This document provides an agenda for the "Space Between Society" conference taking place on June 2-4. It outlines a schedule with multiple concurrent sessions each day covering various topics related to surveillance such as spies, imperial oversight, wartime listening, documentary photography, resistance and protest, avant-garde art, and more. Presentations will be given by academics from universities around the world. The document provides titles and descriptions of over 50 individual presentations organized across 14 panels over the 3 day period.
At the invitation of the East Tennessee chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists and the University of Tennessee Women’s Coordinating Council, Moxley Carmichael CEO Cynthia Moxley moderated a panel on March 25 on the subject of women in journalism. Topics covered included the “glass ceiling” and whether it still exists (it does!) and whether women politicians are covered differently than their male counterparts (they are!).
But one of the more lively parts of the discussion centered around why some women journalists insist on dressing provocatively while they are doing their jobs – and whether this hurts their chances of being treated equally. We thought you’d like to see some of the examples used in the discussion. Thanks to the wonderful journalists who participated in the panel: Jean Ash, formerly of WIVK; Georgiana Vines, political columnist for the News Sentinel; Erin Donovan of WBIR-TV; and Jigsha Desai, of the News Sentinel and knoxnews.com.
At the invitation of the East Tennessee chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists and the University of Tennessee Women’s Coordinating Council, Moxley Carmichael CEO Cynthia Moxley moderated a panel on March 25 on the subject of women in journalism. Topics covered included the “glass ceiling” and whether it still exists (it does!) and whether women politicians are covered differently than their male counterparts (they are!).
But one of the more lively parts of the discussion centered around why some women journalists insist on dressing provocatively while they are doing their jobs – and whether this hurts their chances of being treated equally. We thought you’d like to see some of the examples used in the discussion. Thanks to the wonderful journalists who participated in the panel: Jean Ash, formerly of WIVK; Georgiana Vines, political columnist for the News Sentinel; Erin Donovan of WBIR-TV; and Jigsha Desai, of the News Sentinel and knoxnews.com.
RethinkingtheWesternTraditionThe volumes in th.docxzmark3
Rethinking
the
Western
Tradition
The volumes in this series
seek to address the present debate
over the Western tradition
by reprinting key works of
that tradition along with essays
that evaluate each text from
di!erent perspectives.
EDITORIAL
COMMITTEE FOR
Rethinking
the
Western
Tradition
David Bromwich
Yale University
Gerald Graff
University of Illinois at Chicago
Geoffrey Hartman
Yale University
Samuel Lipman
(deceased)
The New Criterion
Gary Saul Morson
Northwestern University
Jaroslav Pelikan
Yale University
Marjorie Perloff
Stanford University
Richard Rorty
Stanford University
Alan Ryan
New College, Oxford
Ian Shapiro
Yale University
Frank M. Turner
Yale University
Allen W. Wood
Stanford University
The Social
Contract and
The First and
Second
Discourses
J E A N - J A C Q U E S R O U S S E A U
Edited and with an Introduction by Susan Dunn
with essays by
Gita May
Robert N. Bellah
David Bromwich
Conor Cruise O’Brien
Yale University Press
New Haven and London
Copyright ! 2002 by Yale University.
Translations of The Discourse on the Sciences and Arts and
The Social Contract copyright ! 2002 by Susan Dunn.
All rights reserved.
This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part,
including illustrations, in any form (beyond that
copying permitted by Sections 107 and 108 of the U.S.
Copyright Law and except by reviewers for the public
press), without written permission from the publishers.
Printed in the United States of America by Vail-Ballou Press, Binghamton, New York.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques, 1712–1778.
