Literary and Visual Landscapes Autumn Schedule

LVL is back!

We’re excited to announce our autumn schedule which brings together a diverse range of scholars and students from the environmental and geo-humanities. For this term we are keeping the series online, so all are welcome, internal and beyond. Please feel free to circulate this information and flyer to anyone you think might be interested.  

For our first instalment of the series, Dr Noreen Masud from Durham University (though joining Bristol University from January 2022) will be presenting Slippage and Fakery in Willa Cather’s Prairie Landscapes. This session will take place on Wednesday 13th October, at the usual time of 4:30-6pm UK time, on Zoom. Please join us for what will be a fascinating paper and discussion, and to welcome a new CEH member! 

Later this term we have invited Dr Susanne Ferwerda (Utrecht University) to speak on The Waves, the Ocean: Boats, Borders and Refugee Bodies in Behrouz Boochani’s No Friend but the Mountains, and Dr Anushka Peres (University of Revada, Reno) for a paper on Queer Ecovisual Rhetorics and Settler Colonial Landscapes. Details of the full semester’s events can be found on the Events page

This year’s LVL series is very generously funded by the Centre for Environmental Humanities, the School of Geography, and the English Head of Subject Fund. We are very grateful for this support and excited to present such a diverse series, bringing together scholars exploring landscapes across a range of spatial and temporal contexts, with an emphasis on queer and decolonial spaces. 

Free tickets for all the upcoming seminars can be booked via Eventbrite: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/literary-and-visual-landscapes-autumn-2021-tickets-173046255007. A Zoom meeting link will be circulated to ticket-holders in advance of each session. 

We hope to see you there! 

Lena, Austin and Eline (the new LVL team). 

Header image: André Derain, Paysage du Midi (1906), SF MoMA

Two further events: cuteness and ghosts!

News has come our way of two interesting environmental humanities events on creative responses to cuteness and gothic shorelines.

Aww-struck: creative and critical approaches to cuteness is a seminar and exhibition hosted by the University of Birmingham and Royal Holloway, University of London, taking place on 21 May.

The call for papers closes on 29 March. Download the call here.

Haunted Shores: Coastlands, Coastal Waters and the Littoral Gothic Symposium will be hosted by the Haunted Shores Research Network on 26 March. The conference features more than thirty presentations on topics closely connected with the environmental humanities.

Registration is via a webform here.