Cookies on the DFA website

We use cookies to give the best experience on our site while also complying with Data Protection requirements. Continue without changing your settings, and you'll receive cookies, or change your cookie settings at any time.

Skip to main content

IFOBS Conference 2017

Call For Papers
Acting Out:
The IV International Flann O'Brien Conference

Salzburg, 17-21 July 2017

Send abstracts to flannsalzburg2017@gmail.com by 1 February 2017

#Flann2017

Keynote Speakers

Anne Fogarty (University College Dublin)
Stanley E. Gontarski (Florida State University)
Maebh Long (The University of the South Pacific)

Guest Writers & Performers (more to be announced)

Arthur Riordan (Improbable Frequency, Slattery's Sago Saga, The Train)
Liverpool-Irish Literary Theatre (Thirst, The Dead Spit of Kelly, The Glittering Gate)
Kurt Palm (Director of Flann Film Adaptation In Schwimmen-Zwei-Vögel)

#Flann2017

The International Flann O’Brien Society is proud to announce Acting Out: The IV International Flann O’Brien Conference, an international conference on the theme of performance, theatricality, and illusion in Flann O’Brien’s writing, hosted by the Department of English Studies at Salzburg University, 17-21 July 2017.

In recent years O’Brien’s writing has been foregrounded as an integral site for testing the rise of new modernist studies, as it troubles critical commonplaces about modernism itself by virtue of its ephemerality and parochial energies. Recent publications of out-of-print English and Irish-language columns, short stories, non-fiction, dramatic works for the stage, and teleplays for Raidió Teilifís Éireann have not only made O’Brien’s broader canon accessible to a new generation of scholars, but have also highlighted its importance to an understanding of modernism which ‘has grown more capacious, turning its attention to previously neglected forms’ (Rónán McDonald and Julian Murphet).

Germane to these critical projects is the recurring concern with performance, theatricality, and illusion in O’Brien’s prose, columns, plays, correspondence, and TV scripts. In establishing his (highly ironised) aesthetic manifesto in At Swim-Two-Birds, the student narrator notes that ‘the novel was inferior to the play inasmuch as it lacked the outward accidents of illusion, frequently inducing the reader to be outwitted in a shabby fashion and caused to experience a real concern for the fortunes of illusory characters.’ If, as Richard Schechner claims, ‘performances mark identities, bend time, reshape and adorn the body, and tell stories’, then few writers better demonstrate this shaping influence and potential of the performative and the fake.

This dynamic of O’Brien’s work has become all the more visible with the marked rise of creative adaptations of his writing for the stage and beyond. Building on the precedent of pioneering O’Brien performers such as Jimmy O’Dea, David Kelly, and Eamon Morrissey, recent years have seen numerous creative engagements with O’Brien’s work for the stage (Blue Raincoat’s adaptations of O’Brien’s major novels, Arthur Riordan’s Improbable Frequency and Slattery’s Sago Saga, Ergo Phizmiz’s electronic-1920s-Vaudeville adaptation of The Third Policeman, Stephen Rea’s musical dramatic reading of same), film (Kurt Palm’s In Schwimmen-Zwei-Vögel, Park Films’ John Duffy’s Brother and The Martyr’s Crown) and the visual arts (Ralph Steadman's Flann illustrations, John McCloskey’s graphic novel of An Béal Bocht, Micheál Ó Nualláin's paintings, David O’Kane’s stunning O’Brien artworks). As well as demonstrating the significant weight O’Brien’s writing continues to carry in the present cultural moment, these adaptations emphasise its sustained creative dimensions and dramatic energies.

With these issues in mind, the conference aims to address the contours and concealments of performance in Flann O’Brien’s work as it relates to issues of identity, genre, pseudonymity, adaptation, and creative reception. Salzburg is the home of numerous internationally renowned and prestigious theatrical institutions and events, providing the perfect setting to this symposium, which will take place at the outset of the 2017 Salzburger Festspiele (Salzburg Music and Drama Festival).

#Flann2017

The organisers invite proposals on any aspect of O’Brien’s writing, but are especially interested in papers that explore questions of performance, theatricality, and illusion in O’Brien’s prose, columns, plays, correspondence, and TV scripts, including, but not limited to:

Becoming Other: Masks, Pseudonyms, Role-Playing in O’Brien
(Mis)Leading Men: Gender Performativity in O’Brien
Props/Performing Objects: The life of objects / Object as metaphor
The outward accidents of illusion: Sartorial style, costumes, outfits & uniforms in O’Brien
Transmedialisation: Music, Performing Arts, Visual Arts, Illustration, Animation, Film
Come to your Senses: Sight, Sound, Smell, Touch, Taste in O’Brien
Comic & Tragic Passions: O’Brien & Genre
Puppets and Puppet-Masters: Agency, Post-Humanism; Author vs. The Authored
Creativity: Playing by ear vs. learning by heart
Culture’s Scripts: Secular and Sacred Rituals
Dumb play: Playing dumb
– O’Brien and the Theatre in Irish, European, & Modernist contexts (The Abbey, The Gate, The Čapeks, Pirandello, Lord Dunsany, modernist anti-theatricality, William Saroyan, etc.)
– Creative Receptions / Adaptations of O’Brien’s work

Abstracts and Submissions

If you would like to propose a paper (not exceeding 20 minutes), or panel (maximum 3 speakers) please submit your title and an abstract of 250 words accompanied by a short biographical sketch to flannsalzburg2017@gmail.com or paul.fagan@sbg.ac.at by 1 February 2017.

Given the conference’s theme, the organisers also welcome alternative forms of presentation and dialogue, such as roundtables, workshops, debate motions (and debaters), performances, creative responses to Flann O’Brien’s writing, etc.

For more details as they emerge, including social programmes and accommodation & travel details follow us on Twitter.

Organising Committee

Sabine Coelsch-Foisner (Salzburg University)
Paul Fagan (Salzburg University/University of Vienna)
Dieter Fuchs (University of Vienna)
Ruben Borg (Hebrew University of Jerusalem)