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PROGRAM(All sessions and events take place at theHotel Albuquerque unless noted otherwise)WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 20105 p.m. – 7 p.m. Registration East AtriumTHURSDAY, MARCH 18, 20108:00 a.m. – 5 p.m. Registration East Atrium8:00 a.m. – 5 p.m. Book Exhibit Alvarado DSESSIONS I8:00 - 9:30 a.m.1. “Brothels, Boudoirs, Balls” Alvarado EChair: Enid VALLE, Kalamazoo College1. Mary M. CHAN, University of Alberta, “The Reflective Boudoir:Fractured Interiority in Maria Edgeworth’s Belinda”2. Irene GOMEZ CASTELLANO, University of North Carolina, ChapelHill, “The Lady and the Mirror: Toilette Scenes in Goya and MeléndezValdés”3. Dorinda OUTRAM, University of Rochester, “The Transparent Mask:Truth, Transparency and the Erotic in the Enlightenment”4. Margaret E. BONDS, University of the South, “Dancing the Fandangoor Having a Ball in Madrid”LCD AND CD PLAYER2. “Special Delivery: French Epistolarity” Alvarado AChair: Heidi BOSTIC, Baylor University1. Andrea MAGERMANS, Grinnell College, “Madame Riccoboni’sEpistolary Agenda”2. Felicia B. STURZER, University of Tennessee, Chattanooga, “‘Je nefais pas un roman’: Epistolary Configurations and Riccoboni’s Lettresde Mylord Rivers à Sir Charles Cardigan”3. Elizabeth Heckendorn COOK, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Santa Barbara,“Remediating Interpretation: Sophie Calle Rewrites Epistolarity”LCD PROJECTOR1


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th3. “Print and Per<strong>for</strong>mance” Alvarado BChair: Katherine MANNHEIMER, University of Rochester40th 1. NWSECS David A. BREWER, Annual Meeting The Ohio State University, “Polly Honeycombe,Lydia Languish, and the ‘Ever-Green Tree’ of Print, Per<strong>for</strong>mance, andPersonhood”2. Bryan HURT, University of Southern Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, “The MetafictionalMousetrap: Hamlet, Henry Fielding, and the Per<strong>for</strong>mance ofAuthorship in The History of Tom Jones”3. Jennifer WILSON, Appalachian State University, “Tumble-Down Tom:The Afterpiece in Fielding’s Fiction”4. Darryl P. DOMINGO, University of Toronto, “‘A Dance between theActs’: or, Digression as Divertissement in An Apology <strong>for</strong> the Life ofColley Cibber, &c.”LCD PROJECTOR4. “Theories of Visual Experience and Artists’ Writings about Art in the<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”Alvarado CChair: Maureen HARKIN, Reed College1. Hector REYES, Northwestern University, “Drawing History: Dialecticsof Visual Experience in the Comte de Caylus’ Recueil”2. Lyrica TAYLOR, University of Maryland, “Portrait of the Artist: JohnFrancis Rigaud’s Vision of the Role of the Artist in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong>England”3. Abigail ZITIN, University of Chicago, “Hogarth’s Drawing Lesson:Technique and Gender in The Analysis of Beauty”LCD PROJECTOR5. “Beyond Locke: Mind, Matter, Sex, and Soul in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong>Literature and Culture” Suite 318Chair: Kristin M. GIRTEN, University of Nebraska, Omaha1. Kathleen LUBEY, St. John’s University, “Reading Minds: Imagination,Abstraction, and Empirical Fictions”2. Natalie PHILLIPS, Stan<strong>for</strong>d University, “Distraction and the<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Mind”3. Helen THOMPSON, Northwestern University, “Grandison’s Form”Respondent: Jonathan KRAMNICK, Rutgers UniversityOVERHEAD6. “Constructing a Public Face: Image Creation in the Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong><strong>Century</strong>”Alvarado FChair: Janet R. WHITE, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, School ofArchitecture1. Yasser Derwiche DJAZAERLY, Sam Houston State University, “Le RoiSans Souci: Friedrich II and his Palace”2


2. Kevin JUSTUS, Independent Scholar, “The illustrious Kings of Franceor the Strapping Hercules ....Louis XV, the Salon d’Hercule, Identityand the Creation of an Abstract Portrait”3. John WHALE, University of Leeds, “Creating a New Face <strong>for</strong> the City:William Roscoe’s Liverpool, 1770-1830”LCD PROJECTOR7. “Gender and Homosociality in the Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”Alvarado GChair: Heidi STROBEL, University of Evansville1. Jennifer GERMANN, Ithaca College, “Women’s Networks and ArtisticSurvival: The Case of Marie-Éléonore Godefroid”2. Amber LUDWIG, Boston University, “Re-Evaluating Vigée-Lebrun’sPortrait of Lady Hamilton as a Sybil”LCD PROJECTOR8. “Blurring Boundaries: Class, Gender, Race, and Sexuality in the<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>” Suite 518Chair: Hazel GOLD, Emory University1. Lisa ROURKE, Brandeis University, “The Marriage Act of 1753: AnEconomic Argument <strong>for</strong> the Continued Commodification of theLaboring Poor”2. Charlie BONDHUS, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, “ImperialGothic: Travel, Discourse, and the European Other”3. Mehl PENROSE, University of Maryland, College Park, “Queer Camp:Ramón de la Cruz’s Sainetes”LCD PROJECTOR9. “Portraits and Money” Alvarado HChair: Brad<strong>for</strong>d MUDGE, University of Colorado, Denver1. Susan EGENOLF, Texas A&M University, “Narrative as Commodityin the Marketing of Wedgwood’s Fine Heads”2. Megan PEISER, Texas Tech University, “A Picture of Commodity:The Culture of Miniatures in Ann Radcliffe’s The Mysteries ofUdolpho”3. Tatiana SENKEVITCH, University of Toronto, “The Flip Side of theAncient Coin: Du Bos on the Portraiture of the King”LCD PROJECTOR10. “Adam Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments and <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>Fiction”ChapelChair: Corey E. ANDREWS, Youngstown State University1. Heather KING, University of Redlands, “”From Spectacle to Spectator:Adam Smith, Eliza Haywood, and Moral Observation”3


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th2. Christopher REESE, University of Kentucky, “Finding the Immoral to beMoral: Humorous Sympathy in Fielding’s Tom Jones”40th 3. NWSECS Ann KIBBIE, Annual Bowdoin Meeting College, “Sympathy <strong>for</strong> the Dead: Adam Smith,Henry Brooke and William Godwin”11. “The Birth of Celebrity” PotterChairs: Julia FAWCETT, Yale University AND Katharine ZIMOLZAK,University of Southern Cali<strong>for</strong>nia1. Elaine MCGIRR, Royal Holloway, University of London, “What PriceFame? Cibber, Celebrity and Reputation”2. Emily H. ANDERSON, University of Southern Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, “Celebrity asEffacement: Mary Robinson’s Perdita”3. Erin MACKIE, Syracuse University, “The Celebrity of CriminalLegends: Jack Sheppard, Macheath, and Dick Turpin”4. Jason SHAFFER, United States Naval Academy, “Importing IT: TheEvolution of Celebrity in the Early <strong>American</strong> Theatre”LCD PROJECTOR12. “The Turn to Ethics in Analyses of Restoration and <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Literature” Suite 618Chair: Elizabeth KRAFT, University of Georgia1. Donald R. WEHRS, Auburn University, “The Ethical Turn in Criticismand the Novelistic Turn in Fielding: Pregnant Parallels and FearfulSymmetries”2. Tobias MENELY, Willamette University, “Creaturely Ethics from Sterneto Benjamin”3. Efraht MARGULIET, State University of New York, Buffalo, “The(Re)turn to Ethics: Coleridge’s Baconianism in The Friend”Respondent: Melvyn NEW, University of Florida13. “Memoria Technica, or: the Art of Retention in the Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong><strong>Century</strong>”WeaverChair: Bruno FORMENT, Ghent University1. Andrew BROUGHTON, University of Chicago, “Grey’s MemoriaTechnica, Richardson’s Table: Reading, Narrative, and the Art ofMemory in the Age of <strong>Johns</strong>on”2. Sarah EYERLY, Butler University, “The All-Time Easiest Path to Utopia:The Memorial Archive of the <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Herrnhuter”3. Daniel DEWISPELARE, University of Pennsylvania, “The Andrometer:Translation, Memory, and Mastery in the Late <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”LCD PROJECTOR4


Thursday, March 18, 201014. “The <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong> in Motion” Suite 4v18Chair: Alistaire TALLENT, Colorado College1. Lila Miranda GRAVES, University of Alabama, Birmingham, “Walkingthe Western Circuit: Paradise Hall, Glastonbury Tor and the ArthurianContext of Tom Jones”2. Meredith DAVIS, Ramapo College of New Jersey, “Hogarth In Flight”3. Michael YONAN, University of Missouri, “Movement, Perception, andSalvation in the Bavarian Rococo Church”15. “Bluestocking Philosophy and Enlightenment Thought” TurquoiseChair: JoEllen DELUCIA, John Jay College, City University of New York1. Rachel JURADO, University of Notre Dame, “Elizabeth Carter andWomen’s Pursuit of Happiness in the Enlightenment Novel”2. Deborah HELLER, Western New Mexico University, “Talking a BlueStreak: Bluestockings Practice Enlightenment”3. Celia Barnes RASMUSSEN, Indiana University, “Warm Bodies by theFire-side: Elizabeth Carter’s Epistolary Philosophy”4. Olivera JOKIC, John Jay College, City University of New York, “Whatis Enlightenment? Female Characters in a Tale of Improvement, from theBluestockings to Catharine Macaulay”LCD PROJECTOR16. “Economics and Literature” Suite 218Chair: Reginald MCGINNIS, University of Arizona1. Mike HILL, State University of New York, Albany, “‘The PleasingWonder of Ignorance’: Adam Smith’s Divisions of Knowledge”2. Olivier DELERS, University of Richmond, “Prefiguring the ‘New’ Spiritof Capitalism in Sade’s Les In<strong>for</strong>tunes de la vertu”3. Stéphane PUJOL, Université de Paris X – Nanterre, “La Notion de‘Commerce’ à L’âge Classique”4. Geoffrey TURNOVSKY, University of Washington, “The Gift ofAutonomy: Patronage, Economics, and the Literary Lives ofPhilosophes”SESSIONS II9:45 - 11:15 a.m.17. “ECCO, EEBO, and the Burney Collection: Some ‘NoisyFeedback’ (Roundtable)Alvarado EChair: Anna BATTIGELLI, State University of New York, Plattsburgh1. Sayre GREENFIELD, University of Pittsburgh, Greensburg2. Stephen KARIAN, Marquette University5


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th3. James E. MAY, Pennsylvania State University, DuBois4. Eleanor F. SHEVLIN, West Chester University40th 5. NWSECS Michael F. Annual SUAREZ, Meeting S.J., Rare Book School, University of VirginiaRESPONDENTS: Scott DAWSON, Gale/CengageBrian GEIGER, ESTCJo-Anne HOGAN, Proquest(Pre-panel discussion and selected readings can be found atwww.earlymodernonlinebib.wordpress.com)18. “The Whole Show on the <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Stage” Alvarado AChairs: Fiona RITCHIE, McGill University AND Diana SOLOMON, SimonFraser University1. Jane MILLING, University of Exeter “Tags, Puffs, and Persons: TheImaginative Perils of Restoration Popular Per<strong>for</strong>mance”2. Tonya HOWE, Marymount University, “‘Things without Head, or Tail,or Form, or Grace’: The Hypercorporeality of Farce on the Early<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Stage”3. Peter BROADWELL, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles, “NoveltyActs, Horse Tricks, Ballet-Pantomime and the Development of Action-Adventure Music on the Late <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> English Stage”4. Cami D. AGAN, Oklahoma Christian University, “The Actress asWhole Show: Catherine Clive as Per<strong>for</strong>mer, Author, Persona”LCD PROJECTOR AND SPEAKERS19. “To Be or Not To Be: Monsters, Mutants and Morphs in the<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”Alvarado BChair: Yvonne FUENTES, Independent Scholar1. Lydia BARNETT, Stan<strong>for</strong>d University, “Kidney Stones and FossilFerns: The Struggle to Define Living and Non-Living Nature in theEarly Enlightenment”2. Jess KEISER, Cornell University, “Enrolling a Legion: On the<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong> Quarrel with Wit”3. Jennifer LOCKE, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Irvine, “MonstrousPossibilities: The Second Sight, Sympathy and Reparation in ElizaHaywood’s Spy on the Conjurer and The Dumb Projector”4. David SLADE, Berry College, “Monsters in Viceregal Peru: PeraltaBarnuevo’s Desvíos de la naturaleza. O tratado del origen de losmonstrous (1695)”LCD PROJECTOR6


Thursday, March 18, 201020. “Degeneration and Decline in French Enlightenment Thought”Alvarado CChair: Joanna STALNAKER, Columbia University1. Andrew CURRAN, Wesleyan University, “Regressive History: TheOrigins of Degeneration Theory in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Thought”2. Saul ANTON, Princeton University, “The Art of Ruins: Fiction andHistory in Diderot’s Salons”3. Rudy LE MENTHÉOUR, Bryn Mawr College, “Regénération: DuMicroscope à la Guillotine”LCD PROJECTOR21. “New Perspectives on Thomas Shadwell” Alvarado FChair: Jennifer L. AIREY, University of Tulsa1. Bill BLAKE, University of Wisconsin, Madison, “Shadwell and theSoldier-Playwrights”2. Peter CRAFT, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, “Shadwell’sResponse to a True Widow’s Unpopularity”3. Ereck JARVIS, University of Wisconsin, Madison, :Scowring the Club:Shadwell and Authorizing New Sociality in Seventeenth-<strong>Century</strong>London”4. Peggy THOMPSON, Agnes Scott College, “Coyness and Crime inShadwell’s Late Comedies”LCD PROJECTOR22. “Venice” in the Imagination of the Creative Artist and the DiscursiveCitizen”Alvarado GChair: Todd L. LARKIN, Montana State University1. Sally GRANT, University of Sydney, “The World in the VenetianCountryside: The Tiepolos at the Villa Valmarana ai Nani”2. Sabrina FERRI, University of Notre Dame, “Venice on Stage: Gozzi’sTheater Between Conservatism and Innovation”3. Irene ZANINI-CORDI, Florida State University, “Lagoon Waters:Double Vision of Venetian Festivities”4. Lisa BERGLUND, Buffalo State College, State University of New York,“Sweet Seducements and Wandering Misery: Hester Lynch PiozziReflects on Venice”LCD PROJECTOR AND TWO SCREENS23. “<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> “Englishness” in German: “Engellandsdelicater Bücher-Geschmack kan schon eine gute Meynung vondiesem Buche erwecken”Alvarado HChair: Michael GAMER, University of Pennsylvania1. Bethany WIGGIN, University of Pennsylvania, “Englishness in<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Germany: Milton, Defoe, Richardson”7


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th30. “Novels as Children’s Books” Suite 418Chair: Heather KLEMANN, Yale University40th 1. NWSECS Teresa MICHALS, Annual George Meeting Mason University, “For ‘the Youth of BothSexes’: Re-Writing Pamela”2. Margaret FRANCE, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Davis, “TheDomestication of Robinson Crusoe: Farther Adventures in the HomeSchool Curriculum”3. Shelley KING, Queen’s University, “‘Into the hands of persons of anyage or sex’: Identifying Multiple Markets <strong>for</strong> Amelia Opie’s ‘The BlackVelvet Pelisse’”Respondent: Andrea IMMEL, Princeton University LibraryLCD PROJECTOR31. “Moving Vegetation: Collecting, Transplanting, and AcclimatizingPlants in the Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>” Suite 518Chair: Giulia PACINI, The College of William & Mary1. Glynis RIDLEY, University of Louisville, “Eating Locally, EatingGlobally: The Naturalization of Exotics and the <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong>Imperial Enterprise”2. Stephanie VOLMER, Managing Editor, Raritan Quarterly, RutgersUniversity, “Escaping Plants and Other Examples of BotanicalMobility”3. Mira RADANOVIC, McMaster University, “‘Lily flowers steeped inalcohol, an excellent vulnerary’: The Interests, Surfeits, Debts, andFetishes of Florilegium Culture”LCD PROJECTOR32. “Eve Sedgwick’s <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>: In Memoriam” (Roundtable)Suite 618Chair: Lisa L. MOORE, University of Texas at Austin1. Jill CASID, University of Wisconsin-Madison2. Jody GREENE, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia-Santa Cruz3. Kristina STRAUB, Carnegie Mellon University4. Scarlet BOWEN, University of Colorado5. George HAGGERTY, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia-Riverside10


SESSIONS IIIThursday, March 18, 201011:30 a.m. – 1 p.m.33. “Epic Dialogs: Conversations with the Living and the Dead” IAlvarado CChair: Renee GUTIÉRREZ, Hiram College1. James CREECH, University of Notre Dame, “The Magic of ModernLearning in Davenant’s Gondibert”2. Sarah CAMPBELL, University of Virginia, “Innovation and Imitation:The Case of Two <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Spanish Epics”?3. Seth RUDY, New York University, “Epic or Encyclopedia: GenericChange and the New Learning”LCD PROJECTOR34. “Violence in the Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>” Suite 518Chair: Lori A. Davis PERRY, United States Air Force Academy1. Winifred ERNST, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, “Rape andMarriage in Dryden’s Fables”2. Susan MCNEILL-BINDON, University of Alberta, “Breaking Ties thatBind: Social Stability and Female Violence in Three Later <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Novels”3. Kirsten SAXTON, Mills College, “Domestic Assault: MurderessesSarah Malcolm and Elizabeth Brownrigg”4. Gretchen KOENIG, United States Air Force Academy, “”DomesticTransgression as Precursor to War: Fear and Violence in Evelina”35. “Fear Be<strong>for</strong>e the Gothic” Suite 618Chair: Christopher LOAR, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Davis1. Taylor CORSE, Arizona State University, “The Politics of Fear inDryden’s ‘Sigismonda and Guiscardo’”2. Paul KELLEHER, Emory University, “Pamela and the Erotics of Fear”3. Jonathan SADOW, State University of New York, Oneonta, “‘Scenes ofthe Most Exquisite Distress’: Frances Sheridan and the Novel ofPersecution”4. Melissa DEININGER, Iowa State University, “Sade and Pre-Revolutionary Fear”36. “Music, Science, and Technology” Alvarado EChair: Laurel E. ZEISS, Baylor University1. Deidre LOUGHRIDGE, University of Pennsylvania, “Muted Soundsand Optical Images: Haydn’s Telescopic Music”2. Samuel BREENE, Rhode Island College, “Technologies of the MusicChamber: Instrumental Prostheses and the Mozartean Sound”LCD PROJECTOR / CD PLAYER11


