The Paradigmatic City (II): Capitals and their Successors címen, angol nyelvű, nemzetközi, interdiszciplináris konferenciára kerül sor a Károlyi-palotában. A tudományos összejövetelt a PIM közösen rendezi a Miskolci Egyetem Irodalomtudományi Doktori Iskolájával és a Bukaresti Egyetem Kulturális Identitást Kutató Kiválósági Központjával. Minden érdeklődőt szeretettel várunk.
Petőfi Literary Museum (Budapest) houses this year the 14th international, interdisciplinary conference entitled The Paradigmatic City (II): Capitals and their Successors. In the interval of 13–16 October, 2016 the event is being organized by the Centre of Excellence for the Study of Cultural Identity (University of Bucharest ) jointly with the Doctoral School for Literary Studies (University of Miskolc) and the Petőfi Literary Museum.
Részletes program:
PROGRAMME
13 October, 2016 (Thursday)
09:30–10:00
Registration (Lobby)
10:00–10:30
Opening Ceremony (Ceremonial Hall): Alexandra Szalay-Bobrovniczky, Vice Mayor for Human Affairs, Budapest as the main social patron of the event; Csilla E. Csorba, the General Director of the Petőfi Literary Museum; Gabriela Matei, the Director of the Romanian Cultural Institute (Budapest), as a partner in organizing the conference; Professor Mihaela Irimia, the Director of the Centre of Excellence for the Study of Cultural Identity (University of Bucharest); Associate Professor László Gyapay, Head of the Department of the History of Hungarian Literature (University of Miskolc)
Opening Session (Ceremonial Hall) Chair: Mihaela Irimia
10:30–11:30
Keynote Address: Gábor Gyáni, The Metropolis as a Symbol for Modernity
11:30–11:50
Coffee break (Balcony Hall)
Session 1 (Ceremonial Hall) Chair: NICK CERAMELLA
Session 2 (Lotz Hall) Chair: WOJCIECH NOWICKI
11:50–12–20
John Dunkley (Aberden), Haussmann and Zola
Simon Edwards (Center for Inter American Studies, University of Graz), Wells, Orwell and Suburbia: Modernism, Urbanity and Carpet Bombing
12:20–12:50
Gabriel H. Decuble (University of Bucharest), The ‘Cool Person’ Facing the ‘Architectural Uncanny’: Why Postmodern Cities Are Uncentered
Ákos Sivadó (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Research Centre for the Humanities, Institute of Philosophy, Budapest), From Organic to Numerical Representations: William Petty and Urban Life in Early Modern England
12:50–14:00
Lunch
Plenary 1 (Ceremonial Hall) Chair: PÉTER DÁVIDHÁZI
14:00–15:00
Keynote Address: Stephen Prickett (University of Kent), Picturing Jerusalem: New and Old
Session 3 (Ceremonial Hall) Chair: SIMON EDWARDS
Session 4 (Lotz Hall) Chair: JOHN DUNKLEY
15:00–15:30
László Gyapay (University of Miskolc), Buda Presented as the Symbol of National Might and Decline: Dániel Berzsenyi, To the Hungarians
Ludmila Volná (Charles University, Prague; IMAGER University, Paris XII), Prague: The Myth of Creation
15:30–16:00
Péter Dávidházi (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Research Centre for the Humanities, Institute for Literary Studies, Budapest), A Sinful City for the Lord: Nineveh in Mihály Babits’s Book of Jonah
Mirosława Modrzewska (University of Gdańsk), The Capital of Kashubia by Huelle
16:00–16:20
Coffee break (Balcony Hall)
Session 5 (Ceremonial Hall) Chair: OANA BOSCA-MALIN
Session 6 (Lotz Hall) Chair: HORATIU DECUBLE
16:20–16:50
Cezara Dragomir (University of Bucharest), The City as Means of Identity Construction in Băiuțeii, by Filip and Matei Florian
Wojciech Nowicki (Maria Curie-Skłodowska University, Lublin), The Town Eclogue: Mock-Pastoral Representations of London in Eighteenth-Century Poetry
16:50–17:20
Radu Stoica (University of Bucharest), An Allegorical Construction of the (Post-)Colonial / (Post-)Communist Urban Periphery: A Comparative Reading of Dan Lungu and V. S. Naipaul
Nick Ceramella (Independent Scholar), Italy: The Multi-Capitals Country
17:20– 17:50
