Subject
Nabokov papers & abstracts for Annual Conference of American
Assoc. of Teachers if E. European & Slavic Langs
Assoc. of Teachers if E. European & Slavic Langs
From
Date
Body
AATSEEL 2003 will be held in San Diego, CA at the Loews Coronado Bay Resort, December 27-30. Pre-registration for the conference closed on November 30. Anyone wishing to register for the conference must now do so onsite at Loews Coronado.
----------------------------------------------------------------
December 28, 1:00pm - 3:00pm
Panel 28C-1: Teaching Lolita (I)
Chair: Zoran Kuzmanovich, Davidson College
Equipment: CP
Paper: My Sin, My Soul: Making a Monster in Frankenstein and Lolita (Rebeca Helfer, Columbia University)
Paper: 'To borrow and to borrow and to borrow': Teaching Lolita Through Parody (Charles Fischer, University of Washington)
Paper: A Question of Focal Adjustment: Teaching Lolita with Its Film Adaptations (Christopher A. Link, Boston University)
Paper: On the Road with Lolita (Corinne Scheiner, Colorado College)
December 28, 3:15-5:15
Panel 28D-3: Teaching Lolita (II)
Chair: Zoran Kuzmanovich, Davidson College
Paper: Being Cruel to be Kind: Teaching Lolita's 'Trifles' and 'Telltale Tingles' (Harriet Hustis, The College of New Jersey)
Paper: Humbert Humbert and the Five D's: Dramatics, Dance, Debating, Dating, and Democracy (David Clippinger, Pennsylvania State University)
Paper: Peddling Pedophilia, Murder, Lesbianism, and Suicide: Teaching Controversial Texts at a Religious College (Marianne Cotugno)
Discussant: Galya Diment, University of Washington
December 29, 8-10 am
Panel 29A-3: Theoretical Approaches to Literature
Paper: The Linguistic Prison-House of the Unconscious: Oedipus Complex in Belyj and Nabokov (Maria Levina Parker, University of Geneva)
Panel 29C-3: International Vladimir Nabokov Society
Chair: Zoran Kuzmanovich, Davidson College
Paper: Sports in Nabokov (Timothy C. Harte, Bryn Mawr College)
Paper: Poshlust', Hegelian Syllogism, and the Proverb: A Paremiological Approach to Vladimir Nabokov's Laughter in the Dark (Kevin J. McKenna, University of Vermont)
Paper: Imaginary Journeys and Nightmares: "The Execution" and its Models (Stanislav Shvabrin, University of California, Los Angeles)
Paper: Nabokov's Theory and Practice of Translation (Joseph Fitzpatrick, Duke University)
Paper: Literalness, Translation, and Commentary : Nabokov's Eugene Onegin (Julia Trubikhina, New York University)
----------------------------------------------------------------
December 28, 1:00pm - 3:00pm
Panel 28C-1: Teaching Lolita (I)
Chair: Zoran Kuzmanovich, Davidson College
Equipment: CP
Paper: My Sin, My Soul: Making a Monster in Frankenstein and Lolita (Rebeca Helfer, Columbia University)
Paper: 'To borrow and to borrow and to borrow': Teaching Lolita Through Parody (Charles Fischer, University of Washington)
Paper: A Question of Focal Adjustment: Teaching Lolita with Its Film Adaptations (Christopher A. Link, Boston University)
Paper: On the Road with Lolita (Corinne Scheiner, Colorado College)
December 28, 3:15-5:15
Panel 28D-3: Teaching Lolita (II)
Chair: Zoran Kuzmanovich, Davidson College
Paper: Being Cruel to be Kind: Teaching Lolita's 'Trifles' and 'Telltale Tingles' (Harriet Hustis, The College of New Jersey)
Paper: Humbert Humbert and the Five D's: Dramatics, Dance, Debating, Dating, and Democracy (David Clippinger, Pennsylvania State University)
Paper: Peddling Pedophilia, Murder, Lesbianism, and Suicide: Teaching Controversial Texts at a Religious College (Marianne Cotugno)
Discussant: Galya Diment, University of Washington
December 29, 8-10 am
Panel 29A-3: Theoretical Approaches to Literature
Paper: The Linguistic Prison-House of the Unconscious: Oedipus Complex in Belyj and Nabokov (Maria Levina Parker, University of Geneva)
Panel 29C-3: International Vladimir Nabokov Society
Chair: Zoran Kuzmanovich, Davidson College
Paper: Sports in Nabokov (Timothy C. Harte, Bryn Mawr College)
Paper: Poshlust', Hegelian Syllogism, and the Proverb: A Paremiological Approach to Vladimir Nabokov's Laughter in the Dark (Kevin J. McKenna, University of Vermont)
Paper: Imaginary Journeys and Nightmares: "The Execution" and its Models (Stanislav Shvabrin, University of California, Los Angeles)
Paper: Nabokov's Theory and Practice of Translation (Joseph Fitzpatrick, Duke University)
Paper: Literalness, Translation, and Commentary : Nabokov's Eugene Onegin (Julia Trubikhina, New York University)