Past conferences

 

 Previous Day Conferences

 

2008 Fall Medieval Texts and Textual Meaning

Peter Robinson (Birmingham, UK), Martin Foys (Drew U), Hoyt Duggan (U  Virginia), Allen Frantzen (LUC)

 

2009 Spring Nineteenth-Century Studies and Digital Texts

Neil Fraistat (U Maryland), Andrew Stauffer (U Virginia), Joseph Viscomi (U North Carolina), Steve Jones (LUC)

 

2009 Fall  The Future of Shakespeare's Text(s)

Michael Best (U Victoria, BC), Alan Galey (U Toronto), Gabriel Egan (Loughborough U, UK), Michael Witmore (U Wisconsin), Suzanne Gossett (LUC)

 

2010 Spring Modernist Networks

George Bornstein (U Michigan), Robin Schulze (Penn State U), Sean Latham (U Tulsa), Pamela Caughie (LUC)




2010 Fall Humanities Research Infrastructure and Tools

George Thiruvathukal (LUC), Laura Mandell (Miami U of Ohio), Desmond Schmidt (Queens U of Technology, Australia), Peter Shillingsburg (LUC)

 

2011 Spring Thackeray and Brontë

Judith Fisher (Trinity U, San Antonio), Marianne Thormählen (Lund U, Sweden), Peter Shillingsburg (LUC), Micael Clarke (LUC)

 

2011 Fall Minority Archives and the Politics of Textual Recovery

Christopher Mulvey (Winchester U, UK), José Aranda (Rice U), María Cotera (U Michigan), Suzanne Bost (LUC)

 

2012 Spring Eighteenth Century Texts and Books

Tom Bonnell (St. Mary's College), Steve Karian (U Missouri), James Woolley (Lafayette College), Barbara Benedict (Trinity College, Hartford), Tom Kaminski (LUC)






2012 Fall Textual Studies and Literary Theory

Paul Armstrong (Brown U), Steven Mailloux (Loyola U Marymount), David Greetham (CUNY), Paul Jay (LUC)

2013 Spring The Fate of the Page in Digital Environments

Morris Eaves (U of Rochester)

Laura Estill (U Victoria, BC)

Patricia Fumerton (U California, Santa Barbara)

James Knapp (Loyola U)

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April 20, 2013

The Fate of the Page in Digital Environments - Day Conference
Loyola University Chicago
Lake Shore Campus
9:30-4:00
Saturday, April 20, 2013
free and open to the public (but email Lwinnard@luc.edu to register.
Cuneo Hall Rm 2
Bld 18 on map at
http://www.luc.edu/media/lucedu/lsc.pdf

Sponsored by
The Center for Textual Studies and Digital Humanities
The Edward Surtz, S.J. Professor of English
The Martin J. Svaglic Chair in Textual Studies

Schedule
9:30 am Registration and Reception

10:00 am “The Really Hard Page in an Xediting Environment" Morris Eaves, University of Rochester: introduced by Andrew Welch

11:00 am "The Ineluctable Modality of the Visual Page in the History of the Book" James Knapp, Loyola University Chicago: introduced by Devon Wallace

12:00 noon Lunch

1:00 pm “Remediating Early Modern Literary Manuscripts” Laura Estill, University of Victoria, BC introduced by Jenny Frey

2:00 pm “The Digital Recovery of Moving Media: EBBA and the Early English Broadside Ballad.” Patricia Fumerton University of California Santa Barbara: introduced by Lara Wagner

3:00 pm Coffee Break

3:20 pm Roundtable discussion:
Jeffrey Glover, Devon Wallace, Jenny Frey, Lara Wagner, and Andrew Welch

5:00 to 7:30 pm Reception at the home of Peter Shillingsburg
(Directions given on the day.)

