The Idea of America

…or, to give it its full title, The Idea of America in Nineteenth-Century British Culture, 1776-1914. The is a conference to be held at the Institute of English Studies, University of London 27-28 June 2008, for which the final call for papers has just been issued. There’s a film potential there, as the conference blurb offers:

The meaning of America to those beyond its borders has rarely been the subject of such passion and global conflict as it has been in the past seven years. If we look to the long nineteenth century, however, the idea of America in British culture suggests that there is a lively pre-history of competing and opposed notions of the emergent republic. From the new world of revolution, individual liberty, democracy and freedom to the home of plutocracy and Philistinism; from avatar of the mechanical city to the last hope of utopias in the wilderness, America emerged, and continued to accrete meanings, as diverse as its landscape.

This interdisciplinary conference invites scholars to reflect on the ideas, representations and transmissions of America in Britain during the period in question. Possible subjects might include: republicanism; liberty; revolution; democracy; populism; utopias; individualism; feminism; transcendentalism; frontiers; landscapes; pioneers; displacement; plutocracy; commerce; art-collection. We encourage papers that might pursue these or other subjects using travel-writing, letters, essays, photography and painting, early film, records of travelling shows and extravaganzas in addition to fiction, poetry and drama.

Abstracts of 250-300 words should be sent to the conference organisers, Dr Ella Dzelzainis, School of English and Humanities, Birkbeck College, University of London (e.dzelzainis [at] bbk.ac.uk) and Dr Ruth Livesey, Department of English, Royal Holloway, University of London (ruth.livese [at] rhul.ac.uk), by November 15th 2007.

Live in Trafalgar Square

Silents in Trafalgar Square

Frame still taken from BBC News video of Capital Tales in Trafalgar Square

Recently, as you’ll know, the London Film Festival hosted two screenings of silents in Trafalgar Square, with live music accompaniment. There’s a BBC video news report on the second screening, Capital Tales, which featured a pot pourri of London footage, much of it silent, with John Sweeney at the piano.

John Sweeney in Trafalgar Square

John Sweeney accompanying Capital Tales in Trafalgar Square, from http://www.bbc.co.uk

The report features short interviews with John, BFI programmer Robin Baker, and assorted members of the public. The general feedback from this event, and the screening of Blackmail the day before, has been very positive, and I think we can expect more screenings of silents in the London open air in the future. I’m entirely in favour of this. Take the films to the people. Let’s have people stumbling upon archive films in unexpected places. Let’s bring the past into the present. Archives should be everywhere.