Date: Mon, 3 May 1999 15:11:29 -0700 (PDT)
The following message from Joseph McElrath at Florida State University
may
be of interest to Wharton-L members:
Nominations Solicited for Boydston Prize
The Association for Documentary Editing seeks nominations for its biennial
Jo Ann Boydston Prize, which is awarded to the author of a review or
review essay dealing with scholarly editing of works or documents.
Reviews and review essays published between June 1, 1997, and May 30,
1999, are eligible for the 1999 prize, which will be awarded at the
annual
meeting of the ADE in Charlottesville, Va., October 7-9, 1999.
The winner
receives a plaque and a monetary award.
Deadline for nominations is 1 August 1999. Submissions should
include
three copies of the published review or review essay (with the source
clearly identified), together with the author's name, address, and
telephone
number.
Send submissions to George L. Geckle, Department of English, Welsh
Humanities Building, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208
Date: Fri, 7 May 1999 23:10:47 -0700 (PDT)
From: Donna Campbell <campbell@gem.gonzaga.edu>
To: wharton-l@gonzaga.edu
Subject: Edith Wharton Sessions at ALA
Date: Fri, 7 May 1999 23:10:47 -0700 (PDT)
Edith Wharton Sessions at ALA (American Literature Association) Conference
Baltimore, May 28-31, 1999
Full conference schedule available at http://www.public.coe.edu/ala.html.
Session I: Sunday, May 30, 1999, 9:00-10:15
EDITH WHARTON AND ECONOMICS, Fells Point
Organizer and Chair: Reiner Kornetta, Heinrich Heine University, and
the
Edith Wharton Society
1. "Parasites, Aborigines, and Invaders : Consumption and Race in Edith
Wharton's The Custom of the Country," Stephanie
Bower, Claremont McKenna College
2. "For Love or Money: Edith Wharton's Move to D. Appleton & Son,"
Sharon
Shaloo, Independent Scholar
3. "The Economics of Marriage: Wharton Early and Late," Julie
Olin-Ammentorp, Le Moyne College"
Session II: Sunday, May 30, 1999, 10:30-11:45
A ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION: EDITH WHARTON INTO THE 21ST CENTURY, Fells Point
Organizer and Chair: Augusta Rohrbach, Oberlin College
This session is designed to initiate discussion from scholars assembled
from different regions, institutional affiliations, career stages
and critical standpoints. Each discussant will address one approach
to
Wharton scholarship and examine its suitability or
contribution to the field as it is envisioned in the 21st century.
1. Hildegarde Hoeller, Babson College
"Wharton and the Canon"
2. David Leverenz, University of Florida
"The Daddy's Girl in Wharton's Fiction: Rethinking
Consumer
Capitalism"
3. Mary Carney, The University of Georgia
"Edith Wharton's War Writings"
4. Ann Mairoff, Palomar College
"Transgressive Relationships in Wharton's
Texts: Wharton's Rebellion
against Freud and 'Normal Sex Roles'"
5. Ellen Lee McCallum, Indiana University
"Wharton in the Age of Information"
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This page last modified on 25 July 1999. Please send comments and suggestions to D. Campbell.