[Selections. English. 2002]
The social contract ; and, The first and second discourses / Jean-Jacques Rousseau ;
edited and with an introduction by Susan Dunn ; with essays by Gita May . . . [et al.].
p. cm. — (Rethinking the Western tradition)
Includes bibliographical references.
isbn 0-300-09140-0 (cloth : alk. paper) — isbn 0-300-09141-9 (pbk. : alk. paper)
1. Political science—Early works to 1800. 2. Social contract—Early works to 1800.
3. Civilization—Early works to 1800. I. Dunn, Susan. II. May, Gita. III. Title. IV. Series.
jc179 .r7 2002
320%.01—dc21 2001046557
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
The paper in this book meets the guidelines
for permanence and durability of the Committee on
Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the
Council on Library Resources.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Contributors
Robert N. Bellah is Elliott Professor of Sociology Emeritus at the Univer-
sity of California at Berkeley. He is the author of numerous books, includ-
ing Beyond Belief and The Broken Covenant, and is co-author of Habits of
the Heart and The Good Society.
David Bromwich is Housum Professor of English at Yale University. He is
the author of several books, including Politics by Other Means: Higher
Education and Group Thinking, Skeptical Music: Essays on Modern Po-
etry, and A.
Going Beyond What Movements are ‘Against’ to What They are ‘For’
Freedom Dreams Freedom Now asks the following questions: What language
do we have that reflects the kind of world we want to live in? Is there a rubric
under which “a” movement can rally today? What are the components of a
shared analysis of this moment, what is needed, what is possible and how?
What are new slogans, texts, terms that help us forge a collective analysis?
What are the freedom dreams of this generation of activists?
Freedom Dreams Freedom Now is an intergenerational gathering of scholars,
artists and activists commemorating the 50th Anniversary of Freedom Summer
1964 and mapping the landscape of contemporary social justice work.
We will engage in political and analytical quilting to connect different debates,
communities and movements.
Mythological Origins & Elizabethan Concerns
Looks at the way Shakespeare's work has been influenced by a body of myths, medieval writing and also shapes his work to suit the Elizabethan audience.
RethinkingtheWesternTraditionThe volumes in th.docxzmark3
Rethinking
the
Western
Tradition
The volumes in this series
seek to address the present debate
over the Western tradition
by reprinting key works of
that tradition along with essays
that evaluate each text from
di!erent perspectives.
EDITORIAL
COMMITTEE FOR
Rethinking
the
Western
Tradition
David Bromwich
Yale University
Gerald Graff
University of Illinois at Chicago
Geoffrey Hartman
Yale University
Samuel Lipman
(deceased)
The New Criterion
Gary Saul Morson
Northwestern University
Jaroslav Pelikan
Yale University
Marjorie Perloff
Stanford University
Richard Rorty
Stanford University
Alan Ryan
New College, Oxford
Ian Shapiro
Yale University
Frank M. Turner
Yale University
Allen W. Wood
Stanford University
The Social
Contract and
The First and
Second
Discourses
J E A N - J A C Q U E S R O U S S E A U
Edited and with an Introduction by Susan Dunn
with essays by
Gita May
Robert N. Bellah
David Bromwich
Conor Cruise O’Brien
Yale University Press
New Haven and London
Copyright ! 2002 by Yale University.
Translations of The Discourse on the Sciences and Arts and
The Social Contract copyright ! 2002 by Susan Dunn.
All rights reserved.
This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part,
including illustrations, in any form (beyond that
copying permitted by Sections 107 and 108 of the U.S.
Copyright Law and except by reviewers for the public
press), without written permission from the publishers.
Printed in the United States of America by Vail-Ballou Press, Binghamton, New York.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques, 1712–1778.
[Selections. English. 2002]
The social contract ; and, The first and second discourses / Jean-Jacques Rousseau ;
edited and with an introduction by Susan Dunn ; with essays by Gita May . . . [et al.].
p. cm. — (Rethinking the Western tradition)
Includes bibliographical references.
isbn 0-300-09140-0 (cloth : alk. paper) — isbn 0-300-09141-9 (pbk. : alk. paper)
1. Political science—Early works to 1800. 2. Social contract—Early works to 1800.
3. Civilization—Early works to 1800. I. Dunn, Susan. II. May, Gita. III. Title. IV. Series.
jc179 .r7 2002
320%.01—dc21 2001046557
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
The paper in this book meets the guidelines
for permanence and durability of the Committee on
Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the
Council on Library Resources.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Contributors
Robert N. Bellah is Elliott Professor of Sociology Emeritus at the Univer-
sity of California at Berkeley. He is the author of numerous books, includ-
ing Beyond Belief and The Broken Covenant, and is co-author of Habits of
the Heart and The Good Society.
