IASIL 2006 - Conference Schedule
THURSDAY 20 JULY |
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TIME |
WELCOME TO COUNTRY & TO THE CONFERENCETHE J.B.R LECTURE THEATRE AUSTRALIAN GRADUATE SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENTGATE 11 BOTANY STREET, KENSINGTON |
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10.30-11.00 |
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11.00-11.30 |
MORNING TEA |
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11.30-12.00 |
ROOM—MORVEN BROWN G5 |
ROOM—MORVEN BROWN G6 |
ROOM—MORVEN BROWN G7 |
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Prof. Michael KenneallyImages that Memory Begets: Home and Away in Frances Stewart’s Our Forest Home |
Prof. Ciaran MurrayThe Abominable Lamp-post: Yeats and Morris |
Prof. Joan Dean George Fitzmaurice’s Artist Obsessives |
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12.00-12.30 |
Brian CliffAnne Enright and Emma Donoghue: The Desire to Belong in Contemporary Irish Fiction |
Dr. Edward MarxYone Noguchi in Yeats’s Japan | Prof. Peter HarrisFrom Stage to Page: Images of Ireland in the Reflections of the London Theatre Critics |
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12.30-1.00 |
Dr. Patrick LonerganMonologue in 1990s Irish Theatre: Intention, Intertextuality, Internationalization |
A/Prof. Anna Fattori‘A genuinely funny German farce’ turns into a very Irish play, The Broken Jug (1994): John Banville’s adaptation of Heinrich von Kleist’s Der zerbrochene Krug (1807) |
Tony EarlsEchoes of The Colleen Bawn |
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1.00-1.30 |
Prof. Rina KikuchiA Reality Distinct from the Actual: An Alternative World in the Poetry of Walter de la Mare and Matthew Sweeney |
Christopher Thomson‘Father, the gate is open’: intertextuality and the drama of masculinity in John Banville’s fiction |
Dr. Pamela O’NeillLost Infants in the Irish Psyche |
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1.30-2.45 |
LUNCH |
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2.45-3.15 |
Prof. Jose LantersIntertextuality in Eilis Ni Dhuibhne’s Summer Pudding |
Prof. Coilin ParsonsWord Maps: J.M. Synge’s prose writings and the Ordnance Survey |
Prof. Neil MurphyJohn Banville’s Intratextual Fantasies |
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3.15-3.45 |
Dr. Cliona O GallchoirFact, Fiction and Intertextuality in Joseph O’Connor’s The Star of the Sea |
Dr. Eamonn HughesAt Swim-Two-Birds in the age of mechanical reproduction |
Joakim WrethedThe Tissue, Flesh and Blood of the Intertext in John Banville’s The Book of Evidence |
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3.45-4.15 |
AFTERNOON TEA |
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4.15-5.15 |
OFFICIAL OPENING — JEFFARES MEMORIAL LECTURE |
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CONSULAR RECEPTION 7.00 for 7.30 at 400 George Street, Sydney |
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FRIDAY 21 JULY |
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TIME |
ROOM MB G5 |
ROOM MB G6 |
ROOM MBG7 |
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10.00-10.30 |
Giovanna TalloneDark Spaces. ‘Emma Brown’ by Clare Boylan and/or Charlotte Bronte |
Prof. Michael Lynch‘Worthy of the New Ireland’: Reading Joyce’s Dubliners in the light of changing critical perceptions |
Prof. Daniel JerniganFlann O’Brien’s Faustian Accomplishments, From Faustus Kelly to The Third Policeman |
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10.30-11.00 |
Yulia Pushkarevskaya“Intertextual Consciousness in Jennifer Johnston: 'All those people whose words fill my head’” |
Dr. Stephen McLarenA Portrait of young Joyce: the endless knot and the Mangan imagination |
Prof. James CahalanWomen's Intertextualities versus Men's Anxieties of Influence in Somerville and Ross, Samuel Beckett, and Flann O'Brien. |
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11.00-11.30 |
MORNING TEA |
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11.30-12.00 |
Dr. Rhona KenneallySpatial Reproductions of The Quiet Man: The Quiet Man Museum in Mayo, Ireland, as an interactive enactment of text and film |
Prof. Vivian Lynch‘Crimson the face of shame’: Marina Carr’s Ariel reconstitutes Greek Tragedy |
Dr. John MenaghanThe Female James Joyce? James Joyce, Maeve Brennan and the Begetting of Fictional Dublin |
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12.00-12.30 |
Fionna BarberFarset, Gomorrah and Kilburn: Reading Diasporic Queer Identities and Irish painting in 1950s London |
Dr. Patricia LynchThe ancient world in an Irish bog: intertextuality and Hiberno-English in Irish versions of the classics |
Jared Lesser‘If the man in the moon was a jew, jew, jew’: Unearthing anti/Jewish iconology in Ulysses |
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12.30-1.30 |
PLENARY — LES MURRAY J.B.R. LECTURE THEATRE |
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1.30-2.45 |
LUNCH |
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2.45-3.15 |
Prof. C.L. Innes Ned Kelly in Dialogue with Irish Literature and Culture |
Prof. Kevin O’Connor‘You could not have a green rose’: Joyce’s and Deane’s rewriting of Yeats’s Irish symbol |
Dr. Julie-Ann RobsonPoetry and propaganda: Oscar Wilde’s post-trial writings |
