CFP Annual Conference 2019

Dreams of the Future in Nineteenth-Century Ireland

SSNCI Annual Conference

Centre for Urban History, University of Leicester, 27-28 June 2019

Call for Papers

This conference will consider the history of the future in nineteenth-century Ireland. We are looking for papers that address how different voices – from all walks of life, backgrounds, levels of public notoriety or obscurity – dreamed, imagined, perceived, anticipated or feared the future. How did people living in Ireland – or the Irish abroad – imagine the world of their children and grandchildren? Which utopias, dystopias or visions were projected by novelists, painters, architects, antiquarians, engineers, priests and vicars, administrators, elites both old and new, the young and old, those of different gender and sexual identities, and others still? We seek proposals for papers and panels that address how the future was conceptualised and understood in different cultural settings, how it shifted in relation to the present and to the past, and how it was instrumentalised for political, religious or other social agendas. What, if anything, was distinctly ‘Irish’ about Irish visions of the future and how did they relate to other transnational influences? The future has proved a rich source of historical enquiry in recent years. Much writing has focused on the twentieth century, particularly in modern British studies. This conference will consider the history of the future in Ireland’s long nineteenth century, c. 1790-1914. Topics that could be explored include:

  • Visual representations and depictions of utopias, dystopias, and visions of the future
  • How Irish writers imagined the future, in different genres and for different audiences
  • The future as it appeared before, during, and after the Great Famine
  • Millenarianism and prophecies
  • Feminist futures in Ireland and of Irish people
  • Political visions of Ireland and its status under the Union
  • Urban vs. rural futures
  • The instrumentalisation of the future by different voices for varying political, religious or other social purposes
  • How the future was debated in different languages, including Irish language sources that considered the future of the Irish language
  • The ‘Irishness’ (or not) of Irish projections of the future
  • Dissonance, conflict, parallels, and contradictions within the rhetoric of Irish dreams
  • Architectural, engineering and administrative visions of modernisation, anglicisation, and modernity
  • Projections of scientific or medical advances and their relationship to Ireland or Irish people
  • The historiography of the future in Irish studies
  • How Irish voices understood earlier projections and visions of the future in their own time
  • Radical nationalisms and different understandings of the future
  • Transnational perspectives, including that of the Irish abroad and their view of Ireland’s future
  • Cultural studies of predicting the future and of those who did the predicting
  • Individual visions vs. those of associations or institutions

Please send 200-word abstracts or panel descriptions and a brief CV by Monday, 7 January 2019, to the SSNCI Secretary, Richard Butler (University of Leicester), rjb86@le.ac.uk

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