The Thomas
Hardy Society
c/o Dorset County Museum
High West Street
Dorchester
Dorset
DT1 1XA
United Kingdom


email us

 

Conference


 
The Nineteenth International Thomas Hardy Conference and Festival
will take place 24th - 1st August 2010 in Dorchester, Dorset UK

 

Leading Hardy Scholars,  Poetry Readings,  Lectures,  Seminars.
Receptions, Suppers, Tastings,  New Writing from Wessex,  Competition.
Guided Walks,  Coach Tours,  Drama,  Dance and Musical Performances. 
Book Launches, Exhibition of Illustrations, Antiquarian Fair,  Awards.

For full details and Programme please click on the blue Booking Form link near the bottom of this page.

The 2010 International Thomas Hardy Conference will mark the 170th anniversary of the birth of Thomas Hardy and take place 24th July - 1st August. Like its predecessors it will be designed to appeal both to Hardy scholars and to the lay readers who attend in large numbers.

Distinguished scholars both in this country and abroad will give the academic side of the programme. Their subjects will range over many different aspects of Hardy's life and works.

Those taking part include:

Sir Andrew Motion
Andrew Motion was born in 1952 and read English at University College, Oxford and subsequently spent two years writing about the poetry of Edward Thomas for an M. Litt. From 1976 to 1980 he taught English at the University of Hull; from 1980 to 1982 he edited the Poetry Review and from 1982 to 1989 he was Editorial Director and Poetry Editor at Chatto & Windus. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. Andrew Motion was appointed as Poet Laureate in May 1999.

Brian Patten
Brian Patten was born in 1946 in Liverpool, and grew up in the docklands. He left school at fifteen, becoming a junior reporter on The Bootle Times, with responsibility for writing the popular music column. He made his name in the 1960s as one of the Liverpool Poets, alongside Adrian Henri and Roger McGough.
He has written numerous adult poetry collections, including Vanishing Trick (1976) and Armada (1996). Penguin published his Selected Poems (February 2007), and at the same time Harper Perennial published one of his most important books, The
Collected Love Poems.

Brian Patten is also well known for his best-selling poetry collections for children, most famously Gargling with Jelly: A Collection of Poems (1985) and Juggling with Gerbils (2000). His collection for children, The Blue and Green Ark: An Alphabet for Planet Earth (1999) won a Cholmondeley Award in 2002. He has also written a novel for children, Mr Moon's Last Case (1975), which won an award from the Mystery Writers of America Guild.

Brian Patten has been honoured with the Freedom of the City of Liverpool. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and of both Liverpool University and John Moores University.

Christopher Reid
Christopher Reid was born in Hong Kong in 1949, educated in England, and studied at Oxford University from 1968-1971. He then worked as a freelance journalist and as book review editor of Crafts magazine. He won an Eric Gregory Award for his poetry in 1978. A year later his first poetry collection, Arcadia (1979) was published, winning the 1980 Somerset Maugham Award and the Hawthornden Prize. This has been followed by Pea Soup (1982); Katerina Brac (1985); In The Echoey Tunnel (1991); Expanded Universes (1996); For and After (2002) and Mr Mouth (2005). A selection of his poems was published in the US as Mermaids Explained (2001).

He is often cited as co-founder with Craig Raine of the 'Martian School' of poetry, which employs exotic and humorous metaphors to defamiliarize everyday experiences and objects. He has also written two books of poetry for children: All Sorts (1999) and Alphabicycle Order (2001).

He is the editor of two Faber and Faber collections: Sounds Good: 101 Poems to be Heard (1998) and Not to Speak of the Dog: 101 Short Stories in Verse (2000).
He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

On 26 January 2010 Christopher Reid won the Costa Book of the Year award, one of Britain's most important literary prizes. The Costa, formerly the Whitbread, pits poetry against novels, first novels, biographies and children's books.

Claire Tomalin
Biographer Claire Tomalin was born in London in 1933. After graduating from Newnham College, Cambridge, she worked in publishing for Heinemann, Hutchinson and Cape before switching to journalism, becoming literary editor of both the New Statesman magazine and the Sunday Times newspaper. She is a trustee of the National Portrait Gallery, London and the Wordsworth Trust, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and a Vice-President of English PEN.

Claire Tomalin is the author of highly acclaimed biographies of Mary Wollstonecraft, Katherine Mansfield and Jane Austen. Her account of Charles Dickens' relationship with the actress Nelly Ternan, The Invisible Woman: The Story of Nelly Ternan and Charles Dickens, was published in 1990 and won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for biography), the NCR Book Award for Non-Fiction and the Hawthornden Prize. It was followed by Mrs Jordan's Profession (1994), a biography of the actress Dora Jordan, consort to William IV.

