NortheaT American Society for
EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY
STUDIES
Newsletter
Edited by John H. O’Neill, Hamilton College
Newsletter No. 72 July, 2007
Caryl Phillips, the well-known
NEASECS 2007: Dartmouth Col-
British and Caribbean Author, will
lege, Hanover, NH, Oct 25-28, 2007
be reading from the Francis Barber
The 2007 regional meeting will
section of his new novel, Foreigners,
be held at Dartmouth College on the
to be published in September, 2007.
theme of Transatlantic Destinies. The
Transatlantic Destinies is present-
theme memorializes the 200th anni-
ed in conjunction with the Human-
versary of the abolition of the slave
ities Institute conference, "No Laugh-
trade, while also acknowledging all
ing Matter: Visual Humor in Ideas of
aspects of the transformation of the
Race, Nationality and Ethnicity."
transatlantic social sphere, including
During the reception for both confer-
European exploration and native
ences on Friday afternoon at the
resistance, and the increasingly uni-
spectacular Kim Gallery of the Hood
fied circulation of culture and capital
Museum, informal docent tours will
across the largest natural trade
be offered by the organizers of “No
routes known up to this point.
Laughing Matter.”
The two plenary speakers are in
The treasures of Dartmouth Col-
keeping with the theme. Madge
lege’s Rauner Special Collections
Dresser, University of the West of
Library will be on display through-
England, Bristol, has served as
out the conference, including some
historical consultant to the Bristol
little-known first editions of Pope’s
City Museum and Art Gallery exhi-
Essay on Man, as well as documents
bition on “Bristol and the Trans-
charting Dartmouth’s founding in
atlantic Slave Trade.” She has
1769.
published Slavery Obscured: The
More complete information will
Social History of the Slave Trade in an
be found on the conference website:
English Provincial Port, and will
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~neasec
speak on “Slavery and Public
s07/
Monuments.”
NEASECS Newsletter 72 - 2 - July, 2007
CALL FOR PAPERS: The Philoso- opportunity to re-evaluate the signif-
phy of Adam Smith: A conference icance of Smith's moral philosophy
to commemorate the 250th anniver- and moral psychology, the relation-
sary of The Theory of Moral Sentiments ship between them and his other
will be held January 6-8, 2009, at writings on economics, politics, juris-
Balliol College, Oxford. The confer- prudence, history, and rhetoric and
ence is organized by the Interna- belles lettres, and the relevance of his
tional Adam Smith Society and The thought to current research in these
Adam Smith Review areas. Papers on any of these topics,
Although Adam Smith is better and from any discipline, are wel-
known now for his economics, in his come.
own time it was his first book, The Please send detailed abstracts
Theory of Moral Sentiments (1759), (500-800 words) prepared for blind
that established his reputation. Just review by September 15, 2007 to
as scholarly work on Smith has Samuel Fleischacker, Philosophy
challenged the free market appro- Department (M/C 267), 601 South
priation of Smith's Wealth of Nations, Morgan Street, University of Illinois
so it has also come to appreciate the at Chicago, Chicago, IL 60607-7114
importance of Smith's moral philo- USA; or email them (as attachments,
sophy for his overall intellectual prepared for blind review) to:
project. This conference, to be held at sfleisch@uic.edu.
the college Smith himself attended Participants will be notified that
from 1740-46, and at the beginning of their proposals have been accepted
the year marking the 250th anniver- for the conference by December 1,
sary of the publication of The Theory 2007.
of Moral Sentiments, will provide an
states after 1922, and the attendant
Call for Submissions: “The Irish
"Irish diaspora" in England, Canada,
Question”
the United States, and beyond.
The Radical History Review seeks
However, the editors do not assume
submissions for an issue that will
that the Irish Question is restricted to
explore the intellectual, historical
people of Irish descent or the
and political implications of the
countries they inhabit: we are
"Irish Question" over the past eight
equally interested in the relationship
centuries. We depart from the
of Ireland's national struggle to Asia,
premise that the national question
Africa, and Latin America.
and its resolution (or not) in Ireland
Though the RHR continues to
is not only a major topic in Irish and
publish monographic articles, it also
British Imperial history, but one with
invites Reflections, Interventions,
fundamental implications for the
roundtables, interviews, and reviews
evolution of the modern world, and
that go beyond books to look at
the histories of colonialism and
popular historical representations,
postcolonialism. We envision contri-
whether visual, cinematic, or textual.
