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CeMoRe Conference Launches New Book Series

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Published by Harriet Phipps

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Tuesday, May 2nd, 2017

Last month ¶¶ÒõAPPµ¼º½â€™s Centre for Mobilities Research hosted the inaugural conference of Palgrave Macmillan’s new book series, .

 

– which was organised by (from the Department of English and Creative Writing), (from LICA), (from the University of Surrey) and (from Carnegie Mellon University, USA), attracted delegates from as far away as New Zealand, North and South America and South Africa, as well as Europe and the Middle East.

 

Kat Jungnickel demonstrated the ‘adjustable’ cycle wear of early twentieth-century women cyclists

Across 20 panels, delegates presented on topics as various as the political significance of murder on Europe’s railways in 1930s crime fiction, the hotel as a space of transient mobility, and the way in which the bodily organs used in transplant surgery are now able to migrate around the globe with more ease and status than asylum seekers. Many of the speakers invoked the work of the late John Urry whose ‘mobilities paradigm’ – which has already traveled across countless disciplines – is now finding its way into literary scholarship. The event included two fascinating and thought-provoking keynote lectures by (Goldsmiths, London) and Marian Aguiar (Carnegie Mellon, Pittsburgh, USA) as well as the film premiere of Andrew Kötting’s ‘’ which enacts the relationship between King Harold (1066) and his ‘handfast wife’, Edith Swan Neck, by means of a walk from Waltham Abbey to St.Leonards-on-the-Sea. Kat Jungnickel’s talk, ‘Secret Cycling Selves’, also featured a riveting enactment of the speaker’s argument when she demonstrated the ‘adjustable’ cycle wear of early twentieth-century women cyclists (see photo right).

 

If anyone would like to find out more about this event or the book series please see our website .

 

Main photo: unsplash.com

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