Dragoş Manea (University of Bucharest), Harap Alb continuă and the Aesthetics of the Historical Fantasy City
14 October, 2016 (Friday)
Plenary 2 (Ceremonial Hall) Chair: FLAVIO GREGORI
09:30–10:30
Keynote Speaker George Rousseau (Oxford University), The Implicit Emotion: Reflections on Cities Classical, Modern, Terrorist, and Digital
Session 7 (Ceremonial Hall) Chair: RAÚL IANES
Session 8 (Lotz Hall) Chair: JUKKA TIUSANEN
10:30–11:00
Leonor Santa Bárbara (CHAM/FCSH-UNL/UAç.), From Athens to Alexandria
Maria-Sabina Draga Alexandru (University of Bucharest), What Makes a Capital? Violence, Architecture and the Media in New York City
11:00–11:30
Mihaela Irimia (University of Bucharest), Sailing from Byzantium
Júlia Demeter, Planning Theatres – Turning a City into a Capital
11:30–11:50
Coffee break (Balcony Hall)
Session 9 (Ceremonial Hall) Chair: HansPeter Söder
Session 10 (Lotz Hall) Chair: MARIA FENGLER
11:50–12:20
Raúl Ianes (Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, USA), Madrid in 1898: at the End of the Century and the Empire
Vassil Anastassov (Fatih University, Istanbul), Constantinopolis – Civitas Paradigmatica: What Is It that Makes Istanbul a Paradigmatic City? The City as Text
12:20–12:50
Elena Butoescu (University of Craiova, Romania), Chronicles from the Galata Bridge, or Geert Mak’s Multi-Ethnic Heterotopian Space
Patricia Erskine-Hill (NADFAS lecturer), The Making of Venice, from Swamp to Serenissima
12:50–14:00
Lunch
Plenary 3 (Ceremonial Hall) Chair: CHRISTOPH EHLAND
14:00–15:00
KeynoteAddress: Andrew Sanders (ex University of Durham), Between the Celestial City and the City of Destruction: Dickens's London
Session 11 (Ceremonial Hall) Chair: Júlia Demeter
Session 12 (Lotz Hall) Chair: Leonor Santa Bárbara
15:00–15:30
Flavio Gregori, (Università Ca’ Foscari, Venezia), Anomic City: Early Eighteenth-Century Satiric Descriptions of London
Maria Fengler (University of Gdansk, Poland), The Picture of Dublin in Dermot Bolger’s The Journey Home
15:30–16:00
Zelma Catalan (Sofia University), Encountering the Metropolis in the Victorian Novel: First Impressions, Lasting Effects
Cornelia Wächer (Ruhr University Bochum), Paradigmatically Queer: Manchester’s Gay Village from Queer as Folk to Cucumber, Banana and Tofu
16:00–16:20
Coffee break (Balcony Hall)
Session 13 (Ceremonial Hall) Chair: LUDMILA VOLNÁ
Session 14 (Lotz Hall) Chair: ELENA BUTOESCU
16:20–16:50
Christoph Houswitschka (University of Bamberg), Rome and its Successor: Ancient London in Bernadine Evaristo’s The Emperor’s Babe (2001)
Ágnes Klára Papp (Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary, Budapest), The Poetics of the Provincial Town
16:50–17:20
Anett Schäffer (University of Miskolc), The ‘Cockney Venus’: The City and Female Identity in Angela Carter’s Nights at the Circus
Dalma Török (Petőfi Literary Museum, Budapest), Encounter with the Ideal: Narrated Cities in Between the Realm of Ideas and Experience
15 October, 2016 (Saturday)
Plenary 4 (Ceremonial Hall) Chair: Chair: MIROSŁLAVA MODRZEWSKA
09:30–10:30
Keynote Address: Liviu Papadima, (University of Bucharest), Bucharest, Iaşi (Jassy) and the Assertion of Romanian Modernity
Plenary 5 (Ceremonial Hall) Chair: VASSIL ANASTASOV
10:30–11:00
Ruxanda Topor (University of Bucharest), Post-Soviet Kishinev: Struggling for the Reassertion of Romanian Identity
11:00–11:30
Jukka Tiusanen (University of Vaasa), Helsinki's Architecture: Ambiguous Paradigms and the Making of Modernity
11:30–11:50
Coffee break (Balcony Hall)
Plenary 6 (Ceremonial Hall) Chair: László Gyapay
11:50–12:20
Oana Bosca-Malin (University of Bucharest), Una giornata particolare in Rome: the Essence of Mass Fascism at Its Peak
12:20–12:50
Christoph Ehland (Paderborn), Monumental Capital: Memories of a Nation Before Brexit
12:50–13:20
HansPeter Söder (University of Munich), Picturing Europe as an Imaginary Museum
13:20–13:50
Conclusion and future activities
13:50–
Lunch