----------------------------Original message---------------------------- Date: 25-Nov-1996 09:35pm EDT From: Rose, Jonathan JEROSE Dept: FAC/STAFF Tel No: (201)-408-3545 TO: Press SH to view recipients. Subject: SHARP Panels at AHA and MLA SHARP PANELS AT AHA AND MLA The Society for the History of Authorship, Reading and Publishing will be sponsoring several panels at the upcoming American Historical Association conference in New York City and the Modern Language Association convention in Washington. The four SHARP sessions at the AHA include one that will revisit Elizabeth Eisenstein's "The Printing Press as an Agent of Change," with a commentary by Prof. Eisenstein herself: SUBVERSIVE LITERATURE: CENSORSHIP AND MEANING (3 January, 9:30-11:30 am, Sheraton: Carnegie Room 2) Chair: Bernice Glatzer Rosenthal, Fordham University "Fires of Expiation: Book-Burnings and Cultural Politics in Early Nineteenth-Century France," Martyn Lyons, University of New South Wales "Text Makers, Meaning Makers: The Construction of News for the Masses in Nineteenth-Century Paris," Thomas Cragin, University of Scranton "Censorship and the Reading Community: Lady Chatterley Meets the Authorities," Priscilla Coit Murphy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Comment: Margaret A. Blanchard, University of North carolina at Chapel Hill THE PRINTING PRESS AS AN AGENT OF CHANGE OUTSIDE EUROPE (4 January, 9:30-11:30 am, Sheraton: New York Ballroom A) Chair: Jonathan Rose, Drew University "Agent of Change or Trusted Servant: The Eighteenth-Century Williamsburg Press," Susan Berg, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation Library "From Xylography to Typography: The Printing Press as an Agent of Change in Japan, 1850-1900," Giles Richter, Columbia University "The Coming of Print to Egypt in the Late Nineteenth Century and Its Impact," Roberta L. Dougherty, University of Pennsylvania Library Comment: Elizabeth L. Eisenstein, University of Michigan (emerita) THE AMERICAN COMMON READER: FROM LITTLE EVA TO MISS SEPTEMBER (4 January, 2:30-4:30 pm, Sheraton: Carnegie Room 1) Chair: Patrick Leary, Indiana University "Approaches to the History of Reading: Responses from Antebellum New England," Ronald J. Zboray, Georgia State University, and Mary Saracino Zboray, Atlanta, Georgia "Selling the American Common Reader on the Modern American Novel: John Dos Passos and Gertrude Stein at Harcourt Brace," Catherine Turner, University of Texas at Austin "Reading Consumer Culture, Reading *Playboy*, Jesse Berrett, University of California at Berkeley Comment: E. Jennifer Monaghan, Brooklyn College, CUNY PERIODICALS AND THE POLITICS OF INTELLECTUAL AUTHORITY (5 January, 8:30-10:30 am, Sheraton: Carnegie Room 1) Chair: Linda E. Connors, Drew University Library "Authority and Trust in the Early History of Academic Peer Review," Harold S. Stone, American University in Cairo "Purifying Nietzsche in France: Reading Strategies of the NRF Group," Christopher E. Forth, University of Memphis "The American Historical Review 1895-1995: A Bibliometric Analysis," Thomas D. Walker, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Comment: James Smith Allen, Southern Illinois University At the same conference, SHARP is also co-sponsoring a session with the American Society of Church History: CREATING COMMUNITIES OF BELIEVERS: TOWARD THE HISTORY OF THE RELIGIOUS BOOK (5 January, 11:00 am-1:00 pm, Sheraton: Empire Room 3) Chair: Jonathan Rose, Drew University "Religious Publishing and the Rise of the Unitarian Controversy, 1805-1835," Leon Jackson. Ferris State University "Religious Narratives: Creating a Democratic Print Culture, 1790-1835," Cathleen McDonnell Schultz, College of St. Francis "Lodestones of Metaphysics: Anglo-American Publishing and the Construction of Popular Occultism 1800-1920," Bradford Verter, Princeton University Comment: David D. Hall, Harvard Divinity School These sessions are open to the general public: you need not be a member of SHARP to attend. If you only plan to attend these SHARP sessions, registration for the AHA conference is not mandatory: it is, of course, required if you attend other AHA functions. SHARP will also sponsor two special sessions at this year's Modern Language Association convention in Washington, DC: REACHING OUT TO READERS: BOOK DISTRIBUTION IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY AMERICA (27 December, 9:00-10:15 pm, Sheraton Washington: Eisenhower Room) Session leader: Jeffrey D. Groves, Harvey Mudd College "Forgotten Readers: Marketing Books and Reading in Antebellum African-American Contexts," Elizabeth McHenry, University of Texas at Austin "`A Dream That Went by Contraries': Charles Chesnitt's Divided Audience," Robert M. Myers, University of Texas at Tyler "Trilby: Illustrations Create a Fad," Emily Jenkins, Columbia University IN SEARCH OF THE HISTORICAL READER (28 December, 1:45-3:00 pm, Sheraton Washington, Virginia Suite A) Session leader: Leon Jackson, Michigan State University "The Reader Retailored: Reconstructing Carlyle's Historical Audiences," Leon Jackson, Michigan State University "Virgil and the Myth of Venice: A Study in Renaissance Readership," Craig Kallendorf, Texas A&M University "Virtual Communities: Readers' Networks in Late Nineteenth-Century Japan," Giles Richter, Columbia University "Moving Readings: Early Train Travel in France and the Bibliotheque des Chemins de fer," Mark Wolff, University of Chicago SHARP is already seeking papers for the next American Historical Association convention, which will meet 8-11 January in Seattle. Please send proposals by 1 March 1997 to F. J. Levy, History Department, Box 353560, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98105, [log in to unmask] We are also organizing panels for the next Modern Language Association convention, which will meet in Toronto in late December 1997. All panelists must be or become members of both SHARP and MLA. Please contact Michael Winship, Department of English, University of Texas, Austin, TX 78712, [log in to unmask], by 1 December 1996.