Her play The Winter Wife (1991) is based on her own biography of Katherine Mansfield, and she edited the first edition of a previously undiscovered manuscript by Mary Shelley, Maurice, or the Fisher's Cot, first published in 1998. A collection of book reviews and journalism, Several Strangers: Writing from Three Decades, was published in 1999.

Claire Tomalin lives in London with her husband, the playwright and novelist Michael Frayn. Her biography of the seventeenth-century diarist Samuel Pepys (2002) won the the Samuel Pepys Award, and the 2002 Whitbread Book of the Year award. Her book Thomas Hardy: The Time-Torn Man (2006), was shortlisted for the British Book Awards Biography of the Year. Most recently she has selected and edited two books of poetry: The Poems of Thomas Hardy (2007), and The Poems of John Milton (2008).

Penny Boumelha
Penny Boumelha holds a Master of Arts and a Doctorate in Philosophy from the University of Oxford. She has lectured at the University of Western Australia and has participated in a number of academic development and review boards in New Zealand and Australia. In 1997 she was elected a Fellow of the Academy of the Humanities.
Penny Boumelha is currently Jury Professor of English Language and Literature at the University of Adelaide.

The State of Victoria University, Wellington has appointed Professor Penny Boumelha as the new Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academic), a position formerly held by Professor David Macky until his retirement in January 2009.

There will be ample opportunity to join in discussions with morning Lectures and afternoon Seminars

Professor Philip Davis (University of Liverpool):  "Of Individuality": Significant Variation in Hardy's Poetry'

Professor William Greenslade (University of the West of England):  "Out of the Way Places": Hardy's Symbolic Geographies' 

Doctor Angelique Richardson (University of Exeter):  'Hardy, War and Biology'

Professor Barrie Bullen (University of Reading):  'Expressive Places in Far From the Madding Crowd'

Doctor Sophie Gilmartin (Royal Holloway, University of London):  'Storms and Teacups: Hardy's Quiet Catastrophes'

Professor Tim Armstrong (Royal Holloway, University of London): 'Hardy's Maths'

General Readers' Seminar convened by Jeanie Smith and Ann Bliss

Thomas Hardy Association Forum chaired by Professor Rosemarie Morgan

 

New Writing from Wessex

'Who's In The Next Room?'  Paul Hyland, Kate Scott, Catherine Simmonds and Pam Zinnemann-Hope.

SPONSORED BY THE NATIONAL TRUST

Four Dorset poets read a selection of Thomas Hardy's strange and electrifying verse alongside their own work.  Their poems - responses to Hardy's fiction, poetry and the landscape in which he lived and worked - create an animated conversation, reflecting the man, his legend and his words.

PAUL HYLAND, poet, travel writer and biographer, author of Ralegh's Last Journey (HarperCollins), the guide Getting Into Poetry and six poetry titles including Art of the Impossible, New & Selected Poems (Bloodaxe, 2004).

KATE SCOTT's collection, Stitches, was published by Peterloo. Poems from the book have been broadcast on Radio 4 and in the US. A new chap-book is forthcoming from Happenstance.

CATHERINE SIMMONDS' poetry has been published in journals in the UK and USA. We Have Heard Ravens (2008, Flagon Press) is her collection of prose poems drawn from the diaries of Dorothy Wordsworth.

PAM ZINNEMANN-HOPE is a children's author and playwright. Her poems have been published in a pamphlet by Outposts, in anthologies and magazines and she has performed them at THe Drum Theatre, Plymouth & Lighthouse, Poole.

'Who's In The Next Room?' was developed during a National Trust poetry residency at Hardy's Cottage in Higher Bockhampton. It was originally performed at Max Gate, the house Hardy designed for himself in Dorchester. A chap-book of poems from 'Who's In The Next Room?' is due from Happenstance in the autumn.

 

'Poetry For All The Family'

Brian Patten announces the winners of the Junior Bard of Dorchester Poetry Competition.  Entry details are available from the Thomas Hardy Society.    

SPONSORED BY DORCHESTER TOWN COUNCIL

A Poetry Reading by Brian Patten

SPONSORED BY WEST DORSET DISTRICT COUNCIL

 

The week provides a unique opportunity to meet with other people who are working in the same field or who simply share a common interest in Hardy

Andrew Wadsworth, Director of the Dorchester Brewery Square Development speaks on 'Arts in the Community'.

