所有活动的

IF 0.3 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN
Mary K. Bercaw Edwards
{"title":"所有活动的","authors":"Mary K. Bercaw Edwards","doi":"10.1353/lvn.2023.0006","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"All Astir Mary K. Bercaw Edwards Click for larger view View full resolution Melville visited the Musée de Cluny, then called the Hôtel de Cluny, in 1849; conference participants followed in his footsteps on June 29, 2022, during the Thirteenth International Melville conference. Photo credit Mary K. Bercaw Edwards. The Thirteenth International Melville Society Conference, “Melville’s Energies: Aesthetics, Politics, Ecologies,” held in Paris, France, on June 27–30, 2022, was a resounding success. The conference was hosted at Sorbonne Université and Université Sorbonne Nouvelle situated in the Quartier Latin, which Melville explored during his 1849 trip to Paris, on days 1 and 4, and at Université de Paris on days 2 and 3. The organizing committee—Thomas Constantinesco (Sorbonne Université), Hélène Cottet (Université de Lille), Michael Jonik (University of Sussex), Ronan Ludot-Vlasak (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle), Édouard Marsoin (Université de Paris), and [End Page 51] Cécile Roudeau (Université de Paris)—did an outstanding job of planning, organizing, and running the conference. Participants felt much gratitude to all involved for such a rich and rewarding four days. In this issue of Leviathan, we are honored to include the plenary addresses of Jennifer Greiman and Jeffrey Insko. We also present four conference reports and a photo gallery. (More photos are available at <https://www.dropbox.com/sh/rejkwcg9y4dgsl5/AAAckLu-7bklK2VlhE_eYtSsa?dl=0>.) We wish to thank the plenary speakers for their engaging talks; Alex Benson, Tony McGowan, Christopher Rice, and Maki Sadahiro for their conference reports; and Alan Van Brackel for his wonderful photography. William Reese’s extensive Melville collection went up for auction in September at Christie’s. Barbara Schneider attended the last day of the auction and sent the following short piece and images. Thoughts on viewing the Herman Melville Collection of William S. Reese by Barbara Schneider, a serial participant in the Moby-Dick Marathon in New Bedford. “One of the pleasures of collecting Melville has been getting to know the scholarly community who study, a pleasantly obsessed group of people. I am fortunate in having sufficient material of interest that they want to come see me—running a very small private research library is one of the most enjoyable aspects of book collecting.” So said the late William Reese in a 1993 essay in the Gazette of the Grolier Club, detailing how he assembled his impressive collection of Melville material (William S. Reese, “Collecting Herman Melville,” The Gazette of the Grolier Club, 1993 <https://www.williamreesecompany.com/pages/articles/49/collecting-herman-melville>). That collection was auctioned online last September [2022], with sales from the auction totaling $2,783,214. Now that the books have been disbursed to dealers, collectors, and institutions, the print catalogue and the online description of the lots on Christie’s website (<https://onlineonly.christies.com/s/herman-melville-collection-william-s-reese/lots/3322>) are the only things that remain of the collection. “The ghost is spouted up, and away we sail to fight some other world, and go through young life’s old routine again” (Chapter 98, “Stowing Down and Clearing Up,” Moby-Dick). Melville’s August 1 birthday did not go unnoticed in 2022. Amanda Lehr did a riotous piece in McSweeney’s, “If Starbucks Had Been Named After Other Characters from Moby-Dick,” imagining the work environment if the coffee company were named Ahabs, Queequegs, Ishmaels, Pips, Tashtegos, Daggoos, Stubbs, Flasks, Father Mapples, Fedallahs, or Moby Dicks. Jessie Li’s daily newsletter in The New Yorker ended, “John Updike reflects on the critical failure of the novel at the time of its publication, and the ‘subsequent withdrawal into wounded silence’ of Melville, who was born on this day in 1819,” with a link to Updike’s May 2, 1982, reflection, “Herman Melville’s Soft Withdrawal.” Just [End Page 52] Click for larger view View full resolution