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Posts Tagged ‘Virginia Woolf Society of Turkey’

I am a bit late to the party, but the inaugural issue of the Virginia Woolf Fanzin is here. An online publication of the Virginia Woolf Society of Turkey, it debuted in March with articles from 10 contributing authors.

The 46-page publication includes:

  • research articles and essays,
  • traces of encounters with Virginia Woolf and the impressions they left,
  • a special poetry section,
  • a translation,
  • and event reports and announcements.

About the Virginia Woolf Fanzin

According to the publication’s introduction, it is “a space born out of admiration, curiosity, and a shared desire to keep Woolf’s voice resonating across time and borders.”

Turkish is its first language, so it is natural that the editor and its board connect Woolf to Turkey in a multitude of ways. As they put it:

Here, Woolf meets Istanbul’s streets, Anatolia’s silences, and the layered histories of Turkish women writers and thinkers. Each contribution—be it essay, artwork, translation—echoes Woolf’s spirit while refracting it through our own cultural lens.

Online in two languages

While the majority of articles are written in Turkish, several are written in English. They include:

  • “Angela Inside the Convent and Angela Inside the College. Life Among Women in Mansfield’s ‘Taking the Veil’ and Woolf’s ‘A Woman’s College From Outside’” by Eleonora Tarabella,
  • “Towards A Room of One’s Own Centenary by Valérie Favre and Anne-Laure Rigeade,
  • “Virginia Woolf, My Soulmate” by Nilüfer Kuyaş,
  • and several reports.

Demet Karabulut Dede is editor-in-chief and Nilüfer Kuyaş and Şima İmşir serve on the editorial board. You can read the Virginia Woolf Fanzin online.

The Virginia Woolf Society of Turkey also sponsors a Woolf Seminar Series.

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“Virginia Woolf and Jean Rhys’s Embodied Writing” is the topic for the next Woolf seminar presented by the Virginia Woolf Society of Turkey, featuring Eret Talviste on April 17 at 7 p.m. (Turkey time).

About the talk

Eret’s talk will focus on her new monograph Strange Intimacies – Affect, Embodiment, and Materiality in Virginia Woolf and Jean Rhys (Edinburgh University Press, 2025), in which she explores how Woolf and Rhys understood writing as an embodied practice, starting with diaries, letters, and autobiographical texts, and moving into novels and short stories.

About Eret

Eret is a researcher in English Literature at the University of Tartu. Her research interests include modernist and contemporary fiction, transnationalism, feminism, and posthumanism. Strange Intimacies – Affect, Embodiment and Materiality in Virginia Woolf and Jean Rhys is her first monograph.

How to attend

This is a Zoom event. Register on the Virginia Woolf Society of Turkey website. Then click on the Zoom link on the date and time posted above. Please check your time zone.

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The next Woolf Seminar by the Virginia Woolf Society of Turkey is set for March 6 at 7 p.m. Turkey time, with a lecture from Pamela L. Caughie on “Virginia Woolf in the Age of a New Aurality: Reprising Scholarship on Woolf and Sound 25 Years On.”

The talk will revisit a quarter century of scholarship on sound in Woolf’s works, situating Woolf within the soundscape of modernism and examining the interplay of new technologies, mass culture, and the arts.

Registration and time

Register online at this link to receive the Zoom link. If you do not receive the Zoom link after registering, email virginiawoolfturkiye@gmail.com.

Seven p.m. Turkey time is 11 a.m. EST. Check the lecture time in your zone here.

About the lecturer

Professor Caughie is professor emerita of English and Gender Studies at Loyola University Chicago, and a former president of the Modernist Studies Association. She has authored two monographs and edited or co-edited several volumes, including including Virginia Woolf in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction (2000) and the first comparative scholarly edition of Man into Woman, Lili Elbe’s 1931 life narrative. She serves as Project Director of the Lili Elbe Digital Archive.

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Today, the Virginia Woolf Society of Turkey presents a new talk in its Woolf Seminar series featuring Jeanne Dubino on “Virginia Woolf’s Life and Writing: The Embodiment of Animal Studies.”

The talk will begin at 7 p.m. (Turkey time) or 11 a.m. EST and is available via Zoom.

In it, Dubino will explore how Virginia Woolf’s work engages with animals, not merely as metaphors, but as companions, performers, and wild beings, while also addressing themes of experimentation and activism.

You can register for the talk via this link. Once registered, you will receive an email with the meeting link. Remember to check your spam folder if the email does not appear in your inbox.

Dubino is professor of English, Global Studies, and Animal Studies at Appalachian State University in North Carolina.

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Two Virginia Woolf events will take place this week, one on Thursday, one on Friday, and both on Zoom. In the first, Maria Oliviera discusses the reception of Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own (1929) in Brazil. In the second, Amy Smith considers Woolf’s critical engagement with Platonism in her 1919 novel Night and Day.

A Room of One’s Own in Brazil” seminar

Who: Maria Oliviera, professor, Federal University of Paraiba
What: This first session of the “A Room of One’s Own Around the Globe” seminar will discuss the reception of Woolf’s 1929 polemic in Brazil. Presented in English.
When:  6 p.m. CTE; noon EST on Thursday, November 20. Check your time zone.
Where: On Zoom. Free and open to all.
Get more details: Get the Zoom link in order to attend.

About the project: The A Room of One’s Own : Echos and circulation research project offers to take up Virginia Woolf’s landmark essay A Room of One’s Own (1929) and explore its full potential. One question it attempts to answer is what echo chambers has A Room of One’s Own opened up nearly a century after its publication?

Led by Valérie Favre (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne) and Anne-Laure Rigeade (Université Paris Est Créteil), this project will continue until 2029, the centenary of the publication of A Room of One’s Own, and will include seminars, a conference, and a collective publication.

 

“‘Dreams and Realities’: Woolf’s Revisions to Plato in Night and Day — a talk

Who: Amy Smith, associate professor of English at Lamar University and author of Virginia Wool’s Mythic Method.
What: A talk for the Virginia Woolf Society of Turkey titled “‘Dreams and Realities’: Woolf’s Revisions to Plato in Night and Day. Presented in English.
When: 7 p.m. Turkey time on Friday, November 21.
Where: On Zoom. Free and open to all.
Get more details: Register online for the event in order to attend. The Zoom link will then be provided.

About the talk: The intellectual significance of Night and Day in Woolf’s development as a writer and thinker has long been overlooked. In her talk, Amy considers Woolf’s critical engagement with Platonism in the novel, where it appears both as a genre model and as a reservoir of imagery, to which Woolf makes polyvalent references that disrupt Platonic idealism. Woolf’s active wrestling with Plato suggests that she is processing and separating from early philosophical influences just as she is from her inherited models of love, marriage, and the correct life for a woman, and also from conventional models of writing in her emerging in her modernist stories and aesthetic theory. Equally important as the aesthetic and personal revolutions Woolf makes at this moment is her philosophical revolution, and wrestling with Plato is a necessary step in her development of a unique, mature philosophy of her own.

About the book: Amy’s book, Virginia Woolf’s Mythic Method, is also now available in paperback. Use code SMITH at http://www.ohiostatepress.org for 40% off the hardcover or paperback.

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