Showing posts with label English. Show all posts
Showing posts with label English. Show all posts

Friday, 24 March 2017

David Mitchell Conference 2017


This one-day international conference to be held on Saturday 3rd June 2017 brings together 20 speakers from ten countries to discuss the works of author David Mitchell. This sold-out event will also include a visit to Special Collections to see the new collection of his rare works held there, as well as a talk from the author himself.

Bringing together those researching, teaching and studying the author's work, the conference is open to academics, students and interested non-specialist parties alike.

The conference is organised by Rose Harris-Birtill of the School of English and has been made possible through the generous support of the School of English, GRADskills Postgraduate Conference fund and Student Project Fund. Rose will also be guest editing the associated publication following the conference, a special edition of the journal, C21 Literature. See https://davidmitchellconference.wordpress.com/ for full information.

Follow DMcon2017 on Twitter

Monday, 8 August 2016

World politics podcasts: State of the Theory

Dr Anindya Raychaudhuri from the School of English and Dr Hannah Fitzpatrick from the University of Aberdeen run a weekly podcast called “State of the Theory”. Each week, this series tackles a new topic from the world of politics, news or popular culture and try to analyse it using the tools of philosophy and critical theory. The latest episode focuses on the ramifications of Brexit and what we might learn from the EU referendum results. We have previously looked at the Oscars, the UK budget, Islamophobia, and the London mayoral elections.


You can find the episodes on Soundcloud (https://soundcloud.com/stateofthetheorypodcast) or on iTunes (https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/state-of-the-theory/id1082692500?mt=2) Please give it a listen, and join in the conversation. We are on Twitter as @DrAnindyaR and @DrHFitz – you can also get in touch through the podcast Twitter account - @TheoryDoctors

The podcast website is www.stateofthetheory.com 

Monday, 27 June 2016

'New Generation Thinker 2016' winners! Dr Victoria Donovan and Anindya Raychaudhuri

Congratulations to Dr Anindya Raychaudhuri, School of English, and Dr Victoria Donovan, School of Modern Languages two early career researchers from St Andrews (out of 10 total!) who have been chosen as New Generation Thinkers 2016!

BBC Radio 3 and the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) have unveiled the 10 academics who will be turning their research into television and radio programmes on the BBC. The New Generation Thinkers scheme 2016 is a nationwide search for the brightest minds who have the potential to share their cutting edge academic ideas through broadcasting. After a four-month selection process involving a series of day-long workshops at the BBC in Salford and London, the final 10 were chosen by a panel of BBC Radio 3 and BBC Arts producers, and the Arts and Humanities Research Council. The scheme has been a successful first step for many academics, with previous thinkers going on to appear across television and radio.


Dr Anindya Raychaudhuri is working on the way nostalgia is used by diasporic communities to create imaginary and real homes. He has written about the Spanish Civil War and the India/Pakistan partition and the cultural legacies of these wars. He co-hosts a podcast show, State of the Theory, and explores the issues raised by his research in stand-up comedy.
 
Dr Victoria Donovan is a cultural historian of Russia whose research explores local identities, heritage politics, and the cultural memory of the Soviet past in twenty-first century Russia. Her new project explores patriotic identity in Putin’s Russia. She is also working on a project that looks at the connections between mining communities in South Wales and Eastern Ukraine.

Tuesday, 21 June 2016

Neil Gaiman brings Beowulf back to St Andrews

Neil Gaiman
(photo credit: Kimberly Butler)
When prize-winning author Neil Gaiman first encountered the Old English epic Beowulf, he did so via the Penguin Classics translation of the poem, made by Michael Alexander, former Berry Professor of English at St Andrews.
This week Gaiman comes to St Andrews to receive an honorary degree and to talk about (among other subjects) his part as writer on the Hollywood film adaptation of Beowulf. Dr Chris Jones of the School of English specializes in the uses that contemporary artists make of Old English literature. You can read his blog about Gaiman’s Beowulf here: School of English blog, or if you have a Reading Group, download discussions questions about Beowulf and the film here: Beowulf Discussion Questions.

Read about the research:   Chris Jones, ‘From Heorot to Hollywood: reading Beowulf in its third millennium’, in David Clark and Nicholas Perkins, eds., Anglo-Saxon and the Modern Imagination (Cambridge: Brewer, 2010), pp. 13-29. Published in Anglo-Saxon Culture and the Modern Imagination, Edited by David Clark &Nicholas Perkins.