butions focused on Ireland, first as a
Potential contributors are
colony and then partitioned into two
NEASECS Newsletter 72 - 3 - July, 2007
encouraged to look at recent issues (each image as a separate file). For
for examples of these non-traditional preliminary e-mail inquiries, please
forms of scholarship. Submissions include "Issue 104" in the subject
are due by March 15, 2008 and line. Those articles selected for publi-
should be submitted electronically, cation after the peer review process
as an attachment, to rhr@igc.org will be included in issue 104 of the
with "Issue 104 submission" in the Radical History Review, scheduled to
subject line. For artwork, please send appear in Spring 2009.
images as high resolution digital files
vision therefore partial. What is
Call for Papers: “Evidence of
needed in order for the study of the
Reading, Reading the Evidence”
history of reading to progress
A major international conference
beyond the boundaries of specific
to be held at the Institute of English
institutions, disciplines, methodolo-
Studies, University of London, 21-23
gies, geographical locations and time
July 2008, organized by the Open
periods is a forum in which as many
University and the Institute of
diverse approaches as possible are
English Studies
brought into energetic debate.
Keynote speakers: Kate Flint,
This major 3-day conference, the
Jonathan Rose, David Vincent
first of its type, seeks to provide such
Studies centered on the history
a forum. We invite 20-minute papers
of reading have proliferated in the
from international students and
last twenty years. They have sprung
scholars of any discipline -- both
from several different disciplines,
within and outside the Humanities --
encompassed different periods and
who are interested in the history and
geographical locations and chosen
practice of reading in any period or
divergent methodologies, but their
geographical location.
common quest has been to recover
Paper titles, abstracts of no more
and understand the traces of a
than 300 words and short biogra-
prac tice that is central to our
phies should be sent electronically
understanding of human history, yet
by 31 January 2008 to all three
notoriously elusive.
organizers:
One such approach is The
Dr Shaf Towheed
Reading Experience Database 1450-
(S.S.Towheed@open.ac.uk);
1945 (RED), a project run by the
Dr Rosalind Crone
Open University and the University
(r.h.crone@open.ac.uk);
of London. While RED is already
Dr Katie Halsey
proving its worth as a digital re-
(Katie.Halsey@sas.ac.uk).
source, its methodological paramet-
ers are necessarily limited and its
utive Secretary of the Dictionary
News of Members
Society of North America.
Lisa Berglund (English, Buffalo
Arnd Bohm (German, Carleton
State College) has been elected Exec-
University) is the author of Goethe’s
NEASECS Newsletter 72 - 4 - July, 2007
Faust and European Epic: Forgetting XVIIIe siècle. Textes de Le Franc de
the Future (Camden House, 2007); Pompignan, edited by Theodore E. D.
and of “Naming Goethe’s Faust: A Braun and Guillaume Robichez,
Matter of Significance.” Deutsche Saint-Étienne, Publications de
Vierteljahrsschrift für Literaturwissen- l'Université de Saint-Étienne, Se'rie
schaft und Geistesgeschichte 80.3 "Lire le dix-huitième siècle," 2007.
(2006). Professor Braun was an invited
Martha Bowden (English, Ken- speaker at the Colloque Le Franc de
nesaw State University) has publish- Pompignan held in September 2006
ed Yorick's Congregation: The Church in Toulouse, Montauban and Pompi-
of England in the Time of Laurence gnan.
Sterne (University of Delaware, Robert Frail (French, Centenary
2007). College) is the author of A Singular
Kevin Cope (English and Com- Duality: Literary Relations between
parative Literature, Louisiana State France and England in the Eighteenth
University) has published two new Century (AMS Press); of Realism in
books, both with AMS Press: In and Samuel Richardson and the Abbe Pre-
After the Beginning: Inaugural Mo- vost (Edwin Mellen Press, 2005), and
ments and Literary Institutions in the of a novel, Fringe Dwellers (Dor-
Long Eighteenth Century and Above rance Publishing, 2006).
the Age of Reason: Miracles and After being a guest lecturer at
Wonders in the Long Eighteenth Cen- Yale University for a year and re-
tury, a set of four treatises with ceiving her Ph.D. in French Liter-
extensive commentary and anno- ature from Columbia University in
tation. 2005, Zeina Hakim accepted a posi-
Charlotte Craig (German, tion as an “assistante” in the French
Rutgers) and her husband, Bob Department of the University of
Craig (Independent Scholar) pre- Geneva, Switzerland, where she
sented papers at NEASECS, Salem, teaches undergraduate and graduate
Massachusetts; at the conference of courses on 18th century literature.