The New Hardy Players perform 'The Mayor of Casterbridge'          

SPONSORED BY DORCHESTER TOWN COUNCIL

Keith Wilson talks about the Hardy Players

Alan Chedzoy presents 'Wessex Voices'

'She Opened the Door' (The Wife, The Mother, The Other Woman and The (ruined) Maid) a new play with songs commissioned by AsOne Theatre Company written by Peter J Cooper with music by Roderick Skeaping.

Margaret Howard, Bernard Palmer, Roy Burton, Furse Swann, Sue Theobald and Colin Thompson  present Hardy's ballads and narrative poems.

The Gryphon School Film:  'Far from the Madding Crowd'

Chris Rowe introduces a Thomas Hardy Quiz

Tea at Max Gate by invitation of Marilyn and Andrew Leah with poetry reading by Michael Thorpe

Exhibition by local artist David Brackston

Church Services with sermons by The Revd John Schofield and The Revd Dr John Travell

 

The programme is interspersed with approaches to Hardy through music, song and dance there are performances by

Tim Laycock  Folksinger, songwriter and actor. Director of music for the last Dorchester Community Play.

Colin Thompson (violin)  His book The English Fiddle Tutor is being republished later this year.

The luventus String Quartet:  A programme of music by Haydn, Beethoven and Dvorak.

SPONSORED BY DORCHESTER BID

Sarah Deere-Jones (harp), Phil Williams (cittern & guitars). Folk settings of Hardy's poems.

SPONSORED BY BLANCHARDS BAILEY

Climax Ceilidh Band   Barn Dance

 


Experience the countryside and towns of Thomas Hardy's Wessex

The programme of Coach Tours & Walks include:

Day visit to Boscastle, Cornwall, led by Helen Gibson and Phillip Mallet.

A day tour to Stonehenge and other archaeological sites, led by Rebecca Welshman and Brenda Parry.

Circular walk from Stinsford Church, following the Service, with a stop for lunch, led by Sue Clarke.

Afternoon walk around Dorchester, led by Helen Lange.

Local coach tour visiting Frome Hill Barrow, Birthplace, Lower Bockhampton, Stinsford and West Knighton, led by Furse Swann.

'Hardy's Churches' coach tour led by JoAnna Mink.

'Trumpet Major' and 'Melancholy Hussar' walk from Sutton Poyntz, led by Tony Fincham. In conjunction with the South Dorset Ridgeway Festival.

Coach tour to Sherborne, led by Helen Lange.

Coach tour 'Another Group of Noble Houses', led by Helen Gibson.

Visit to 'Knollsea' with walk in hoofsteps of Ethelberta to Corfe Castle, led by Angela Bell.

'Three Wayfarers' walk, led by Tony Fincham.

Afternoon coach tour of West Dorset to include Beaminster, Bridport, Abbotsbury and Lyme Regis, led by Sue Clarke.

 

The Conference and Festival is based in the heart of the 'Hardy Country' in Dorchester, Dorset, UK with its major Hardy collections at the Dorset County Museum and County Library.

The Thomas Hardy Society would like to thank the following organisations for their generous sponsorship and support of the Nineteenth International Thomas Hardy Conference & Festival

Waterstone's              Char Chars Fine Teas              The Faber Academy

Blanchards Bailey LLP Solicitors              Dorset Echo

Wetherspoon              Cafe Paninis              Brewery Square Dorchester

Goulds              Epic Quality Print              The Thomas Hardye School

Dorchester Town Council              West Dorset District Council   

Dorset County Council              Dorchester BID

For full details of The Nineteenth International Thomas Hardy Conference and Festival 2010 and  Programme please click on the blue Booking Form link near the bottom of this page.

 

CALL FOR PAPERS

 

THE NINETEENTH INTERNATIONAL THOMAS HARDY CONFERENCE AND FESTIVAL
Dorchester, UK

24th July – 1st August 2010

CALL FOR PAPERS

The 2010 International Thomas Hardy Conference marks the 170th anniversary of the birth of Thomas Hardy. Like its predecessors it will be designed to appeal both to Hardy scholars and to the lay readers who attend in large numbers. The academic sessions will be supplemented by a wide variety of excursions and entertainments relating to the local context which Hardy"s work celebrated, and from which it emerged.
Our invited speakers include Professor Penny Boumelha, Professor Tim Armstrong, Dr Sophie Gilmartin, Claire Tomalin, Professor Barrie Bullen, Professor Phil Davis, Professor William Greenslade and there will be poetry readings from Sir Andrew Motion, Brian Patten and Christopher Reid. We are also soliciting papers from Hardy scholars across the world. A series of thirty-minute talks will be given in chaired parallel sessions. Proposals for such lectures, which may concern any aspect of Hardy"s work, should take the form of an abstract not exceeding 250 words in length.
They should be addressed to:

"Call for Papers" –
( The Thomas Hardy Society)
Dr. J.E. Thomas, Senior Lecturer, Department of English
University of Hull, East Yorkshire HU6 7RX
Email: j.e.thomas@hull.ac.uk

Convener of MA in English; MA in English by Research.  Academic Director of the International Thomas Hardy Conference.

