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
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