the BSECS (British Society for Her doctoral dissertation explored
Eighteenth-Century Studies) at the formal techniques and aesthetic
Oxford in January 2007; at the implications of “make-believe” in
ASECS conference in Atlanta, and 18th-century French memoir-novels
will present papers at the ISECS and she has published articles on
meeting at Montpellier, France, next Diderot, literature and the visual arts
summer. Professor Craig has also and women’s studies. She is current-
published a chapter, “The Doctor,” ly working on a book-length manu-
in Friedrich Schiller: Playwright, Poet, script that focuses on the poetics of
Philosopher, Historian, ed. Paul E. fiction in early 18th-century French
Kerry (Peter Lang, 2007). novels and some of her recent papers
T. E. D. Braun (French, Univer- have been accepted in Cahiers Isabelle
sity of Delaware, Emeritus) has de Charrière, Dix-Huitième Siècle,
published Lumières voilées, OEuvres Studies on Voltaire and in the MLA
choisies d'un magistrat chrétien du
NEASECS Newsletter 72 - 5 - July, 2007
series "Approaches to Teaching Philosopher, Historian, (Peter Lang,
World Literature." 2007) and “Schiller, National Wars
Jocelyn Harris, University of for Independence, and ‘merely
Otago, New Zealand, published political’ Revolutions,” in: Schiller,
“Domestic Virtues and National National Poet - Poet of Nations, (Rodo-
Importance: Lord Nelson, Captain pi, 2006), as well articles on Schiller’s
Wentworth, and the English “Wallenstein” and “The Criminal of
Napoleonic War Hero” in Eighteenth- Lost Honor,” and Heinrich von
Century Fiction 19: 1-2 (Fall-Winter, Kleist's “The Beggar Woman of Lo-
2006-7), 181-205. Her new book carno” for The Literary Encyclopedia
about Jane Austen, A Revolution Al- <http://www.LiteraryEncyclopedia.
most Beyond Expression: Jane Austen's com>. He will once again co-direct
"Persuasion" is in press with the the German Summer School of the
University of Delaware. She co- University of New Mexico in 2007 in
edited, with Lisa Zunshine, Approac- consortium with California State.
hes to Teaching the Novels of Samuel Catherine Labio (French, Yale
Richardson (MLA, 2006), which University) has published “The Solu-
includes her essay: “Clarissa Lives!” tion Is in the Text: A Survey of the
Reading Richardson through Re- Recent Literary Turn in Adam Smith
writings.” In 2006, New Windows on Studies” in The Adam Smith Review
a Woman's World: Essays in Honour of (vol. 2, October 2006). She has lec-
Jocelyn Harris (2 vols.), was publish- tured on visual and verbal represen-
ed by the English Department, Uni- tations of financial speculation in
versity of Otago. She will be a plen- early eighteenth-century Europe at
ary speaker at the annual conference NEASECS' annual meeting, at a
of the Jane Austen Society of North colloquium on “The Netherlandish
America in Vancouver, 2007, speak- Seventeenth Century and Its After-
ing on “Jane Austen, Jane Fairfax, lives” held at Duke University; at a
and Jane Eyre.” She organized, with conference on “The Language of
Shef Rogers, Paul Tankard, and Tom Images” held at Central Connecticut
McLean, the 13th David Nichol State University; and at Yale Uni-
Smith Seminar in Eighteenth-Cen- versity’s “Transitions to Modernity”
tury Studies, held at the University colloquium.
of Otago, 13-17 April, 2007. The Mary K. Lindberg (Art and
seminar attracted speakers from all Literature, Independent Scholar) has
round the world. Peter Knox-Shaw, published “Goya's Portrait of Ferrer”
Felicity Nussbaum, Ruth Perry and in the Beloit Poetry Journal, 57:1 (Fall,
David Porter delivered the plenary 2006). Her poetry chapbook entitled
addresses. The Tang of Glue was published in
Jeffrey High (German, Califor- 2006 by Puddinghouse.
nia State University at Long Beach) Amber Ludwig, (Ph.D. candi-
has recently published the articles date, Boston University) is at work
”Friedrich Schiller, The Author of on her dissertation entitled “’She is
Literary Prose,” in the volume all Nature and yet all Art’: Portraits
Friedrich Schiller: Playwright, Poet, of Emma Hamilton.”
NEASECS Newsletter 72 - 6 - July, 2007
Mira Morgenstern (Political Ballads.” She has also published an
Science, CUNY) will present a paper essay “Kinship in Clarissa,” in
this summer at the ISECS meeting in Approaches to Teaching the Novels of
Montpelier on a about Rousseau's Samuel Richardson (MLA, 2006).
