Society of Early Americanists
PROGRAM: MARCH 8-10, 2001
NORFOLK MARRIOTT WATERSIDE HOTEL, NORFOLK, VIRGINIA
(Norfolk Waterside Marriott Contact: 757-627-4200)
THURSDAY, MARCH 8
8:15-9:00 A.M.
1. Welcome and Inaugural Address (Marriott IV)
- David S. Shields, President, Society of Early Americanists
This opening session will be followed by a coffee and pastry break from 9:00-9:30. (Foyer)
9:30-11:00 A.M.
2. The Material Text (Marriot VI)
Dorothy Z. Baker, University of Houston, chair
- Heather S. Nathans, University of Maryland, "Land to Let: Ann White and the Birth of the Park Street Theatre"
3. William Byrd II of Westover: Geographies of a Colonial Identity in Early Eighteenth-Century Virginia (Marriott VII)
Ralph Bauer, University of Maryland, chair
- Martin Brückner, University of Delaware, "The Surveyed Self of William Byrd: Plotting Land, Language, and Identity in the Early Eighteenth Century"
4. The Occom-Wheelock Circle (Marriott V)
Hilary E. Wyss, Auburn University, chair
- Keely McCarthy, University of Nebraska-Omaha, "Conversion and Assimilation: The Occom-Wheelock Debate"
5. Teaching Early American Literature with Technology (Chesapeake I)
Edward J. Gallagher, Lehigh University, chair
- Lisa Logan and Christopher G. Hale, University of Central Florida, "A Web-Based Study Guide Assignment for Graduate/Undergraduate Dialogue"
6. Religion, Radicalism, and the Response to America (Chesapeake II)
Christopher Grasso, William and Mary Quarterly and College of William and Mary, chair
- Jane T. Merritt, Old Dominion University, "Moravian Religious Radicalism and America Re-envisioned"
THURSDAY, MARCH 8
11:15 A.M.-12:45 P.M.
7. Language and Economics in Early American Literature I: Class, Property, and Consumption (Marriott V)
Michelle Burnham, Santa Clara University, chair
- Timothy Sweet, West Virginia University, "ëAdmirable Oeconomyí: Robert Beverleyís Calculus of Compensation"
8. Landscapes of Culture and Commerce: The Valley Road in Early Virginia (Marriott VI)
Jane T. Merritt, Old Dominion University, chair
- Warren Hofstra, Shenandoah University, "The Colonial Wagon Road"
9. Spiritual and Secular States: Church and Social Order in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries (Marriott VII)
Shoshannah Cohen, East-West University, chair
- Jessie Schindler Cheney, Columbia University, "ëYet Being So Chosení: Marriage, Choice, and Metaphor in Puritan America"
10. Eighteenth-Century Periodical Culture (Chesapeake I)
Mark Kamrath, University of Central Florida, chair
- Chad Reid, Independent Scholar, "ëWidely Read by American Patriotsí: The New York Weekly Journal and the Influence of Catoís Letters on Colonial America"
11. To the Shores of Tripoli: Captivity and Liberty in Early American Captivity Narratives (Chesapeake II)
Daniel Williams, University of Mississippi, chair
- Robert Battistini, Columbia University, "Captivity as Failure of the Enlightenment: Royall Tylerís Nuanced Abolitionism in The Algerine Captive"
2:00-3:30 P. M.
12. General Session: Plenary Address (Marriott IV)
- Peter Linebaugh, Bard College (Visiting Professor), "Engaging The Many-Headed Hydra: Sailors, Slaves, Commoners in the Hidden History of the Revolutionary Atlantic"
THURSDAY, MARCH 8
3:45-5:15 P.M.