David Bromwich is Housum Professor of English at Yale University. He is
the author of several books, including Politics by Other Means: Higher
Education and Group Thinking, Skeptical Music: Essays on Modern Po-
etry, and A.
Going Beyond What Movements are ‘Against’ to What They are ‘For’
Freedom Dreams Freedom Now asks the following questions: What language
do we have that reflects the kind of world we want to live in? Is there a rubric
under which “a” movement can rally today? What are the components of a
shared analysis of this moment, what is needed, what is possible and how?
What are new slogans, texts, terms that help us forge a collective analysis?
What are the freedom dreams of this generation of activists?
Freedom Dreams Freedom Now is an intergenerational gathering of scholars,
artists and activists commemorating the 50th Anniversary of Freedom Summer
1964 and mapping the landscape of contemporary social justice work.
We will engage in political and analytical quilting to connect different debates,
communities and movements.
Mythological Origins & Elizabethan Concerns
Looks at the way Shakespeare's work has been influenced by a body of myths, medieval writing and also shapes his work to suit the Elizabethan audience.
Backers of 11-story building by Commons take case to public
SB2016 Under Surveillance Schedule (FINAL)
1. !2
THURSDAY, JUNE 2
12:00 – 1:30 p.m. Registration and Refreshment Ballroom
1:30 – 2:30 p.m. Concurrent Session I
Panel A: SPIES AND TRAITORS 404
Moderator: Robin Feenstra
“Eating and Espionage in Geoffrey Household’s Rogue Male”
Ariel Buckley, McGill University
“Enemies Within: Fear, Treachery and Paranoia in Wartime London in The
Heat of the Day and The Ministry of Fear”
Ann Rea, University of Pittsburgh (Johnstown)
Panel B: INSPECTION AND REGULATION 406
Moderator: Lesley Hall
“Surveilling Rumours and Responding to Everyday Bigotry during World
War II”
Marianne Kinkel, Washington State University
“Surveying Sex: Medical Interventions into Ambiguity”
Clare Tebbutt, Nottingham Trent University
2:30 – 2:50 p.m. Break Ballroom
2:50 – 4:10 p.m. Concurrent Session II
Panel C: IMPERIAL AND NATIONAL OVERSIGHT 404
Moderator: Carolyn Ownbey
“Surveillance Writ Large: South African Artist William Kentridge, German
Imperialism, the Third Reich and Apartheid”
Elizabeth R. Baer, Gustavus Adolphus College
“First World War Photography: Overseeing the Colonial Subject”
Claire Buck, Wheaton College
“‘He had such a queer look in his eyes’: Postcolonial Nationalism in
Peregrine Acland’s All Else Is Folly”
2. ! 3
Lee Frew, Glendon College (York University)
Panel D: PRIVATE LIFE, PUBLIC RECORD: DIARIES & MEMOIRS 406
Moderator: Ann Rea
“A witnessing intermediary: Harold Nicolson at the Paris Peace Conference”
Caroline Krzakowski, Northern Michigan University
“Introspection, Observation, and the Diary as a Recording Device”
Ella Ophir, University of Saskatchewan
“Secrets During the Blitz: Private Life and Mass Observation in the
Wartime Diaries of Olivia Cockett”
Janine Utell, Widener University
4:10 – 4:30 p.m. Break Ballroom
4:30 – 5:50 p.m. Concurrent Session III
Panel E: WHO’S WATCHING THE KIDS? 404
Moderator: Kristin Bluemel
