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Seventh International Conference
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Melville and the Mediterranean
The Melville Society's Seventh
International Conference
Jerusalem
June 17-21, 2009
CALL FOR PAPERS
This conference is devoted to understanding the place of the Mediterranean and the “Holy Land” in Western consciousness. Using Melville’s epic Clarel: A Poem and Pilgrimage in the Holy Land as one focus, the conference is meant to open up discussions related to travel, literature, other humanities and the sciences, aesthetics, anthropology, archaeology, ethnography, and religion. Papers and panels are welcome on a range of international writing about the region, including but not limited to the following:
- Clarel as a major work of travel in the 19th century and today; its qualities
and challenges; relation to political, historical, religious, mythological,
scientific, ethnographic, and philosophical views; iconography and
aesthetics; resurgence and necessity in the canon
Meaning of the Eastern Mediterranean (Levant) region, its position as a
basin of culture, civilization, and mythology; the significance of its landscape
and life to larger existential issues, in works by Melville and various
writers, in different periods
Interest, comparatively, in other parts of the Mediterranean region
Connections between Melville and other writers and artists (e.g.,
Goethe, Humboldt, Piranesi, Kinglake, Poe, Hawthorne, Twain); connections
to contemporaneous and later American, British, French,
German, Italian, Persian, or other Eastern influences, and philosophies
Works encouraging study and translation of Melville in the region;
alternative research and outlooks; translation and international context
of Melville's works; Melville's poetry and poetics
1876: U.S. Centennial, publication of Clarel, and other publications and
events in that year
Theorizing on topics such as travel writing, Orientalism, postcolonial
theory, race and ethnicity, applied to Melville or others
The conference organizers welcome various perspectives and session formats. Appropriately, the activities of this world conference will be centered in international venues in the Old City of Jerusalem and its vicinity, and willoffer opportunities for touring the region.
Send one-to-two page proposals for papers, roundtable discussions, and panels by 1 September 2008 to the email addresses of the conference cochairs:
Basem Ra’ad
basem48@yahoo.com
Tim Marr
marr@email.unc.edu
Hilton Obenzinger
obenzinger@stanford.edu
Click Here for Conference Flyer

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