The Australian and New Zealand Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (ANZSECS) and the Australian Catholic University invite you to the 18th David Nichol Smith (DNS) Seminar for Eighteenth-Century Studies.
In 2022, the DNS will be held on December 7-9 at the ACU Fitzroy Campus of ACU in Melbourne. The meeting will convene in-person. We are delighted to announce that the seminar will include three keynotes: Lynette Russell, ARC Laureate Professor at Monash University; Kevin Dawson, Associate Professor of History at UC Merced; and Miranda Stanyon, ARC DECRA Research Fellow in the School of Culture and Communication at the University of Melbourne. We are pleased, furthermore, to be working with an international group of scholars on a digital gallery of invited oceanic micro-talks. The gallery, which will be hosted on our website, will be available to colleagues unable to join us in Fitzroy, as well as to those who are.
CALL FOR PAPERS [you can also download this as a PDF here]
We welcome proposals that address our theme, ‘The Marine Worlds of the Long Eighteenth Century.’ We seek to explore and understand the experiences, knowledges, and spaces of the sea and undersea from 1650 to 1850. We are particularly keen to highlight and interrogate how the ‘blue humanities,’ and the environmental humanities in general, are in conversation with the study of the eighteenth century across disciplines.
Topics may include:
- human-animal relationships in eighteenth-century oceans
- more-than-human oceans
- ideas and practices exploring ocean depths and sea surfaces
- oceanic lives: Indigenous, Black, gendered, plebeian, mercantile, imperial
- queering the eighteenth-century ocean
- feminist, subaltern, or decolonial knowledges of the marine
- seacraft design and representation
- maritime wrecks, disasters, and salvage operations
- reinterpretations of piracy and seaborne conflict
- marine and maritime labors, both free and unfree
- sensing seascapes: sights, sounds, tastes, and smells
- marine genres / oceanic forms
- aquatic sports, leisure, and culture
- relations between eighteenth-century studies and the blue humanities
- marine geographies, or ‘thalassographies,’ in formation, relation, and conflict
- philosophies and practices of sub/marine science
- sea-languages of the long eighteenth century
- submergence, diving, and drowning
- marine worlds of coasts and shores
- objects, things, and oceanic materialisms
- marine memories, testimonies, and archives
HOW TO SUBMIT
We are seeking proposals for panels, workshops, and roundtables (
Please email proposals to dns.xviii@gmail.com by Monday, August 1st 2022
VARIETIES OF SESSION:
Panel of 90 minutes – 4 x 15 minute papers with a chair. Please submit a proposal with a title that covers your broad topic, the name and email of the main correspondent for the panel, the names of the four speakers, and 4×100-word abstracts (one for each prospective paper). You are welcome also to include a chair, or we can arrange one for you.
Panel of 60 minutes – 2 x 15 minute papers with a commentator. Please submit a proposal with a title that covers your broad topic, the name and email of the main correspondent for the panel, the names of the two speakers, and 2×100-word abstracts (one for each prospective paper). Please also arrange for a commentator who will reflect for 10 minutes on the paired papers.
Workshop of 60 minutes – this will involve group discussion of 2 x pre-circulated new works-in-progress. Please submit a proposal with a title, the name and email of the main correspondent for the workshop, and the names of the two scholars who will pre-circulate their article/chapter-length drafts for discussion, as well as a 100-word abstract for each. You are welcome also to include a chair-discussant, or we can arrange one for you.
Roundtable of 90 or 60 minutes – this has an open format but must include only short talks by participants that all speak to a central question or issue within the field of eighteenth-century marine studies. Please submit a proposal with a title that signals the key problem, a 200-word abstract for the roundtable, the name and email of the main correspondent/moderator for the roundtable, and the names of all the other participants.
As with previous DNS conferences, we aim to pursue a publication of some work arising from the seminar. We are already in talks with two interested publishers.
Convenors: Kristie Flannery, Kate Fullagar, Killian Quigley
Australian Catholic University
Inaugurated in 1966 by the National Library of Australia, the DNS is the leading forum for eighteenth-century studies in Australasia. It brings together scholars from across the region and internationally who work on the long eighteenth century in a range of disciplines, including history, literature, Indigenous studies, art and architectural history, philosophy, theology, the history of science, musicology, anthropology, archaeology and studies of material culture.