Tuesday, 4 November 2014

Public talk: 'The Weather in British Literature'

The School of English will be hosting a lecture by Dr Alexandra Harris of the University of Liverpool, entitled "The Weather in British Literature".

"Writers and artists across the centuries, looking up at the same skies and walking in the same brisk air, have felt very different things. There have been times when the numbers on a rain gauge count for more than a pantheon of aerial gods; there have been times for meteoric marvels and times for gentle breeze. Shelley wanted to sublimate himself into a cloud while Ruskin, equally but differently obsessed, wanted to store the clouds in bottles. Alexandra Harris will introduce her work on a cultural history of English weather, show how Woolf's Orlando can be read as a guide to the climates of history, and ask whether modernism has distinctive weathers of its own."

Dr Alexandra Harris
'The weather in British Literature' 
Tuesday, 11 November 2014, 5.15pm
Lawson Room, Kennedy Hall,
School of English, The Scores 

Dr Harris' wide-ranging book 'Romantic Moderns' won Guardian First Book Award in 2010. She appears regularly on radio and television, most recently fronting an episode of the BBC series 'The Secret Life of Books'.

The lecture is free and open to the public.

Monday, 3 November 2014

"Dragon" wins Best Play for Children and Young People award

Dragon, by Oliver Emanuel, a lecturer in Creative Writing at the School of English, was named Best Play for Children and Young People in the UK Theatre Awards. The play was up against productions of Around the World in Eighty Days and Nivelli’s War in the awards ceremony at London's Guildhall on 19 October 2014.
 
Oliver had been approached by directors Jamie Harrison and Candice Edmunds to write a visual play with very little text about grief and dragons. The result, Dragon, has no spoken text, instead utilising puppetry, magic and orchestral music to tell the story of 12-year-old Tommy who has recently lost his mother. His father is in despair, his big sister ignores him and he has become the target of the school bully. And then, one night, a dragon appears at his window…
Dragon, which was commissioned by the National Theatre of Scotland, opened at the Citizen’s Theatre in October 2013. A co-production with Scottish touring company Vox Motus and the Tianjin People Arts Theatre, China, the play subsequently toured Scotland and opened in Tianjin, China in 2014.

The UK Theatre Awards are the only nationwide awards to honour creative excellence and the outstanding achievement seen on and off stage throughout England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Oliver, whose new play for children, The Lost Things, will open next May, said, “Dragon is a dark tale of loss, family and the beasts that haunt our dreams. The response has been overwhelmingly positive and we’re in the process of developing another tour at the moment. It seems to be a show that both young and old respond to.”

 
Dragon trailer from the National Theatre of Scotland

Monday, 31 March 2014

Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry 2013

Congratulations to Professor Douglas Dunn, Emeritus Professor of English, who was awarded the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry 2013 in recognition of his lifetime contribution to literature. Prof. Dunn accepted the medal personally from Her Majesty the Queen at Buckingham Palace.

Awarded for excellence, the Gold Medal for Poetry was created by George V in 1933, following a suggestion from then poet laureate John Masefield. In winning the award, Professor Dunn joins the ranks of distinguished past winners such as W. H. Auden (1936), John Betjeman (1960), Philip Larkin (1965), Ted Hughes (1974) and Norman MacCaig (1985). [BBC news] [press photo]

Tuesday, 11 February 2014

'Where have all the flowers gone?' and the ubi sunt motif

‘Where have all the flowers gone?’ by American folk singer and political activist Pete Seeger is not just an arrestingly powerful protest song from the era of the Cold War and McCarthyism; it draws on a deep tradition of lament literature as old as the English language itself.

Seeger opens each verse of his song with one of a linked chain of ‘where-are-they?’ questions that trouble the listener; not only have all the flowers apparently vanished, but so have all the young women, all the young men, and all the soldiers – the whereabouts of each being a mystery to the singer, until the end of the song, where we learn that they’ve gone to graveyards, which in turn disappear, to be replaced once more by flowers ‘long time ago’.