13. The Seven Yearsí War and Early American Literature (Chesapeake I)
Larry Kutchen, University of California, Berkeley, chair
- Pinckney S. Wilkinson, College of Charleston, "A Soldier of Misfortune: John Maylemís Brief Poetic Campaign"
14. Sectarian Sisters: Relocation and Revelation in Womenís Personal Narratives (Chesapeake II)
Rebecca L. Harrison, Georgia State University, chair
- Maryanne Cole, Case Western Reserve University, "Alienation , Fellowship and the Authoritative Voice in the Personal Narratives of Transatlantic Journeys by Quaker Women Preachers"
15. The Colonial-Era Archaeology of Tidewater Virginia and Eastern North Carolina (Marriott V)
Julia A. King, Maryland Archaeological Conservation Laboratory, chair
- Charles Ewen, East Carolina University, "The Historical Archaeology of Eastern North Carolina"
16. Brockden Brownís Arthur Mervyn and Early American Responses to Disease (Marriott VI)
Joanna Brooks, University of Texas at Austin, chair
- Jacquelyn Miller, Seattle University: "The Wages of Blackness: Disease and the Social Construction of Racial Difference during Philadelphiaís 1793 Yellow Fever Epidemic"
17. Global Figures, National Identities: The Work of Missionary Projects and Global Exploration in Early Modern English and American Writing (Marriott VII)
Edward Watts, Michigan State University, chair
- Olivia Bloechl, University of Pennsylvania, "ëThese howling devotionsí: English Anti-Catholicism and Indigenous American Song"
8:00 P.M.
18. An Evening of Early American Music (Norfolk I-II )
David and Ginger Hildebrand, musicologists and performers
FRIDAY, MARCH 9
9:00-10:30 A.M.
19. (Mis)Representing the Self in Image and Word (Chesapeake I)
Ann M. Brunjes, Bridgewater State College, chair
- Christopher F. Packard, Parsons School of Design, "Self-Fashioning in Early America: The Cultural Work of Autobiographies and Self-Portraits"
20. The Day After: When Doomsday Fails to Come (Chesapeake II)
Reiner Smolinski, Georgia State University, chair
- Richard W. Cogley, Southern Methodist University, "Revisions of American Puritan Eschatology After the Restoration of Charles II"
21. Filming Early America (Marriott V)
Alan J. Silva, James Madison University, chair
- Paul Galante, Lehigh University, "Cabeza de Vaca: The Rider on the Psychic Borderlands in Nicolas Echevarriaís Cabeza de Vaca"
22. The Hub of Empire: The Caribbean in the 17th and 18th Centuries (Marriott VI)
Thomas W. Krise, United States Air Force Academy, chair
- Louis P. Nelson, Valparaiso University, "Anglican Architectures: Material Documents of Transatlantic Rhetoric and Local Authority, in Early Modern Jamaica"
23. Traveling Women: Narrative Visions of Early America (Marriott VII)
Carla Mulford, Pennsylvania State University, chair
- Mary McAleer Balkun, Seton Hall University, "Journeys Spiritual and Temporal: The Trope of Travel in Elizabeth Ashbridgeís Account"
FRIDAY, MARCH 9
10:45 A.M.-12:15 P.M.
24. The Land Speaks: Cartography and Identity in Early America (Marriott VI)
Martin Brückner, University of Delaware, chair
- Deborah Allen, Rutgers University, "ëA More Philosophical Viewí of Geography: Lewis Evansís Cartographical Analysis of the Middle British Colonies"
25. Constructions of Masculinity in the Early Americas: Multidisciplinary Approaches (Marriott V)
Denise Kohn, Greensboro College, chair
- Amy Mitchell-Cook, Pennsylvania State University, "Shipwreck Narratives: Preserving Masculinity in a Time of Crisis"
26. The Salem Witch Trials: Criticism and Pedagogy (Marriott VII)
Zabelle Stodola, University of Arkansas at Little Rock, chair
- Elaine Breslaw, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, "Teaching about the History of Witchcraft in America: The Multicultural Approach"
27. "That Art of Coyning Christians": John Eliotís Mission Writings (Chesapeake I)
Kristina Bross, Purdue University, chair
- Zubeda Jalazai, Rhode Island College, "ëA Little I Shall Sayí: Race, Conversion, and Native Voices in John Eliotís Indian Missions and the Eliot Tracts"
28. New World Narratives (Chesapeake II)
Wendy McLallen, Florida State University, chair
- Steven Liparulo, University of Houston, "Re-Casting the Conquest Narrative: Cabeza de Vaca, Christian Improvisation, and Strategic Revision"
1:30-3:00 P.M.