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th37. “What’s in a ‘Querelle’?” Suite 418Chair: Kate E. TUNSTALL, University of Ox<strong>for</strong>d, Besterman Centre <strong>for</strong> the40th NWSECS Enlightenment Annual Meeting1. Ourida MOSTEFAI, Boston College, “Taking Sides in French EpistolaryQuarrels”2. David MACKLOVITCH, Columbia University, “Hermeneutics at Play inthe ‘Querelle de l’Éloquence Sacrée’”3. Alexis TADIÉ, Université de Paris IV - Sorbonne, “Translation,Transposition, Ficitionalisation of Quarrels: From the Querelle to theBattle of the Books”4. Sabine VOLK-BIRKE, MLU Halle-Wittenberg, “The Quarrel About the(Literary) Critic: Authority Contested”38. “The Stage on the Page: Plays, Players, and Playhouses in the<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Novel”TurquoiseChair: Robert DIMIT, New York University1. Bridget DRAXLER, University of Iowa, “Generic Inheritance in the<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Novel: The Role of the Theater in MariaEdgeworth’s Belinda”2. Marcie FRANK, Concordia University, “Provocations: The ProvokedHusband and Aesthetic Response in the Novel”3. Sophie DELAHAYE, Washburn University, “Life Imitates Art:Actresses as Role Models in Sade’s Novel Aline et Valcour”Respondent: Paula R. BACKSCHEIDER, Auburn University39. “Artists’ Lives and Afterlives: Fact, Fiction, and Fabrication”Alvarado BChair: Heather MCPHERSON, University of Alabama at Birmingham1. Sarah MONKS, University of East Anglia, Norwich, “Life/<strong>Studies</strong>:Living as an Artist in Late <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> London”2. Robert MODE, Vanderbilt University, “Staging the Life of Hogarth orThe Artist’s Progress”3. Paulo M. KUHL, State University of Campinas (Brazil), “Making Heroesin the Institut de France: Joachim Le Breton’s ‘Notices Historiques’”LCD PROJECTOR AND LIGHTED PODIUM40. “‘Mixture’ in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Britain: Poetry and Theory”Chair: David FAIRER, University of Leeds Suite 3181. Wolfram SCHMIDGEN, Washington University, St Louis, “MixtureUnbound”2. Jennifer OHLUND, Cali<strong>for</strong>nia State University, Los Angeles, “The‘Huge Confluent’ of Culture in John Gay’s Trivia”3. Juan Christian PELLICER, University of Oslo, “Charlotte Smith’sBeachy Head and the <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Tradition of Generic Mixturein Poetry”12


Thursday, March 18, 20104. Suvir KAUL, University of Pennsylvania, “An Imperial Poetics? Empireand the Poetry of Mixed Form”41. “The <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Road Trip” Alvarado AChair: Inger Sigrun BRODEY, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill1. Andrew FRANTA, University of Utah, “From Map to Network: Travelin Humphry Clinker”2. Pamela PHILLIPS, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras, “InsiderKnowledge: Pedestrian Travel in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Spain”3. Jon KERSHNER, University of Birmingham, “The (Com)Motion ofLove: Theological and Moral Formation in John Woolman’s ItinerantMinistry”4. Tom REINERT, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, “Providencein the Picaresque”LCD PROJECTOR42. “Staging the Atlantic Revolutions in the Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”Suite 218Chair: Kathleen WILSON, State University of New York, Stony Brook1. Marc LERNER, University of Mississippi, “William Tell as an EnduringRevolutionary Symbol in the Atlantic Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”2. Peter REED, University of Mississippi, “Rebels and Refugees: TheHaitian Revolution and the North <strong>American</strong> Stage”3. Jenna GIBBS, Florida International University, “The Black Spartacus ofthe East End London Theatre: Toussaint as an Icon of UniversalResistance”43. “Considering Slavery: Representation of Enslavement(s) in the Long<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”Alvarado FChair: Srividhya SWAMINATHAN, Long Island University1. Amy WITHERBEE, Independent Scholar, “‘Arabian Nights’, theSultan’s Slaves and the Slave to Love”2. Laura MARTIN, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Santa Cruz, “‘PerpetualServants’ and ‘Slaves <strong>for</strong> Four Years’: The Interchange of Servitudeand Slavery in Oroonoko’s Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”3. Susan Houghton LIBBY, Rollins College, “When is Slavery Liberty?Social Death and Rebirth in Abolitionist Prints of the FrenchRevolution”4. Aida RAMOS, West Texas A&M University, “‘Slaves to Their OwnWants’: Sir James Steuart on Physical and Commercial Slavery in the<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>LCD PROJECTOR13


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th44. “Editing (and Re-Editing) Historical Texts” Alvarado GChair: Kevin Joel BERLAND, Pennsylvania State University, Shenango40th 1. NWSECS Geraldine Annual SHERIDAN, Meeting University of Limerick, “Boulainvilliers’s Essaide Métaphysique”2. Kevin BOURQUE, University of Texas, Austin, “Genre Trouble:Marginalia, Temporality, and Charles <strong>Johns</strong>tone’s Chrysal: or, theAdventures of a Guinea”3. William RIVERS, University of South Carolina, “Editing <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Periodicals: Problems of Attribution and Context in theCraftsman”4. Rebecca SHAPIRO, City University of New York, “The HarmlessDrudge’s Guide to Editing Prefaces and Theoretical Front Matter inDictionaries Be<strong>for</strong>e the OED”LCD PROJECTOR45. “‘He said, she said’: Rape in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Law, Fiction, andMoralist Writing”WeaverChair: Mary TROUILLE, Illinois State University1. Jeffrey CASS, University of Louisiana at Monroe, “OrientalizingColonial Violence: Rape in Hartly House, Calcutta”2. Christopher FRITSCH, Weather<strong>for</strong>d College, “Examining the Law ofRape in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> America”3. Ellen MOODY, George Mason University, “‘What right have you todetain me here?’: Rape in Clarissa”4. Leslie A. RICHARDSON, Xavier University of Louisiana, “Rape andIdentity in the <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> British Novel”5. Sarah SKORONSKI, McGill University, “To Censor or Censure?Representing Rape in Samuel Richardson’s Clarissa and ElizaHaywood’s The Fruitless Enquiry”46. “Foreign Captives: European Masters” Alvarado HChair: Daren HODSON, Bilkent University1. Michèle BOCQUILLON, Hunter College & the Graduate Center of theCity University of New York, “Placement/Displacement of AfricanChildren in European Courts”2. Valérie LASTINGER, West Virginia University, “From the Asian Bazaarsto the World of France: Mademoiselle Aïssé and the Art ofAssimilation”LCD PROJECTOR14


Thursday, March 18, 201047. “Roger Lonsdale’s edition of <strong>Johns</strong>on’s Lives of the Most EminentEnglish Poets; with Critical Observations on the their Works, 4 vols.(Clarendon Press, 2006)” (Roundtable)ChapelChair: Greg CLINGHAM, Bucknell University1. O M BRACK, Jr., Arizona State University2. Robert DE MARIA, Vassar College3. Robert FOLKENFLIK, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Irvine4. Adam ROUNCE, Manchester Metropolitan University5. Philip SMALLWOOD, Birmingham City University48. “The Fate of the Restoration in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>”(Roundtable)PotterChair: Daniel GUSTAFSON, Yale University1. Elizabeth KRAFT, University of Georgia2. Hilary MENGES, Yale University3. Loring PFEIFFER, University of Pittsburgh4. Jacob Sider JOST, Harvard University5. Alison CONWAY, University of Western Ontario6. Elliott VISCONSI, Yale University1-2:30 p.m. Lunch BreakSESSIONS IV2:30 – 4 p.m.49. “Gender and the Global <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong> I” Suite 618Chair: Abby COYKENDALL, Eastern Michigan University1. Melissa MOWRY, St. John’s University, “Love, Empire, and Proofs ofSovereignty in Aphra Behn’s Atlantic World”2. Alexis MCQUIGGE, University of Waterloo, “What’s an AutomatonDoing on a Deserted Island? Gender and the Female Robinsonade”3 Christine M. ROULSTON, University of Western Ontario, “Gender andColonial Discourse In Isabelle de Charrière’s Lettres de MistrissHenley”4. Jason SOLINGER, University of Mississippi, “They Marry YourDaughters!: The Domestic Stakes of the Trial of Warren Hastings”15


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th50. “Topography and Tourism – I” Alvarado BChair: Felicity NUSSBAUM, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles40th 1. NWSECS Alison O’BYRNE, Annual University Meetingof York, “Topographizing the Metropolis:Tourism in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> London”2. Catriona KENNEDY, University of York, “Naval Gazing: MilitaryTourism and the Aesthetics of Patriotism in Britain, 1793-1815”3. Harriet GUEST, University of York, “Barmouth Bathing”LCD PROJECTOR51. “Epic Dialogs: Conversations with the Living and the Dead” IIAlvarado CChair: Renee GUTIÉRREZ, Hiram College1. Nicole HOREJSI, Columbia University, “‘Pulcherrima Dido”: Jane Barkerand the Epic of Exile”2. Donna WALDRON, Campbell University, “The Epic in the Age ofSensibility: Hannah Cowley and The Siege of Acre”3. Hilary MENGES, Yale University, “Epic, Satire, and Monumentality inJonathan Swift”LCD PROJECTOR52. “Dialogues des morts / Dialogs of the Dead” – I Suite 518Chair: Theodore E. D. BRAUN, University of Delaware1. Thomas F. DILLINGHAM, University of Missouri, “Mother Midnightand the Mincing Bard Cross Paths in a Country Church-Yard”2. Sharon HARROW, Shippensburg University, Jack LYNCH, RutgersUniversity, AND Bruce MCKENZIE, Independent Scholar, “The Fightof the <strong>Century</strong>! Mendoza v. Pope: At once the Source, the End, andTest of the Art and Science of Boxing”53. “Fin de siècle I: Avatars of the Novel in the Waning Years of the<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>” Suite 318Chair: Ourida MOSTEFAI, Boston College1. Pierre FRANTZ, Université de Paris-Sorbonne, “Le théâtre, lecteur duroman à la fin du XVIIIe siècle”2. Pierre SAINT-AMAND, Brown University, “De la perversité moderne:le roman au tournant des Lumières”3. Suzanne R. PUCCI, University of Kentucky, “The DisappearingFirst-Person: The Orphaned ‘I’ and the Colonial Subject in Ourika”16


Thursday, March 18, 201054. “Border Crossings: National Identities and Music during the Long<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”Alvarado AChair: Jane MILLING, University of Exeter1. John S. POWELL, University of Tulsa, “Channel Crossings: TheMigration of French Music and Musicians to England during the EarlyYears of the Restoration”2. Kathryn LOWERRE, “‘Les Goûts Réunis’ in English Opera?: Frenchand Italian Tastes in Per<strong>for</strong>mance c. 1715"3. Amanda Eubanks WINKLER, Syracuse University, “The Frenchconnection: Post-Purcell dramatick opera and Lully’s tragédies enmusique”4. Leslie RITCHIE, Queens University, “Femininity and Foreignness inColman’s Farce, The Musical Lady”LCD PROJECTOR / CD PLAYER55. “Women Without Gender?: A Roundtable Discussion” (Roundtable)WeaverChair: Katherine BINHAMMER, University of Alberta1. Alison CONWAY, University of Western Ontario2. Vivien JONES, University of Leeds3. Kathyrn R. KING, University of Montevallo4. Betty A. SCHELLENBERG, Simon Fraser University56. “Concepts of Debt in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Culture” – I PotterChair: Linda ZIONKOWSKI, Ohio University1. D.N. DELUNA, University College London, “On the Repudiation ofState Debt in Fact and Whig Fiction”2. Robert MARKLEY, University of Illinois, “”Rethinking England’sNational Debt in the Age of Bernie Madoff”3. Reed BENHAMOU, Indiana University, “Charles-Joseph Natoire andthe Money Market”4. Diane KELLEY, University of Puget Sound, “Indebtedness as aNarrative Strategy in Early Modern French Women’s Fiction”57. “Jonathan Swift and His Circle VII” Suite 218Chair: Donald C. MELL, University of Delaware1. Paul W. CHILD, Sam Houston State University, “Per<strong>for</strong>ming Medicine:Swift's A Consultation of Four Physicians”2. Mary CARTER, Millikin University, “Swift’s Frenemies”3. Louise BARNETT, Rutgers University, “La Différence: Gender andSwift’s Friendships”4. Judith HAWLEY, Royal Holloway, University of London, “Clubbing. Together: Swift and the Scriblerus Club”5. Joseph MCMINN, University of Ulster, “Why Swift Liked Gay’s TheBeggar’s Opera” LCD PROJECTOR17


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th58. “Contagious Inspiration: Envisioning Enthusiasm in the <strong>Eighteenth</strong><strong>Century</strong>”Alvarado F40th Chair: NWSECS Amanda LAHIKAINEN, Annual Meeting Brown University AND Hope SASKA, TheDetroit Institute of Arts1. Douglas FORDHAM, University of Virginia, “Enthusiasm Delimited:William Hogarth’s Bristol Altarpiece”2. Dustin D. STEWART, University of Texas at Austin, “Regularizing (butstill Satirizing) Enthusiasm: The Case of the Pindaric Ode”3. Mary PEACE, Sheffield Hallam University, “Sentiment and Enthusiasm:John Wesley and the Abridgement of Henry Brooke’s ‘The Fool ofQuality’”LCD PROJECTOR59. “Vice” Suite 418Chair: Jessica RICHARD, Wake Forest University1. Daniel LUPTON, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, “WorkingHard, Playing Hard: Wilkes, Dashwood and Sandwich as a New Kind ofLibertine”2. Alex WETMORE, Carleton University, “Spa Mania, Literature, andMoral-Physiological Health in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Britain”3. Giovanna SUMMERFIELD, Auburn University, “Domenico Tempio andthe Vicious Circle of <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Sicily”4. Julien GUILLEMET, Univeristy of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Santa Barbara, “Gamblingin <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> France”60. “The Arts at Court and Courtly Arts in the Old and New Worlds”Alvarado EChair: Gloria EIVE, Emeritus, Saint Mary’s College of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia1. Daren HODSON, Bilkent University, “Court and Opera: Beaumarchais’and Salieri’s Tarare (1787)”2. Joseph R. JONES, University of Kentucky, “Musical Comedy <strong>for</strong>Christmas: The <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Villancico”3. Ligia Ravenna PINHEIRO, Wittenberg University, “Portuguese CourtFestivities in Early Nineteenth-<strong>Century</strong> Brazil”4. Nena COUCH, Ohio State University, “Dance and Court”Large Room , LCD PROJECTOR, OVERHEAD PROJECTOR, CD/DVD PLAYER, EXTERNAL SPEAKERS61. “Theatricality, Religion, and Politics in the 1660s” TurquoiseChair: Anna BATTIGELLI, State University of New York, Plattsburgh1. Jessica MUNNS, University of Denver, “Forging the Actress”2. Helen BURKE, Florida State University, “‘Crost’ Catholics: Teague and18


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0thSESSIONS V 4:15 – 5:45 p.m.40th NWSECS Annual Meeting65. “Unfamiliar Texts of the <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Caribbean”(Early Caribbean <strong>Society</strong>)Alvarado CChair: Jordan KELLMAN, University of Louisiana, Lafayette1. Linda STURTZ, Beloit College, “Miss Sweet-Sop, Mrs. Midnight andthe Widow Guava: Free Creole Women in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Jamaica”2. James ROBERTSON, University of the West Indies, Jamaica, “Soldiers’Journals and the Nature of Colonial Campaigning: Fighting Jamaica’sFirst Maroon War, 1728-1738/9”3. April SHELFORD, <strong>American</strong> University, “Buttons and Blood: Fusée-Aublet’s Critique of Slavery, East and West”RESPONDENT: Thomas W. KRISE, University of the PacificLCD PROJECTOR66. “Gender and the Global <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong> II” Suite 618Chair: Abby COYKENDALL, Eastern Michigan University1. Isobel GRUNDY, University of Alberta, Canada, “‘Just as ’Tis withYou’: Lady Mary Wortley Montagu and Gender Abroad”2. Ana de Freitas BOE, Baldwin-Wallace College, “John Gabriel Stedman,the Hetero Picaresque, and the Deflation of White Colonial Masculinityin Narrative of a Five Year Expedition Against the Revolted Negroesof Surinam”3. Regulus L. ALLEN, Cali<strong>for</strong>nia Polytechnic State University, San LuisObispo, “‘The Sable Venus’ and Desire <strong>for</strong> the Undesirable”4. Frances B. SINGH, Hostos Community College, “The Life and Times ofJane Cumming (b. 1795 ?), Missing in Action Since 1812”67. “The Culture of the Anecdote” – I Suite 218Chair: David SIMPSON, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Davis1. Danielle BOBKER, Concordia University, “Roxane Redux: Anecdoteand the Domestication of Female Homosocial Desire”2. James WOOD, Stan<strong>for</strong>d University, “Addison’s Anecdotes and theScience of Human Nature”3. Kate E. TUNSTALL, University of Ox<strong>for</strong>d, Besterman Centre <strong>for</strong> theEnlightenment, “Anecdotal Particulars, Epistemology and the Blind”68. “The Digital <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong> 2.0” - I (Roundtable) Alvarado EChair: Lisa MARUCA, Wayne State University1. Randall CREAM University of South Carolina2. Molly O’Hagan HARDY, University of Texas at Austin3. Laura MANDELL, Miami University, Ohio4. Julie MELONI, Washington State UniversityLCD PROJECTOR, INTERNET ACCESS, AUDIO CAPABILITY20


Thursday, March 18, 201069. “Topography and Tourism - II Alvarado BChair: Alison O’BYRNE, University of York1. Jim WATT, University of York, “Netley Abbey and Gothic Tourism”2. Emma MAJOR, University of York, “‘SOULS are ripen’d in our northernsky’: Dissenting Views of Religion and Topography”3. John BARRELL, University of York, “Edward Pugh and theTopography of Denbighshire”LCD PROJECTOR70. “Dialogues des morts / Dialogs of the Dead” - II Suite 518Chair: Theodore E. D. BRAUN, University of Delaware1. Dale Katherine IRELAND AND Sean IRELAND, Cali<strong>for</strong>nia StateUniversity, East Bay, “‘Hats are of no use now, as you say, except tothrow up into the air and say huzza with’: Samuel <strong>Johns</strong>on and HesterThrale ask ‘Are we dead?’”2. Paul BENHAMOU, Purdue University, “Voltaire’s ‘bete noire’: TheCritic E.C.Freron”71. “Fin de siècle II: Avatars of the Novel in the Waning Years of the<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>” Suite 318Chair: Ourida MOSTEFAI, Boston College1. Loïc THOMERET, Oberlin College, “Échos de la question del’esclavage et de son abolition dans le roman à la Révolution”2. Melissa GANZ, Stan<strong>for</strong>d University, “‘Tis Our Hearts Alone That CanBind the Vow’: Romantic Love and Contract Logic in Secresy andAdeline Mowbray”3. Robin CRAIG, Université Laurentienne, “Nouveaux territoiresromanesques : l’exotisme ossianique dans le roman Malvina de SophieCottin”72. “Border Crossings and Female Identity” Suite 418Chair: Mona NARAIN, Texas Christian University1. Pamela CHEEK, University of New Mexico, “The ComparativeLiterature of Late <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Women Writers”2. Marisa HUERTA, University of Texas at San Antonio, “Malinche NoMore: A Reconsideration of the Female ‘Savage’ in John Dryden’s TheIndian Emperor”3. Judith Bailey SLAGLE, East Tennessee State University, “‘BorderWars’: Margaret Hol<strong>for</strong>d and Joanna Baillie Appropriate the Legend ofWilliam Wallace”4. Kacy TILLMAN, University of Tampa, “Immigrant Women and the<strong>American</strong> Revolution: The Letters of Elizabeth Murray Smith Inman, aSpy”21