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March 6-8, 2013

SOCIETY FOR TEXTUAL SCHOLARSHIP
"The Objects of Textual Scholarship"
17th Biennial International Interdisciplinary Conference

March 6-8, 2013

Loyola University Chicago, Water Tower Campus

Hosted by Loyola's Center for Textual Studies and Digital Humanities

Co-sponsored by the Department of English, The Martin J. Svaglic Chair in Textual Studies, and the John Cardinal Cody Chair of Theology, Loyola University Chicago
With the support of the Newberry Library, Chicago
http://www.textual.org/
On Twitter: #sts13
Campus map: http://www.luc.edu/about/pdfs/wtc_map020911.pdf
President: Peter Shillingsburg (Loyola University Chicago)

Executive Director: John K. Young (Marshall University)

Program Co-chairs: Peter Shillingsburg and Steven Jones (Loyola University Chicago) s3jones1@gmail.com

CONFERENCE PROGRAM
WEDNESDAY, March 6

4:00-6:00 Registration [Kasbeer Hall, Corboy Law Center (CLC), 25 East Pearson]

4:30-5:45 [pre-enrolled] Seminar organized by Matthew Vechinski:
“The Text as Designed Object” [CLC 305]

4:30-5:45 Roundtable: “Extra-Legal Bibliography” (Bodó Balázs, Alex Gil, Nick Morris, Karla Nielsen, Matt Schneider) [CLC 601; chair, Alex Gil]

6:00-7:30 PRESIDENTS’ RECEPTION [Baumhart Hall, 26 E. Pearson]

7:45 STS Board meeting 1 [TBA]

THURSDAY, March 7

8:00 STS Board meeting 2 [CLC 305]

8:30 Coffee, registration

9:00-10:30 KEYNOTES 1 and 2 [CLC 211; chair, Peter Shillingsburg]

Dirk Van Hulle (University of Antwerp): “The Stuff of Fiction: Digital Editing, Multiple Drafts and the Extended Mind”

Paulius Subacius (Vilnius University) “On Importance of the One Character: Some Afterthoughts”

10:45-12:00 sessions

1. Roundtable: “Medieval Lyric, Material Philology” (Daniel O’Sullivan, Wayne Storey, Christopher Callahan, John Haines, Michelangelo Zaccarello) [CLC 305; chair, Daniel O’Sullivan]

2. Jeffrey Gutierrez, “A Note on DVD Editions;” Doug Reside, “A Tool for New ‘Edits’ of the NYPL Performing Arts Collection;” Gabrielle Dean, “Hey Kids, Let’s Put On a Show: Student-Curated Exhibitions” [CLC 211; chair, Jason Kolkey]

3. Federico Meschini, “Why We Will Always Be Talking About Electronic Editions;” Giles Bergel, “The Wandering Jew's Chronicle: The Materiality of Tradition in the Digital Archive;” Whitney Trettien, “From Mark Up to Cut Up: Materializing the Digital Edition” [CLC 601; chair, Sarah Eilefson]

12:00 LUNCH

1:00-2:15 sessions

4. Dominique Zino, “Emily Dickinson’s Virtual Reality: Remediation and the Work of the Index;” Melissa White, “Amateur Editing as a Key to Historical Literary Value;” Marta Werner, “‘Through Telegraphic Signs --’: Emily Dickinson’s Late Envelope Poems” [CLC 211; chair, Marta Werner]

5. Rebecca Fall, “Editorial Touches: Text-use and Tactile Relations Between Renaissance Readers and Writers;” Seth Swanner, “A Poetics of Disfigurement: The Quasi-Shapes of Herbert’s Temple;” Simon Nyl, “Dressing Up The Schoolmaster: The Texts’ Queer Bodies in Eighteenth-Century Editing” [CLC 305; chair, Mark Owen]

6. Elizabeth Rodriguez, “The Absent Presence of Evidence in Early Modern English Rape Depositions;” Jillian Linster, “When ‘Nothing’ Goes Missing: The Impotent Censorship of Helkiah Crooke’s Mikrokosmographia;” Grant Leyton Simpson, “The Philips Screwdriver: Tools, Patents, and the Sociology of Texts” [CLC 601: chair, Andrew Welch ]

2:30-3:45 sessions

7. Rebecca Weir and Elizabeth Lorang, “‘From the Great Crisis’: The Poetry of The Anglo-African and National Anti-Slavery Standard;” James West, “Anti-Semitism, et al., in Fitzgerald's 'Two Wrongs’;” George Bornstein, “Book History and Minority Authors” [CLC 211; chair, Suzanne Gossett]

8. Jacob Halford, “Lost in Translation: How Digitization is Altering Textual Scholarship;” Per Röcken, “Philological Platonism: Clarification and Defense;” Annika Rockenberger, “Editing a Discourse, Not a Text” [CLC 305; chair, John McCarthy]

