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VSAWC has ended
Victorian Sociability
An International Conference

This conference will pair traditional presentations with a collaborative digital humanities project, sponsored by the Orlando Project and VSAWC, which we warmly invite all delegates to participate in. Mapping Victorian Literary Sociability aims to uncover the spatial networks that allowed writers, artists, editors, and publishers to collaborate and sustain successful careers. No technical knowledge is necessary to participate in this project.

In advance of the conference, we will be asking delegates to collect data on the addresses of one or two Victorian writers, artists, editors, or publishers. In workshops during the conference, we will work together to map this data, which will show us how propinquity and literary sociability shaped the careers of those who worked together, especially women who did not have access to the more public networks of the club and the literary dinner party. Support and guidance for delegates will be provided by the Orlando Project and staff from Libraries and Cultural Resources. At the end of the conference, we will launch the beta version of this project: Mapping Victorian Literary Sociability.
Friday, May 3 • 9:00am - 10:30am
Panel Session 3A: The Tools of the Trade: Sociability and DH

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Moderated by Ingrid Reiche (University of Calgary)
  • Karen Bourrier (University of Calgary) and Kelly Hager (Simmons College, in absentia): Sociability and Short Sibling Sets in the Long Victorian Novel
  • Alison Hedley (McGill University) and Mary Grant (Ryerson University): Pixie and the Green-Sheaf: Social Labour and Magazine Production in the Y90s Personography
  • Jana Smith Elford (University of Alberta): The Gendered Spaces of Sociability: Charting Women's Organizations in the Women's Penny Paper

Friday May 3, 2019 9:00am - 10:30am MDT
Taylor Institute for Teaching and Learning, Studio A