POSTGRADUATE SYMPOSIUM

We are also seeking papers from postgraduates and new scholars of Hardy for a postgraduate symposium, which will form part of the conference. Proposals of 300 words max. for papers of 20 minutes duration should be submitted before 31 January 2010 to the postgraduate convenor:

Prof Roger Ebbatson: ebbatson@tiscali.co.uk  or Dr Angelique Richardson: A.Richardson@exeter.ac.uk

A small bursary will be offered to successful applicants and conference fees will be waived. Reduced rates are offered to postgraduates not invited to speak. A selection of the papers presented at the conference will be published in the peer-reviewed Thomas Hardy Journal.

All submissions will be read and adjudicated by an academic panel. The closing date is 31st January 2010.
The best of the papers given at the Conference will be eligible for publication in the book-length Thomas Hardy Journal appearing in Autumn 2010.

 

The Frank Pinion Award

Applications are invited for this award which commemorates Dr. Frank Pinion's contribution to Thomas Hardy studies. His many publications on Hardy include:

'A Thomas Hardy Companion'; 'Thomas Hardy: his life and friends'; 'Hardy the writer: surveys and assessments'; 'A commentary on the poems of Thomas Hardy'; 'Thomas Hardy: art and thought'; 'A Thomas Hardy Dictionary' and 'One rare fair woman (letters to Florence Henniker, edited jointly with Evelyn Hardy). Dr Pinion also edited The Thomas Hardy Society Review, which later became the Thomas Hardy Journal. He was a Vice-President of the Society.


Dr. Pinion's entire career was with young people, his own interest in Thomas Hardy began when a student: the Award was founded by his students. For these reasons, it was decided to devote the Award to young people wishing to further their Thomas Hardy studies. It provides financial help to attend the Thomas Hardy Conference, enabling the winner to hear lectures by Hardy scholars and visit many Hardy locations. The closing date is 31 March 2010.

AWARD DETAILS

The Award is linked to the Thomas Hardy Conference and is made every two years.

The Award is £250 towards attendance at the Conference.

Applications are not limited to Society members.

Applicants must be under the age of 35 by 1 July 2010 (The start of the Conference).

Applications must be in writing and be based on reasons for wishing to attend the Conference. These may relate to an emerging but strong interest in Thomas Hardy or a continuation of research on Hardy. A short CV giving relevant details concerning your date of birth and interest in Thomas Hardy should be included.

Applications will be judged by a panel drawn from members of the Sheffield Branch of the Thomas Hardy Society. Their decision is final.

The winner will be notified by mid-May and the Award presented during the Conference.

Applications, marked clearly The Frank Pinion Award, must be submitted by 31 March 2010 to the Society at:

The Thomas Hardy Society
c/o Dorset County Museum
High West Street
Dorchester
Dorset
DT1 1XA


The Conference & Festival will be based at the United Church, South Street in Dorchester. Registration will take place here from 12 noon onwards on Saturday 24 July.
The Conference will open at 7pm at a Reception at the Thomas Hardye School, Coburg Road, Dorchester.

Conference & Festival fees:
Members of the Thomas Hardy Society £210
Non-members & guests of members £230
Full-time student members of the Society £50

Conference & Festival membership fee includes attendance at all lectures, talks, seminars, poetry readings and evening entertainments as well as dinner on the first and last nights.
There will be an additional charge for the excursions and walks and for the Max Gate teas.

Tickets for individual events are available from the Thomas Hardy Society office, or on the door, or at the Box Office at the United Church (during Conference & Festival week).

This year the Conference will be over eight days.

For full details and Programme please click on the following link:

The Nineteenth International Thomas Hardy Conference and Festival Booking Form 

(Please wait while the Programme loads)

 

Further details or enquiries to:

The Conference Secretary
The Thomas Hardy Society c/o Dorset County Museum High West Street Dorchester Dorset DT1 1XA
e-mail: info@hardysociety.org
Telephone: +44 (0)1305 251501

Office hours are 1400hrs - 1600hrs Monday - Thursday.
Answerphone at other times.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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