[Kaupunkitutkimus] City Peripheries / Peripheral Cities Conference, Helsinki 29-30.8 - registration extended
ameel at mappi.helsinki.fi
ameel at mappi.helsinki.fi
Fri Aug 16 12:02:46 EEST 2013
It is still possible to register for the City Peripheries / Peripheral
Cities Conference.
(University of Helsinki Main Building, 29-30.8.2013)
Registration extended until Thursday 22 August 2013.
Registration: http://blogs.helsinki.fi/hlc-n/registration/
Conference website: http://blogs.helsinki.fi/hlc-n/conference/
The conference “City Peripheries / Peripheral Cities”, the first
conference organized by the international Helsinki Literature and the
City Network, presents new approaches to the study of literary cities,
city peripheries and peripheral cities.
The keynote speakers are Professor Tone Selboe, University of Oslo and
Professor Jeremy Tambling, University of Manchester. Professor Selboe
has written extensively on city literature and urban theory. Her
latest articles in English include “Home and City in Dickens’s Great
Expectations and Flaubert’s L’éducation sentimentale”, and “Virginia
Woolf and the Ambiguities of Domestic Space”. Professor Tambling is
the author of numerous books on comparativist literary themes with an
urban focus, including Lost in the American City: Dickens, James and
Kafka (2001), Going Astray: Dickens and London (2009) and, with Louis
Lo, Walking Macao: Reading the Baroque (also 2009).
The Conference fee is 60 € (40 € for students).
During the conference, a round table discussion will be held to
discuss the development of the network and the possibilities for
further cooperation between international scholars in the field of
urban literary studies. A peer-reviewed publication on the basis of
selected conference papers is planned.
On behalf of the organizing committee,
Lieven Ameel
HLCN coordinator
The Finnish Doctoral Programme for Literary Studies
Department of Finnish, Finno-Ugrian and Scandinavian Studies
P. O. Box 3, 00014 University of Helsinki
---
The conference “City Peripheries / Peripheral Cities”, the first
conference organized by the international Helsinki Literature and the
City Network, presents new approaches to the study of literary cities,
city peripheries and peripheral cities.
The keynote speakers are Professor Tone Selboe, University of Oslo and
Professor Jeremy Tambling, University of Manchester. Professor Selboe
has written extensively on city literature and urban theory. Her
latest articles in English include “Home and City in Dickens’s Great
Expectations and Flaubert’s L’éducation sentimentale”, and “Virginia
Woolf and the Ambiguities of Domestic Space”. Professor Tambling is
the author of numerous books on comparativist literary themes
including, with an urban focus, Lost in the American City: Dickens,
James and Kafka (2001), Going Astray: Dickens and London (2009) and,
with Louis Lo, Walking Macao: Reading the Baroque (also 2009).
The city has always occupied a special position amongst literary
spaces. From the very earliest surviving literary texts, city images
appear in all their contradictory complexity: as nodes of creative and
destructive energy; as beacons of utopian possibility and of moral
warning. As Burton Pike has pointed out, ‘[w]e unthinkingly consider
this phenomenon modern, but it goes back to early epic and mythic
thought. We cannot imagine Gilgamesh, the Bible, the Iliad, or the
Aeneid, without their cities, which contain so much of their energy
and radiate so much of their meaning’. Cities in literature appear as
organisms: they are described as rising and falling, as growing,
blooming, prospering, and decaying. Recent centuries have seen the
kind of rhetoric used concerning cities and their literature modulate
from the centripetal perspectives of the nineteenth-century urban
novel to the increasingly centrifugal perspectives found in modernist
and postmodernist literary visions.
Cities tend to be defined by a sense of centrality and density,
contrasted to a (suburban, rural, colonial) hinterland or periphery.
As urban sprawl and the implosion of post-industrial cities have
shown, a sense of peripheral urbanity may, however, turn out to be
essential to many contemporary city centres. Simultaneously, some of
the most interesting urban phenomena are being acted out in what was
formerly considered the periphery: in Europe, redeveloping harbour
areas; in China and in developing countries megacities arising in
regions that until recently were barely urbanised. In another sense,
an interest in city peripheries can be seen as central even to many of
the most canonical city novels and poems, from the evocations of the
prostitute and urban scavenger in Baudelaire and Dickens, to the
sudden and often uncanny appearance of such peripheral figures as the
immigrant, the suburban outcast, the isolated housewife, or the
tourist passing through, in a plethora of city novels.
The difference between centre and periphery is often not only a
question of spatiality, but also of temporality: the differences in
experiences of urban time are as momentous when suburban cyclicality
is compared with the time experiences of the bustling city centre, as
when the expanding time of a subjectively experienced moment of
epiphany is set against the temporal consciousness of the urban crowd.
This experiential range finds appropriate expression in urban and
suburban narratives, which reflect, exaggerate, and sometimes mix or
juxtapose, specific types of spatio-temporal experience.
What kinds of new theoretical frameworks can be brought to bear on
peripheral cities and city peripheries? The most helpful will perhaps
be those which are able to explain both cities that seem peripheral
from the perspective of the capitals of modernity and post-modernity,
and which also include an awareness of the multiple senses of
geographical, social, gendered and racial city peripheries to be found
in literature.
During the conference, a round table discussion will be held to
discuss the development of the network and the possibilities for
further cooperation between international scholars in the field of
urban literary studies. A peer-reviewed publication on the basis of
selected conference papers is planned.
For more information contact:
Lieven Ameel, University of Helsinki (lieven.ameel at helsinki.fi)
Jason Finch, Åbo Akademi University (jfinch at abo.fi)
Markku Salmela, University of Tampere (markku.salmela at uta.fi)
HLCN website:
http://blogs.helsinki.fi/hlc-n
http://blogs.helsinki.fi/hlc-n/conference/
-----
Lieven Ameel
MA, junior researcher
The Finnish Doctoral Programme for Literary Studies
Department of Finnish, Finno-Ugrian and Scandinavian Studies
P. O. Box 3, 00014 University of Helsinki
lieven.ameel at helsinki.fi
http://blogs.helsinki.fi/hlc-n/
https://tuhat.halvi.helsinki.fi/portal/en/persons/lieven-ameel%286c2e6af6-f20b-4f4d-bb91-58ec2abf8953%29.html
-----
Lieven Ameel
MA, junior researcher
The Finnish Doctoral Programme for Literary Studies
Department of Finnish, Finno-Ugrian and Scandinavian Studies
P. O. Box 3, 00014 University of Helsinki
lieven.ameel at helsinki.fi
http://blogs.helsinki.fi/hlc-n/
https://tuhat.halvi.helsinki.fi/portal/en/persons/lieven-ameel%286c2e6af6-f20b-4f4d-bb91-58ec2abf8953%29.html
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