Lévite d'Ephraïm. Professor Morgen- Adam Potkay (English, College
stern will also be speaking on Rou- of William and Mary) will have two
sseau's paradoxes at the meeting of new books published this fall: The
the American Political Science Story of Joy from the Bible to Late Ro-
Association in Chicago in August, as manticism (Cambridge University
well as at the NEASECS meeting at Press) and a new edition of Henry
Dartmouth this fall. At the 2008 Fielding’s Joseph Andrews (Long-
ASECS in Portland, she will chair a man).
panel on “Reading the Bible in the Kirby Don Richards (German,
18th century.” Independent Scholar) published his
Sean D. Moore (English, Univer- new translation of a work by Johan-
sity of New Hampshire) has an nes Kelpius, A Method of Prayer. A
essay, “Devouring Posterity,” forth- Mystical Pamphlet from Colonial
coming in the next issue of PMLA America (Schuylkill Wordsmiths,
and is working on an essay for the 2006). Meanwhile, he has a received
forthcoming Oxford University Press a one-month fellowship through the
collection The Postcolonial Enlight- German Historical Institute and the
enment. German Society of Pennsylvania to
John C. O’Neal, (French, Hamil- broaden his studies of this topic. Dr.
ton College, and First Vice President Richards will conduct research at the
of NEASECS) was recently promoted German Society's Horner Library
from the rank of chevalier to officier in and other area libraries on German
the Ordre des Palmes Académiques. mysticism in colonial Pennsylvania.
This order, which dates from 1808, in Wendy Wassyng Roworth (Art
the Napoleonic era, recognizes con- and Art History, University of
tributions in the arts and sciences. Rhode Island) has published "Angel-
Professor O’Neal was commended ica in Love: Gossip, Rumor, Ro-
for his “services rendered to French mance, and Scandal," (Angelica in
culture.” Love: Klatsch, Gerüchte, Liebe und
At the David Nichol Smith sym- Skandal) in the catalog for the exhib-
posium at Otago University, New ition Angelica Kauffman: ein Weib von
Zealand in April, 2007, Ruth Perry ungeheurem Talent at the Vorarlber-
(English, M.I.T.) presented a plenary ger Landesmuseum in Bregenz,
lecture on eighteenth-century Scot- Austria (June 14 – November 5,
tish song culture. She has edited a 2007). The catalogue is published in
special double edition of The Eight- both German and English editions,
eenth Century: Theory and Interpreta- Angelica Kauffman: A Woman of
tion (47:2-3) devoted to this topic and Immense Talent (Hatje Cantz, 2007).
containing an essay by Professor Deborah Ross (English, Hawaii
Perry: “Brother Trouble: Murder Pacific University) is the author of
and Incest in Eighteenth-Century “The Haunted Piano,” a work of
NEASECS Newsletter 72 - 7 - July, 2007
creative nonfiction, forthcoming in Randolph Trumbach (History,
the Connecticut Review. CUNY) has published “Blackmail for
Nancy Lusignan Schultz Sodomy in 18th-Century London” in
(English, Salem State College) has Historical Reflections/ Réflexions
been elected Chairperson of the Historiques, 33.1 (2007); and two
Salem State College (Massachusetts) articles, “Renaissance Sodomy, 1500-
English Department. Her three-year 1700,” and “Modern Sodomy: The
term begins July 1, 2007. Origins of Homosexuality, 1700-
Eric Seeman (History, SUNY at 1800,” in A Gay History of Britain:
Buffalo) has published, with Jorge Love and Sex Between Men Since the
Cañizares-Esguerra, The Atlantic in Middle Ages (Greenwood World
Global History, 1500-2000 (Prentice- Publishing, 2007.
Hall, 2007). Gina Walker (Social Sciences,
A Literary History of Women's The New School) reports that her
Writing in Britain, 1660-1789, by book Mary Hays (1759-1843): The
Susan Staves (English, Brandeis) has Growth of a Woman's Mind, was
been published by Cambridge Uni- published by Ashgate in late 2006.
versity Press (2006). With support Rational Passions: Women and Schol-
from the Mellon Foundation, Profes- arship in Britain 1702-1870, A Reader,
sor Staves has begun work on a new that Professor Walker is co-editing
book on the rhetoric and theory of with Felicia Gordon, will be publish-
rights in the seventeenth- and ed by Broadview Press in early 2008.