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th80. “James Boswell: Beyond the London Journal, 1762-1763”Turquoise40th Chair: NWSECS Daniel GUSTAFSON, Annual Meeting Yale University1. Michael GAVIN, Rutgers University, “Boswell and Co.: The Uses ofScurrility”2. William CAVERT, Northwestern University, “‘A Nation Formed <strong>for</strong>Liberty’: Boswell on Corsica and Scotland”3. Claudia KAIROFF, Wake Forest University, “A Tale of a Duck: AnnaSeward, James Boswell, and a Controversy in The Gentleman’sMagazine”Respondent: Gordon TURNBULL, Yale University6 - 7 p.m.MEMBER RECEPTION(Co-Sponsored with theWomen’s Cauucs of ASECSin celebration of their 35th Anniversary)Franciscan Ballroom24


FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 2010Friday, March 19, 20108:00 a.m. – 5 p.m. Registration East Atrium8:00 a.m. – 5 p.m. Book Exhibit DSESSIONS VI8:00 - 9:30 a.m.81. “Cultures of Flowers” Suite 318Chair: Melissa HYDE, University of Florida1. Mira MORGENSTERN, City College of New York, “The ‘Blooming’Truth: Rousseau and the Paradox of Flowers”2. John KOSTER, University of Toronto, “The Political Aesthetics ofGoethe’s Metamorphosis of Plants (1790)”3. Ann SHTEIR, York University, “Flora in the Vernacular: ‘ArtificialFlower Gardens’ in 1780s London”4. Julia SHAPCHENKO, All-Russian Academy of Arts, St. Petersburg,“Count Razumovsky’s Botanical Garden, Gorenky, Russia, 1805-1822”Overhead projector82. “What You Must Know About the French Revolution: Literary RoundTable / Les Must de la Révolution française: Table ronde littéraire(Roundtable) (Titles of the books presented included) Alvarado AChair: Julia DOUTHWAITE, University of Notre Dame1. Pamela CHEEK, University of New Mexico, “Isabelle de Charrière, Troisfemmes (1798)”2. Nanette LE COAT, Trinity University, “Pauline Guizot, LesContradictions (1799) et La Chapelle d’Ayton (1800)”3. Catriona SETH, Université de Nancy 2, “François Vernes, Adélaïde deClarencé ou les Malheurs et les Délices du sentiment (1795)”4. Antoinette SOL, University of Texas at Arlington, “Elisabeth Guénard,Irma ou les malheurs d’une jeune orpheline (An VIII)”5. James STEINTRAGER, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia,Irvine, “Marquis deSade, La Philosophie dans le boudoir (1795)”6. Jennifer TAMAS, Stan<strong>for</strong>d University, “Olympe de Gouges, LaDéclaration des droits de la femme (1791)”LCD PROJECTOR25


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th83. “Politics and Domesticity on the English Stage, 1660-1700”Suite 618Chair: 40th NWSECS Cynthia KLEKAR, Annual Western Meeting Michigan University1. Marilyn FRANCUS, West Virginia University, “Stirring up Trouble:Rowe and the Politics of the Blended Family”2. Kathleen E. URDA, Bronx Community College, City University of NewYork, “All Tangled Up: The Political, the Domestic, and the Dramatic inThomas Otway’s Venice Preserv’d”3. Hilary HAVENS, McGill University, “‘Nothing can come of nothing:’Systems of Exchange in Tate’s King Lear”84. “Creatively Writing the Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>: Historical Fiction,Entertainment and Credibility” Suite 218Chair: Judith Bailey SLAGLE, East Tennessee State University1. Rachel SCHNEIDER, University of Texas at Austin, “‘History Come toLife’: Georgette Heyer’s Revivified, Romantic <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”2. Sandra TOMC, University of British Columbia, “Popular Uprising:Historical Romance in the Beam of Enlightenment”3. Theresa A. DOUGAL, Moravian College, “Mary Wollstonecraft onScreen: Accuracy and Effect in the Twenty-First-<strong>Century</strong> Biopic”DVD Player and speakers85. “Scenes from the Scaffold” TurquoiseChair: Amy WITHERBEE, Independent Scholar1. Alyssa CONNELL, University of Pennsylvania, “‘Amongst theUndigesting Multitude’: The Audience in Late Seventeenth-<strong>Century</strong>Execution Rhetoric”2. Elizabeth KOWALESKI-WALLACE, Boston College, “The Agency ofThings in Emma Donoghue’s Slammerkin”3. Eric ALDRICH, Arizona State University, “The Speech of Death to LeviAmes: Execution Literature and Discourses of Vice”4. Lela GRAYBILL, University of Utah, “The Site of Witness: Jacques-Louis David’s Marie-Antoinette on the Way to the Scaffold”LCD PROJECTOR86. “Dualing Couplets: Form and Meaning in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong>Poetry”WeaverChair: Dustin D. STEWART, University of Texas at Austin1. John Peter RUMRICH, University of Texas at Austin, “No NecessaryAdjunct: Milton’s Early Reception and the Monarchy of Rhyme”2. Y.S. AMAD, Stan<strong>for</strong>d University, “More Roomy: Couplets and theProblem of Heroic Measure”26


Friday, March 19, 20103. Dorothy COUCHMAN, University of Virginia, “What’s the Difference?:Meta-couplets, Comedy and Satire in Dryden”Respondent: David FAIRER, University of LeedsLCD PROJECTOR87. “Representations of East Asia in the Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”PotterChair: Naoki YOSHIDA, Otaru University of Commerce1. Carmen NOCENTELLI, University of New Mexico, “Eastern Travel inThe English Rogue (1665)”2. Yoshiko MATSUDA, Tokyo University of Science, “China Imagined asan Origin of Europe: ‘Chinese Garden’ in The Fairy Queen (1692)”3. Michael WINSTON, University of Oklahoma, “China as Political Modelin Pre-Revolutionary France”LCD PROJECTOR88. “Per<strong>for</strong>mativity: History and Genre” Suite 518Chair: Scarlet BOWEN, University of Colorado, Boulder1. Amy BERTKEN, University of Colorado, Boulder, “Queering the Castle:History, Per<strong>for</strong>mance and the Trouble with Things in Castle ofOtranto”2. Janine HAUGEN, University of Colorado, Boulder, “Per<strong>for</strong>mingIllegitimacy in Tristram Shandy”3. Kurtis HESSEL, University of Colorado, Boulder, “Per<strong>for</strong>ming GothicQueerness: Camp in Castle of Otranto and The Monk”4. Elizabeth MORGAN, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Santa Cruz, “Per<strong>for</strong>mingResistance: Women’s Renditions of Scottish Songs in Late-GeorgianEngland”89. “The Noble and the Not So Noble Savage in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> TravelWritings”Alvarado HChair: Michael J. MULRYAN, Christopher Newport University1. Ala ALRYYES, Yale University, “Adam Ferguson on “Rude Nations”2. Daniel J. ENNIS, Coastal Carolina University, “The Noble SavageTranslated: Reconsidering the ‘Azakia Cycle’”3. Matthew REILLY, University of Texas at Austin, “Affective Meetings:‘Paw-Waw’ in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> England”4. Barbara Wonneken WANSKE, Ohio State University, “ImaginativeSpaces: Encountering the Other in Sophie von La Roche’s ‘Amerika-Roman’ Erscheinungen am See Oneida”LCD PROJECTOR27


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th90. “Recovered and ‘Canonized’-Now What?: Examining the Future ofEliza Haywood <strong>Studies</strong>” (Roundtable)Alvarado GChair: 40th NWSECS Patsy FOWLER, Annual Gonzaga Meeting University1. Catherine INGRASSIA, Virginia Commonwealth University2. David OAKLEAF, University of Calgary3. Juliette MERRITT, Wilfrid Laurier University4. Kathyrn R. KING, University of Montevallo91. “Visualizing Interiority in the <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>” Alvarado CChairs: Catherine CLINGER AND Richard TAWS, McGill University1. Jennifer FERNG, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, “Mining,Modernism, and the Visual Culture of the Geological Landscape in Late<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong> France”2. David EHRENPREIS, James Madison University, “Inside the Mind’sEye: Mesmer’s Imagination and Lavoisier’s Reason”3. Suzie PARK, Eastern Illinois University, “Adam Smith, William Gilpin,and Interiority in Ruins: Visualizing ‘what has befallen you’”LCD PROJECTOR92. “Gravitation: Laurence Sterne and the Abyss of Language”Suite 418Chairs: Peter DEGABRIELE, Mississippi State University AND NathanGORELICK, State University of New York, Buffalo1. Julia FAWCETT, Yale University, “Shandeism, Cibberisms, andCelebrity in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> England”2. Shane HERRON, State University of New York, Buffalo, “There’s NoSuch Thing as Metafiction: Tristram’s Authorial Masquerade”3. Melanie HOLM, Rutgers University, “Epistemology and Hedonism inTristram Shandy, Gentleman”93. “New Economic Criticism and the <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>: Ten YearsLater”ChapelChair: Olivier DELERS, University of Richmond1. Jill BRADBURY, Gallaudet University, “Doing What Economists Do:Literary <strong>Studies</strong>, Economics and the Challenges of Interdisciplinarity”2. Batya UNGAR-SARGON, Berkeley University, “IncommensurateValues in the <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong>: A Conversation with New EconomicCriticism”ASL INTERPRETER28


Friday, March 19, 201094. “Transnational Connections: Looking at <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> BorderCrossing”Alvarado BChair: Emily M.N. KUGLER, Roger Williams University1. Humberto GARCIA,Vanderbilt University, “A Hungarian Revolution inRestoration England: Henry Stubbe, Radical Islam, and the Rye HousePlot”2. Diane FOURNY, The University of Kansas, “Confucius as Jesuit?Joseph-Marie Amiot’s La Vie de Confucius (“Life of Confucius”) andthe Transmission of Enlightenment”3. John Patrick GREENE, University of Louisville, “Reading Culturesthrough Objects: How the French and Pacific Islanders Connect in the<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”4. Sophia A. ESTANTE, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles, “Eskimo,Japanese, and <strong>American</strong> Crusoes: Nationalism and the Robinsonade”LCD PROJECTOR95. “New Directions in Dissent, Bunyan to Cowper” Alvarado FChair: Misty ANDERSON, University of Tennessee1. George STARR, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Berkeley, “Dissent and Deism:Sir William Temple and Daniel Defoe”2. Kevin SEIDEL, Eastern Mennonite University, “How Defoe’s FictionWorks: A Better Secular”3. Lori BRANCH, University of Iowa, “Bunyan and Bishop Butler:Thinking Dissent and Secularism in the <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”96. “Representations of Natural Philosophy” Alvarado EChair: Al COPPOLA, John Jay College, City University of New York1. Kevin Joel BERLAND, Pennsylvania State University, Shenango,“From Pliny to Boyle: Ancient Authority and the New Science inWilliam Byrd’s Dividing Line Histories”2. Kristin M. GIRTEN, University of Nebraska, Omaha, “A SynestheticScience: Convergences of Visuality and Tactility in EnlightenmentLiterature and Microscopy”3. Claudia BRODSKY, Princeton University, “Natural Philosophy and‘Second Nature’ in Rousseau, Diderot, and Kant”4. Joseph DRURY, Wesleyan University, “The Progress of Mind: Novelsof Improvement in the 1790s”LCD PROJECTOR29


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0thSESSIONS VII40th NWSECS Annual Meeting9:45 – 11:15 a.m.97. “<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Media Culture”: Mediating Drama, DramatizingMedia Capital”(<strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> the History of Authorship, Reading, and Publishing -SHARP)TurquoiseChair: Lee KAHAN, Indiana University, South Bend1. Michael GAMER, University of Pennsylvania, “Diverging Canons:Copyright and the National Repertory”2. Stuart SHERMAN, Fordham University, “Moving Among the Media:Days in the Lives of <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Theatergoers”3. Michael BUCKLEY, Rutgers University, “‘A Dream of Murder’: TheTimes, the Fall of Robespierre, and the Tragic Imagination”LCD PROJECTOR98. “Satire et censure de l’Ancien Régime au Consulat”(French <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>) Alvarado AChair: Bernadette FORT, Northwestern University1. Melissa HYDE, University of Florida, “Needling: The Arts of Embroideryand Satire in the Hands of the Saint-Aubins”2. Brigitte WELTMAN-ARON, University of Florida, “Voltaire et Rousseau:courte satire, longue défense”3. Nanette LE COAT, Trinity University, “Les Censeurs censurés: Cham<strong>for</strong>t,Marat et l’Académie française”4. Julia DOUTHWAITE, University of Notre Dame, “Le Cimetière de laMadeleine et la censure sous le Consulat”LCD PROJECTOR99. “Life During Wartime: I ain’t got time <strong>for</strong> that now” (Roundtable)(Cultural <strong>Studies</strong> Caucus) – IWeaverChair: Daniel O’QUINN, University of Guelph1. Jody GREENE, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Santa Cruz2. Ala ALRYYES, Yale University3. David WORRALL, Nottingham Trent University4. Paul DOWNES, University of Toronto5. Eric WERTHEIMER, Arizona State University6. Ian BALFOUR, York University100. “New Projects in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>”(Southeastern <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>) Suite 618Chair: Mary MCALPIN, University of Tennessee, Knoxville30


Friday, March 19, 20101. Christina LUPTON, University of Michigan, “Systems Theory and the<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Reader”2. Brian MCINNIS, University of Northern Iowa, “Pious Tears and Mind/Body Connections in Early Enlightenment Medicine, Religion, andLiterature”3. Daniel GUSTAFSON, Yale University, “Defoe’s Restoration Novels andthe Theory of Cultural Memory”4. Jack DEROCHI, Winthrop University, “Raising the Screen: NewPerspectives on Richard Brinsley Sheridan”101. “Turkey, the Turkish, and Turkeys: The Foul <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>?”(Mid-Western ASECS)PotterChair: Kit KINCADE, Indiana State University1. J. Karen RAY, Washburn University, “Lady Mary Wortley Montaguand the Architecture of Islam”2. Susan SPENCER, University of Central Oklahoma, “The Handkerchief,the Harem, and the Not-so-Valid Valide: Mythbusting and the OttomanSeraglio”3. Keith BYERMAN, Indiana State University, “Henri Gregoire, ThomasJefferson, and the Discourse on Race”4. Ghazi Q. NASSIR, University of Kuwait, “The Representation of theTurks in Samuel <strong>Johns</strong>on’s Irene”LCD PROJECTOR102. “Organizing, Managing, Developing, and Building an Affiliate <strong>Society</strong>(Affiliate Societies Roundtable)Alvarado HChair: Catherine M. PARISIAN, University of North Carolina, Pembroke1. Misty ANDERSON, University of Tennessee2. Kevin L. COPE, Louisiana State University3. Dennis MOORE, Florida State University4. Thomas W. KRISE, University of the Pacific5. Marilyn FRANCUS, West Virginia University6. Linda TROOST, Washington and Jefferson College103. “Presentation and Representation: Perceptions of the Ibero-<strong>American</strong>World in the <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”Alvarado B(Ibero-<strong>American</strong> <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>)Chair: Mark R. MALIN, Randolph-Macon College1. Gretchen WOERTENDYKE, University of South Carolina, “Piratas de laAmerica: Bucaniers, Privateers, and Filibusteros in the Novel of theAmericas”2. Jonathan E. CARLYON, Colorado State University, “Translation andthe Transatlantic World in Gerónimo de Uztáriz’s Theorica y practicadel comercio y de marina”31


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th3. Kathleen FUEGER, St Louis University, “Belonging and Blanco White’sRepresentation of the Americas in El español”40th LCD NWSECS PROJECTOR Annual Meeting104. “Charlotte Brooke’s Reliques of Irish Poetry: Its Creation, OriginalContext and Literary Legacy” (Irish <strong>Studies</strong> Caucus) Suite 318Chair: Jennifer SNEAD, Texas Tech University1. Lesa Ni MHUNGHAILE , Mary Immaculate College, Limerick,“Charlotte Brooke’s Reliques of Irish Poetry (1789): Context andMotivation”2. Celestina SAVONIUS-WROTH, Indiana University , Bloomington,“Reliques and Responsibilities: Religious Dimensions of <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Antiquarianism”3. David CLARE, University College Dublin, “Charlotte Brooke’sInfluence on Irish Ascendancy Women Writers”105. “Scotland and the <strong>American</strong> Enlightenment” Suite 418(<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Scottish <strong>Studies</strong> <strong>Society</strong>)Chair: Mark G. SPENCER, Brock University1. Roger FECHNER, Adrian College, “Francis Alison and JohnWitherspoon: Francis Hutcheson’s Philosophical Heirs in America”2. Toni Vogel CAREY, Independent Scholar, “Scotland and Harvard Yard:The Dominance and Decline of Scottish Common Sense in the<strong>American</strong> University”3. Corey E. ANDREWS, Youngstown State University, “The Pleasures ofWyoming: Thomas Campbell and America”106. “Queer Belonging and <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>”(Gay & Lesbian Caucus) Suite 518Chairs: Michael Thomas TAYLOR, University of Calgary ANDKristi L. KRUMNOW, Utah State University1. Petra VAN BRABANDT, University of Antwerp, Belgium, “TheHumean Family”2. George HAGGERTY, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Riverside, “An ImaginedGenealogy of Queerness”3. Derrick R. MILLER, University of North Carolina, Wilmington,“Moravian Familiarities”107. “Enthusiastic Per<strong>for</strong>mances: Women and Spirituality in the<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”Chapel(The Aphra Behn <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> Women in the Arts, 1660-1830)Chair: Robin RUNIA, Angelo State University1. Kari LOKKE, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Davis, “The ‘Eccentric Force’ ofFemale Spirituality: Ann Batten Cristall’s ‘The Enthusiast. Arla’”32