9. Mandy Gagel, “Epistolary Spaces of the Letter: Vernon Lee and Versions;” Sophie Geoffrey, “Vernon Lee and the French Painters André and Berthe Noufflard, 1925-35;” Christa Zorn, “The Correspondence of Vernon Lee and Irene Forbes-Mosse, World War I Letters” [CLC 601; chair, Peter Robinson]

4:00-5:15 sessions

10. Martin Mueller, “Corpus-wide Editing in a Digital Age;” Peter Robinson, “Why We Need a Theory of Digital Editions and What It Might Look Like;” Amanda Gailey, “Reconsidering Collected Editions in Digital Editing” [CLC 211; chair, James West]

11. Magdelyn Helwig, “Verbal-Visual Collaboration in Context: Editing the Four-Decades Long Correspondence of Ted Hughes and Leonard Baskin;” Nicole Gray, "Spiritualism, Printers in Trance, and the Posthumous Authorship of John Quincy Adams;” Ken Price, “Walt Whitman's Bureaucratic (and Democratic) Vistas" [CLC 305; chair, John Bryant]

12. Mark Byron, “Modernist Texts and Challenges to Conventions of Scholarly Editing;” Colby Reid, “Joyce’s Fancy Book;” James P. Sullivan, “What Can Textual Variants Offer the Field of Translation Studies: Rendering the Voices of Ulysses’ ‘Pub Crawl’” [CLC 601; chair, Paul Eggert]

5:30-6:00 RECEPTION AT THE NEWBERRY LIBRARY [60 West Walton Street]

6:00-7:15 KEYNOTE 3 [Newberry Library; chair, Steven Jones]

Paul Gehl (The Newberry Library): “Collecting Type on the Page: Early Twentieth-Century Librarians in the Service of Bibliography, Text Criticism, and the History of Design”

FRIDAY, March 8

8:30 Coffee

9:00-10:15 sessions

13. Karen Schiff, “The Sky is Never Empty: Spatial Activation in Gothic Illuminations and in Today’s Imagination;” Michelle Strizever, “The Unstable Book: Textual Scholarship and the Artist’s Book;” Jason Kolkey, “The Digital and Decompressed: A Textual Studies Approach to 21st-Century Comic Books” [CLC 305; chair, Amanda Coleman]

14. W. Scott Lancaster, “The Emerging Figure of the Author in the Paratext of the Works of Early Modern Publisher William Ferbrand;” Frank Mariner, “Editing Charles Varlet de La Grange’s Family Record Book;” Adam Hooks, “Ransacking Shakespeare’s Texts” [CLC 601; chair, Cameron Phillips]

15. Matthew Clarke, “'The luxury of woe': Goldsmith's 'The Deserted Village' and the Luxury Quarto;” Elspeth Healey, “The Ancestral and Filial New: New Directions, Belatedness, and Publishing a Genealogy of the Moderns;” Paul Armstrong, “How Historical is Reading? What Book History Can Learn from Neuroscience" [CLC 211; chair, Nathan Jung]

10:30-11:45 KEYNOTE 4 [CLC 211; chair, Peter Shillingsburg]
Isaac Gewirtz (The Berg Collection, The New York Public Library):
“The Archive as Literature: Reading the Work, Reading the Life”

12:00 LUNCH

1:00-2:15 sessions

16. Zach Whalen, “Videogame Typography and its Antecedents;” Rachael Sullivan, “The Liminal Textuality of Comments in Code;” Mary-Louise Craven, “How Early 20th-Century Postcards Can Be Studied” [CLC 601; chair, Doug Reside]

17. John Young, “How to Revise a True War Story: Tim O’Brien’s Unending Narratives;” Sarah Eilefson, “Translation, Censorship and Combat Gnosticism: The Implications of Textual Scholarship on Interpretation and Pedagogy of All Quiet on the Western Front;” Gabrielė Gailiūtė, “(Un)Perceivable Contexts: The Reception Gap of a Soviet Novel in the North American Market” [CLC 211; chair, Gabrielle Dean]

18. Jennifer M. Bryant, “Still Points and Turning Worlds: Memory, Materiality, and the Textual Scholar;” Chelsea Jennings, “Packaging Modernist Poetry: Promotional Dust Jackets, 1910-1940;” Arend Oak Speser, "The Everywhere of North Dakota: Tom McGrath and a new Poetics of the Archive" [CLC 305; chair, Matthew Clarke]