William Reese’s Herman Melville on display at Christie’s. Photo credit Barbara Schneider. Click for larger view View full resolution Illustration from Lot 693 Rockwell Kent (1882–1971). Original set of proofs of the illustrations and decorations for the Lakeside Press edition of Melville’s Moby Dick, or The Whale (Chicago: R.E. Donnelly & Sons Co...","PeriodicalId":42245,"journal":{"name":"Leviathan-A Journal of Melville Studies","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"All Astir\",\"authors\":\"Mary K. Bercaw Edwards\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/lvn.2023.0006\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"All Astir Mary K. Bercaw Edwards Click for larger view View full resolution Melville visited the Musée de Cluny, then called the Hôtel de Cluny, in 1849; conference participants followed in his footsteps on June 29, 2022, during the Thirteenth International Melville conference. Photo credit Mary K. Bercaw Edwards. The Thirteenth International Melville Society Conference, “Melville’s Energies: Aesthetics, Politics, Ecologies,” held in Paris, France, on June 27–30, 2022, was a resounding success. The conference was hosted at Sorbonne Université and Université Sorbonne Nouvelle situated in the Quartier Latin, which Melville explored during his 1849 trip to Paris, on days 1 and 4, and at Université de Paris on days 2 and 3. The organizing committee—Thomas Constantinesco (Sorbonne Université), Hélène Cottet (Université de Lille), Michael Jonik (University of Sussex), Ronan Ludot-Vlasak (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle), Édouard Marsoin (Université de Paris), and [End Page 51] Cécile Roudeau (Université de Paris)—did an outstanding job of planning, organizing, and running the conference. Participants felt much gratitude to all involved for such a rich and rewarding four days. In this issue of Leviathan, we are honored to include the plenary addresses of Jennifer Greiman and Jeffrey Insko. 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I am fortunate in having sufficient material of interest that they want to come see me—running a very small private research library is one of the most enjoyable aspects of book collecting.” So said the late William Reese in a 1993 essay in the Gazette of the Grolier Club, detailing how he assembled his impressive collection of Melville material (William S. Reese, “Collecting Herman Melville,” The Gazette of the Grolier Club, 1993 <https://www.williamreesecompany.com/pages/articles/49/collecting-herman-melville>). That collection was auctioned online last September [2022], with sales from the auction totaling $2,783,214. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

1849年,梅尔维尔参观了muse de Cluny,当时被称为Hôtel de Cluny;2022年6月29日,在第十三届国际梅尔维尔会议期间,与会者跟随他的脚步。图片来源:Mary K. Bercaw Edwards。第13届国际梅尔维尔学会会议,“梅尔维尔的能量:美学、政治、生态”,于2022年6月27日至30日在法国巴黎举行,取得了巨大的成功。会议在位于拉丁区的索邦大学和新索邦大学举行,第1天和第4天,梅尔维尔在1849年的巴黎之行中探索了这个地方,第2天和第3天在巴黎大学举行。会议的组织委员会——thomas Constantinesco(索邦大学)、h l tcottet(里尔大学)、Michael Jonik(苏塞克斯大学)、Ronan Ludot-Vlasak(新索邦大学)、Édouard Marsoin(巴黎大学)和cmacciile Roudeau(巴黎大学)——在会议的策划、组织和运行方面做得非常出色。参与者对所有参与的人都非常感激,因为这是一个丰富而有意义的四天。在本期《利维坦》中,我们荣幸地邀请到詹妮弗·格莱曼和杰弗里·因斯科的全体会议发言。我们还提供了四份会议报告和一个图片库。(更多照片见。)我们谨感谢全体会议发言人所作的引人入胜的发言;Alex Benson, Tony McGowan, Christopher Rice和Maki Sadahiro的会议报告;以及艾伦·范·布雷克尔精彩的摄影作品。威廉·里斯的大量梅尔维尔收藏于9月在佳士得拍卖。芭芭拉·施耐德参加了拍卖的最后一天,并发送了以下短片和图片。新贝德福德白鲸马拉松的连续参与者芭芭拉·施耐德对赫尔曼·梅尔维尔威廉·s·里斯的收藏的看法。“收藏梅尔维尔作品的乐趣之一是了解了研究的学术团体,这是一群愉快而痴迷的人。幸运的是,我有足够的有趣的资料,他们愿意来看我——管理一个非常小的私人研究图书馆是藏书中最令人愉快的方面之一。”已故的威廉·里斯在1993年格罗里埃俱乐部公报上的一篇文章中这样说,详细介绍了他是如何收集梅尔维尔的资料的(威廉·s·里斯,“收集赫尔曼·梅尔维尔”,1993年格罗里埃俱乐部公报)。这些藏品于去年9月(2022年)在网上拍卖,拍卖总额为2,783,214美元。现在,这些书已经分发给了经销商、收藏家和机构,佳士得网站上的印刷目录和拍卖品的在线描述是这些藏品仅存的东西。“幽灵被喷了出来,我们扬帆远航,去另一个世界战斗,重新开始年轻生活的老套路。”(《白鲸记》第98章,“收拾收拾”)2022年8月1日,梅尔维尔的生日并没有被忽视。Amanda Lehr在McSweeney 's做了一篇有趣的文章,“如果星巴克以《白鲸》中的其他角色命名”,想象一下如果咖啡公司被命名为Ahabs, Queequegs, Ishmaels, Pips, Tashtegos, Daggoos, Stubbs, Flasks, Father Mapples, Fedallahs或Moby Dicks,工作环境会是什么样子。杰西·李(Jessie Li)在《纽约客》(The New Yorker)上的每日时事通讯结尾处写道,“约翰·厄普代克反思了小说出版时评论界的失败,以及1819年的今天出生的梅尔维尔‘随后陷入了受伤的沉默’”,并链接到了厄普代克1982年5月2日的反思——“赫尔曼·梅尔维尔的温和退缩”。点击查看大图查看全分辨率威廉·里斯的赫尔曼·梅尔维尔在佳士得展出。图片来源:Barbara Schneider点击查看大图查看全分辨率插图来自拍品693洛克威尔·肯特(1882-1971)。梅尔维尔的《白鲸记》湖畔出版社版的插图和装饰的原始证明(芝加哥:R.E. Donnelly & Sons Co.)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