Friday, March 19, 20102. Caroline BABCOCK, University College London, “Saint TheresaIncarnate: The Sexualization of Female Spiritual Experience in FrenchLiterature and Painting of the <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”3. Agab FAZLOLLAHI, Georgia State University, “The Spiritual World ofElizabeth Carter”108. “Adapting Austen: Theory and Practice” - I Alvarado CChair: Brycchan CAREY, Kingston University1. Rachel BROWNSTEIN, City University of New York, “A Pride ofPrejudices”2. Nora NACHUMI, Yeshiva University, “Doing Mr. Darcy: Sexing up theAdaptations”3. David RICHTER, Queen’s College, City University of New York,“Theorizing Adaptations of Austen: From John Dryden to DudleyAndrew”LCD PROJECTOR109. “The Culture of the Anecdote” – II Alvarado FChair: David SIMPSON, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Davis1. Chloe CHARD, Independent Scholar, “Cases of Delicacy and Hilarity:Anecdotal Digression in Travel Narratives”2. Johanna DEVEREAUX, New York University, “Mediating Forms:Hester Thrale Piozzi’s Thraliana and Anecdotes of the Late Dr.<strong>Johns</strong>on”3. Sean BARRY, Rutgers University, “Walter Scott’s UnrepresentativeAnecdotes”4. Brad<strong>for</strong>d MUDGE, University of Colorado, Denver, “The English Loveof Portraiture: Henry Angelo, Anecdotes, and the Rise of GraphicSatire”LCD PROJECTOR110. “The Digital <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong> 2.0” - II (Roundtable)Alvarado EChair: George H. WILLIAMS, University of South Carolina, Upstate1. Sharon HARROW, Shippensburg University2. Tonya HOWE, Marymount University3. Benjamin PAULEY, Eastern Connecticut State University4. Adrianne WADEWITZ, Indiana University, BloomingtonLCD PROJECTOR, INTERNET ACCESS, AUDIO CAPABILITY111. “Bluestocking <strong>Studies</strong>” (Roundtable) Alvarado GChair: Deborah HELLER, Western New Mexico University1. Elizabeth EGER, King’s College London2. Harriet GUEST, University of York33


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th3. Gary KELLY University of Alberta4. Susan LANSER, Brandeis University40th 5. NWSECS Devoney LOOSER, Annual Meeting University of Missouri6. Felicity NUSSBAUM, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles7. Betty A. SCHELLENBERG, Simon Fraser University8. Beth Fowkes TOBIN, Arizona State UniversityAudio Visual Needs: a table to sit nine (eight participants and a chairperson)with MICROPHONE.112. “Why Is There No French Mr. Darcy: A Comparison of the French andEnglish Novelistic Traditions” (Roundtable) Suite 218Chair: Sally O’DRISCOLL, Fairfield University1. Kate JENSEN, Louisiana State University2. Christopher MOUNSEY, University of Winchester3. Lesley WALKER, University of Indiana, South Bend4. Miriam WALLACE, New College of Florida5. Carolyn WOODWARD, University of New Mexico113. “Teaching the <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>: A Poster Session”Chair: Jack IVERSON, Whitman College North Atrium1. John HALLAM, Pacific Lutheran University, “The Paris SalonExhibitions of the Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”2. Dale Katherine IRELAND, Cali<strong>for</strong>nia State University, East Bay, “‘Wewere at leisure to extend our speculations and to investigate the reasonof those peculiarities’: Using <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Travel Writing in theCritical Thinking Class”3. Roxanne KENT-DRURY, Northern Kentucky University, “Editing the<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>: The Eminent Ladies Anthology Project”4. Heather KING, University of the Redlands, “Shakespeare in theRestoration: Staging Assignments”5. Christopher NAGLE, Western Michigan University, “PolyamorousLiterature: Erotic and Affective Multiplicities from the Bible to The LWord”6. Lorri NANDREA, University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point, “LaurenceSterne: An Upper Division Undergraduate Seminar”7. Cecilia PICK, Minnesota State University, Mankato, “Goethe andSchiller <strong>for</strong> Generation Y”8. Laura RUNGE, University of South Florida, “Teaching Women andPlace in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> British Literature”Dividers or Easels <strong>for</strong> display of posters as well as foamcore supports.Note: Posters will be on display throughout conference.34


Friday, March 19, 2010Graduate Student Mentoring CoffeeOpportunity <strong>for</strong> Graduate Students to meetwith their assigned mentors.Franciscan BallroomSESSIONS VIII11:30 a.m. – 1 p.m.114. “Promotion, Advertising, and Marketing of Printed Material in theLong <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>: Targeting the Consumer”(The Bibliographical <strong>Society</strong> of America) - IAlvarado HChair: Andrea IMMEL, Princeton University1. Nancy A. MACE, United States Naval Academy, “Peter Welcker, hisCustomers, and the Market <strong>for</strong> Printed Music in Late <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> England”2. Emily GREEN, Peabody Institute, “Going Public: Music Dedications inthe <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”3. Norbert SCHÜRER, Cali<strong>for</strong>nia State University, Long Beach, “The End-Page Catalogs of Thomas Lowndes”LCD PROJECTOR115. “Goethe’s Voices” - l (The Goethe <strong>Society</strong> of North America)Suite 618Chair: Markus WILCZEK, Harvard University1. Christian WEBER, Florida State University, “Goethe’s Lyric Voice(s)”2. Anne HOLZMUELLER, University of Freiburg, “‘Schweigen im Walde.’Goethe’s Voice in Musical Settings”3. Martin BAEUMEL, University of Chicago, “The Voice ofTranscendence in Brockes’ and Goethe’s Poetry”116. “Secrets et Lumières / Secrecy and Enlightenment”(<strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> French <strong>Studies</strong>) - I ChapelChair: Rudy LE MENTHÉOUR, Bryn Mawr College1. Joanna STALNAKER, Columbia University, “Buried Secrets: Death andthe Plot in Rousseau’s Dialogues”35


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th2. Laurence MALL, University of Illinois, “Les clairs-obscurs de lasociabilité populaire: relations privées et monde du travail dans40th NWSECS Monsieur Annual Nicolas, de Meeting Rétif de la Bretonne”3. Philip KNEE, Université Laval, “Transparence et tradition dans lesLumières”117. “Matters of Life and Death” - I Potter(Germaine de Staël <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> Revolutionary and Romantic <strong>Studies</strong>)Chair: Ann GARDINER, Franklin College, Switzerland1. Charles WHARRAM, Eastern Illinois University, “Germaine de Staël’sHybrid Reproductions”2. Beatrice GUENTHER, Bowling Green State University, Mme de Staël’sDix années d’exil: Surviving on Cultural Capital”3. Eve MORISI, Princeton University, “The Last Cry Of A CondemnedMan. Revolutionizing Representation Against Revolutionary Justice”4. Regina JANES, Skidmore College, “‘The self-conscious memoir of one’sown dying’: Henry Fielding Invents a Genre”LCD PROJECTOR118. “Samuel <strong>Johns</strong>on after 300 Years” (Roundtable) Suite 318(The <strong>Johns</strong>on <strong>Society</strong> of the Central Region)Chair: George JUSTICE, University of Missouri1. Howard WEINBROT, University of Wisconsin, Madison2. Rajani SUDAN, Southern Methodist University3. Carrie SHANAFELT, City University of New York, Graduate Center4. Fiona RITCHIE, McGill University119. “Historians of <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Art and Architecture (HECAA)New Scholars Session”Turquoise(Historians of <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Art and Architecture)Chair: Wendy Wassyng ROWORTH, University of Rhode Island1. Rose LOGIE, University of Toronto, “The Artful Voyeur: Watteau,Drawing, and Spectatorship”2. Anne-Louise G. FONESCA, University of Montréal, “MythologicalPainting in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Portugal: Models, Nudity andPatronage”3. Hilary Coe SMITH, Duke University, “A New Approach to MeasuringTaste in the Parisian Art Market, 1760-1784”4. Diana CHENG, McGill University, “The Boudoir of the Marquise DuChâtelet: A Chapel <strong>for</strong> Oneself and the Illusion of Happiness”LCD PROJECTOR36


Friday, March 19, 2010120. “Life During Wartime – The burning keeps me alive” (Roundtable)(Cultural <strong>Studies</strong> Caucus) - IIWeaverChair: Daniel O’QUINN, University of Guelph1. Sarah MONKS, University of East Anglia2. Douglas FORDHAM, University of Virginia3. Mary FAVRET, Indiana University, Bloomington4. Helen BURKE, Florida State University5. Gillian RUSSELL, Australian National UniversityLCD PROJECTOR121. “Personality, Region, and Individual or Group Character in<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>: The Role, Value, and Influence ofIdentifying Features, Noteworthy Habits, Special Cultures, andSometimes Idiosyncrasy”(South Central <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>) Suite 518Chair: TBA1. Mark A. PEDREIRA, University of Puerto Rico, “Boswell and the‘Metaphorical Presence’ of <strong>Johns</strong>on in The Life of <strong>Johns</strong>on”2. Kevin L. COPE, Louisiana State University, “The Anonymous Celebrityof Yesteryear, The Name Figure of Today, and the Towns in TimelessRegions: Forms of Fame and Era Expertise”122. “Re-Invigorating Nature(s) in the Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”(Graduate Caucus Scholarship Panel) - IAlvarado FChair: Kate PARKER, Washington University, St. Louis1. Erin DREW, University of Notre Dame, “Thomson, Cowper and theChanging Science of Natural Description”2. Elizabeth ATHENS, Yale University, “(Dis)Orienting Oneself: WilliamBartram’s Experience of Nature”3. Frauke JUNG, University of Worcester, “’Thus Vanishes the Horrid andthe Wild’: Re-Imagining Nature in Daniel Defoe’s Caledonia”4. Anna Katerina SAGAL, Georgetown University, “‘A Man ofUncommon Parts’: Tobias Smollett and the Unknowable Excesses ofNature”LCD PROJECTOR123. “<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Ireland” Suite 218(Keough-Naughton Institute <strong>for</strong> Irish <strong>Studies</strong>)Chair: Christopher FOX, University of Notre Dame1. James W. HAMRICK, University of Notre Dame, “Jacobite Ecology:Cutting Down Trees in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Britain and Ireland”2. Willa MURPHY, University of Ulster, “From Bristol Cream to Derry Air:The Elegant Republicanism of Bishop F.A. Hervey”3. Peter MCQUILLAN, University of Notre Dame, “Bliss and Solitude in<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Irish Poetry”Respondent: Jim SMYTH, University of Notre Dame37


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th124. “Intersecting Perspectives: Defining the Marginal, Then and Now”(New Lights Forum)Alvarado G40th Chair: NWSECS Jennifer VANDERHEYDEN, Annual MeetingMarquette University1. Barbara ABRAMS, Suffolk University, “Le Bizarre and Le Décousu inthe Novels and Theoretical Works of Denis Diderot: How the Idea ofMarginality Originated in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> France”2. Maria DEBLASSIE, University of Washington, “Voluptuous Texts:Textual Transgressions in Wollstonecraft’s Maria: Or the Wrong ofWoman”3. Aya TANAKA, Rutgers University, “Unconsummated History andEmerging Novel in Prévost’s Grecque moderne”LCD PROJECTOR125. “Spain and Italy in the <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong>: Cultural Influences”(Ibero-<strong>American</strong> <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>) – IAlvarado BChair: Gloria EIVE, Emeritus, Saint Mary’s College of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia1. Gloria ALLAIRE, University of Kentucky, “Spanish Cultural Influencesin the Regno di Napoli”2. Robin L. THOMAS, Pennsylvania State University, “From Naples toMadrid: Charles III and Civic Architecture of Re<strong>for</strong>m”3. Elizabeth Franklin LEWIS, University of Mary Washington, Translationand Legitimization: Josefa Amar y Borbón’s Italian Roots”LCD PROJECTOR ANDCD/DVD PLAYER W SPEAKERS126. “Lesbian Queer?: Investigating <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Notions ofWomen’s Love, Homosociability, Homosexuality, and Queerness”(Gay & Lesbian Caucus) Suite 418Chair:Kristi L. KRUMNOW, Utah State University AND Michael ThomasTAYLOR, University of Calgary1. Lena HEILMANN, University of Washington, “Under the Covers:Locating Female Friendships in Beds During the <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”2. Caroline GONDA, St. Catherine’s College, “Lesbian Narrative and theQueer Workings of Allusion, 1723-1835”3. Terra CAPUTO, Allegheny College, “Queer Desire and the Politics ofGender: Constructions of Lesbianism in the Works of Aphra Behn”4. Emily BOWLES-SMITH, Lawrence University, “Breaking GenderedVows: Cross-Dressing, Genderfucking, and Lesbian Queer Identities inAphra Behn’s Narrative Prose”38


Friday, March 19, 2010127. “Adapting Austen: Theory and Practice” - II Alvarado CChair: Dale Katherine IRELAND, Cali<strong>for</strong>nia State University, East Bay1. Andrea CABUS, Temple University, “New Spaces: Austen Adaptationsas Popular Intrusions into Critical Dialogue”2. Deborah NESTOR, Fairmont State University. “Selling Aunt Jane, orWhen Does Interpretation Become Appropriation in Adapting JaneAusten?”3. Eleanor TY, Wilfrid Laurier University, “Postfeminist and Other GuiltyPleasures in Guy Andrews’s Lost in Austen”LCD PROJECTOR128. “Digital Humanities and the <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>: Pros and Cons”Alvarado EChair: Jeffrey RAVEL, Massachusetts Institute of Technology1. Alison MURI, University of Saskatchewan, “From Ctrl-F to DigitalEditions: The Challenges and Successes of Teaching the <strong>Eighteenth</strong><strong>Century</strong> with Digital Texts and Tools”2. Benjamin PAULEY, Eastern Connecticut State University, “Rememberingthe <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Book”3. Sean TAKETS, George Mason University, “Recent Developments atthe Center <strong>for</strong> History and New Media”LCD PROJECTOR with internet connection129. “Colloquy with Leonard Tennenhouse on The Importance of FeelingEnglish”Alvarado AChair: Dennis MOORE, Florida State University1. Jonathan ELMER, University of Indiana2. Sandra GUSTAFSON, University of Notre Dame3. Mary Helen MCMURRAN, University of Western Ontario4. Elisa TAMARKIN, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Berkeley5. Leonard TENNENHOUSE, Duke University6. Bryan WATERMAN, New York UniversityLCD PROJECTOR1-2:30 p.m. LuncheonsGraduate Student Luncheon* - Fireplace RoomHistorians of <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Art and Architecture* -Franciscan Ballroom39


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th40th NWSECS Annual Meeting 2:30 – 4 p.m.PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESSAWARDS PRESENTATION andASECS BUSINESS MEETING(All ASECS members are encouraged to attend)Peter H. REILLUniversity of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles“Vitalism and the Construction of the HumanSciences in the Enlightenment: JohannGottfried Herder and Adam Smith”Presiding: Keith BAKER, Stan<strong>for</strong>d UniversityAlvarado ESESSIONS IX 4:15 – 5:45130. “Promotion, Advertising, and Marketing of Printed Material in theLong <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>: Case <strong>Studies</strong>”(The Bibliographical <strong>Society</strong> of America) – II Alvarado HChair: Andrea IMMEL, Princeton University1. Mikko TOLONEN, University of Helsinki, “Jacob Tonson Jr. and thePromotion, Advertising and Marketing of the Fable of the Bees”2. Marie-Claude FELTON, EHESS, Paris, France and UQAM, Montreal,“À Paris: chez l’Auteur: Advertising and Marketing strategies <strong>for</strong> selfpublishedbooks in the French Capital (1763-1789)”3. Eleanor F. SHEVLIN, West Chester University, “From ‘PleasingPublication’ to ‘Celebrated Work’: The History of Harrison’s Novelist’sMagazine in the Newspapers, 1779-1802"LCD PROJECTOR40


Friday, March 19, 2010131. “Goethe’s Voices” - lI (The Goethe <strong>Society</strong> of North America)Suite 618Chair: Christian WEBER, Florida State University1. Ansgar MOHNKERN, Yale University, “Morphology, Conversation,Metaphor. On Goethe’s Origin”2. Michael AUER, University of Bonn, “Hear Telling. ‘Das Unerhörte’ inGoethe’s Novella”3. Markus WILCZEK, Harvard University, “Be/Stimmung. DeterminedVoices Around 1800"132. Rousseau and Romanticism / Rousseau et le romantisme(Rousseau Association) Suite 218Chair: Philip KNEE, Université Laval1. Benjamin STOREY, Furman University, “Admiration and Suspicion inthe Thought of Rousseau”2. Debra CHANNICK, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Irvine, “EloquentIn(ter)vention: Mme de Staël’s ‘Ardent Emulation’ of Jean-JacquesRousseau’s Spectacle”3. Zev TRACHTENBERG, University of Oklahoma, “Playing atAuthenticity: Rousseau on the Self in Nature”133. “Matters of Life and Death” - II Potter(Germaine de Staël <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> Revolutionary and Romantic <strong>Studies</strong>)Chair: Karyna SZMURLO, Clemson University1. Ann GARDINER, Franklin College, Switzerland, “Chamisso’s SublimeMutations”2. Ivano DAL PRETE, Yale University, “Maurilia’s Sin: Debating HumanGeneration in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Republic of Venice”3. Nicholas E. MILLER, Washington University in St. Louis, “‘In UtterFearlessness of the Reigning Disease’: Revolutionary Immunities andthe Outbreak Narratives of Charles Brockden Brown”4. Cristobal SILVA, Florida State University, “‘Drowned in their ownBlood’: Imagined Immunities in the Age of Revolution”LCD PROJECTOR134. “Samuel <strong>Johns</strong>on and Colonialism” Suite 518(Samuel <strong>Johns</strong>on <strong>Society</strong> of Southern Cali<strong>for</strong>nia)Chair: Myron D. YEAGER, Chapman University1. Anthony W. LEE, Arkansas Tech University, “‘Through the spectaclesof books’: Discursive Cultural Agon in Boswell’s Life and <strong>Johns</strong>on’sJourney”2. Emily M. N. KUGLER, Roger Williams University, “Re-ImaginingUniversalism in Rasselas”41


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th3. Dale Katherine IRELAND, Cali<strong>for</strong>nia State University, East Bay, “‘Suchan Accumulation of Absurdity’: Samuel <strong>Johns</strong>on’s Rhetoric of40th NWSECS Colonialism” Annual Meeting135. “Theorizing the Decorative in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Art”(Historians of <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Art and Architecture)(Presentations and Roundtable)Alvarado AChair: Adrienne CHILDS, University of Maryland1. B.A. HARRINGTON, University of Wisconsin, “Virtue Embodied: APolite and Dutiful Worktable”2. Ethan LASSER, The Chipstone Foundation, “The Phenomenology ofDecoration”LCD PROJECTOR136. “Cultures of the Gothic” (Cultural <strong>Studies</strong> Caucus) Alvarado CChair: Abby COYKENDALL, Eastern Michigan University1. Laura J. ROSENTHAL, University of Maryland, College Park, “‘TheQueen of Sorrows’: History, Geography, and The Recess”2. Ellen Malenas LEDOUX, Rutgers University, Camden, “Cross andCrescent: Sixteenth-<strong>Century</strong> Hungary in Godwin’s St. Leon”3. Barrett KALTER, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, “Transparencyand Illumination in Radcliffe”Respondent: Suvir KAUL, University of PennsylvaniaLCD PROJECTOR137. “Teaching Mozart” (Mozart <strong>Society</strong>) Alvarado BChair: Kathryn L. LIBIN, Vassar College,1. Edmund J. GOEHRING, University of Western Ontario, “MozartObjects: History as Thought in the Teaching of Mozart”2. Bruce Alan BROWN, Thornton School of Music, “Teaching Figaro:Approaches and Sources”3. Mary ROBBINS, Independent Scholar, “Enlightenment Ideals asCommunicated through Mozart's Use of Articulation Markings”4. Roye WATES, Boston University, “"Teaching Mozart to Non-majors”LCD PROJECTOR AND CD PLAYER WITH SPEAKERS138. “The <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong> on Film” (Northeast ASECS) Alvarado GChair: John H. O’NEILL, Hamilton College1. Peggy SCHALLER, Georgia College and State University, “Ridiculeand Role-Play: <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Feminism in Contemporary Film”2. Srividhya SWAMINATHAN, Long Island University, “The AfricanSlave Trade and the Cinematic Eye”42


