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CALL FOR PAPERS |
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The
28th Annual July
22-27, 2001
There were three wars at work in the mind of William
Faulkner: the American Civil War, World War I, and World War II. He did
not fight in any of them, yet they are all there, in
Some of
the issues that might be raised: What is the nature of Faulkner’s
treatment of military engagement: the kinds of episode he tends to
emphasize, the behavior of people in the midst of war? How does he
describe the behavior and attitudes of those who, like himself, were not
combatants, but who seem to have a deep, at times obsessive, concern with
the wars they did not fight? How are the factors of race, class, and
gender affected by the action of war or its remembrance? What role do
women play in Faulkner’s wars? What
are the psychological and
Authors
whose papers are selected for presentation at the conference will receive
(1) a waiver of the conference registration fee, (2) lodging at the
University Alumni House from Saturday, July 21, through Friday, July 27,
and (3) reimbursement of up to $500 in travel expenses within the
continental United States ($.31 per mile by automobile or tourist class
airfare). Papers presented at the conference will be published by the
University Press of Mississippi.
The 14th
edition of the University of Chicago Manual of Style should be used
as a guide in preparing manuscripts (3,000 to 6,000 words). Three copies
of manuscripts must be submitted |
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