CfP: Diaries in the 20th Century: Testimony, Memory, and Self-Construction (Event, 12/2023, Dublin and virtual space); by: 30.06.2023

Univ. College Dublin; Valeria Taddei (Web) and Mara Josi (Web)

Time: 08.-09.12.2023
Venue: Dublin and virtual space
Proposals by: 30.06.2023

The diary proved an important form of writing during the 20th century, particularly for its engagement with self-definition and memory. In the early decades of the century, it enabled a new exploration of individual personality influenced by late-19th-centurypsychology and philosophy. It can thus be read as an introspective prism displaying the author’s psychological, moral, and physical evolution in a different light from what would have been conceivable before. Around mid-century, it offered diarists a powerful tool to document and elaborate the trauma of the two wars, the self-threatening policies of totalitarian regimes, and the very physical threat of genocide. This kind of diary is a testimonial object of and against war. In the final decades of the century, diaries were written in an individualistic and expressivist society which increasingly blurred the boundaries between reality and fiction. They could thus become the chosen medium for postmodernist literary experimentation and invite a form of self-construction which is a precursor of (but remains very different from) the instantly public self-accounts of present-day blogs and vlogs.
This two-day conference aims to observe these and other evolutions of the 20th-century diary, exploring their interplay with traditional assumptions about the diary as a repository of memories, an outlet for feelings, as an embodiment of the self, and a concrete means for its preservation. To this end, the organizers invite scholars working from a wide range of disciplines on diaristic writing from different perspectives, with a particular preference for transnational and comparative approaches. Potential topics for papers include, but are not limited to:

  • Theoretical or historical perspectives on diaristic writing during the 20th century
  • Previously unknown/unpublished 20th-century diaries
  • Diaries as documents or as literary works
  • Diary as a writing genre: real vs. fictional
  • Diary and affects
  • The body in the diary
  • Diaries as chronicles of introspection/self-talk
  • The diary between personal and collective memory
  • Self-analysis, self-questioning, self-discovery, self-awareness in diaristic writing
  • Communities and mutual influence among diary-writers
  • Comparative studies of 20th-century diaries
  • Diaries and Cognitive Studies
  • Writing diaries during war periods
  • The diary and the Holocaust
  • The diary as gender writing

The conference will be held in person at Univ. College Dublin (UCD) to facilitate interaction among panelists, and streamed online to allow for a wider attendance. Four travel grants will be offered for PhD, early-career, and independent researchers who cannot rely on institutional funds.
Send your title, abstract for a 20-minute paper (max 250 words), and short bio (max 100 words) to the organizers Valeria Taddei and Mara Josi by 30 June 2023. Let them know in your email if you would need to be considered for the travel grant. For any further information please do not hesitate to contact the organizers.

Contact: ucdiaries2023@gmail.com, valeria.taddei@ucd.ie, or m.josi1993@gmail.com

Valeria Taddei, IRC Government of Ireland Postdoctoral Fellow, School of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics, Univ. College Dublin, Belfield D04 F6X4, Ireland (Web)

Mara Josi, Lecturer in Italian, School of Languages, Arts and Cultures, Univ. of Manchester, UK, Oxford Rd. | M13 9PL, Manchester, UK (Web)

Source: W Howes|craighow@hawaii.edu