Friday, March 19, 20103. Janet Aikins YOUNT, University of New Hampshire, “Pride andPrejudice of 1940: Aldous Huxley’s Approach to CinematicAdaptation”LCD PROJECTOR, DVD PLAYER WITH SOUND139. “Revolutionary Writing” (Mid-Western ASECS) Suite 418Chair: Susan SPENCER, University of Central Oklahoma1. Catherine CRAFT-FAIRCHILD, University of St. Thomas, “ShylockRevolutionized: Nationalism, Politics, Pamphlets and the Jews”2. Christy PICHICHERO, Stan<strong>for</strong>d University, “Inventing the FrenchRevolution by Rewriting the National Past: Belloy’s Le Siege de Calais(1765)”3. Katherine GREEN, Western Kentucky University, “‘The Idol will beBroken’: Necessitarianism and Gender in Inchbald’s Nature and Art”4. Heather ZUBER, The Graduate Center, City University of New York,“Maria Edgeworth: Anti-Jacobin Novelist or Jacobin Writer?”140. “Re-Invigorating Nature(s) in the Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”(Graduate Caucus Scholarship Panel) - IIAlvarado FChair: Kate PARKER, Washington University, St. Louis1. Eric PETERSON, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Riverside, “VariedPerspectives of the Vary’d Year: How Sublime and Gothic Expand thePastoral in James Thomson’s ‘Winter’”2. Dallin G. LEWIS, University of Notre Dame, “Enlightened Ecocriticism:Thomson’s Industry and Heidegger’s Dwelling”3. Rachel SWINKIN, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Davis, “‘Am I Not a FlyLike Thee’: Sentimental Subjectivity and the Ethics of Compassion <strong>for</strong>Animals”LCD PROJECTOR141. “Situating Scotland, Ireland, and Wales in <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong><strong>Studies</strong>” (Roundtable) (<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Scottish <strong>Studies</strong> <strong>Society</strong>)Suite 318Chair: Juliet SHIELDS, University of Washington1. Leith DAVIS, Simon Frasier University2. Sharon ALKER, Whitman College, AND Holly Faith NELSON, TrinityWestern University3. Mike HILL, University at Albany, State University of New York4. Jeff STRABONE, University of South Florida5. James MULHOLLAND, Emory University43


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th142. “Spain and Italy in the <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong>: The Metaphor of Travel”(Ibero-<strong>American</strong> <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>) – II40th NWSECS Annual MeetingAlvarado EChairs: Gloria EIVE, Emeritus, Saint Mary’s College of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia1. Fernando García LARA, University Pablo de Olavide, Seville, Spain,“Imágenes culturales sobre Italia en epistolarios españoles del XVIII”2. María Victoria LÓPEZ-CORDÓN, Universidad Complutense de Madrid,“Familia, corte y gobierno: italianos en España y españoles en Italia(1715-1759)”3. Franco QUINZIANO, Korea University, “Españoles en Italia e italianosen España: literatura de viajes, grand tour y exotismo en el último terciodel XVIII”LCD PROJECTOR AND CD/DVD PLAYER W/SPEAKERS143. “The Age of Burney” (Roundtable) (The Frances Burney <strong>Society</strong>)WeaverChair: Emily C. FRIEDMAN, Auburn University1. Peter SABOR, McGill University2. George JUSTICE, University of Missouri3. Emily H. ANDERSON, University of Southern Cali<strong>for</strong>nia4. Lori Halvorsen ZERNE, West Virginia University5. Margaret Anne DOODY, University of Notre Dame144. “Prefaces in the Limelight” TurquoiseChair: Nadine BERENGUIER, University of New Hampshire1. Zeina HAKIM, Tufts University, “”Entre vérité et fiction: le rôle despréfaces dans La Vie de Marianne et Manon Lescaut”2. Heidi BOSTIC, Baylor University, “The Preface as Reading Protocol:Graffigny and Riccoboni, Then and Now”3. Holly LUHNING, McGill University, “Culture and Business: PrefatoryMaterial in Eliza Haywood’s Love in Excess”LCD PROJECTOR145. “Rum, Sodomy and the Lash: A Celebration of the Life and Work ofHans Turley”ChapelChair: Kathryn R. KING, University of Montevallo1. Dawn GOODE, James Madison University, “The Queerest Virgin Alive:Catharine Trotter’s Agnes de Castro”2. Aparna GOLLAPUDI, Colorado State University, “Maternity in theMarketplace: Daniel Defoe’s Roxana”3. Salita N. SEIBERT, Carnegie Mellon University, “Women Pirates”4. Sally O’DRISCOLL, Fairfield University, “After-lives of the LadyPyrates”OVERHEAD AND LCD PROJECTOR44


Friday, March 19, 2010Memorial Service <strong>for</strong> Hans Turley in Chapel immediatelyfollowing the conclusion of this session.6 - 7 p.m.Business Meeting – Rousseau AssociationSuite 218Business Meeting – Enlightenment Perspectives onContemporary Culture: New Lights ForumSuite 318Business Meeting – Ibero-<strong>American</strong> <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong><strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>Alvarado EAffiliate Societies Cash Bars –Franciscan BallroomSHARP*Junior Scholars’ Happy Hour*<strong>Society</strong> of Early <strong>American</strong>ists*Women’s Caucus, Lesbian and Gay Caucus*Cultural <strong>Studies</strong> Caucus*Irish <strong>Studies</strong> Caucus45


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th40th NWSECS Annual Meeting 7 – 9 p.m.Dinner and Business Meeting<strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> French <strong>Studies</strong>*La Crépe Michel400 San Felipe St NWSaturday, March 20, 20107 – 8 a.m. Breakfast MeetingsAffiliate SocietiesFranciscan BallroomChair: Catherine M. PARISIAN, University of North Carolina, PembrokeAffiliates CoordiatorRepresentatives of the <strong>American</strong> <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>Affiliate Societies: Aphra Behn <strong>Society</strong>, Bibliographical <strong>Society</strong> ofAmerica, Burney <strong>Society</strong>, Daniel Defoe <strong>Society</strong>, East-Central ASECS,<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Scottish <strong>Studies</strong> <strong>Society</strong>, Enlightenment Perspectiveson Contemporary Culture: New Lights Forum, Goethe <strong>Society</strong> of NorthAmerica,Historians of <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Art and Architecture, Ibero-<strong>American</strong> SECS, The International Herder <strong>Society</strong>, <strong>Johns</strong>on <strong>Society</strong> ofthe Central Region, <strong>Johns</strong>on <strong>Society</strong> of Southern Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Lessing<strong>Society</strong>, Midwestern ASECS, Mozart <strong>Society</strong>, Northeast ASECS, North<strong>American</strong> Kant <strong>Society</strong>, Northwest SECS, Rousseau Association,<strong>Society</strong> of Early <strong>American</strong>ists, <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> French<strong>Studies</strong>, <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Music, <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> the Historyof Authorship, Reading and Publishing, South Central SECS, SoutheasternASECS, Germaine de Staël <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> Revolutionary and Romantic <strong>Studies</strong>,Voltarie <strong>Society</strong> of America, Western SECS, Atlantic SECS, and CanadianSECSWomen’s Caucus Business MeetingFireplace Room8:00 a.m. – 5 p.m. Registration East Atrium8:00 a.m. – 5 p.m. Book Exhibit Alvarado D46


SESSIONS XSaturday, March 20, 20108 – 9:30 a.m.146. “Revisiting the Epistolary Novel” Suite 218Chair: Robyn L. SCHIFFMAN, Fairleigh Dickinson University1. Caroline DOMENGHINO, <strong>Johns</strong> Hopkins University, “The GermanEpistolary Novel of the 1790’s: Ludwig Tieck’s William Lovell”2. Lorraine PIROUX, Rutgers University, “The Public Life of Letters:Communication and Literature in Laclos’ Liaisons dangereuses”3. Nicole WRIGHT, Yale University, “‘Struck partly with horror, partlywith Compassion’: Impressions of Culpability and the Transition tothe Epistolary Mode in Walter Scott’s Novels”147. “Form in Space and Time” ChapelChair: David A. BREWER, The Ohio State University1. Adriana CRACIUN, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Riverside, “‘Why Do IWrite of Things of Such a Distance?’: Form in Arctic Space/Time”2. Ruth MACK, State University of New York at Buffalo, “History vs.Temporality: The <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Novel’s Contribution”3. Mark BLACKWELL, University of Hart<strong>for</strong>d, “It-Narratives and theMetamorphosis of Topicality”4. Sandra MACPHERSON, The Ohio State University, "A Metaphysics ofForm"148. “Theological and Patriotic Enlightenment: Clergy, Former Clergy,and <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Interdisciplinary Trajectories” Alvarado HChair: Mark R. MALIN, Randolph-Macon College1. Dale K. VAN KLEY, Ohio State University, “Re<strong>for</strong>mist Catholicism,Approximate Protestantism, and the Limits of Toleration in the DutchRepublic: Pierre Le Clerc and the Council of Utrecht, 1758-1769”2. Robert FRAIL, Centenary College, “The Lost ‘abbés commendataires’of <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> French Literature”3. Jeffrey D. BURSON, Macon State College, “Between Clergy andPhilosophe: The Theological Enlightenment of abbé Claude Yvon”LCD PROJECTOR149. “Reading Diderot’s Paradoxe sur le comédien Today” (Roundtable)TurquoiseChairs: Thierry BELLEGUIC, Université Laval AND Kate E. TUNSTALL,University of Ox<strong>for</strong>d, Besterman Centre <strong>for</strong> the Enlightenment1. Daniel DUMOUCHEL, Université de Montréal2. Jeff LEICHMAN, Sarah Lawrence College3. Stéphane LOJKINE, Université de Provence47


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th4. Lucien NOUIS, New York University5. Mitia RIOUX-BEAUNE, University of Ottawa40th 6. NWSECS Jennifer VANDERHEYDEN, Annual MeetingMarquette University150. “Character in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Poetry” Suite 318Chair: John BENDER, Stan<strong>for</strong>d University1. Marshall J. BROWN, University of Washington, ”Most Poems HaveNo Characters at All”2. Margaret Anne DOODY, University of Notre Dame, “Chloe, Atossa,Sylphs, and Other Mixed-up Persons”3. Stephen OSADETZ, Stan<strong>for</strong>d University, “Souls with Reflection: TheSubstance of Didactic Characters”151. “Drama at Mid-<strong>Century</strong>: London on the Stage” Suite 418Chair: Brian CORMAN, University of Toronto1. Michael BURDEN, New College, University of Ox<strong>for</strong>d, “Theatrical Lifeon the London Stage”2. Heather LADD, University of Toronto, “‘The Poet and Publisher atVariance!’: Samuel Foote’s Comic Representations of the London BookTrade”3. Daniel O’QUINN, University of Guelph, “Arthur Murphy’s TheUpholsterer, or, London, Capital of the <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”4. Gordon TURNBULL, Yale University, “James Boswell and the Viewfrom Edinburgh”152. “Moving Texts: Mobility and Reading Practices” Suite 518Chair: Janet SORENSEN, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Berkeley1. Richard BARNEY, State University of New York, Albany, “The SublimeAesthetic of Mobility”2. Kevis GOODMAN, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Berkeley, “MotionSickness: The Case of Nostalgia”3. Charlotte SUSSMAN, Duke University, “‘bearing their conqueredhousehold gods’: The Transport of Virgilian Epic in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> British Literature”4. Miranda BURGESS, University of British Columbia, “Frantic Novels”153. “The <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Novel in the New Millenium” Suite 618Chair: Robert FOLKENFLIK, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Irvine1. Scott BLACK, University of Utah, “The Progress of Romance in<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Britain”2. Tony JARRELLS, University of South Carolina, “After Novels”Respondent: Robert FOLKENFLIK, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Irvine48


Saturday, March 20, 2010154. “Arboreal Values” Alvarado AChair: Elizabeth Heckendorn COOK, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Santa Barbara1. Paula R. BACKSCHEIDER, Auburn University, “Disputed Value:Women and the Trees They Loved”2. Nicolle JORDAN, University of Southern Mississippi, “Writing onTrees in Jonson, Barker, and Defoe”3. Irene FIZER, Hofstra University, “The Residues She Leaves: ArborealConstructs and the Woman ‘Out of Place’ in Sense and Sensibility”4. Giulia PACINI, The College of William and Mary, “How to Think Trees:Arboreal Values in the <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”LCD PROJECTOR155. “Identity, Personality, and Self in the <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> AtlanticWorld” (Roundtable)Alvarado BChair: Nicholas ROGERS, York University1. Ben BANKHURST, King’s College, London2. Andrea HASLANGER, University of Chicago3. Benjamin HELLER, University of Ox<strong>for</strong>d4. Natasha LEE, Princeton UniversityLCD PROJECTOR156. “Generation and Its Contexts” Alvarado CChair: Raymond STEPHANSON, University of Saskatchewan1. Darren WAGNER, University of York, “Physiologies, Pathologies, andPleasures: Sexuality and the Womb in Early <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong>Britain”2. Corinna WAGNER, University of Exeter, “Hermaphrodites,Nymphomaniacs and Monstrous Mothers: Medicine, Gender andPolitical Culture”Respondent: Robert A. ERICKSON, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Santa BarbaraLCD PROJECTOR157. “<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Ectopias” Alvarado FChair: Trevor SPELLER, State University of New York, Buffalo1. Nick VALVO, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Davis, “The Sanctuary ofConscience: Tillotson and the Theology of Debt in the British<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”2. Melissa SCHINDLER, State University of New York, Buffalo, “‘The boysaid nothing’: The Dutchman’s Sin, His Lover’s Silence”LCD PROJECTOR49


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th158. “Ventures and Adventures: Travel Narrative Turbulence in the<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”Alvarado G40th Chair: NWSECS Manushag Annual N. POWELL, Meeting Purdue University1. Maximillian NOVAK, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles, “ThreeCrusoe Narratives, 1795-1814”2. Rivka SWENSON, Virginia Commonwealth University, “The FartherAdventures of The Adventures of Telemachus, the Son of Ulysses:Nation, Gender, and the House of the Father”3. Ian Macgregor MORRIS, University of Nottingham, “PoeticalGeographies: Travel to the Past and Visions of the Future”LCD PROJECTOR159. “Representations of the Fairies in Europe and its Colonies in the Long<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”Alvarado EChair: Charlotte TRINQUET, University of Central Florida1. Kevin PASK, Concordia University, “Fairy Painting, Fairy Theater”2. Sophie RAYNARD-LEROY, State University of New York, Stony Brook,“The Conteuse as a Fairy: The Example of Madame d’Aulnoy”3. Aurélie ZYGEL-BASSO, Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières, “‘Cecin'est pas une fée’: the Representation of Fairies and Magicians inFrench and English Anthologies Illustration at the End of the<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong> (Clément-Pierre Marillier, Thomas Stothard)”4. Anne DUGGAN, Wayne University, “Ancient and Modern ‘Fairies’ inDonkey Skin and Lady Oscar”LCD projector and sound system160. “The ‘Otter’ <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>” PotterChair: Tobias MENELY, Willamette University1. Lucinda COLE, University of Southern Maine, “Being and Otterness”2. Katherine BINHAMMER, University of Alberta, “Tales of Plenty:Economic Growth and the Sea Otter Trade in the Pacific Northwest”3. Richard NASH, Indiana University, “The Political Environment ofSomerville’s ‘insatiate’ Otter”LCD PROJECTOR161. “Buffon Reconsidered” WeaverChair: Andrew CURRAN, Wesleyan University1. William Max NELSON, University of Miami, “Making Men, MakingRace: A New Dimension of the Buffonian Revolution”2. Swann PARADIS, York University, “La fabrique des quadrupèdes : legénie scientifique de Buffon”3. Joan B. LANDES, Pennsylvania State University, “Monkey Acts inBuffon’s Natural History: <strong>Eighteenth</strong> and Twentieth-<strong>Century</strong>Perspectives”Respondent: Joanna STALNAKER, Columbia UniversityLCD PROJECTOR50


SESSIONS XISaturday, March 20, 20109:45 – 11:15 a.m.162. “Associational Reading: Libraries, Reading Societies, and BookClubs in the <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”(The Bibliographical <strong>Society</strong> of America)Alvarado BChair: Eleanor F. SHEVLIN, West Chester University1. George H. WILLIAMS, University of South Carolina Upstate,“Religious Movements as Associational Reading Projects”2. Lynda K. YANKASKAS, Virginia Commonwealth University, “‘PublickAdvantage’ and Private Good: Social Libraries and Civic Culture inSalem, Massachusetts”3. Mark TOWSEY, University of Liverpool, “‘Improved and Enlightenedby Reading’: Subscription Libraries and the ‘Urban Renaissance’ inProvincial Scotland, c.1750-c.1820”LCD PROJECTOR163. “Stoic Thought in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Literature and Philosophy”(German <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>) (DeutscheGesellschaft für die Er<strong>for</strong>schung des 18. Jahrhunderts) (DGEJ)Suite 218Chair: Andreas Urs SOMMER, University of Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany1. Elizabeth AGNEW COCHRAN, Duquesne University, “Approbationand Assent: StoicLogic in the Moral Thought of Jonathan Edwards”2. Philip AJOURI, University of Stuttgart, Germany, “Stoic Thought in the‘Policeywissenschaft’ and in the ‘Staatsroman’ of the <strong>Eighteenth</strong><strong>Century</strong>”3. Randall CREAM, University of South Carolina, “Rhetorical Surgeries:Filial Duty, Whig Virtue, and Stoic Offices”4. Stefanie AREND, University of Rostock, Germany, “In discussion withSeneca. Wieland’s ‘Musarion” as Anti-Stoic Polemics”5. Hans-Christian RIECHERS, University of Freiburg im Breisgau,Germany, “‘Knigge’ A Stoic Doctrine in the Guise of Courtesy”OVERHEAD PROJECTOR164. “Secrets et Lumières / Secrecy and Enlightenment”(<strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> French <strong>Studies</strong>) - II TurquoiseChair: Rudy LE MENTHÉOUR, Bryn Mawr College1. Kenneth LOISELLE, Trinity University, “Freemasonry and theProblem of Secrecy in Enlightenment France”2. Mladen KOZUL, University of Montana, “La part du secret dans lesfictions auctoriales de D’Holbach”51