Structurally then, Seeger’s song is patterned according to an age-old rhetorical device known by its Latin name as the ubi sunt motif. Meaning ‘where are they?’, repeated ubi sunt questions would be used in ancient literature to introduce lists of people long-since dead, or of places or material objects which have decayed away, or otherwise been lost to time. The device is at least as old as Cicero, who used it in a speech defending Cnaeus Placius, introducing a set of abstract virtues that he associated with the old Republic, but which he felt to be lacking in his own time: ‘Where are our old customs? Where is our equality of privileges? Where is that ancient liberty?’

In the Middle Ages the motif became extremely popular, after it entered the work of Boethius, the sixth-century philosopher and author of The Consolation of Philosophy. Once the motif was in Boethius, a hugely influential text for almost a thousand years, it went viral in European poetry of the Middle Ages in a multitude of languages and nations.

The poets of Anglo-Saxon England were particularly fond of this device, and used it in many of their poems, several of which have survived to us in manuscripts written just over a thousand years ago, in the language known as Old English. Perhaps the most well-known example occurs in the elegy known as The Wanderer. Because the poet is writing in Old English, not Latin, he writes hwær cwom (‘where has it/they gone?’) rather than ubi sunt, but the effect is the same:

Hwær cwom mearg? Hwær cwom mago? Hwær cwom maþþumgyfa? 
Hwær cwom symbla gesetu? Hwær sindon seledreamas? 
[...]Hu seo þrag gewat, genap under nihthelm, swa heo no wære. 
 (‘Where has the horse gone? Where the rider? Where the treasure-giver? Where are the seats at the feast? Where are the joys of the hall? How that time has passed away, grown dark under the helmet of night, as if it never was.)’

The ubi sunt motif was an international one, a meme that jumped languages and cultures appearing in French and German literature, as well as in early English. This is not unlike Seeger’s own adoption of the question-format of his song; by his own admission he found the outline of the song, in its bare bones, in a Cossack folk song, quoted within a Russian novel he was reading by Mikhail Sholokhov. In borrowing, extending, and setting to music the basic questions of his source text (‘Where are the flowers? The girls have plucked them. Where are the girls? They've all taken husbands. Where are the men? They're all in the army.’), Seeger composes in ways very similar to those which our earliest English poets would have understood. Our idea that compositions are the ‘original’ property of those who first came up with them is an entirely modern way of thinking, which would have bewildered Old English poets (who refer to their own work as if it were song) as much as it is an anathema to modern folk musicians, who freely adopt, adapt, borrow and steal words, tunes, even whole songs from each other. For Seeger to take the question-structure of his song from Cossack folk tradition is entirely in keeping with the Anglo-Saxon poets ‘lifting’ the idea of ubi sunt from Boethius.

Seeger’s ‘Where have all the flowers gone’, also needs to be seen in the context of apocalyptic fears: fears engendered by the Cold War, fears of nuclear apocalypse and about the loss of youth to a culture of militarism. We, like the people of Anglo-Saxon England, belong to a culture that is contemplating its own, whether that be through an unimaginable more, or (more recently) through the kind of climate catastrophe that might well prompt us to ask ‘where have all the flowers gone?’

This too is something else that Seeger and these earlier writers have in common. Whenever the ubi sunt motif is deployed it’s not really about the past; it’s about the future. Ostensibly what’s going on in these poems and lyrics concerns the relationship between the present and past: look at these people, places, objects or qualities that have only barely survived to the here and now, either only in name and vague reputation, or in physical ruins and fragments. But what’s actually going on is about the relationship between the present and the future. What if we disappear the same way they did? What will the world look like in the future and will we be a part of it? Will our achievements matter or be remembered?

It’s this unspoken, but crystal-clear, anticipatory anxiety that gives the ubi sunt its power over our imagination. It’s a power that charges Old English poetry to a super-high voltage, and it’s a power which over a thousand years later crackles through Seeger’s voice when he sings ‘where have all the graveyards gone?’ It’s a power that will, no doubt, continue to be voiced in poetry and song for as long as our culture lasts. After that time, who knows to whom it might fall to ask of us ‘where are they now?’

Dr Chris Jones, Director of Research, School of English

Thursday, 30 January 2014

Pete Seeger's link to Medieval Poetry

With the sad passing of Pete Seeger on Tuesday, the lament for a lost generation – Where Have All the Flowers Gone – will have been played more often than usual in homes across the world this week. What listeners may not realize is that Seeger's famous protest song belongs to an extremely ancient literary tradition known as the 'ubi sunt theme'. Dr Chris Jones, from the School of English, discusses the use of this rhetorical device in Pete Seeger's song, in Anglo-Saxon and Latin medieval poetry, and in the work of the rapper Nas, on Radio 3's, The Verb, Friday, 31 January 2014, at 10pm. Tune in to find out more!

