Eden Building

Edith Wharton and The Custom of the Country

Overview

Edith Wharton and The Custom of the Country:  Centennial Reappraisals

Edith WhartonSymposium:  Thursday 22rd and Friday 23rd August 2013, Liverpool Hope University, UK

Symposium Directors: William Blazek (Liverpool Hope University) and Laura Rattray (University of Glasgow)

This symposium marks the 100th anniversary of the publication of Wharton’s much-read and much-analysed novel The Custom of the Country. Described as the writer’s "greatest book" by Hermione Lee in her 2007 biography, and listed by Wharton herself at the end of a long and prolific career as one of her own favourite works, The Custom of the Country arguably remains the author's most complex and controversial novel.

To mark the centenary, many of the panels and keynotes will be devoted to topics pertaining specifically to this landmark text, while others will address the literary, cultural and historical contexts of Wharton’s writing.

Keynote speakers for this event will be the esteemed Wharton scholars Dr Pamela Knights (Durham University) and Professor Gary Totten (North Dakota State University).  Dr Knights, who has published extensively on Wharton, is perhaps best known as the author of The Cambridge Introduction to Edith Wharton, while Professor Totten is the immediate past president of the Wharton Society and editor of Memorial Boxes and Guarded Interiors: Edith Wharton and Material Culture.

Co-sponsored by the Edith Wharton Society and Liverpool Hope University, the symposium will be held on the Hope Park campus of Liverpool Hope University, located within five miles of the Liverpool city centre.  En suite campus accommodation will be available to delegates for the duration of the symposium.  Day rates are also available.

For those wishing to stay on and explore Liverpool after the symposium, an additional night’s accommodation will be available, and we will be arranging a morning tour of the city and/or – by special request for Beatles fans – of influential sites for the group, followed by lunch together before departing.

Registration will open in June. Further information and updates will be posted on the symposium website:www.hope.ac.uk/custom  We hope you’ll join us for this friendly and timely gathering of Wharton and early-twentieth-century scholars in August. You can find out more details about the symposium by emailing custom@hope.ac.uk

Sponsors:  Liverpool Hope University and the Edith Wharton Society

 

Call for Papers

Edith Wharton The Custom of the CountryCall for Papers: extended deadline 27th May 2013

We warmly invite papers on the life and work of Edith Wharton for an international symposium, co-sponsored by the Wharton Society, to be held in Liverpool in August 2013. 

The symposium marks the 100th anniversary of the publication of Wharton’s much-read and much-analyzed novel The Custom of the Country. Described as the writer’s "greatest book" by Hermione Lee in her 2007 biography, and listed by Wharton herself at the end of a long and prolific career as one of her own favourite works, The Custom of the Country arguably remains the author's most complex and controversial novel. To mark the centenary, many of the panels and keynotes will be devoted to topics pertaining specifically to this landmark text.

However, we also warmly welcome papers on any aspect of Wharton’s life and work, and the work of her contemporaries, both male and female, canonical and non-canonical, European and American. Papers might offer readings of any of Wharton's texts, in any genre; Wharton's work in relation to any of its nineteenth- and twentieth-century contexts; Wharton in a transatlantic literary context; Wharton and her contemporaries; narrative strategies; the writer’s dialogue with modernism and modernist aesthetics; Wharton’s influence on contemporary writers and popular culture. As another centenary approaches, we also seek papers treating Wharton and her contemporaries in the contexts of World War I.

Please send any queries and 250-word abstracts for 20-minute papers (indicating any equipment/technical requirements) and a brief biographical note by 27 May 2013 to Laura Rattray via e-mail: custom@hope.ac.uk


 

 

Accommodation

For more information about the accommodation available on campus and details of our conferencing facilities, visit the Conferencing and Events section of this website.

Symposium delegates will be able to choose two different rates for accommodation, either in the EDEN Suite (executive double-bedrooms) or in Wesley, Newman, and Teresa Halls (single en-suite bedrooms).

For those wishing to stay on and explore Liverpool after the symposium, an additional night’s accommodation will be available, and we will be arranging a morning tour of the city and/or – by special request for Beatles fans – of influential sites for the group, followed by lunch together before departing.