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Oceans in World Literature: from the Middle Ages to Modern Times

Type: Virtual

Virtual Session

Description

In The Novel and the Sea, Margaret Cohen argues that the dominant narrative about the rise of the western novel occurring on land could be revised with a consideration of sea adventure fiction.

One of the most exciting scholarly developments in recent years is the global surge of criticism, thinking, and writing on the “blue humanities,”—a belated recognition of the importance of oceans to human lives and cultures.

This seminar aims to foster conversations on “oceanic literature” across and beyond the disciplines of national literatures. The time span of this seminar is broad, ranging from the Middle Ages to present times.

This seminar welcomes submissions from scholars working in traditional genres of literary studies such as poetry, drama, and the novel, but we also welcome submissions from scholars who conceive of the literary in more capacious terms, including those working on arts, the histories of travel and trade and legal history.

 We welcome papers that address (but are not limited to) following questions:

The relationship between the sea and the land in literature;
Pirates, boats, sea ports in literature and film;
Specific regions on the seas as described in arts and literature;
Sea creatures in literature and art;
The sea, climate change, pollution, and ecocriticism;
Legal history, trade, diplomacy, and wars on the seas;
Languages spoken by sea people;
Underwater media; 
A comparative and/or transnational perspective to “oceanic literature.”

Schedule

Friday, May 30, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: Virtual Conference

Papers

Fa'a'a from France: Temaru, Tefana, and Radio Silence
Rosemary Peters-Hill — Louisiana State University
Beyond Surfboards to Sacredness: The Meanings of the Sea in South Africa
Lucy Graham — University of Johannesburg
The Atlantic Ocean and Slave Ships as (non-)places of memory in Black Atlantic literature
Aurelia Mouzet — University of Arizona
Saturday, May 31, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: Virtual Conference

Papers

Asia deluged: A long-range perspective
Kelly Yin Nga Tse — The Education University of Hong Kong
The Myth of Luting: Writing the Sea Nomads at the Maritime Frontier
Jasmin Law — KU Leuven (University of Leuven)
Re-mediating and Remedying Traumatized Bodies and Minds Adrfit at Sea: Ikeda Hirochika’s Funaosa nikki (1822) Reconsidered
Suiyun Pan — Harvard University
Sunday, June 1, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: Virtual Conference

Papers

The Oceanic World-Literature of the Indian Ocean
Tyler Ball — University of Warwick
The More-than-human Contact Zone: Human-Fish Encounters in Yaşar Kemal’s Deniz Küstü and Ernest Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea
Muge Gedik — Stanford University
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea Then and Now: Traversing Oceans and Time
Christina (Ting-Ting) Shiea — University of Washington Seattle