CALL FOR PAPERS
Greenscapes ~ Sense and Meaning:
Fields of Dreams (Landscapes of Myth and Imagination)
October 1-3, 2009, Brock University, Ontario, CANADA
Our landscapes have long been the unconscious repository of cultural hopes, fears and desires. From the Garden of Eden to aboriginal Dreamtime, societies have perceived their surrounding natural environment to express cultural values reflected in their myths, legends, sacred texts and belief systems. The occupation, transition, or representation of landscape constitutes an imaginative exercise for both subject and object. Yet imagination is not a consciously controllable process, and dreams can be unsettling portents as well as expressions of wish-fulfilment. We welcome papers that explore landscapes of myth and imagination in real and virtual sites, literary texts, images, and installations and invite proposals on the following topics:
Landscapes of allusion (texts, myths, folktales, legends)
Sacred and Secular Utopias
Profane imagination: ruin, decay and social transgression
Gardens of the ‘first time’: origin myths and social legends
Dream landscapes: fear, desire, and exploring the unconscious
Please send abstracts (up to 250 words) and a brief biography to greenscapes@brocku.ca by January 5, 2008.
The conference will take place at Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario. Giles Blunt, author of Forty Words for Sorrow, The Delicate Storm, and Black Fly Season, will deliver the opening keynote on the subject of landscape and fiction.
Conference organizers: Keri Cronin (Visual Arts, Brock University), David Galbraith (Royal Botanical Gardens), Sharilyn J. Ingram (School of Fine and Performing Arts, Brock University), Leah Knight (English Language and Literature, Brock University), Katharine T. von Stackelberg (Classics, Brock University).
For more information see: http://www.brocku.ca/greenscapes/
Month: October 2008
On September 23, 2008, Gaius Octavian Augustus would have celebrated his 2,071st birthday. In homage to Augustus, students from Professor Berenfeld’s class (ARCH 1100: Archaeology in the Age of Augustus) decorated the bronze statue of his likeness on the Wriston Quad. Once festively attired, the class feasted on cake as they sat at his feet- an appropriate celebration for the first Emperor of Rome.