Self-Commentary in Early Modern European Literature. Durham University, 26-27 February 2016

Self-Commentary in Early Modern

European Literature

                               26-27 February 2016

Palace Green Library, Learning Centre, Durham University

 

 

 

Writers the world over have often accompanied their texts with a variety of annotations, marginal glosses, rubrications, and explicatory or narrative prose in an effort to direct and control the reception of their own works. Such self-exegetical devices do not merely serve as an external apparatus but effectively interact with the primary text by introducing a distinctive meta-literary dimension which, in turn, reveals complex dynamics affecting the very notions of authorship and readership. In the Renaissance, self-commentaries enjoyed unprecedented diffusion and found expression in a multiplicity of forms, which appear to be closely linked to momentous processes such as the legitimation of vernacular languages across Europe, the construction of a literary canon, the making of the modern author as we know it, and the self-representation of modern individual identities.

 

The Institute of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (IMEMS) at Durham University will host an international conference on the topic of self-commentary and self-exegesis in early modern European literature, 26-27 February 2016 at Palace Green Library.

  

Registration is free. To reserve a place, please email:

selfcommentary@gmail.com

 

 

 

Programme

 

 

 

Friday 26 February

 

10.30               Registration, coffee and tea

 

11:00-12:45   

Opening remarks: Francesco Venturi

Introduction and Chair: Carlo Caruso

Keynote: Martin McLaughlin (University of Oxford), Alberti’s ‘Commentarium’ to his First Literary Work: Self-Commentary as Self-Presentation

Jeroen De Keyser(KU Leuven), Elucidation and Self-Explanation in Filelfo’s Marginalia

 

12:45-2:15pm             Catered lunch

 

2:15-4pm

Chair: Patrick Gray

Ian Johnson(University of St Andrews), Self-Commentary during Medieval Early Modernity: Reginald Pecock and Gavin Douglas

Harriet Archer(Newcastle University),Framing Creative Practice: Fictive Narratives of Poetic Invention in Elizabethan Prose-Verse Hybrids

Gilles Bertheau(Université François Rabelais – Tours), George Chapman and the ‘Andromeda Liberata’ Affair (1614): can a Poet be ‘master of [his] own meaning’?

 

4:00-4:30pm   Coffee and tea

 

4:30-6:00pm  

Chair: Dario Tessicini

Keynote:Federica Pich (University of Leeds), On the Threshold of Poems: Lyric as/vs Narrative in Italian Renaissance Poetry

Magdalena Ożarska(Jan Kochanowski – Kielce),The Uses of Authorial Side Glosses in Anna Stanisławska’s ‘Transaction’ (1685)

 

 

Saturday 27 February

 

9:30-10:30     

Chair:Marc Schachter

Keynote: John O’Brien (Durham University), ‘All outward and on show’: Montaigne’s External Glosses

 

10:30-11:00    Coffee and tea

 

11:00-12:50   

Chair and concluding remarks: Richard Maber

Russel Ganim(University of Iowa), Blood, Sweat, and Tears: Annotation and Self-Exegesis in La Ceppède

Joseph Harris(Royal Holloway – London), Critical Failures: Corneille Observes his Spectators

 

Carlo Caruso (Durham University), Mock and Erudition: Alessandro Tassoni and Francesco Redi

 

 

For further information, please contact the event organiser

francesco.venturi@durham.ac.uk or visit:

https://www.dur.ac.uk/imems/events/conferences/?eventno=25738

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