“‘I Have a Secret Code Message that I Want to Give You in Private’:
Branding and Clandestine Child Societies in 1930s Britain”
Richard Hornsey, University of Nottingham
“‘Freaks of fancy’: Unsupervised Children and Unruly Imaginations in
Robert Graves’s The Penny Fiddle”
Gyllian Phillips and Sarah Winters, Nipissing University
“Bad Wartime Mothers in Rose Macaulay’s Non-Combatants and Others
and The World My Wilderness”
Geneviève Brassard, University of Portland
Panel F: WARTIME LISTENING-IN 406
Moderator: Ian Whittington
“Auditory Discomforts: The Institutional Poetics of Listening-In”
Debra Rae Cohen, University of South Carolina
“Hilda Matheson, the BBC, and Listening to the Speech of Others”
Leonie Thomas, Universities of Bristol and Exeter
3. !4
“Dorothy Sayers’ The Man Born to Be King and Wartime Surveillance”
Miranda Hickman, McGill University
5:50 – 7:30 p.m. Opening Reception Ballroom
FRIDAY, JUNE 3
8:30 – 9:00 a.m. Breakfast Ballroom
9:00 – 10:20 a.m. Concurrent Session IV
Panel G: KEEPING MUM: MIDCENTURY MOTHERS AND WIVES 404
Moderator: Geneviève Brassard
“Policing the Private Spheres of Motherhood and Domesticity: Surveillance
and Wartime Evacuation”
Maggie Andrews, University of Worcester
“Surveillance on the Home Front: Sailors and Soldier’s Wives in World
War I”
Steph Brown, University of Arizona
“Theatre of Modern Life: Self-Regulation in Clemence Dane’s A Bill of
Divorce”
Nicole Flynn, South Dakota State University
Panel H: THE ART OF CAMOUFLAGE 406
Moderator: Marie Gasper-Hulvat
“Camouflage: Hiddenness and Modernity in Robert Pilot’s Paintings”
Allan Hepburn, McGill University
“Camouflage and the ‘Great Invisibles’”
Samantha Kavky, Penn State University
“The Figure in Plain Sight: Camouflage Dress in the Americas”
Harmony Wolfe, Independent Scholar
10:20 – 10:40 a.m. Break Ballroom
4. ! 5
10:40 – 12:00 p.m. Concurrent Session V
Panel I: PROTEST AND RESISTANCE 404
Moderator: Sarah Fedirka
“Edward Upward’s Regrets”
Joseph Elkanah Rosenberg, University of Notre Dame
“Surveillance and the State: The Law as Outside of Language in Kafka’s The
Trial”
Stacy Stingle, Louisiana State University
“Glancing Blows: The Violent Black Gaze in the Social Protest Novel”
J. Ken Stuckey, Bentley University
Panel J: AVANT-GARDE ESCAPE ARTISTS 406
Moderator: Roger Rothman
“A Person Unwilling to Make Compromises? Kazimir Malevich’s 1930
Arrest”
Marie Gasper-Hulvat, Kent State University (Stark)
“Marcel Duchamp, Faux Cheese Merchant: Slipping Across Borders”
James W. McManus, California State University (Chico)
“‘Perfectly Delicious’: Marcel Duchamp’s 1942 Transatlantic Crossing”
Anne Collins Goodyear, Bowdoin College Museum of Art
Panel K: WRITING AGAINST SURVEILLANCE
Moderator: Amanda Clarke
“The Irish Censorship of Publications and the Genres of Resistance”
Brad Kent, Université Laval
“To Be Private Is To Be Public: Auden, the Constitutionalization of Privacy,
and the Political Insistence of Public Knowledge”
Michael Lopez, Independent Scholar
“Beware of Pity: Stefan Zweig and the Fate of Empathy Under Surveillance”
Emily Ridge, The Hong Kong Institute of Education
12:00 – 1:30 p.m. Business Lunch Ballroom
5. !6
All are welcome for lunch and the Space Between Society’s annual business
meeting.