2:30-3:45 sessions

19. David Greetham, “‘Good Enough’ Editing and Object Relations in Textual Scholarship;” Ronald Broude, “Reproductions Revisited: Ruminations of a Reflective Reprinter;” Randall McLeod, “The Birth of Italics” [CLC 211; chair, John Young]

20. Pamela Caughie, Anthony Betori, Niamh McGuigan, Jonathan Reinhardt, “Recreating Lili Elbe: The Search for the First Transsexual;” Jan Gielkens, “Editor Predator. Why a Scholarly Editor Would Destroy More than 6000 Letters;” Fredrik Tydal, “Troubling Tales from the Home Front: Modern American Short Stories in the Armed Services Editions” [CLC 305; chair, Mark Byron]

21. Roger Osborne, “An Ontology-based Electronic Edition of Joseph Furphy’s Such is Life;” Melissa Dinvero, “Resisting Burial: Lorca, Textuality and Memory in Democratic Spain;” Russell McDonald, “Seeking Home Through Textual Revision: The Case of Rushdie’s East, West” [CLC 601; chair, Sarah Polen]

4:00-5:30 sessions

22. Barbara Bordalejo, “Computer Assisted Textual Analysis and the Re-Thinking of the Scholarly Edition;” John Bryant, “Versions of Revision: Billy Budd, TextLab, and the Editing of a Fluid Text;” Nicholas Hayward, “From Lighthouse to Framework: Visualizing Digital Scholarly Editions with Pathways and Histories;” Peter Shillingsburg, “Woolf Online in Mojulem” [CLC 211; chair, Roger Osborne]

23. John McCarthy, “Script to Scripture: Intentions at the Edges of Reading;” Colby Dickinson, “Transforming Scripture Into a Fetish-Object: Late Modern Reflections on Cultural and Religious Canonical Texts;” Edmondo Lupieri, “To Bible or Not To Bible: How on Earth Does a Text Become Scripture?” [CLC 601; chair, Dirk van Hulle]

24. John Charles Caruso, “‘The Head Fell Off’: Textual Historical Clues to Reading Edgar A. Poe’s ‘Murders in the Rue Morgue’;” Ileana Marin, “Holes and Fillers in the Manuscript of Charlotte Bronte’s Villette” [CLC 305; chair, Julia Bninski]

6:30 BANQUET (bar opens at 6:00) [Regents' Hall, Lewis Towers, 820 N. Michigan]

PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS: Paul Eggert: "The Hand of the Present"

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October 27, 2012

Textual Studies and Literary Theory - Day Conference
Information Commons 4th floor, Lake Shore Campus
Sponsored by the Martin J. Svaglic Chair in Textual Studies and the CTSDH
Free and open to the public, but email Lwinnard@luc.edu by Oct. 22 -- to register.

Program
9:30 coffee
10:00 Paul Armstrong, Brown University: "How Historical Is Reading? What Book History Can Learn from Neuroscience."
11:00 Steven Mailloux, Loyola University Marymount: "The Author Still Hasn't Left the Building: Intention, Conventions, and Rhetorical Agency."
12:00 lunch
1:00 Paul Jay, Loyola University Chicago: "Accidental Editor: How I Wrote the Burke Cowley Letters, and Why."
2:00 David Greetham, Graduate Center, CUNY: "The Well-Tempered Text?"
3:15 Panel discussion
Later: Party

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February 25, 2012

18th Century Texts and Books - Day Conference
Information Commons 4th floor, Lake Shore Campus
Sponsored by the Martin J. Svaglic Chair in Textual Studies and the CTSDH

Free and open to the public, but mail Peter Shillingsburg --peter.shillingsburg@gmail.com -- to register.

Program
9:30 am Registration and Reception
10 am “Boswell’s Perplex Writing: The Stag Unable to Trace His Own Doublings”
Thomas F. Bonnell, St. Mary’s College
11 am “The Hybrid Scholarly Edition: Possibilities and Problems”
Stephen Karian, University of Missouri
12 noon Lunch
1 pm “Books as Collections: Accumulation and Possession in British Eighteenth-Century Literature”
Barbara Benedict, Trinity College
2 pm “Editing Collaborations: Poems from the Vicinity of Swift”
James Woolley, Lafayette College
3 pm Coffee Break
3:20 pm Roundtable discussion:
Christopher Kendrick, Jack Cragwall, Tom Kaminski, Lorraine Eadie, Jason Kolkey, and Andrew Welch
5 to 7:30 pm Reception (Directions and car pool arrangements to be made on the day).