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th3. Masano YAMASHITA, University of Colorado at Boulder, “‘Jem’avance masqué’ – Figurations du philosophe et stratégies libertines40th NWSECS au dix-huitième Annual siècle” Meeting165. “Strangers, Gods, and Monsters”: Encountering the Other in Defoeand His Contemporaries” (Daniel Defoe <strong>Society</strong>) Suite 618Chair: Holly Faith NELSON, Trinity Western University1. Andreas MUELLER, University of Worcester, “The Zombie Satirist:Defoe and his Versifying Other”2. Scott A. NOWKA, Salem State College, “Building the Wall: Crusoe andthe Other”3. Christopher LOAR, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Davis, “Architectures ofViolence: Defoe’s Political Spaces”166. “Fiction, Wit, and Wisdom in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Prose and Poetry”(Northwest <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong> - NWSECS)Alvarado CChair: Kenneth J. ERICKSEN, Linfield College1. Pamela PLIMPTON, Warner Pacific College, “What’s So Funny Aboutthe Gothic?”2. Wanda CREASER, Texas A&M International University, “Ali G andBorat: the Progeny of Jonathan Swift?”3. Michael HOUSEHOLDER, Southern Methodist University, “RoyallTyler’s Dumb <strong>Century</strong>: Why We can Understand Twenty-First-<strong>Century</strong>Politics with an <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Brain”4. Marvin LANSVERK, Montana State University, “Traveling Texts:Blake’s Lavater and The Swiss in England”LCD PROJECTOR167. “(Not) Knowing Our Place: The Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong> in the Twenty-First<strong>Century</strong>” (Graduate Caucus Professionalization Panel) (Roundtable)Suite 318Chair: Jarrod HURLBERT, Marquette University1. Ann CAMPBELL, Boise State University2. Margaret KOEHLER, Otterbein College3. Robert MARKLEY, University of Illinois4. Peter SABOR, McGill University5. Wolfram SCHMIDGEN, Washington University in St. Louis168. “Irish Enlightenments/Ireland and Enlightenment” Suite 418(Irish <strong>Studies</strong> Caucus)Chair: Sean MOORE, University of New Hampshire1. Michael BROWN, University of Aberdeen, “The Biter Bitten: JamesArbuckle and the Enlightenment Counter Public”52


Saturday, March 20, 20102. Molly O’Hagan HARDY, University of Texas at Austin, “Exporting PrintCapitalism: Dublin’s Printing Press on a Hill”3. Zi PARKER, University of Limerick, “The Limerick Printed Magazine ofMagazines and its Enlightenment Content”4. Scott BREUNINGER, University of South Dakota, “A Matter ofPerspective: The Irish Enlightenment and Europe”169. “Frances Burney and Fashion” (The Frances Burney <strong>Society</strong>)Alvarado FChair: Laura ENGEL, Duquesne University1. Suzanne COOK, Duquesne University, “Mr. Lovel and the Monkey: ACritique of Fashion and Foppery in Frances Burney’s Evelina”2. Alicia KERFOOT, McMaster University, “Declining Buckles andMovable Shoes in Frances Burney’s Cecilia”3. Kathryn STRONG, The Citadel, “Camilla, Fashion, Fiction, and Falsity”4. Lori Halvorsen ZERNE, West Virginia University, “Observing Only HerDress: Fashion as Per<strong>for</strong>mance and the Plausibility of Identity in TheWanderer”LCD PROJECTOR170. “Invisible Labor: Service through the Ranks” (Roundtable)(Women’s Caucus)WeaverChairs: Tita CHICO, University of Maryland, College Park ANDMaureen HARKIN, Reed College1. Misty ANDERSON, University of Tennessee2. Martine Watson BROWNLEY, Emory University3. Lisa A. FREEMAN, University of Illinois, Chicago4. Katharine KITTREDGE, Ithaca College5. Mary MCALPIN, University of Tennessee, Knoxville6. Jean MARSDEN, University of Connecticut7. Shawn Lisa MAURER, College of the Holy Cross8. Laura J. ROSENTHAL, University of Maryland, College Park171. “Slavery and Feeling: The State of the Field” Suite 518(<strong>Society</strong> of Early <strong>American</strong>ists) (Roundtable)Chair: George BOULUKOS, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale1. Roxann WHEELER, Ohio State University2. Margaret ABRUZZO, University of Alabama3. Ramesh MALLIPEDDI, Hunter College, City University of New York4. Stephanie SPADARO, University of Wisconsin, Madison5. Maureen TUTHILL, Westminster College53


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th172. “Richardson’s Networks” (Samuel Richardson <strong>Society</strong>)Alvarado G40th Chair: NWSECS Nicholas D. Annual NACE, Meeting Binghamton University, State University of NewYork1. Louise CURRAN, University College London, “Samuel Richardson’sEpistolary Networks”2. Coby DOWDELL, University of Toronto, “‘Another MortifyingInstance of Amazing Weakness’: Clarissa, Clarinda, and LiteraryEphemera in the Richardson-Mulso Correspondence”3. Betty A. SCHELLENBERG, Simon Fraser University, “The ‘GloriousPrivilege’ of the ‘Truly Good Man’: Richardson’s Correspondence withMen”LCD PROJECTOR173. “The House of Habsburg and Its Influence” I Alvarado HChair: Michael YONAN, University of Missouri1. Katherine ARENS, University of Texas at Austin, “The Holy RomanEmpire as a Missing Early Modern Culture”2. Rita KRUEGER, Temple University, “The Challenges of ImperialMothering: Empress Maria Theresa and her People”3. Todd L. LARKIN, Montana State University, Bozeman, “The Lily andthe Eagle: The Bourbon-Habsburg Alliance Emblematized by ElisabethVigée-Lebrun’s Marie-Antoinette in Ceremonial Dress (1778)”4. Madeline SUTHERLAND-MEIER, University of Texas at Austin“The Spanish Habsburgs Viewed from the <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”LCD PROJECTOR174. “Enlightenment and Its Discontents: Resistance to Reason in<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Britain - I: Prose”ChapelChair: Deborah WEISS, University of Alabama1. Joanne MYERS, Gettysburg College, “Enlightened Enthusiasm in Swift,Shaftsbury, and Astell”2. Abby COYKENDALL, Eastern Michigan University, “Enlightenment asMass Simulacrum: Counter Memory and The Castle of Otranto”3. Neil CHUDGAR, Macalester College, “Enlightenment and theResurrection of the Body”54


Saturday, March 20, 2010175. “Imperial Translations: Old Texts in New Worlds” PotterChair: Joanne VAN DER WOUDE, Harvard University1. Molly FARRELL, Yale University, “Population across Space and Time:Bradstreet’s Translations and the Birth of Counting”2. Chris PHILLIPS, Lafayette College, “Benjamin West’s EpicTranslations: Language, Media, and Scripture in Anglo-America”3. Alice BOONE, Columbia University, “Bad Translation: Philip Freneau,Hugh Henry Brackenridge, and the Ghost of Lucian”LCD PROJECTOR176. “Ballads and Song in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Culture” Alvarado EChair: William DONALDSON, Massachusetts Institute of Technology1. Linda TROOST, Washington and Jefferson College, “Robin HoodBallads and Garlands in the Restoration and Early <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”2. Joanne HOLLAND, McGill University, “‘May they who madly aim tokill be always disappointed’: Songs of Margaret Nicholson, failedregicide”3. Julie HENIGAN, University of Notre Dame, “<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong>Printed Ballads: The Irish Contribution”4. Ruth PERRY, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, “Anna GordonBrown’s Ballads in the New World”LCD Projector and CD player with speakers177. “On the Fence: Fantasies, Fancies, Frontiers” Alvarado AChair: Margaret EWALT, Wake Forest University1. Jason PEARL, Florida International University, “The Geography ofEscapism in the Early Novel”2. Catherine M. JAFFE, Texas State University, San Marcos, “On theFence in the Junta de Damas: Politics, Charity and Gender at the Turnof the <strong>Century</strong>”3. Clorinda DONATO, Cali<strong>for</strong>nia State University, Long Beach, “GenderFrontiers in Seventeenth- and <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Italy and Spain: TheMonja de Alferez and Catterina Vizzani”LCD PROJECTOR55


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th40th NWSECS Annual 11:30 Meeting a.m. – 12:30 p.m.CLIFFORD LECTURERuth HILLUniversity of Virginia“Race and the Atlantic Divide”Presiding: Margaret R. EWALTWake Forest UniversityAlvarado E12:30 – 2 p.m. LuncheonsGerman Caucus* - Fireplace RoomWomen’s Caucus* - Franciscan BallroomSESSIONS XII2-3:30 p.m.178. “The ‘ Wirtshaus:’. Comparative perspectives on the hotel in the<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>” (German <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong><strong>Studies</strong>) (Deutsche Gesellschaft für die Er<strong>for</strong>schung des 18.Jahrhunderts) (DGEJ)Alvarado BChair: Anne FLEIG, Universität Hannover1. Susanne SCHMID, Freie Universitaet Berlin, “Fielding, Smollett, andthe Pleasures of the Roadside Inn”56


57Saturday, March 20, 20102. Matthias RÖDER, Harvard University, “Between Representation,Entertainment, and Music Cultivation: Public Concerts in the HotelStadt Paris in Late <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Berlin”3. Stefanie STOCKHORST, Universität Augsburg, “Prussian Hospitality.Friedrich Nicolai’s Guidelines <strong>for</strong> Foreigners and Locals”LCD PROJECTOR179. “Beyond the Text: Books, Paratexts, and Material Matters”(<strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> the History of Authorship, Reading, and Publishing —SHARP) - IAlvarado AChair: Norbert SCHÜRER, Cali<strong>for</strong>nia State University, Long Beach1. Jennie BATCHELOR, University of Kent, “An ‘Author by Profession’:Paratext, Self-Marketing and the Case of Charlotte Smith”2. Dorothee BIRKE, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg: “BetweenDirection and Diversion: Chapter Titles in Mid-<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong>Novels”3. Emily C. FRIEDMAN, Auburn University, “When a Good End is Hardto Find: Backmatter, Indices, and Novel Endings”LCD PROJECTOR180. “Recent Research on Voltaire” (Voltaire <strong>Society</strong> of America)Suite 218Chair: Edward LANGILLE, St. Francis Xavier University1. Marcy FARRELL, University of Wisconsin, Madison, “Voltaire et lemerveilleux: A Philosopher’s Response To a Literary Trend”2. Felicia GOTTMANN, Somerville College, Ox<strong>for</strong>d, “Mandeville, DuChâtelet and Voltaire: The Intellectual Foundations of Voltaire’sDefence of Luxury and Commercial <strong>Society</strong>”3. Antonio GURRADO, Voltaire Foundation, “Voltaire and Condillac:New Evidence?”4. Thomas WYNN, University of Exeter, “Voltaire’s Tancrède: Pompadour,Patriotism and the Playhouse”181. “Teaching Germaine de Staël’s Corinne” (Roundtable)(Germaine de Staël <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> Revolutionary and Romantic <strong>Studies</strong>)Alvarado CChair: Nanette LE COAT, Trinity University1. Ione CRUMMY, University of Montana2. Lauren FORTNER, Harvard University3. Eric GIDAL, University of Iowa4. Andrea GODOY-ORANTES, Chapman University5. Fabienne MOORE, University of Oregon6. Véronique OLIVIER-WALLIS, Chapman University7. Karyna SZMURLO, Clemson UniversityLCD PROJECTOR


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th182. “Defoe and the Occult and Supernatural” (Daniel Defoe <strong>Society</strong>)(Roundtable) Suite 61840th Chair: NWSECS Kit KINCADE, Annual Indiana Meeting State University1. Maximillian NOVAK, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles2. Geoffrey SILL, Rutgers University183. “Improvisation and Music in the Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”(<strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Music)Alvarado EChair: Sarah EYERLY, Butler University1. Gloria EIVE, Emeritus, Saint Mary’s College of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, “Teaching‘Improvised Ornamentation’: Giuseppe Tartini and his ‘School’”2. Guido OLIVIERI,University of Texas at Austin, “A New Repertory <strong>for</strong>the Improvisation at the Cello: Francesco P. Supriani’s Twelve Sonatasfrom the Principij da imparare a suonare il violoncello”3. Alexander BONUS, Case Western Reserve University, “The MovingPassions: Approaches <strong>for</strong> Analyzing and Improvising Ground-BassVariations in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> French Style”LCD PROJECTOR / CD PLAYER AND SPEAKERS184. “Cultural Hybridity—Intercultural Understandings and Influences,Crossing Boundaries”(Northwest <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong> - NWSECS)Suite 518Chair: Marvin LANSVERK, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana1. George DRAKE, Central Washington Univesity, “”Worldmaking inMaria Edgeworth’s Irish Novels”2. Johann REUSCH, University of Washington, Tacoma, “EuropeansGone Native: Anxieties, Fantasies, and Scientific Discourse aboutAssimilated Europeans in European Travel Literature”3. Marta FIGLEROWICZ, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Berkeley, “Showing theSelf: Theater in Francoise de Graffigny’s Lettres d’une peruvienne”4. Joshua PIKER, University of Oklahoma, “Lying Together: Cross-Cultural Untruths and their Imperial Implications”185. Race in the <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>: Continuing the Clif<strong>for</strong>d LectureConversation(Ibero-<strong>American</strong> <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>) (Roundtable)Alvarado FChair: Karen STOLLEY, Emory University1. Roxann WHEELER, Ohio State University2. Magali M. CARRERA, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth3. Natasha LEE, Princeton University4. Hazel GOLD, Emory University5. Ralph BAUER, University of Maryland6. Ruth HILL, University of VirginiaLCD PROJECTOR58


Saturday, March 20, 2010186. “Graphic Evidence: Visual Meaning in Textual <strong>Studies</strong>”(Western <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>) Alvarado GChair: Timothy ERWIN, University of Nevada, Las Vegas1. Thora BRYLOWE, Trinity College, “Textual Monuments andMonumental Texts: Beyond Bowyer’s Historic Gallery”2. Erica MIAO, Yale University, “Sterne’s Stars: Asterisks and Omissionsin Tristram Shandy”3. Heather KLEMANN, Yale University, “Locke, Newbery, and the Matterof Moral Education”4. Thomas M. KAVANAGH, Yale University, “Enacting the Image:Jourdan’s Le Guerrier philosophe and Boyer d’Argens’ Thérèsephilosophe”LCD PROJECTOR187. “Gender, Sexuality, and Happiness” (Women’s Caucus) TurquoiseChairs: Danielle BOBKER, Concordia University AND Kathryn L. STEELE,University of Oklahoma1. Guilhem ARMAND, University of Reunion Island, France,“Hermaphrodite to Androgen: Ideal and Sexual Conceptions ofHappiness”2. Matt CARRILLO-VINCENT, University of Southern Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, “‘MyHeart Bleeds <strong>for</strong> You’: The Politics of Sadness in Male Sentimentality”3. Judith P. ZINSSER, Miami University, Ohio, “What Do Women Want?Reflection and Sensation: Emilie Du Châtelet’s Discourse onHappiness”188. “The Feelings of Slaves” (<strong>Society</strong> of Early <strong>American</strong>ists) Suite 418Chair: Laura M. STEVENS, University of Tulsa1. Brycchan CAREY, Kingston University, “‘These poor afflicted,tormented miserable Slaves!’: Quaker Discussions of the Feelings ofSlaves in Early Philadelphia”2. Sarah NICOLAZZO, University of Pennsylvania, “Bodies that Suffer:Affects and Aesthetics of Slavery in James Grainger’s The SugarCane”3. Lindsey PHILLIPS, Florida State University, “‘We are all dust and dirt’:Geophagy, Sensibility, and Slavery in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Medical andColonial Writings”4. Vincent CARRETTA, University of Maryland, “Phillis Wheatley’s FirstEf<strong>for</strong>t”59


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th189. “Enlightenment and Its Discontents: Resistance to Reason in<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Britain - II: Poetry”Chapel40th Chair: NWSECS Deborah WEISS, Annual University Meeting of Alabama1. Sarah STEIN, Emory University, “Rewriting English Origins: A Readingof Christopher Smart”2. William HALL, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Santa Barbara, “AestheticKnowledge: Epistemological Anxiety in William Collins’ ‘Manners: anOde’”3. Mark Andrew ALGEE-HEWITT, McGill University, “Simulating Reasonin a Non-Rational World: Thomson’s Anti-Enlightenment Poetics”190. Innovative Course Design (Three to be selected <strong>for</strong> competition)Suite 318Chair: Clorinda DONATO, Cali<strong>for</strong>nia State University, Long Beach1. Laura BAUDOT, Oberline College, “Wits, Rakes, Madmen, and Jane”2. Caroline BREASHEARS, St. Lawrence University, “The Popular and thePolite: Intersections in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> British Culture”3. Emily DOLAN, University of Pennsylvania, “Haydn and Mozart”4. Steven EPLEY, Sam<strong>for</strong>d University, “‘The Poet’s Rapture, and thePeasant’s Care’: A Service/Learning Approach to <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong>British Laboring-Class Verse”5. Kyle E. FRACKMAN, University of Massachusetts, Amherst,“Enlightenment 2.0”6. Joan G. GONZALEZ, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles, “TheDethroning of a King: The French Revolution and the Fall of LouisXVI”7. Regina JANES, Skidmore College, The ‘20s, Gaily, Swifly”8. Ellen Malenas LEDOUX, Rutgers University, Camden, “Women onWar”9. Paula LOSCOCCO, Lehman College, City University of New York,“Special Victims”10. Mary MCALPIN, University of Tennessee, “Avant le déluge”11. Nicholas D. NACE, Binghamton University, State University of NewYork, “Pamela and Lolita”12. Nathaniel NORMAN, University of Tennessee, “Types, Originals, andCharacters: Identity and Social Values in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> BritishDrama and Prose”13. Pascale RIHOUET, Rhode Island School of Design, “<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> French Art”14. Sean SILVER, University of Michigan, “Celebrity Stagecraft: London toHollywod”15. Maria TRAUB AND William HAMILTON, Neumann University,“Literature and Social Criticism in the Age of Ideas”60