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3.15-3.45 |
Dr. Anthony Hughes"Who does he think he is?": An intertextual reading of Roy Keane's biography' |
Dr. Masaya ShimokusuDublin Bohemia |
Prof. Linda Wong‘Tracing the Textual Web’ of Oscar Wilde in a Chinese Context |
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3.45-4.15 |
AFTERNOON TEA |
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6.15pm |
CONFERENCE DINNER — Harbour Cruise Captain Cook III 6.15pm boarding Darling Harbour King’s Street Warf No:9 |
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SATURDAY 22 JULY |
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TIME |
ROOM MB G5 |
ROOM MB G6 |
ROOM MBG7 |
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10.00-10.30 |
Prof. Maureen Murphy The Land War in Irish Literature |
Dr. Anne JamisonThe ‘accident of being a writer’: locating the archival/authorial subject in Kate O’Brien’s unpublished life-writing |
Jennifer Beckett‘Whose accent is that anyway?’ |
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10.30-11.00 |
Dr. Irene LucchittiIceland Fishermen and the Islands of Ireland |
Dr. Connor JohnstonRevisiting the Western Australian Poems of John Boyle O’Reilly |
Dr. Gary PearceThe Irish Modernist Structure of Feeling |
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11.00-11.30 |
MORNING TEA |
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11.30-12.00 |
Dr. Cliona Ni RíordáinIntertextuality and the Ethics of Translation |
Dr. Stephanie SchwerterWord city vs. real city: Belfast between reality and fiction |
Dr. Dominique SeveLord Dunsany: The Ghosts of the Past |
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12.00-12.30 |
Prof. Britta OlinderThe Literary tradition in John Hewitt’s Poetry |
Caitlin McGuinnessAbsence on display: David Park’s Swallowing the Sun |
Jerry NolanThe Irishry in Tom Moore’s Lalla Rookh |
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12.30-11.30 |
PLENARY — TOM KENEALLY J.B.R. LECTURE THEATRE |
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1.30-2.45 |
LUNCH |
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2.45-3.15 |
Prof. Shaun Richards‘“God, wouldn’t they hop!”: Synge and the “Savage God”’ |
Dr. Emilie PineStreet fighting, ceremonial hats and the Spanish Civil War: Brian Friel and Arnold Wesker |
Prof. Marthine SatrisThe Boland Effect: Writing After Outside History |
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3.15-3.45 |
Beatriz BastosRe-presenting the Irish Dramatic Tradition: Two Plays by Vincent Woods |
Prof. Andries WesselsConceptual intertextuality: Marlene van Niekerk’s Agaat as an Afrikaans Big House novel |
Prof. Naoko ToraiwaMarvell or Eliot: Hyperbole needed: Influence of Metaphysical Poets in Medbh McGuckian’s Captain Lavender |
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3.45-4.15 |
AFTERNOON TEA |
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4.15-5.15 |
EXECUTIVE MEETING — MORVEN BROWN 112 |
4.15-4.45 |
Dr. Matthew Ryan The Influence of the World: John Banville’s material epiphanies and the reterritorialisation of the self |
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OPERA — TURANDOT |
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SUNDAY 23 JULY |
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TIME |
PLENARY — DAVID MALOUF J.B.R. LECTURE THEATRE |
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10.00-11.00 |
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11.00-11.30 |
MORNING TEA |
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11.30-12.00 |
ROOM MB G5 |
ROOM MB G6 |
ROOM MB G7 |
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Dr. Rui HomemThe Sinuous and the Straight: Diction and Gaze in Ciaran Carson’s Ekphrastic Writing |
Prof. Noriko ItoAn intertextual reading of Brian Moore |
Prof. Patricia Trainor de la Cruz“‘Norn Iron’ and Seamus Heaney” |
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12.00-12.30 |
Nigel Hunter‘The wind blows hard from our past’: Anxiety and Influence in Berryman’s Irish Dream Songs |
Dr. Danine Farquharson My Two Dads: Roddy Doyle Under the Influence of Joyce and O’Casey |
Dr. Karen MoloneyHomage to Dionysus: Heaney’s Sweeney, Orpheus, and Wilmington Giant |
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12.30-1.00 |
Prof. Ken’ichi MatsumuraThe Severing Seas: The Structure of Sailing from Bran to Yeats |
Dr. Dawn DuncanAcross the Ages and Into the West: The White Horse Myth Still Travels |
Prof. Frank MolloyThe Anxiety of History: Sebastian Barry’s A Long Long Way |
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1.00-1.30 |
Dr. Wei H. KaoVoices from the Irish margin: Sean O’Casey’s The Shadow of a Gunman and Christine Reid’s Joyriders |
Prof. Laura O’ConnorFrom Douglas Hyde to Mike Mignola: the improbable resurfacings of Teig O'Kane's corpse |
Dr. Mark PhelanTemenos, Trauma, Topography and Photography: Remembering “The Disappeared” |
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1.30-2.45 |
LUNCH |
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2.45-3.45 |
AGM to be FOLLOWED BY WELCOME TO 2007 IASIL, AFTERNOON TEA & CLOSE OF CONFERENCE |
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3.45-4.15 |
AFTERNOON TEA |
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4.15 ff |
DEPARTURE |
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