All Astir
All Astir Mary K. Bercaw Edwards Click for larger view View full resolution Melville visited the Musée de Cluny, then called the Hôtel de Cluny, in 1849; conference participants followed in his footsteps on June 29, 2022, during the Thirteenth International Melville conference. Photo credit Mary K. Bercaw Edwards. The Thirteenth International Melville Society Conference, “Melville’s Energies: Aesthetics, Politics, Ecologies,” held in Paris, France, on June 27–30, 2022, was a resounding success. The conference was hosted at Sorbonne Université and Université Sorbonne Nouvelle situated in the Quartier Latin, which Melville explored during his 1849 trip to Paris, on days 1 and 4, and at Université de Paris on days 2 and 3. The organizing committee—Thomas Constantinesco (Sorbonne Université), Hélène Cottet (Université de Lille), Michael Jonik (University of Sussex), Ronan Ludot-Vlasak (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle), Édouard Marsoin (Université de Paris), and [End Page 51] Cécile Roudeau (Université de Paris)—did an outstanding job of planning, organizing, and running the conference. Participants felt much gratitude to all involved for such a rich and rewarding four days. In this issue of Leviathan, we are honored to include the plenary addresses of Jennifer Greiman and Jeffrey Insko. We also present four conference reports and a photo gallery. (More photos are available at .) We wish to thank the plenary speakers for their engaging talks; Alex Benson, Tony McGowan, Christopher Rice, and Maki Sadahiro for their conference reports; and Alan Van Brackel for his wonderful photography. William Reese’s extensive Melville collection went up for auction in September at Christie’s. Barbara Schneider attended the last day of the auction and sent the following short piece and images. Thoughts on viewing the Herman Melville Collection of William S. Reese by Barbara Schneider, a serial participant in the Moby-Dick Marathon in New Bedford. “One of the pleasures of collecting Melville has been getting to know the scholarly community who study, a pleasantly obsessed group of people. I am fortunate in having sufficient material of interest that they want to come see me—running a very small private research library is one of the most enjoyable aspects of book collecting.” So said the late William Reese in a 1993 essay in the Gazette of the Grolier Club, detailing how he assembled his impressive collection of Melville material (William S. Reese, “Collecting Herman Melville,” The Gazette of the Grolier Club, 1993 ). That collection was auctioned online last September [2022], with sales from the auction totaling $2,783,214. Now that the books have been disbursed to dealers, collectors, and institutions, the print catalogue and the online description of the lots on Christie’s website () are the only things that remain of the collection. “The ghost is spouted up, and away we sail to fight some other world, and go through young life’s old routine again” (Chapter 98, “Stowing Down and Clearing Up,” Moby-Dick). Melville’s August 1 birthday did not go unnoticed in 2022. Amanda Lehr did a riotous piece in McSweeney’s, “If Starbucks Had Been Named After Other Characters from Moby-Dick,” imagining the work environment if the coffee company were named Ahabs, Queequegs, Ishmaels, Pips, Tashtegos, Daggoos, Stubbs, Flasks, Father Mapples, Fedallahs, or Moby Dicks. Jessie Li’s daily newsletter in The New Yorker ended, “John Updike reflects on the critical failure of the novel at the time of its publication, and the ‘subsequent withdrawal into wounded silence’ of Melville, who was born on this day in 1819,” with a link to Updike’s May 2, 1982, reflection, “Herman Melville’s Soft Withdrawal.” Just [End Page 52] Click for larger view View full resolution William Reese’s Herman Melville on display at Christie’s. Photo credit Barbara Schneider. Click for larger view View full resolution Illustration from Lot 693 Rockwell Kent (1882–1971). Original set of proofs of the illustrations and decorations for the Lakeside Press edition of Melville’s Moby Dick, or The Whale (Chicago: R.E. Donnelly & Sons Co...
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