29. General Session. Plenary Address Marriott IV
- William Kelso, Jamestown Rediscovery, "Recent Developments in Jamestown Archaeology"
FRIDAY, MARCH 9
3:15-4:45 P.M.
30. Sites of Transgression: Quaker Texts, Colonial Contexts (Chesapeake I)
Kristina Bross, Purdue University, chair
- Michele Lise Tarter, College of New Jersey, "The Invasion of Celestial Flesh: Inscriptions of Prophecy and Punishment in the Transatlantic Quaker Movement"
31. New Worlds in a New World: Culture, Community, and Creation in the Early Republic (Chesapeake II)
Seth Cotlar, Willamette University, chair
- Dietmar Schloss, University of Heidelberg, "Godwinian Utopianism and the American Republic in Charles Brockden Brownís Arthur Mervyn"
32. Psalmody, Hymnody, and the Production of Literature in Early America (Marriott V)
Rosemary Fithian Guruswamy, Radford University, chair
- Michael Cody, Murray State University, "A Vindication of the Minister-Translators of the Bay Psalm Book"
33. Interactions between German and English Print Cultures in Eighteenth-Century America (Marriott VI)
Patrick Erben, Emory University, chair
- Reiner Smolinski, Georgia State University, "Cannibals All: Hans von Staden and the Marketing of the New World"
34. Teaching the Literatures of Early America (Marriott VII)
Robert A. Gross, Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, chair
- Paul Giles, University of Cambridge
5:15-6:30 P.M.
Reception (Marriott I-III)
8:00 P.M. (Hampton VI-VIII)
35. An Evening of Early American Dance: A Talk and Demonstration Workshop on the Minuet
Kate Van Winkle Keller, dance historian and performer
SATURDAY, MARCH 10
8:15-9:15 A.M.
SEA General Meeting (Marriott IV)
9:30-11:00 A.M.
36. Constructions of Masculinity and Manhood in Early American Texts (Chesapeake I)
Charles Hebert, Greensboro College, chair
- Sarah Rivett, University of Chicago, "Adamís Perfection Redeemed: Masculine Models and Erotic Piety in Thomas Shepardís Cambridge"
37. Theorizing Conspiracy in Early America (Chesapeake II)
Scott Peeples, College of Charleston, chair
- Charles Bradshaw, "The Illuminati Crisis and Charles Brockden Brownís Conspiratorial Aesthetic in Wieland"
38. Colloquy with Joyce Chaplin, author of An Anxious Pursuit (Marriott V)
Dennis Moore, Florida State University, chair
- Joyce Elizabeth Chaplin, Harvard University
39. Panel not meeting
40. Panel not meeting
SATURDAY, MARCH 10
11:15 A.M.-12:45 P.M.
41. Textual Apparatuses of Early American Elections (Marriot V)
Frank Shuffelton, University of Rochester, chair
- Meredith Newman, University of California, Los Angeles, "ëThe Serpentís ey in the Doves headí: Subtlety and Circumstance in 1660s Elections Sermons"
42. Transatlantic Print Culture (Marriott VI)
Edward Larkin, University of Richmond, chair
- Susan Scott Parrish, University of Michigan, "Colonial Women, Knowledge, and the Importation of Science Texts and Fables"
43. Spanish Writings from and about the Colonial "Borderlands" (Marriott VII)
TBA, chair
- E. Thomson Shields, Jr., East Carolina University, "Word Maps: Writing the Geography of the Spanish Colonial Southeast"
44. Language and Economics in Early American Literature II: Economies of Spirit and the Market (Chesapeake I)
Eileen Razarri Elrod, Santa Clara University, chair
- Michael Schnell, Austin Peay State University, "Frontier Feast, Feudal Fast: Food, Trade, and the Eucharist in Edward Taylorís Meditations"
45. Sex in the City (Chesapeake II)
Elizabeth L. Barnes, College of William and Mary, chair
- Susan E. Klepp, Temple University, "Sex and the City: Philadelphia before 1850"
2:00-3:30 P.M.