Thursday, 6 June 2013

'New Generation Thinker 2013' winner Dr Sarah Dillon

Dr Sarah Dillon, of the School of English, has been chosen by BBC Radio 3 and the Arts and Humanities Research Council as one of the New Generation Thinkers 2013. Dr Dillon is one of 10 early career academics chosen from hundreds of applicants, and one of only two from Scotland. The aims of the search was to find the academic broadcasters of the future.

The 10 winners will spend a year working with Radio 3 presenters and producers to develop their research and ideas into broadcasts. They will make their debut appearance on Radio 3's arts and ideas programme, Night Waves, on successive editions beginning Monday 3 June and will be invited to make regular contributions to the network throughout the year. They will deliver talks at Radio 3's annual Free Thinking Festival of Ideas at the Sage, Gateshead in October 2013.  The academics will also have an opportunity to develop their ideas for television, including working with BBC Television Arts to make short taster films to be shown on BBC Arts website.

Sarah’s work looks at the relationship between contemporary literature and science and explores how the reading habits of scientists have influenced the way that they think. [press release]

Monday, 18 March 2013

5 University of St Andrews RSE Young Academy members announced

The Royal Society of Edinburgh (RSE) has announced the second group of RSE Young Academy of Scotland appointments, which consists of 50 new members, including 5 from St Andrews.
The RSE Young Academy of Scotland fosters interdisciplinary activities among emerging leaders from the disciplines of science and humanities, the professions, the arts, business and civil society. Established by the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 2011, the Young Academy of Scotland provides a platform for able and innovative young entrepreneurs, professionals and academics to develop a coherent and influential voice, and to address the most challenging issues facing society in Scotland and beyond.

Monday, 4 February 2013

17th century “bread row” led to long-standing Scottish rivalry

The famous, often misunderstood rivalry between Glasgow and Edinburgh is rumoured to have begun over 300 years ago. One of the first recorded flare-ups happened in 1656, when the town council of Glasgow expressed concern at the bad quality of bread the local bakers were producing. Two bakers from Edinburgh offered an easy solution and also managed to one-up Glasgow; they would happily bake Glaswegians bread that met higher quality, Edinburgh standards. The gloves were off and the jousting between Edinburgh and Glasgow had begun. Today, these two cities continue to have a prickly, yet treasured, relationship. Prof. Robert Crawford of the School of English  brings this rivalry to life in his new book, On Glasgow and Edinburgh and argues that a sense of competition between the country’s two largest cities has long been a defining aspect of Scotland.

Prof. Crawford will be discussing both cities’ unique histories and qualities at the launch of his book in Blackwell’s Bookshop in Edinburgh on Thursday, 28th February at 6:30pm.

Thursday, 3 January 2013

Prof. Burnside receives 2013 Eccles British Library Award

Courtesy of H. Fricke

Poet and novelist Prof. John Burnside, of the School of English, has newly taken up his role as 2013 Eccles British Library Writer in Residence. The prestigious award is sponsored by the David and Mary Eccles Centre for American Studies at the British Library. The Centre is home to the foremost collection of American books, manuscripts, journals,  newspapers and sound recordings outside of the United States and was set up to promote awareness of the British Library collections relating to the USA and Canada and to help facilitate the use of these collections.

Prof. Burnside will be joined in his residency by acclaimed historian Andrea Wulf. Prof. Burnside will use the collection to research a novel, which is very loosely a response to Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, following a brother and sister from their '30s childhood in the South through the volatile ‘60s and the rest of the 'American Century’.

In 2011, Prof. Burnside’s latest poetry collection, Black Cat Bone, won both the Forward Poetry Prize (Best Poetry Collection of the Year) and the T.S. Eliot Prize.

Wednesday, 25 July 2012

Conference: Emblems of Nationhood

Emblems of Nationhood: Britishness1707–1901 is a multi-disciplinary and truly international conference co-organised by postgraduate students from the Schools of Art History and Modern Languages, and recently graduated students from the School of English. It takes place between the 10th and 12th August in Schools 1–3, United Colleges Quadrangle.

