>Hey ya'll,
>My computer crashed three weeks ago, and it seems all of my saved mail is
>gone. I was hoping that someone could forward me the information of the
>Foucault conference that was advertised a while back.
>thanks so much!
>Joanna
Here it is once more. I hope many of you will consider sending abstracts.
> Call for papers
>
> Second Annual University of South Carolina
> Comparative Literature Conference
>
> Directed by Martin Donougho and Paul Allen Miller
>
> History, Technology, and Identity:
> After Foucault
>
> March 16-18, 2000
> Plenaries:
> Thomas Flynn (Emory)
> David Konstan (Brown)
> John Neubauer (Amsterdam)
> G. S. Rousseau (De Montfort and Oxford)
> Jerald Wallulis (South Carolina)
>
>
>This conference is a follow-up to the two-year international conference,
>Cultural History After Foucault, held in 1997 and 1998 at the Universities
>of Amsterdam and Aberdeen. It seeks to examine both the limits and
>contributions of Foucault's thought in the three interrelated topics of
>history, technology, and identity. Inquiries and one page abstracts for 20
>minute papers should be sent to Paul Allen Miller, Program in Comparative
>Literature, Welsh Hall, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208
>(803-777-0473); pamiller@xxxxxx. Selected papers will be published in the
>journal Intertexts. Abstracts must be received by December 1, 1999. This
>conference is sponsored in part by the College of Liberal Arts, The
>University of South Carolina. For updated information, see us on the web:
>http://www.cla.sc.edu/COMP/2ndannualc.html.
>
Paul Allen Miller
Director of Comparative Literature and Assoc. Prof. of Classics
Program in Comparative Literature
University of South Carolina
Columbia, SC 29208
803-777-0473
>My computer crashed three weeks ago, and it seems all of my saved mail is
>gone. I was hoping that someone could forward me the information of the
>Foucault conference that was advertised a while back.
>thanks so much!
>Joanna
Here it is once more. I hope many of you will consider sending abstracts.
> Call for papers
>
> Second Annual University of South Carolina
> Comparative Literature Conference
>
> Directed by Martin Donougho and Paul Allen Miller
>
> History, Technology, and Identity:
> After Foucault
>
> March 16-18, 2000
> Plenaries:
> Thomas Flynn (Emory)
> David Konstan (Brown)
> John Neubauer (Amsterdam)
> G. S. Rousseau (De Montfort and Oxford)
> Jerald Wallulis (South Carolina)
>
>
>This conference is a follow-up to the two-year international conference,
>Cultural History After Foucault, held in 1997 and 1998 at the Universities
>of Amsterdam and Aberdeen. It seeks to examine both the limits and
>contributions of Foucault's thought in the three interrelated topics of
>history, technology, and identity. Inquiries and one page abstracts for 20
>minute papers should be sent to Paul Allen Miller, Program in Comparative
>Literature, Welsh Hall, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208
>(803-777-0473); pamiller@xxxxxx. Selected papers will be published in the
>journal Intertexts. Abstracts must be received by December 1, 1999. This
>conference is sponsored in part by the College of Liberal Arts, The
>University of South Carolina. For updated information, see us on the web:
>http://www.cla.sc.edu/COMP/2ndannualc.html.
>
Paul Allen Miller
Director of Comparative Literature and Assoc. Prof. of Classics
Program in Comparative Literature
University of South Carolina
Columbia, SC 29208
803-777-0473