There were three wars at work in the
mind of William Faulkner: the American Civil War, World War I, and World War
II. He did not fight in any of them, yet they are all there, in novels, short
stories, essays, and letters. The aim of the 28th annual Faulkner and
Yoknapatawpha Conference is to explore the role that war played in the life
and work of a writer whose career seems forever poised against a backdrop of
wars going on or recently ended or in the volatile years between -- or,
perhaps most significant of all, the backdrop of that war that ended
thirty-two years before he was born.
Some of the issues that might be
raised: What is the nature of Faulkner’s treatment of military engagement: the
kinds of episode he tends to emphasize, the behavior of people in the midst of
war? How does he describe the behavior and attitudes of those who, like
himself, were not combatants, but who seem to have a deep, at times obsessive,
concern with the wars they did not fight? How are the factors of race, class,
and gender affected by the action of war or its remembrance? What role do
women play in Faulkner’s wars? What are the psychological and perhaps
aesthetic implications behind Faulkner’s long maintained masquerade as a World
War I fighter pilot, wounded in action? Finally, how does our contemporary
conception of war, influenced by the Vietnam experience as well as more recent
conflicts, affect our reading of Faulkner’s treatments of war? Authors whose
papers are selected for presentation at the conference will receive 1) a
waiver of the conference registration fee, 2) lodging at the University Alumni
House from Saturday, July 22, through Friday, July 27, and 3) reimbursement of
travel expenses, up to $500 ($.31 a mile by automobile or air fare). Papers
presented at the conference will be published by the University Press of
Mississippi.
The 14th edition of the University of
Chicago Manual of Style should be used as a guide in preparing manuscripts
(3,000 to 6,000 words). Three copies of manuscripts must be submitted by
January 15, 2001. Notification of selection will be made by March 1, 2001.
Manuscripts and inquiries about papers should be addressed to Donald
Kartiganer, Department of English, The University of Mississippi, University,
MS 38677. Telephone: 662-915-5793, e-mail: dkartiga@olemiss.edu.