1:30 – 2:50 p.m. Concurrent Session VI
Panel L: THE DOCUMENTARY GAZE 404
Moderator: Joseph Rosenberg
“Documentary Voyeurism: Surveilling Female Flesh in 1930s American Art”
Erika Doss, University of Notre Dame
“‘they seem to watch you the whole time’: Elizabeth Bowen’s Watchful
Things”
Justin Pfefferle, SUNY New Paltz
“Walker Evans’s Subway Portraits: Concealing and Revealing Photographic
Facts”
Lynn M. Somers, Drew University
Panel M: VISION AND DISTORTION 406
Moderator: Dancy Mason
“Caught in the Headlights: Motoring, Detecting, and Blackouts”
Robert Hemmings, University of Leeds
“‘Where all lights become one’: Time, Space, and Surveillance in H.D.’s
Trilogy”
Kelly C. MacPhail, University of Minnesota-Duluth
“‘A Pinch of Inquisitive Pleasure’: Wyndham Lewis, the Great War, and
Military Surveillance”
Allan Pero, University of Western Ontario
Panel N: THE WOOLF PACK
Moderator: Rory Williamson
“Her Poor Dog Was Howling: Animacies and Pedigree in Mrs. Dalloway”
Allison Combs, University of Mississippi
“‘Preserved by obscurity’: Indifference and Ethics in Virginia Woolf’s Three
Guineas”
Rachel Hollander, St. John’s University (New York)
6. ! 7
“The Evasion of Surveillance in Virginia Woolf’s ‘Craftsmanship’”
Emily Kopley, McGill University
2:50 – 3:10 p.m. Break Ballroom
3:10 – 4:30 p.m. Concurrent Session VII
Panel O: CINEMA IN THE SPACE BETWEEN 404
Moderator: Josie Torres Barth
“A girl, a Fur, the City, the Movies: Spectacular ‘Reel’ism in Irmgard Keun’s
The Artificial Silk Girl”
Sarah E. Cornish, University of Northern Colorado
“‘Freedom’ as Compliance in Mervyn LeRoy’s I Am a Fugitive from a
Chain Gang”
Amber Hardiman, McGill University
“Surveying the Space Between in Postwar Berlin: Billy Wilder’s A Foreign
Affair”
Paula Derdiger, University of Minnesota (Duluth)
Panel P: OBSERVING THE MASSES 406
Moderator: Justin Pfefferle
“‘A Day in the Life of a Street’: Mass-Observation, Surveillance, and Social
Housing”
Michael McCluskey, University College London
“Agreeing to be observed? The Pioneer Health Centre and Mass
Observation”
Lesley A. Hall, University College London
“Everything but the Kitchen Sync: Mass-Observation and George Orwell’s
Coming Up for Air”
Peter Faziani, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Panel Q: POPULARITY, PRIVACY, AND PRAGMATISM
Moderator: Sarah Stunden
“The Covert Popular Success of Ayn Rand’s We the Living”
Larry A. Gray, Jacksonville State University
7. !8
“‘it takes its shape from de shore it meets’: Creative Democracy and the
Pragmatic Experience of Love in Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were
Watching God”
Gregory Phipps, University of Oxford
“‘Perpetually Before the Eye’: Performance and Privacy in Djuna Barnes’s
Nightwood”
Rory Williamson, McGill University
4:30 – 4:50 p.m. Break Ballroom
4:50 – 6:00 p.m. Pedagogy Sessions
Session AA: Teaching Interdisciplinarity in the Space Between 404
(Leaders: Kristin Bluemel, Claire Buck & Paula Derdiger)
Session BB: Teaching Media in the Space Between 406
(Leaders: Debra Rae Cohen, Justin Pfefferle & Ian Whittington)
Session CC: Teaching Spy Fiction in the Space Between
(Leaders: Robin Feenstra & Ann Rea)
6:00 – 7:00 p.m. Wine & Cheese Reception Ballroom
SATURDAY, JUNE 4
8:30 – 9:00 a.m. Breakfast Lobby
9:00 – 10:20 a.m. Concurrent Session VIII
Panel R (Roundtable Discussion): EASTERN EUROPE AS A SPACE
BETWEEN SURVEILLANCE AND RESISTANCE 404
Moderator: Paula Derdiger