Saturday, March 20, 2010191. “New Scholarship on Pope and His Circle” PotterChair: Michael GAVIN, Rutgers University1. Jill CAMPBELL, Yale University, “Pope’s Head: Satire, Authorship, andthe Limits of the Proprietary Self”2. Sarah ERON, Cornell University, “‘Eyes that Must Eclipse’: VainEnthusiasm in Pope’s Rape of the Lock”3. Ileana BAIRD, University of Virginia, “The Dunce in the Footnote: AHypertextual Mapping of Pope’s War with His Dunces”LCD PROJECTOR192. “Cognitive Approaches to <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> <strong>Studies</strong>” WeaverChair: John RICHETTI, University of Pennsylvania1. John BENDER, Stan<strong>for</strong>d University AND Jonathan KRAMNICK,Rutgers University, “The Extended Mind Extended”2. Lisa ZUNSHINE, University of Kentucky, “Mind Plus: HistoricizingCognition”LCD PROJECTOR193. “Friendship Between Men and Women” Alvarado HChairs: Susan LANSER, Brandeis University, AND George HAGGERTY,University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Riverside1. Helen DEUTSCH, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles, “Swift’sPassionate Poetics of Friendship”2. Suzanne CONWAY, Chestnut Hill College, “Two Men and a Woman:The Exceptional Friendship of Elisabeth Vigee Le Brun, Hubert Robertand the Marquis de Laborde”3. Laura ENGEL, Duquesne University, “Dangerous Liaisons: TheIntricate Friendship Between Sarah Siddons and Sir Thomas Lawrence”LCD PROJECTORSESSIONS XIII 3:45 – 5:15194 “New Perspectives on Lessing’s Later Works” (The Lessing <strong>Society</strong>)Suite 618Chair: Monika NENON, University of Memphis1. Beate ALLERT, Purdue University, “Conflicting Intentionalities in G.E.Lessing’s Late Work”2. William LEVINE, Middle Tennessee State University, “The Regulationof Religious Understanding in Lessing’s Late Polemics: An AestheticAnalogue in Laocoon”61


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th3. Johannes SCHMIDT, Clemson University, “‘Das Glück, welches derStaat jedem einzelnen Gliede in diesem Leben gewährt’ – Lessing’s Late40th NWSECS Skepticism” Annual Meeting195. “Beyond the Text: Books, Paratexts, and Material Matters”(<strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> the History of Authorship, Reading, and Publishing —SHARP) - IIAlvarado AChair: Norbert SCHÜRER, Cali<strong>for</strong>nia State University, Long Beach1. Eve Tavor BANNET, University of Oklahoma, “Paratexts: the Britishand <strong>American</strong> faces of Ambrose Gwinett and Samson Occom in<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Books”2. Lacy MARSCHALK, Auburn University, “Pirates vs. Patriarchs:Gendered Marketing of Travel Narratives in Early <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong>England”3. Mark MATTES, University of Iowa, “‘A Dark Stain on Our Character’:The Chirographic and Typographic Urgency of Race in the Letters ofthe Late Ignatius Sancho”LCD PROJECTOR196. “Cultural Identity and Cosmopolitanism: the Dutch and EuropeanReception of Isabelle de Charrière” Suite 518(Dutch Isabelle de Charrière Association) (Waiting <strong>for</strong> additionalparticipants)Chair: Suzan VAN DIJK, Huygens Institute, the Hague1. Madeleine VAN STRIEN-CHARDONNEAU, Leiden University, “Lesécrits de jeunesse de Belle de Zuylen/ Isabelle de Charrière (1740-1805):réception dans les salons et cercles littéraires hollandais”197. “The House of Habsburg and Its Influence” II Alvarado EChair: Michael YONAN, University of Missouri1. Bruno FORMENT, Ghent University, Belgium, “Habsburg Opera underthe ‘Belgian Climate’: Three Italian Seasons at the Théâtre de laMonnaie, 1727–1730"2. Erick ARENAS, Stan<strong>for</strong>d University, “The Missa solemnis of<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Vienna: A Study of Music, Liturgy, and theHabsburg Inheritance”3. Edmund J. GOEHRING, University of Western Ontario, “Mozart AmongAustria’s Neoplatonists”4. Karen HILES, Muhlenberg College, “Collecting Music at the Hofburg:Haydn and the ‘Emperor’ Quartet amidst the Emperor’s Quartets”LCD projector and a stereo with CD player62


Saturday, March 20, 2010198. “Feminism Avant la Lettre: What was <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong>“feminism”? Suite 418Chairs: Arianne CHERNOCK, Boston University AND Judith P. ZINSSER,Miami University, Ohio1. Mary TROUILLE, Illinois State University, “Law, Literature, and LifeExperience in Accounts of Wife Abuse in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> France”2. Loring PFEIFFER, University of Pittsburgh, “Mary Astell: The FirstEnglish Feminist?”3. Kelly RYAN, Indiana University Southeast, “Rethinking the SexualDouble Standard: White Women in the North Atlantic?”199. “Empire of Print” WeaverChair: Adriana CRACIUN, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Riverside1. Elisabeth FRASER, University of South Florida, “Print Culture fromConstantinople to Paris: An Ottoman Dragoman between Two Empires”2. Leith DAVIS, Simon Fraser University, “Between Nation and Empire:Print Culture, the Company of Scotland and the Union of 1707”3. Michael EAMON, Queen’s University, Kingston, “The Forgotten<strong>American</strong> Enlightenment: The Print Public Sphere in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Nova Scotia and Québec”LCD PROJECTOR200. “This is Enlightenment” (Roundtable) PotterChairs: Clif<strong>for</strong>d SISKIN, New York University AND William B. WARNER,University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Santa Barbara1. John BENDER, Stan<strong>for</strong>d University2. Daniel BREWER, University of Minnesota3. Christina LUPTON, University of Michigan4. Richard BARNEY, State University of New York, Albany5. Brad PASANEK AND Chad WELLMON, University of VirginiaLCD PROJECTOR201. “New Hay at the Old Market: An Occasional Drama”(A Rehearsed Reading) Alvarado H1. Michael BURDEN, New College, Ox<strong>for</strong>d2. Robert FOLKENFLIK, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Irvine3. Elizabeth KOWALESKI-WALLACE, Boston College4. Christopher MOUNSEY, University of Winchester5. John H. O’NEILL, Hamilton College6. John RICHETTI, University of Pennsylvania7. Diana SOLOMON, Simon Fraser University8. Linda TROOST, Washington and Jefferson College9. Lisa ZUNSHINE, University of Kentucky63


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th202. “French and British ‘Orientalisms’ in the <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”Alvarado G40th Chair: NWSECS Jim WATT, Annual University Meeting of York1. Maryam SANJABI, Yale University, “Whose Oriental Woman?: Imagesof Oriental women among the Philosophes”2. Jenny MANDER, Newnham College, University of Cambridge,“Turkish Delight? The Confecting of Turkish Theatrical Entertainment<strong>for</strong> Turkish Guests in <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> France”3. Joanna DE GROOT, University of York, “Commerce, Gender, and MythMaking: Eighteeenth-<strong>Century</strong> European Versions of Iran”LCD PROJECTOR AND SLIDE PROJECTOR203. “Milton and Literary Culture in the Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”ChapelChair: Mark A. PEDREIRA, University of Puerto Rico1. David F. VENTURO, The College of New Jersey, “From Regicide toNational Poet: The Remaking of John Milton’s Reputation in the Long<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”2. John J. BURKE, Jr., University of Alabama, “Milton, Dryden, and theBattle over Epic”3. Lance WILCOX, Elmhurst College, “Rasselas as Book XIII of ParadiseLost”4. Jacob Sider JOST, Harvard University, “Paradise Lost, Night Thoughtsand <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Time”204. “<strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong> Science and Questions of Genre” Alvarado BChair: John SAVARESE, Rutgers University1. Al COPPOLA, John Jay College, City University of New York, “‘BareUnfinish’d Histories’: The Rehearsal of Natural Philosophy”2. Raymond STEPHANSON, University of Saskatchewan, “The MockScientific Treatise and the Literary: The Case of Vincent Miller’s TheMan-Plant (1752)”3. Christine CLARK-EVANS, Pennsylvania State University,“Rehabilitating Buffon’s Brain: Fetal Development, Neuroscience, andRace in The Natural History of Man (1749)”4. Kelly WISECUP, University of North Texas, “African MedicalKnowledge and Literary Creolization in James Grainger’s The SugarCane (1764)”LCD PROJECTOR64


205. “Forms of Attention, Forms of Distraction” Suite 318Chair: Andrew BROUGHTON, University of Chicago1. Sarah KAREEM, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles, “Wonder,Attention, and Absorption”2. Matthew LANDERS, University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez,“Narration and Memory Theory in the Structure of Tristram Shandy:The Medical Aesthetics of Digression”3. Barbara BENEDICT, Trinity College, “Collecting Impressions:Antiquarianism and Attention to Detail in the Literature of the Long<strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”Respondent: Natalie PHILLIPS, Stan<strong>for</strong>d UniversityOVERHEAD PROJECTOR206. “The Novelty of Novels: A Pedagogy Roundtable” Alvarado CChair: Deborah WEISS, University of Alabama1. Emily H. ANDERSON, University of Southern Cali<strong>for</strong>nia2. Jessica LEIMAN, Carleton College3. Manushag N. POWELL, Purdue University4. Heather WOZNIAK, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles5. Tera PETTELLA, The Ohio State University6. Caroline BREASHEARS, St. Lawrence UniversityLCD PROJECTOR207. “Vegetable Love: Plants and Empire in the Long <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>”Alvarado FChair: Gail AW, University of Virginia1. Adela RAMOS,Columbia University, “Africans, Women, Aloe, andMacaws: Species Diversity and Social Hierarchy in Maria Edgeworth’sBelinda”2. David MAZELLA,University of Houston, “‘Here is the rock, and thetree; and here the roaring stream’: Metaphorics of Empire inMacpherson’s Ossian”3. Christopher NAGLE, Western Michigan University, “Irishing Africa:Botany and Empire in Mary Tighe’s Poetry”LCD PROJECTOR208. “The Role of ‘Close Reading’ in Teaching <strong>Eighteenth</strong>-<strong>Century</strong>Literature?” (Roundtable)TurquoiseChair: Ted RUML, Cali<strong>for</strong>nia State University1. Lisa BERGLUND, State University of New York, Buffalo State College2. Marshall J. BROWN, University of Washington3. Jill CAMPBELL, Yale University4. Lorna CLYMER, Cali<strong>for</strong>nia State University, Bakersfield5. Timothy ERWIN, University of Nevada, Las Vegas65


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Meeting0th209. “‘Mutually Necessary’?: The Relations between Literary Criticismand Philosophy in the <strong>Eighteenth</strong> <strong>Century</strong>” Suite 21840th Chair: NWSECS Philip SMALLWOOD, Annual Meeting Birmingham City University1. Stefan H. UHLIG, University of Cambridge, “Critical Mutism in Kantand Wordsworth”2. Lee MORRISSEY, Clemson University, “David Hume: Philosopher ofCriticism or Critic of Philosophy?”3. Clover BACHMAN, Carnegie Mellon University, “Kant and ExemplaryInterpretation”OVERHEAD PROJECTOR*Optional events at member’s expense.66


AABRAMS, Barbara 38ABRAMSON, Julia 19ABRUZZO, Margaret 53AGAN, Cami D. 6AGNEW COCHRAN, Elizabeth 51AIREY, Jennifer 19AIREY, Jennifer L. 7AJOURI, Philip 51ALDRICH, Eric 26ALGEE-HEWITT, Mark Andrew 60ALKER, Sharon 43ALLAIRE, Gloria 38ALLEN, Regulus L. 20ALLERT, Beate 61ALRYYES, Ala 27, 30ALVAREZ, David 19AMAD, Y.S. 26ANDERSON, Brittany 22ANDERSON, Emily H. 4, 44, 65ANDERSON, Misty 29, 31, 53ANDREWS, Corey E. 3, 32ANTON, Saul 7ARENAS, Erick 62AREND, Stefanie 51ARENS, Katherine 54ARMAND, Guilhem 59ATHENS, Elizabeth 37AUER, Michael 41AW, Gail 65BBABCOCK, Caroline 33BACHMAN, Clover 66BACKSCHEIDER, Paula R. 12, 49BAEUMEL, Martin 35BAIRD, Ileana 61BALFOUR, Ian 30BANKHURST, Ben 49Index of Participants(By Page Number)BANNET, Eve Tavor 62BARNETT, Louise 17BARNETT, Lydia 6BARNEY, Richard 48, 63BAROSKY, Todd 22BARRELL, John 21BARRY, Sean 33BATCHELOR, Jennie 22, 57BATES, David 9BATTIGELLI, Anna 5, 18BAUDOT, Laura 60BAUER, Ralph 58BELLEGUIC, Thierry 47BENDER, John 48, 61, 63BENEDICT, Barbara 65BENHAMOU, Paul 21BENHAMOU, Reed 17BERENGUIER, Nadine 44BERGLUND, Lisa 7, 23, 65BERLAND, Kevin Joel 14, 29BERTKEN, Amy 27BINHAMMER, Katherine 17, 50BIRKE, Dorothee 57BLACK, Scott 48BLACKWELL, Mark 47BLAKE, Bill 7BOBKER, Danielle 20, 59BOCQUILLON, Michèle 14BOE, Ana de Freitas 20BONDHUS, Charlie 3BONDS, Margaret E. 1BONUS, Alexander 58BOONE, Alice 55BOSTIC, Heidi 1, 44BOULUKOS, George 53BOURQUE, Kevin 14BOWEN, Scarlet 10, 27BOWLES-SMITH, Emily 38BRACK, Jr., O M 1567


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Index of Meeting0th ParticipantsBRADBURY, Jill 28BRANCH, Lori 2940th BRAUN, NWSECS Theodore Annual E.D. 16, 21 MeetingBREASHEARS, Caroline 60, 65BREENE, Samuel 11BREUNINGER, Scott 53BREWER, Daniel 63BREWER, David A. 2, 47BROADWELL, Peter 6BRODEY, Inger Sigrun 13BRODSKY, Claudia 29BROUGHTON, Andrew 4, 65BROWN, Bruce Alan 42BROWN, Marshall J. 48, 65BROWN, Michael 52BROWN, Tony C. 9BROWNLEY, Martine Watson 53BROWNSTEIN, Rachel 33BRYLOWE, Thora 59BUCKLEY, Michael 30BURDEN, Michael 48, 63BURGESS, Miranda 48BURGOS, Ana María Díaz 22BURKE, Helen 18, 37BURKE, Jr., John J. 64BURSON, Jeffrey D. 47BYERMAN, Keith 31CCABUS, Andrea 39CALDWELL, Tanya 19CAMPBELL, Ann 52CAMPBELL, Jill 61, 65CAMPBELL, Sarah 11CAPUTO, Terra 38CAREY, Brycchan 33, 59CAREY, Toni Vogel 32CARLILE, Susan 22CARLYON, Jonathan E. 31CARRERA, Magali M. 22, 58CARRETTA, Vincent 59CARRILLO-VINCENT, Matt 59CARTER, Mary 17CASID, Jill 10CASS, Jeffrey 14CAVERT, William 24CHAN, Mary M. 1CHANNICK, Debra 41CHARD, Chloe 33CHEEK, Pamela 21, 25CHENG, Diana 36CHERNOCK, Arianne 63CHICO, Tita 53CHILD, Paul W. 17CHILDS, Adrienne 42CHUDGAR, Neil 54CLARE, David 32CLARK, Katherine 22CLARK-EVANS, Christine 64CLAY, Lauren 23CLINGER, Catherine 28CLINGHAM, Greg 15CLYMER, Lorna 19, 65COLE, Lucinda 50CONNELL, Alyssa 26CONWAY, Alison 15, 17CONWAY, Suzanne 61COOK, Elizabeth Heckendorn 1, 49COOK, Suzanne 53COPE, Kevin L. 31, 37COPE, Virginia H. 9COPPOLA, Al 29, 64CORMAN, Brian 48CORSE, Taylor 11COUCH, Nena 18COUCHMAN, Dorothy 27COYKENDALL, Abby 15, 20, 42, 54CRACIUN, Adriana 47, 63CRAFT, Peter 7CRAFT-FAIRCHILD, Catherine 43CRAIG, Charlotte M. 19CRAIG, Robert B. 19CRAIG, Robin 21CREAM, Randall 20, 51CREASER, Wanda 52CREECH, James 11CRUMMY, Ione 5768


CURRAN, Andrew 7, 50CURRAN, Louise 54DDAL PRETE, Ivano 41DAVIS, Leith 43, 63DAVIS, Meredith 5DAWSON, Scott 6DE GROOT, Joanna 64DE MARIA, Robert 15DEBLASSIE, Maria 38DEGABRIELE, Peter 28DEININGER, Melissa 11DELAHAYE, Sophie 12DELERS, Olivier 5, 28DELUCIA, JoEllen 5DELUNA, D.N. 17DEROCHI, Jack 31DEUTSCH, Helen 61DEVEREAUX, Johanna 33DEWISPELARE, Daniel 4DILLINGHAM, Thomas F. 16DIMIT, Robert 12DIXON, Susan M. 19DJAZAERLY, Yasser Derwiche 2DOLAN, Emily 60DOMENGHINO, Caroline 47DOMINGO, Darryl P. 2DONALDSON, William 55DONATO, Clorinda 55, 60DOODY, Margaret Anne 44, 48DOUGAL, Theresa A. 26DOUTHWAITE, Julia 25, 30DOW, Gillian 22DOWDELL, Coby 54DOWNES, Paul 30DRAKE, George 58DRAXLER, Bridget 12DREW, Erin 37DRURY, Joseph 29DUGGAN, Anne 50DUMOUCHEL, Daniel 47DUNNINGOTN, Jacqueline Orsini 8EEAMON, Michael 63EGENOLF, Susan 3EGER, Elizabeth 33EHRENPREIS, David 28EIVE, Gloria 18, 38, 44, 58ELLENZWEIG, Sarah 8ELMER, Jonathan 39ENGEL, Laura 22, 53, 61ENNIS, Daniel J. 27EPLEY, Steven 60ERICKSEN, Kenneth J. 52ERICKSON,, Robert A. 49ERNST, Winifred 11ERON, Sarah 61ERWIN, Timothy 59, 65ESTANTE, Sophia A. 29EWALT, Margaret 55EYERLY, Sarah 4, 58FFAIRER, David 12, 27FARRELL, Marcy 57FARRELL, Molly 55FAVRET, Mary 37FAWCETT, Julia 4, 28FAZLOLLAHI, Agab 33FECHNER, Roger 32FELTON, Marie-Claude 40FERNG, Jennifer 28FERRI, Sabrina 7FIGLEROWICZ, Marta 58FIZER, Irene 49FLEIG, Anne 56FOLKENFLIK, Robert 15, 48, 63FONESCA, Anne-Louise G. 36FORDHAM, Douglas 18, 37FORMENT, Bruno 4, 62FORT, Bernadette 30FORTNER, Lauren 57FOURNY, Diane 29FOWLER, Patsy 2869


