The conference will be held at https://us05web.zoom.us/j/85206438715.
When you join, you will enter a waiting room and be admitted by the session host. If you have any issues or concerns, please contact litfilmconference@gmail.com.
SCHEDULE
Friday, November 6, 2020
All times are in Eastern Standard Time.
(Click on paper titles to view.)
10:00 AM to 11:00 AM Session 1 Identity and Adaptation
Moderator: Allen Redmon, Texas A&M University-Central Texas
- Kristen Figgins, University of Arkansas, “Taming the Jungle: Adaptation and Appropriation”
- JL Wright, University of Arkansas, “Bitch Rhetoric: Planetary Accusation or Proclamation?”
- John Alberti, Northern Kentucky University, “Identity is Adaptation”
11:15 AM to 12:15 PM Session 2 Medium and Adaptation I
Moderator: Amanda Konkle, Georgia Southern University-Armstrong
- J. Rocky Colavito, Butler University, “If Literature Inspires Film, What Does Film Inspire?”
- John Sanders, Syracuse University, “For Whom is it Faithful? Players, Protagonists, and Game Adaptations”
- Thomas Leitch, University of Delaware, “Is Adaptation a Medium–and If Not, Why Not?”
12:30 PM to 1:30 PM Session 3 Medium and Adaptation II
Moderator: Ed Cameron, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley
- Pamela Demory, University of California, Davis, “How Plays Adapt: The Example of Tony Kushner’s Angels in America”
- David Pelligrini, Eastern Connecticut State University, “Ipseity & Inheritance: New Trends in Identity Construction in Stage & Screen Adaptations”
- Linda Belau, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, “Representing Extremity: Adaptation as Working Through”
1:45 PM to 2:45 PM Annual Business Meeting
3:00 PM to 4:00 PM Session 4 Children’s Culture and Adaptation
Moderator: Pete Kunze, Tulane University
- Will Stanford Abbiss, Victoria University of Wellington, “Big Words and Big Ideas: The Reconstruction of Cultural Identity in Anne with an E”
- Madeleine Hunter, University of Cambridge, “Consolidating the Magic Kingdom: Disney’s Live-Action Remakes and the Corporation as Storyworld”
- Rebecca Rowe, University of Connecticut, “From Children’s Literature to Co-Viewing Media: How Adaptations Reveal Differences in Adult/Child Audiences”
4:15 PM to 5:15 PM Session 5 History and Adaptation
Moderator: Pete Kunze, Tulane University
- Robert Ribera, Portland State University, “Race, History, and Adaptation in the Era of Trump: Watchmen and Lovecraft Country”
- Jack Ryan, Gettysburg College, “A Bob Dylan Story: Martin Scorsese Adapts the Past”
- Michael Mirabile, Lewis & Clark College, “From Pathology to Symbology: The Manchurian Candidate on Page and Screen”
5:30 PM to 6:30 PM Session 6 Ideology and Adaptation
Moderator: Allen Redmon, Texas A&M University-Central Texas
- Marton Marko, University of Montana, “Borderline Bargains. Dealing with István Szabó’s Mephisto”
- Jaedyn A. Baker, Hudson Luthringshausen, and Mattie K. Norman, Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, “Complicit vs. Interrogative Spectatorship: Ideology and Closure in Miller’s 300 and HBO’s Watchmen”
- Mads Larsen, University of California, Los Angeles, “Adapting Ibsen’s Nietzschean Ideology to Nazism, Democratic Populism, Empathetic Humanism, and Pitch-Black Neoliberalist Gloom”
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