“Surveillance as an Instrument of Reclaiming a Lost Civilization”
Phyllis Lassner, Northwestern University
“‘Take a Book of Records and Record’: Ethnography, Commemoration, and
Imagined Surveillance in the Eastern European Space Between”
Michael Williamson, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
8. ! 9
“Vasilii Grossman and Spaces in Between: Public and Private in the Soviet
Union Before 1945”
Alexis Pogorelskin, University of Minnesota (Duluth)
Panel S: WIRELESS WAR 406
Moderator: Melissa Dinsman
“Targeted Listening: German Radio Monitoring and the Nazi Propaganda
Ministry in the Second World War”
Peter Busch, King’s College London
“The Hunt for Clandestine Emitters in Switzerland during WWII”
Christian Rossé, Independent Scholar
“A Neutral Witness: Denis Johnston, War Correspondent”
Ian Whittington, University of Mississippi
10:20 – 10:40 a.m. Break Lobby
10:40 – 12:00 p.m. Concurrent Session IX
Panel T: DETECTION AND SURVEILLANCE 404
Moderator: Janine Utell
“Patrick Hamilton and the Sound of Surveillance”
Melissa Dinsman, University of Notre Dame
“‘The small army of well-paid crooks gathered together under Pyne’s
Surveys Limited’: Competing Surveillance Methods in Margery Allingham’s
Traitor’s Purse (1941)”
Luke Seaber, University College London
“Workplace Surveillance and Social Invisibility in 1930s Detective Fiction”
Victoria Stewart, University of Leicester
Panel U: KEEPING TABS ON ARTISTS AND WRITERS 406
Moderator: James W. McManus
“How American Artists Won the Right to be Monitored”
John X. Christ, Plymouth State University
“George Sylvester Viereck, Patriotism, and Conformity”
9. !10
Patrick Quinn, American College of Greece
“Black Mountain College and Paul Goodman: Surveillance from Above to
Creation from Below”
Roger Rothman, Bucknell University
Panel V: READING RESISTANCE IN LITTLE MAGAZINES
Moderator: Nathan Hurwitz
“Surveilling the Geography of Race and Gender in London, 1919-1939”
Elizabeth F. Evans, University of Notre Dame
“‘Stirring up Disloyalty’: Little Magazines and Indian Nationalist Agitation
in the United States”
Sarah Fedirka, University of Findlay
“Frustrating the Gaze: Modern Fashion and Impossible Surveillance in
Women’s Magazines”
Ilya Parkins, University of British Columbia (Okanagan)
12:00 – 1:00 p.m. Lunch Lobby
1:00 – 2:20 p.m. Concurrent Session X
Panel W: SURVEYING SPACE AND PLACE 404
Moderator: Kelly MacPhail
“Documentary Literature and English Rhetorics of Place: Orwell, Priestley,
Morton”
Kristin Bluemel, Monmouth University
“Martellos and Maps: Surveying Modern Dublin in James Joyce’s Ulysses”
Amanda Clarke, McGill University
“‘But never tell the truth about this business of rooms’: Jean Rhys’s Hotels”
Randi Saloman, Wake Forest University
Panel X: QUEER SPIES AND DOUBLE AGENTS 406
Moderator: Clare Tebbutt
“Between Persecution and Exploitation: Homosexual Spies in Fascist Italy”
Benedetta Carnaghi, Cornell University
10. ! 11
“The Erotic Aesthetics of Double-Agency”
Megan Faragher, Wright State University (Lake Campus)
“Noël Coward: Master Spy”
Nathan Hurwitz, Rider University
2:20 – 2:40 p.m. Break Lobby
2:40 – 4:20 p.m. Plenary Roundtable Ballroom
SURVEILLANCE IN THE SPACE BETWEEN
Moderator: Allan Hepburn (McGill University)
Speakers: Maggie Andrews (University of Worcester)
Peter Busch (King’s College London)
Phyllis Lassner (Northwestern University)
Victoria Stewart (University of Leicester)
4:20 – 6:20 p.m. Closing Reception Ballroom Bar