the more-than-human world
  • the rhetoric of dissent
  • organisational, institutional or networks of dissent
  • aesthetic or artistic dissent
  • religious dissent
  • radical, activist or mainstream publishing
  • revolution and activism (in relation to race, gender, sexuality, ecology)
  • convention, orthodoxy or conformity (political, social, literary, aesthetic)
  • dissident readings of Woolf

This list is only a starting point, and organizers encourage all ideas and approaches including transdisciplinary, transhistorical and collaborative work.

Who can submit and possible formats

Organizers welcome submissions from academics, readers, students of Woolf and for:

  • individual papers (1500-characters abstract)
  • panels or roundtables (3000-characters abstract)
  • interactive workshops (3000-characters abstract)
  • exhibits or posters (including digital and material) (3000-characters abstract)
  • a non-traditional (dissident?) form of presentation (3000-characters abstract)

How to apply

Please apply via the submission form on the conference website at:.
https://woolf2025uk/cfp/ Deadline: 29 November 2024.

Questions?

Please direct queries to: virginiawoolf2025@gmail.com

Stairway in the Virginia Woolf Building at King’s College, London. In 2017, a Virginia Woolf exhibit was at the top of the stairs, complete with a life-sized wax statue of Woolf. Read more.

Read Full Post »