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October 29, 2011

Minority Archives and the Politics of Textual Recovery - Day Conference
Cudahy, Rm 318, Lake Shore Campus
Sponsored by The Martin J. Svaglic Chair in Textual Studies and the CTSDH

Free and open to the public, but email Peter Shillingsburg -- peter.shillingsburg@gmail.com -- to register.

Program:
9:30 Registration and Reception
10:00 “When Archives Collide: The Case of Early Mexican American Literature and the Chicana/o Movement”, Jose Aranda, Rice University
11:00 “African American Text Recovery: The Cases of William Wells Brown and Phillis Wheatley”, Christopher Mulvey, Winchester University, UK
12:00 Lunch
1:00 “Rethinking the Subaltern Archive in the Digital Age: Chicana por mi Raza: Mapping Chicana Feminisms (1960-1990)”, Maria Cotera, University of Michigan
2:00 “Gloria Anzaldúa and the Messy Feminist Archive”, Suzanne Bost, Loyola University Chicago
3:00 Coffee Break
3:20 Roundtable discussion: Badia Ahad, Victoria Bolf, Allison Fagan, Steve Jones
5:00 to 7:30 Reception at the home of Suzanne Bost (Directions and car pool arrangements to be made on the day.)


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April 16, 2011

Thackeray and Brontë - Day Conference
Crown Center, Rm 530, Lake Shore Campus
Sponsored by The Martin J. Svaglic Chair in Textual Studies and the CTSDH

Free and open to the public, but email Peter Shillingsburg -- peter.shillingsburg@gmail.com -- to register.

Program:
9:30 Registration and Reception
10:00 "Reading in and Out of Vanity Fair; or, How to Acquire an Uncomfortable Talent", Judith Fisher, Professor of English, Trinity University, San Antonio
11:00 "What is the Moral Center of Vanity Fair?", Peter Shillingsburg, Professor of English, Loyola University Chicago
12:00 Lunch
1:00 "The Writing on the (Dungeon) Wall: Reading Wuthering Heights by the Light of Brontë's Poems", Micael Clarke, Assoc. Professor of English, Loyola University Chicago
2:00 "The Moral of Wuthering Heights", Marianne Thormählen, Professor of English Studies, Lund University, Sweden
3:00 Coffee Break
3:20 Roundtable discussion: Narrative, Ethics, Aesthetics, and the Novelist’s Responsibility Mark Bosco, Joyce Wexler, Steve Jones, Michael O’Connell, Julia Bninski, Jason Kolkey, and Kari Kronsbei
5:00 to 7:30 Reception at the home of Micael Clarke (Directions and car pool arrangements to be made on the day.)

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October 30, 2010

Humanities Research Infrastructure and Tools - Day Conference
Klarchek Room, 4th Floor, Information Commons, Lake Shore Campus,
Free and open to the public, reservations required:sjones1@luc.edu

Program:
9:30 Reception and coffee, late registration (free)
10:00 Welcome: Joyce Wexler, Chair, English Department.
"Ideals and Practicalities in Electronic Representations of Primary Materials," Peter Shillingsburg, Svaglic Chair of Textual Studies, Loyola University Chicago
11:00 "Principles and Practicalities for Engineering HRIT Solutions," George K. Thiruvathukal, Associate Professor of Computer Science, Loyola University Chicago
12:00 Lunch
1:00 "Meshing New Solutions with Standard Practices," Laura Mandell, English Department, Miami University Ohio
2:00 "Satisfying the demands of computer engineering, scholarly editors, and humanities students and scholars for whom computing is word processing and Internet surfing," Desmond Schmidt, Queensland University of Technology, Australia
3:00 Coffee break
3:15 Panel of potential users: faculty and students
4:00 Refreshments

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April 10, 2010

Modernist Networks - Day Conference
Klarchek Room, 4th Floor, Information Commons
free and open to the public, reservations required:sjones1@luc.edu