Courtesy of the Lewis Walpole Library.
National identity is a central point of enquiry that is repeatedly called upon in contemporary social and political rhetoric. Our conference will address the roots of this theme by discussing depictions of Britain and Britishness in literature, philosophy, history, and art between the Act of Union in 1707 and the death of Queen Victoria in 1901. Over the course of this multidisciplinary conference, we aim to explore how expressions of nationalism have moulded both critical perspectives on national identity and their creative products.

In addition to our key speakers — Prof. Colin Kidd (Queen’s University Belfast), Dr Emma Major (University of York), Prof. Linda Colley (Princeton University), and Prof. Calum Colvin (University of Dundee) — we have attracted 65 speakers from around the world who will deliver papers discussing Britishness. The conference is also accompanied by an exhibition of artwork which is currently on display in the reception of Art History.

We have attracted significant funding from the following sources: the Paul MellonCentre for Studies in British Art, the Russell Trust, The University of the Highlands and the Islands, Capod, the Schools of Art History, History, English, and Modern Languages, the Scottish Society for Art History, the Society for French Studies, and the Royal Historical Society.



Friday, 4 May 2012

Inaugural Lecture: Prof. Don Paterson

Professor Don Paterson, of the School of English, will deliver his Inaugural Lecture, “I know what I have given you;  I do not know what you have received”:  Poetry, Paranoia and Errors in Transmission, in the Buchanan Lecture Theatre on Wednesday, 9 May 2012 at 5.15 p.m. All are welcome.

Don has published five collections of poetry, two books of aphorism, a number of edited anthologies, and a commentary on Shakespeare’s Sonnets. He is currently working on a new collection of poetry, a lengthy technical manual on ars poetica, and a prose book about music.

Friday, 20 January 2012

Prof Burnside wins TS Eliot Prize for Poetry

Professor John Burnside of the School of English has won the TS Eliot Prize for Poetry for Black Cat Bone at a recent ceremony in London. The judges said Black Cat Bone was "a haunting book of great beauty, powered by love, childhood memory, human longing and loneliness. In an exceptional year, it is an outstanding book; one which the judges felt grew with every reading". The book's title refers to a particular bone extracted from a live cat, which is referred to in blues music as a good luck talisman. Black Cat Bone is Burnside's 11th book of poetry and won the 2011 Forward Prize for the best collection. Previous winners of the prize include Ted Hughes, Carol Ann Duffy and Seamus Heaney. [more]

Monday, 5 September 2011

'Body Bags / Simonides' exhibition gets high marks

Yoam © Norman McBeath
One of the photographs from 'Body Bags /Simonides', an exhibition of photographs by Norman McBeath and texts by Robert Crawford, of the School of English, which was held at the Edinburgh College of Art as part of the 2011 Edinburgh Art Festival. It was the only 2011 Festival exhibition to be given a 5-star rating by the 'Scotsman'. Sponsored by Creative Scotland, the Royal Society of Edinburgh and the University of St Andrews, the exhibition will tour in 2012 and its archive will form part of the Special Collections of St Andrews University Library.

Wednesday, 31 August 2011

Professor Neil Rhodes launches the MHRA Tudor and Stuart Translations series

Professor Neil Rhodes, of the School of English, will host a reception with co-General Editor, Andrew Hadfield, for the launch of the MHRA Tudor and Stuart Translations series at the Early Modern Exchanges conference at UCL on 16 September. One of the first two volumes in the series will be Gavin Douglas's translation of The Aeneid, edited by Dr Gordon Kendal, who is an Honorary Research Fellow in the School of English at St Andrews.
Douglas was a graduate of St Andrews in the early sixteenth century, and his translation was the first of Virgil's epic into any European vernacular.

Tuesday, 30 August 2011

Professor Elected to the Fellowship of the British Academy

Congratulations to Professor Robert Crawford of the School of English on his election to the Fellowship of the British Academy. Each year, the British Academy elects to its Fellowship up to 38 outstanding UK-based scholars who have achieved distinction in any branch of the humanities and social sciences. Professor Crawford’s current interests include modern Scottish literature, T.S. Eliot, creative writing and contemporary poetry. His biography of Robert Burns, 'The Bard' (2009) won the overall Saltire Scottish Book of the Year Award, and his recent book, 'The Beginning and the End of the World: St Andrews, Scandal, and the Birth of Photography', was published in June 2011.