46. General Session. Plenary address (Marriott IV)
- Joyce Chaplin, Harvard University, "Subject Matter: Technology, the Body, and Science on the Anglo-American Frontier, 1500-1676"
SATURDAY, MARCH 10
3:45-5:15 P.M.
47. Roundtable: The Latest Early American Literature (Marriott IV)
"We are the authors of early American literature" ñWilliam Spengemann
Richard DeProspo, Washington College, chair
- Philip Gura, University of North Carolina
Please recognize that the schedule is subject to some adjustments. Panel chairs should contact the Program Chair, Jeffrey H. Richards (jhrichar@odu.edu), if they identify errors or problems with the panel as listed.
AND WHEN THE SESSIONS ARE OVER . . .
There are many places of historic significance besides Colonial Williamsburg to visit in the Tidewater area:
Jamestown, a national historic site and part of the Colonial National Historic Park, on the Colonial Parkway, off I-64 west of Newport News. Notable for its scant above-ground ruins and thriving underground archaeological project, Jamestown Rediscovery. http://www.apva.org/
Yorktown Battlefield, the site of the American victory in 1781, is part of the Colonial National Historic Park. http://www.nps.gov/yonb/ Colonial Parkway, off I-64 west of Newport News.
St. Paulís Episcopal Church in Norfolk, a colonial-era building with one of Lord Dunmoreís parting cannon balls embedded in the exterior wall. Walking distance of conference hotel. http://hometown.aol.com/jdool90830/page7.htm has list of the dead in the cemetery.
Chrysler Museum of Art in Norfolk has a very fine collection of American art, a description of which is available at http://www.tfaoi.comsmu/nmus31a.htm . See also www.chrysler.org/ Short cab ride from hotel. 757/664-6200
Historic Houses of Norfolk. Two operated by the Chrysler Museum of Art are within a healthy walk of the conference hotel, the Moses Myers house and the Willoughby-Baylor, both eighteenth-century. http://www.chrysler.org/houses.html
Old Towne Portsmouth, the original section of that city, has purportedly the largest concentration of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century homes between Charleston, SC and Alexandria, VA. Getting there is a pleasant ferry ride across the Elizabeth River at Waterside, near the hotel. 1-800-PORTS-VA.
James River Plantations. There are five open to the public at various times, including the grounds but not the house at Westover, William Byrd IIís home. On Va. Route 5 in Charles City County. http://www.jamesriverplantations.org/
Westmoreland County, between the Rappahannock and Potomac Rivers, has Stratford Hall, the architecturally significant eighteenth-century plantation of the Lee family, and George Washingtonís birth site on Pope Creek. The state park there is gorgeous. All three parks, easily accessible on state route 3, overlook the Potomac. http://www.westmoreland-county.org/vc_home.htm
PERSONAL SCHEDULE NOTES
Thursday, March 8
8:15-9:00 General Session: David Shields Marriott IV
9:30-11:00 ______________________________
11:15-12:45 ______________________________
2:00-3:30 General Session: Peter Linebaugh Marriott IV
3:45-5:15 ______________________________
8:00 Evening of Early American Music Norfolk I-II
Friday, March 9
9:00-10:30 ______________________________
10:45-12:15 ______________________________
1:30-3:00 General Session: William Kelso Marriott IV
3:15-4:45 ______________________________
5:15-6:30 Reception Marriott I-III
8:00 Evening of Early American Dance Norfolk I-II
Saturday, March 10
8:15-9:15 SEA General Meeting Marriott IV
9:30-11:00 ______________________________
11:15-12:45 ______________________________
2:00-3:30 General Session: Joyce Chaplin Marriott IV
3:45-5:15 Roundtable: Latest Early American Lit Marriott IV
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