Program:
9:30 Reception, Coffee
10:00 George Bornstein, C. A. Patrides Professor of English Language and Literature in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts (ret.), University of Michigan: "The Colors of Modernism: Publishing Blacks, Jews, and Irish in the Early Twentieth Century."
11:00 Robin Schulze, Professor of English, Penn State University: "The Hardware and Software of Modernist Studies: Building the Digital Future."
12:00 Lunch
1:00 Sean Latham, Professor of English, University of Tulsa: "Creating a New Art: The Modernist Journals Project and the Archives of the Everyday."
2:00 Pamela Caughie, Professor of English, Loyola University Chicago: "Sounding Off: Modernist Sound Scholarship and the Challenges of Publishing."
3:00 Roundtable discussion (speakers to be joined by David Chinitz, Joyce Wexler, Steve Jones, and Christine Froula).
4:00 Reception

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November 7, 2009

The Future of Shakespeare's Text(s) - Day Conference
Klarchek Room, 4th Floor, Information Commons
free and open to the public, reservations required: sgosset@luc.edu

Program:
9:30 Reception, Coffee
10:00 Welcome by Joyce Wexler, Chair, English Department
10:15 Michael Best, Professor Emeritus, University of Victoria and creator of the Internet Shakespeare: “Let Us Knog Our Praines Together: Collaboration in Electronic Shakespeares.”
11:00 Alan Galey, Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Information, University of Toronto: "The Sense of Reckoning: Quantification versus Materiality in Digital Shakespeare Scholarship."
12:00 Lunch
1:15 Gabriel Egan, Reader in Shakespeare Studies, Loughborough University: "Stop-press Correction and the Shakespearian editor."
2:00 Michael Witmore, Professor of English, University of Wisconsin, Madison: "Digital Filiation: Linguistics, Factor Analysis and the Quantitative Redescription of Shakespearean Genres."
2:45 Roundtable: “The Current State of Shakespearean Textual Studies” (Chair: Suzanne Gossett)
3:30 Refreshments

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March 28, 2009

Nineteenth-Century Studies and Digital Texts - Day Conference
Klarchek Room, 4th Floor, Information Commons

Program:
9:30 Reception, Coffee
10:00 Welcome by Joyce Wexler, Chair, English Department
10:15 Andrew Stauffer, Professor of English at the University of Virginia and Director of the NINES project (Networked Infrastructure for Nineteenth-Century Electronic Scholarship): http://www.nines.org: "From Editions to Scholarship."
11:00 Joseph Viscomi, James G. Kenan Distinguished Professor of English Literature, University of North Carolina, Co-creator and Co-Editor of the William Blake Archive: http://www.blakearchive.org: "Blake's Enlightened Graphics: Illuminated Books and New Technologies."
12:00 Lunch
1:15 Neil Fraistat, Professor of English, University of Maryland, Co-creator and Co-Editor of Romantic Circles and Director of MITH (Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities): http://www.rc.umd.edu and http://www.mith.umd.edu : "Re-centering the Humanities."
2:00 Doug Guerra and Steven Jones, Loyola University and Romantic Circles: http://www.rc.umd.edu : "This is Not an Edition: Romantic Circles' Poets on Poets"
2:45 Future directions: Discussion led by Steven Jones
3:30 Refreshments

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Nov. 8, 2008

Medieval Texts and Textual Meaning - Day Conference
Crown Center Rm 530

Program:

9:30 Reception, Coffee
10:00 Welcome by Joyce Wexler, Chair, English Department
10:15 Peter Robinson, Director, ITSEE, Birmingham Univ., UK
'Why Transcription is Not What It Seems'
Introduction by Peter Shillingsburg, Martin J. Svaglic Chair, LUC
Discussion
10:00 Martin Foys, Assoc Prof., Hood College, and Visiting Prof., Drew Univ.
'Transmedial Mappae: Digitally Editing Medieval Worlds as More than Words'
Introduction by Kevin Caliendo, Grad. Student, LUC
Discussion
12:00 Lunch
1:15 Hoyt Duggan, Emeritus Professor, Univ. of Virginia
'If We Build It, Will They Come: Piers Plowman and the Viability of
Electronic Editing'
Introduction by Allen Frantzen, Professor, LUC
Discussion
2:00 Stephanie Lundeen, Instructor, LUC
'Text and Performance in the Harley Lyrics'
Introduction by Fallon Allison, Grad. Student, LUC
Discussion
2:45 The Current State of Medieval Textual Studies
Chair: Allen Frantzen
3:30 Refreshments

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