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Index of Meeting0th ParticipantsFOX, Christopher 37GRAYBILL, Lela 26FRACKMAN, Kyle E. 60GREEN, Emily 3540th FRAIL, NWSECS Robert 47 Annual Meeting GREEN, Katherine 43FRANCE, Margaret 10GREENE, Jody 10, 30FRANCUS, Marilyn 26, 31GREENE, John Patrick 29FRANK, Marcie 12GREENFIELD, Sayre 5FRANTA, Andrew 13GREIG, Hannah 8FRANTZ, Pierre 16GROBER, Max 23FRASER, Elisabeth 63GRUNDY, Isobel 20FREEMAN, Lisa A. 53GUENTHER, Beatrice 36FRIEDMAN, Emily C. 44, 57GUEST, Harriet 16, 33FRITSCH, Christopher 14, 22 GUILLEMET, Julien 18FUEGER, Kathleen 32GURRADO, Antonio 57FUENTES, Yvonne 6GUSTAFSON, Daniel 15, 24, 31GGUSTAFSON, Sandra 39GUTIÉRREZ, Renee 11, 16GAMER, Michael 7, 30GANZ, Melissa 21GARCIA, Humberto 29GARDINER, Ann 36, 41GAUDET, Katherine 23GAVIN, Michael 24, 61GAVIN, Robin Farwell 8GEIGER, Brian 6GERMANN, Jennifer 3GIBBS, Jenna 13GIDAL, Eric 57GIRTEN, Kristin M. 2, 29GODOY-ORANTES, Andrea 57GOEHRING, Edmund J. 42, 62GOLD, Hazel 3, 58GOLIGHTLY, Jennifer 9, 23GOLLAPUDI, Aparna 44GOMEZ CASTELLANO, Irene 1GONDA, Caroline 38GONZÁLEZ, Cristina Cruz 8GONZALEZ, Joan G. 60GOODE, Dawn 44GOODMAN, Kevis 48GORELICK, Nathan 28GOTTMANN, Felicia 57GRANT, Sally 7GRAVES, Lila Miranda 5HHAGGERTY, George 10, 32, 61HAKIM, Zeina 44HALL, William 60HALLAM, John 34HAMILTON, William 60HAMRICK, James W. 37HARDY, Molly O'Hagan 20, 53HARKIN, Maureen 2, 53HARRINGTON, B.A. 42HARROW, Sharon 16, 33HASLANGER, Andrea 49HAUGEN, Janine 27HAVENS, Hilary 26HAWLEY, Judith 17HAYES, Julie Candler 22HEILMANN, Lena 38HELLER, Benjamin 49HELLER, Deborah 5, 33HENIGAN, Julie 55HERRON, Shane 28HESSEL, Kurtis 27HILES, Karen 62HILL, Mike 5, 43HILL, Ruth 56, 58HODSON, Daren 14, 1870


HOGAN, Jo-Anne 6HOLLAND, Joanne 55HOLM, Melanie 28HOLZMUELLER, Anne 35HOREJSI, Nicole 16HOUSE, Michael K. 9HOUSEHOLDER, Michael 52HOWE, Tonya 6, 33HUERTA, Marisa 21HURLBERT, Jarrod 52HURT, Bryan 2HYDE, Melissa 25, 30IIMMEL, Andrea 10, 35, 40INGRASSIA, Catherine 28IRELAND, Dale Katherine21, 34, 39, 42IRELAND, Sean 21IVERSON, Jack 34JJAFFE, Catherine M. 55JANES, Regina 36, 60JARRELLS, Tony 48JARVIS, Ereck 7JENSEN, Kate 34JOKIC, Olivera 5JONES, Joseph R. 18JONES, Vivien 17JORDAN, Nicolle 49JOST, Jacob Sider 15, 64JUNG, Frauke 37JURADO, Rachel 5JUSTICE, George 36, 44JUSTUS, Kevin 3KKAHAN, Lee 30KAIROFF, Claudia 24KALTER, Barrett 42KAREEM, Sarah 65KARIAN, Stephen 5KAUL, Suvir 13, 42KAVANAGH, Thomas M. 59KEISER, Jess 6KELLEHER, Paul 11KELLEY, Diane 17KELLMAN, Jordan 20KELLY, Gary 34KENNEDY, Catriona 16KENT-DRURY, Roxanne 34KERFOOT, Alicia 53KERSHNER, Jon 13KIBBIE, Ann 4KINCADE, Kit 31, 58KING, Heather 3, 34KING, Kathryn R. 17, 28, 44KING, Shelley 10KITTREDGE, Katharine 53KLEKAR, Cynthia 26KLEMANN, Heather 10, 59KNEE, Philip 36, 41KOEHLER, Margaret 52KOENIG, Gretchen 11KOSTER, John 25KOWALESKI-WALLACE, Elizabeth26, 63KOZUL, Mladen 51KRAFT, Elizabeth 4, 15KRAMNICK, Jonathan 2, 61KRISE, Thomas W. 20, 31KRUEGER, Rita 54KRUMNOW, Kristi L. 32, 38KUGLER, Emily M.N. 29, 41KUHL, Paulo M. 12LLADD, Heather 48LAHIKAINEN, Amanda 18LANDERS, Matthew 65LANDES, Joan B. 50LANGILLE, Edward 57LANSER, Susan 34, 61LANSVERK, Marvin 52, 5871


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Index Meeting0thof ParticipantsLARA, Fernando García 44MACLEOD, Catriona 8LARKIN, Todd L. 7, 54MACPHERSON, Sandra 4740th LASSER, NWSECS Ethan 42Annual Meeting MAGERMANS, Andrea 1LASTINGER, Valérie 14MAJOR, Emma 21LE COAT, Nanette 25, 30, 57 MALIN, Mark R. 31, 47LE MENTHÉOUR, Rudy 7, 35, 51 MALL, Laurence 36LEDOUX, Ellen Malenas 42, 60 MALLIPEDDI, Ramesh 53LEE, Anthony W. 41MANDELL, Laura 20LEE, Natasha 49, 58MANDER, Jenny 64LEICHMAN, Jeff 47MANNHEIMER, Katherine 2LEIMAN, Jessica 65MARGULIET, Efraht 4LERNER, Marc 13MARKLEY, Robert 17, 52LEUNG, Wing Sze 8MARSCHALK, Lacy 62LEVINE, William 61MARSDEN, Jean 53LEWIS, Dallin G. 43MARTIN, Laura 13LEWIS, Elizabeth Franklin 38MARUCA, Lisa 20LIBBY, Susan Houghton 13MATSUDA, Yoshiko 27LIBIN, Kathryn L. 42MATTES, Mark 62LOAR, Christopher 11, 52MAURER, Shawn Lisa 53LOCKE, Jennifer 6MAY, James E. 6LOGIE, Rose 36MAZELLA, David 65LOISELLE, Kenneth 51MCALPIN, Mary 30, 53, 60LOJKINE, Stéphane 47MCGINNIS, Reginald 5LOKKE, Kari 32MCGIRR, Elaine 4LOOSER, Devoney 22, 34MCINNES, Andrew 9LÓPEZ-CORDÓN, María Victoria 44 MCINNIS, Brian 31LOSCOCCO, Paula 60MCKENZIE, Bruce 16LOUGHRIDGE, Deidre 11MCMINN, Joseph 17LOWERRE, Kathryn 17MCMURRAN, Mary Helen 9, 39LUBEY, Kathleen 2MCNEILL-BINDON, Susan 11LUDWIG, Amber 3MCPHERSON, Heather 12LUHNING, Holly 44MCQUIGGE, Alexis 15LUPTON, Christina 31, 63MCQUILLAN, Peter 37LUPTON, Daniel 18MEEKER, Natania 8LUSH, Rebecca 9MELL, Donald C. 17LYNCH, Jack 16MELONI, Julie 20MMENELY, Tobias 4, 50MENGES, Hilary 15, 16MACDONALD, Jennie 23MERRITT, Juliette 28MACE, Nancy A. 35MESSER, Neal Anthony 22MACK, Ruth 47MESSER, Peter 23MACKIE, Erin 4MHUNGHAILE, Lesa Ni 32MACKLOVITCH, David 12MIAO, Erica 5972


MICHALS, Teresa 10MILLER, Derrick R. 32MILLER, Nicholas E. 41MILLING, Jane 6, 17MODE, Robert 12MOHNKERN, Ansgar 41MONKS, Sarah 12, 37MOODY, Ellen 14MOORE, Dennis 31, 39MOORE, Fabienne 57MOORE, Lisa L. 10MOORE, Sean 52MORGAN, Elizabeth 27MORGENSTERN, Mira 22, 25MORISI, Eve 36MORRIS, Ian Macgregor 50MORRISSEY, Lee 66MOSTEFAI, Ourida 12, 16, 21MOUNSEY, Christopher 34, 63MOWRY, Melissa 15MUDGE, Brad<strong>for</strong>d 3, 33MUELLER, Andreas 52MULHOLLAND, James 43MULRYAN, Michael J. 27MUNNS, Jessica 18MURI, Alison 39MURPHY, Willa 37MYERS, Joanne 54NNACE, Nicholas D. 54, 60NACHUMI, Nora 33NAGLE, Christopher 34, 65NANDREA, Lorri 34NARAIN, Mona 21NASH, Richard 50NASSIR, Ghazi Q. 31NELSON, Holly Faith 43, 52NELSON, William Max 50NENON, Monika 61NESTOR, Deborah 39NEW, Melvyn 4NICHOL, Don 23NICOLAZZO, Sarah 59NOCENTELLI, Carmen 27NOGGLE, James 23NORBERG, Kathryn 8NORMAN, Nathaniel 60NOUIS, Lucien 48NOVAK, Maximillian 50, 58NOWKA, Scott A. 52NUSS, Melynda 23NUSSBAUM, Felicity 16, 34OOAKLEAF, David 28O’BYRNE, Alison 16, 21O’DRISCOLL, Sally 34, 44OHLUND, Jennifer 12OLIVIER-WALLIS, Véronique 57OLIVIERI, Guido 58O’NEILL, John H. 42, 63O’QUINN, Daniel 30, 37, 48OSADETZ, Stephen 48OUTRAM, Dorinda 1PPACINI, Giulia 10, 49PARADIS, Swann 50PARISIAN, Catherine M. 31, 46PARK, Suzie 28PARKER, Kate 37, 43PARKER, Zi 53PASANEK, Brad 63PASK, Kevin 50PAULEY, Benjamin 33, 39PEACE, Mary 18PEARL, Jason 55PEDREIRA, Mark A. 37, 64PEISER, Megan 3PELLICER, Juan Christian 12PENROSE, Mehl 3PERRY, Lori A. Davis 11PERRY, Ruth 55PETERSON, Eric 43PETERSON, Lesley 2373


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Index Meeting0thof ParticipantsPETTELLA, Tera 65PFEIFFER, Loring 15, 6340th PHILLIPS, NWSECS Chris 55Annual MeetingPHILLIPS, Lindsey 59PHILLIPS, Natalie 2, 65PHILLIPS, Pamela 13PICHICHERO, Christy 43PICK, Cecilia 34PIKER, Joshua 58PINHEIRO, Ligia Ravenna 18PIROUX, Lorraine 47PLAX, Julie-Anne 19PLIMPTON, Pamela 52POPKIN, Jeremy D. 23POWELL, John S. 17POWELL, Manushag N. 50, 65PUCCI, Suzanne R. 16PUJOL, Stéphane 5PURDY, Daniel 8QQUINZIANO, Franco 44RRADANOVIC, Mira 10RADISICH, Paula 19RAMOS, Adela 65RAMOS, Aida 13RASMUSSEN, Celia Barnes 5RAVEL, Jeffrey 39RAY, J. Karen 31RAYNARD-LEROY, Sopie 50REED, Peter 13REESE, Christopher 4REILL, Peter H. 40REILLY, Matthew 27REINERT, Tom 13RETFORD, Kate 8REUSCH, Johann 58REYES, Hector 2RICHARD, Jessica 18, 22RICHARDSON, Leslie A. 14RICHETTI, John 23, 61, 63RICHMAN, Jared 23RICHTER, David 33RIDLEY, Glynis 10RIECHERS, Hans-Christian 51RIHOUET, Pascale 60RIOUX-BEAUNE, Mitia 48RITCHIE, Fiona 6, 36RITCHIE, Leslie 17RIVERS, William 14ROBBINS, Mary 42ROBERTSON, James 20ROBERTSON, Randy 8RÖDER, Matthias 57ROGERS, Nicholas 49ROSENTHAL, Laura J. 42, 53ROULSTON, Christine M. 15ROUNCE, Adam 15, 23ROURKE, Lisa 3ROWORTH, Wendy Wassyng 19, 36ROY, Devjani 19RUDY, Seth 11RUML, Ted 65RUMRICH, John Peter 26RUNGE, Laura 34RUNIA, Robin 32RUSSELL, Gillian 37RYAN, Kelly 63SSABOR, Peter 44, 52SADOW, Jonathan 11SAINT-AMAND, Pierre 16SANJABI, Maryam 64SASKA, Hope 18SAVARESE, John 64SAVONIUS-WROTH, Celestina 32SAXTON, Kirsten 11SCHALLER, Peggy 42SCHELLENBERG, Betty A. 17, 34, 54SCHIFFMAN, Robyn L. 47SCHINDLER, Melissa 49SCHMID, Susanne 56SCHMIDGEN, Wolfram 12, 5274


SCHMIDT, Johannes 62SCHNEIDER, Rachel 26SCHOCHET, Gordon 22SCHÜRER, Norbert 35, 57, 62SEAGER, Nicholas 22SEIBERT, Salita N. 44SEIDEL, Kevin 29SENIOR, Emily 9SENKEVITCH, Tatiana 3SETH, Catriona 25SHAFFER, Jason 4SHANAFELT, Carrie 36SHAPCHENKO, Julia 25SHAPIRO, Rebecca 14SHELFORD, April 20SHERIDAN, Geraldine 14SHERMAN, Stuart 30SHEVLIN, Eleanor F. 6, 40, 51SHIELDS, Juliet 43SHTEIR, Ann 25SILL, Geoffrey 58SILVA, Cristobal 41SILVER, Sean 60SIMPSON, David 20, 33SINGH, Brijari 23SINGH, Frances B. 20SISKIN, Clif<strong>for</strong>d 63SKORONSKI, Sarah 14SLADE, David 6SLAGLE, Judith Bailey 21, 26SMALLWOOD, Philip 15, 66SMITH, Hilary Coe 36SMYTH, Jim 37SNEAD, Jennifer 32SOL, Antoinette 25SOLINGER, Jason 15SOLOMON, Diana 6, 63SOMMER, Andreas Urs 51SORENSEN, Janet 48SPADARO, Stephanie 53SPELLER, Trevor 22, 49SPENCER, Mark G. 32SPENCER, Susan 31, 43STALNAKER, Joanna 7, 35, 50STARR, George 29STEELE, Kathryn L. 59STEIN, Sarah 60STEINTRAGER, James 9, 25STEPHANSON, Raymond 49, 64STEVENS, Laura M. 19, 59STEWART, Dustin D. 18, 26STOCKHORST, Stefanie 57STOLLEY, Karen 22, 58STOREY, Benjamin 41STRABONE, Jeff 43STRAUB, Kristina 10STROBEL, Heidi 3STRONG, Kathryn 53STURTZ, Linda 20STURZER, Felicia B. 1SUAREZ, S.J., Michael F. 6SUDAN, Rajani 36SUMMERFIELD, Giovanna 18SUSSMAN, Charlotte 48SUTHERLAND-MEIER, Madeline 54SWAMINATHAN, Srividhya 13, 42SWENSON, Rivka 50SWINKIN, Rachel 43SZMURLO, Karyna 41, 57TTADIÉ, Alexis 12TAKETS, Sean 39TALLENT, Alistaire 5TAMARKIN, Elisa 39TAMAS, Jennifer 25TANAKA, Aya 38TAWS, Richard 28TAYLOR, Lyrica 2TAYLOR, Michael Thomas 32, 38TENNENHOUSE, Leonard 39THOMAS, Robin L. 38THOMERET, Loïc 21THOMPSON, Helen 2THOMPSON, Peggy 7TILLMAN, Kacy 21TOBIN, Beth Fowkes 3475


The Annual Meeting of the ASECS 0th NWSECS Annual Index of Meeting0th ParticipantsTOLONEN, Mikko 40TOMC, Sandra 2640th TOMLINSON, NWSECS Tristan Annual 23 MeetingTOWSEY, Mark 51TRACHTENBERG, Zev 41TRAUB, Maria 60TRINQUET, Charlotte 50TROOST, Linda 31, 55, 63TROUILLE, Mary 14, 63TUNSTALL, Kate E. 12, 20, 47TURNBULL, Gordon 24, 48TURNOVSKY, Geoffrey 5TUTHILL, Maureen 22, 53TY, Eleanor 39UUHLIG, Stefan H. 66UNGAR-SARGON, Batya 28URDA, Kathleen E. 26UTHERLAND-MEIER, Madeline 54VVALLE, Enid 1VALVO, Nick 49VAN BRABANDT, Petra 32VAN DER WOUDE, Joanne 55VAN DIJK, Suzan 62VAN KLEY, Dale K. 47VAN STRIEN-CHARDONNEAU,Madeleine 62VANDERHEYDEN, Jennifer 38, 48VENTURO, David F. 64VICKERY, Amanda 8VISCONSI, Elliott 15VOLK-BIRKE, Sabine 12VOLMER, Stephanie 10VON MÜCKE, Dorothea 9WWADEWITZ, Adrianne 33WAGNER, Corinna 49WAGNER, Darren 49WALDRON, Donna 16WALKER, Lesley 34WALLACE, Miriam 34WALLACE, Tara Ghoshal 9WANSKE, Barbara Wonneken 27WARNER, William B. 63WATERMAN, Bryan 39WATES, Roye 42WATT, Jim 21, 64WEBER, Christian 41WEBSTER, Jeremy 23WEHRS, Donald R. 4WEINBROT, Howard 19, 36WEISS, Deborah 54, 60, 65WELLMON, Chad 63WELTMAN-ARON, Brigitte 30WERTHEIMER, Eric 30WETMORE, Alex 18WHALE, John 3WHARRAM, Charles 36WHEELER, Roxann 53, 58WHITE, Janet R. 2WIGGIN, Bethany 7WILBY, Jason B. 8WILCOX, Lance 64WILCZEK, Markus 35, 41WILLIAMS, George H. 33, 51WILSON, Jennifer 2WILSON, Kathleen 13WINKLER, Amanda Eubanks 17WINSTON, Michael 27WISECUP, Kelly 9, 64WITHERBEE, Amy 13, 26WOERTENDYKE, Gretchen 31WOOD, James 20WOODWARD, Carolyn 34WORRALL, David 30WOZNIAK, Heather 65WRIGHT, Nicole 47WROTH, William 8WYE, Margaret Enright 19WYETT, Jodi 9WYNN, Thomas 5776


YYAMASHITA, Masano 52YANKASKAS, Lynda K. 51YEAGER, Myron D. 41YONAN, Michael 5, 54, 62YOSHIDA, Naoki 27YOUNT, Janet Aikins 43ZZANINI-CORDI, Irene 7ZEISS, Laurel E. 11ZERNE, Lori Halvorsen 44, 53ZIMOLZAK, Katharine 4ZINSSER, Judith P. 59, 63ZIONKOWSKI, Linda 17, 22ZITIN, Abigail 2ZUBER, Heather 43ZUNSHINE, Lisa 61, 63ZYGEL-BASSO, Aurélie 5077

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