The Oceanic Turn in the Long Eighteenth Century: Beyond Disciplinary Territories

The Oceanic Turn in the Long Eighteenth Century: Beyond Disciplinary Territories

Organizer
University of California, Riverside
Venue
Location
California
Country
United States
From - Until
20.11.2009 -
By
Craciun, Adriana

This conference addresses how the maritime worlds and discourses of the long eighteenth century can help us rethink the divisions of knowledge emerging in this era. Engaging scholars working on maritime history, literature, history of science, cartography, geography, museum studies and cultural studies, the conference maps two current debates (the “oceanic turn,” and the fate of the disciplines) onto a particular time and space (eighteenth-century maritime worlds) that played a central role in shaping modern disciplinarity. We aim to defamiliarize traditional narratives of disciplinarity by shifting the debate to oceanic spaces, people, and discourses. One of the panels will be devoted to the circumpolar Arctic Ocean, largely neglected by humanists even within the new oceanic turn, but increasingly of interest since the Enlightenment era, when the unique natural, social and aesthetic properties of this region encircling an ocean gained widespread attention.

Programm

Conference Participants:

- Michael Bravo (Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge University)
Michael Bravo is University Senior Lecturer in Geography at Cambridge University, where he also convenes the Circumpolar History group at the Scott Polar Research Institute. He has published and spoken extensively on governance, geography and the history of science as they relate to the circumpolar Arctic, from Enlightenment through twenty-first century contexts, and is an internationally known authority on humanistic approaches to polar studies.

- Margaret Cohen (Comparative Literature, Stanford University)
Margaret Cohen (Professor of Comparative Literature, Stanford) will present a talk drawn from her new book, The Novel and the Sea (Princeton University Press, forthcoming 2010) concerning how the history and representation of global ocean travel informed the development of the novel. Her previous books include the award-winning Sentimental Education of the Novel (1999) and the edited collection, The Literary Channel: The Inter-National Invention of the Novel, which mapped the long eighteenth-century “rise of the novel” in Europe onto the waterway dividing the British Isles and the continent.

- Christopher Connery (Literature, University of California, Santa Cruz)
Christopher Connery (Professor of Literature, UC Santa Cruz) has published widely-cited interdisciplinary essays on oceanic thought in such journals as boundary2 and Journal of Historical Geography. His talk will examine the relationship between geopolitics and the theatricalization of maritime power, and is drawn from his book in progress, titled The Oceanic Feeling: Aqueous Ideologies and the Geo-imaginary of Capitalism. The Oceanic Feeling examines the capitalist west's figuration of its relationship to the ocean and to ocean going, with reference to varying figurations of the ocean in China, Oceania, Japan, and elsewhere.

- Adriana Craciun (English, University of California, Riverside)
Adriana Craciun (Professor of English, UC Riverside) is a founding organizer of the international series of events of which The Oceanic Turn is a part: “The Disorder of Things: Predisciplinarity and the Divisions of Knowledge, 1660-1850.” Her current book project, Northwest Passages: Authorship, Exploration, Disaster, presents a genealogy of multidisciplinary texts and inscriptions (print, manuscript, and graffiti, suppressed and published, authentic and spurious) and their role in shaping three centuries of Arctic exploration. Her previous two books focused on British women’s literature in relationship to the history of the body and to French revolutionary politics. Essays drawn from her Arctic research are forthcoming in Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, PMLA, and Nineteenth-Century Literature.

- Jonathan King (Keeper of the Collections, British Museum)
Jonathan King, Keeper of the Collections at the British Museum, is an internationally recognized authority on indigenous art and material culture from the Arctic. Responsible for the entirety of the British Museum’s collections of objects from the Americas and Oceania, King will contribute a historical and practitioner perspective on Enlightenment-era collecting and its relationship to art from the Arctic.

- Neil Safier (History, University of British Columbia)
Neil Safier is Assistant Professor of History at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, and is author of Measuring the New World: Enlightenment Science and South America (Chicago, 2008), which won the 2009 Gilbert Chinard Prize from the Society for French Historical Studies. He received his Ph.D. from the Johns Hopkins University in 2004 and has since then held postdoctoral fellowships at the University of Michigan and the University of Pennsylvania. Recently, he became an editor of Atlantic Studies, an interdisciplinary journal of Atlantic history, literature, and culture, and in the spring of 2010 will be a visiting researcher at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin.

-Patricia Seed (History, University of California, Irvine)
Patricia Seed is Professor of History at UC Irvine, currently working on the history of cartography (in part through a UCHRI/NEH/ACLS funded project titled "The Development of Mapping: Portuguese Cartography and Coastal Africa” (www.pmoca.net)). She is the author of American Pentimento: The Pursuit of Riches and the Invention of “Indians” (2001) (winner of the Prize in Atlantic History) and Ceremonies of Possession in Europe's Conquest of the New World (1995).

Contact (announcement)

Professor Adriana Craciun
University of California, Riverside
900 University Ave.
Riverside, CA 92521

Tel: (951) 827-1012
Email: adriana.craciun@ucr.edu

http://ideasandsociety.ucr.edu/oceanicturn
Editors Information
Published on
18.09.2009
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Language(s) of event
English
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