eighteenth-century British empire. Lisa Zunshine (English, Univer-
Zabelle Stodola (English Uni- sity of Kentucky) has been awarded
versity of Arkansas at Little Rock), one of only four new Guggenheim
who publishes as Kathryn Zabelle Fellowships in literary criticism. She
Derounian-Stodola, has a book forth- will spend a year as a visiting schol-
coming from the University of Neb- ar at Yale University working with
raska Press titled The War In Words: psychologist Paul Bloom. Professor
Reading the Dakota Conflict Through Zunshine will do research on the
the Captivity Literature. application to fiction of the theory of
Jennifer Thorn (English, Colby mind, a concept in cognitive psycho-
College) is the author of 'All beauti- logy. She explored this topic in her
ful in woe: gender, nation, and Phil- recent book, Why We Read Fiction:
lis Wheatley's 'Niobe,'" forthcoming Theory of Mind and the Novel (Ohio
in Studies in Eighteenth-Century Cul- State University Press, 2006).
ture; and of "Beyond Representation: Professor Zunshine's next book is
Two Stages of Teaching the Transat- Fictions of Transparency: Cognitive
lantic Eighteenth Century," forth- Science and Literary Interpretations.
coming in Teaching the Transatlantic,
a collection to be published by Cam-
bridge Scholars Press. Professor
Thorn’s current project is a book-
length study entitled Phyllis Wheat-
ley, Gender, and Grief.
NEASECS Newsletter 72 - 8 - July, 2007
2005-2006 Treasurer's Report
The following report was submitted by Nancy E. Johnson, Secretary-
Treasurer of the Society, and was accepted at the Business Meeting in Salem,
Massachusetts, November 11, 2006.
NORTHEAST AMERICAN SOCIETY
FOR EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY STUDIES
ANNUAL FINANCIAL STATEMENT
(September 1, 2006)
Rondout Savings Bank, 330 Broadway, Kingston, NY 12401
Checking Account # 0601 13219 9
CD Account # 0102217579
Beginning Balance of Total Funds $25,151.91
Beginning Balance, Checking Acct. $15,021.57
Income:
Dues Received (to Sept. 1, 2006) $ 2,175.00
Interest (to Sept. 1, 2006) 30.46
Conference Surplus 4,467.70
(New Brunswick, 2005)
Sub-total $ 6,673.16
Expenses:
Edna Steeves Prize (2005) $ 300.00
John O’Neill Bursaries (2005) (6) 1,500.00
Check Order (Commerce Bank) 14.25
Photocopying 3.75
Website (Design, Maint. & Reg.) 719.80
Check Order (Rondout Savings) 22.35
Deposit Slips (Rondout Savings) 6.75
Postage 10.28
Loan (seed money) for 2006 conf. 2,000.00
Newsletter Printing and Postage 69.08
Bank fee 15.00
Sub-total $ 4,661.26
NET TOTAL $17,033.47
CLOSING BALANCE
(Checking Acct.) $17,033.47
NEASECS Newsletter 72 - 9 - July, 2007
Beginning Balance, CD Acct. $10,130.34
Income:
Interest at Maturity $ 96.66
CLOSING CD BALANCE $10,227.00
TOTAL NEASECS FUNDS ON ACCOUNT $27,260.47
Respectfully submitted,
Nancy E. Johnson
Secretary-Treasurer
NEASECS
Minutes of the NEASECS Business Meeting
November 11, 2006
Hawthorne Hotel
Salem State College, Salem, Massachusetts
President Edward Larkin called the NEASECS Business Meeting to order at 12:45 p.m.
1. President Larkin spoke about the strength of NEASECS—how it fosters
collaborative work, camaraderie, and friendships—and asked us all to continue
our commitment to this organization.
2. The minutes from the October 1, 2005 meeting were approved.
3. President Larkin expressed his appreciation to Christopher Fauske, Elizabeth
Blood, and their team, for their excellent work organizing the conference at
Salem State.
4. President Larkin presented the new slate of officers and the new Executive Board
members:
Anna Battigelli (English, SUNY at Plattsburg), President
John O’Neal (French, Hamilton College), First Vice-President
John T. Scanlan, (English, Providence College), Second Vice-President
Julie Hayes (French, University of Massachusetts), Board Member
Erik Seeman (History, SUNY at Buffalo), Board Member
Catherine Gallouet (French, Hobart & William Smith), Board Member
All of the new officers and board members were approved.
5. Secretary-Treasurer Nancy Johnson presented the Treasurer’s Report. President
Larkin thanked the conference organizers from New Brunswick (2005) for their
conference surplus. The report was approved.
NEASECS Newsletter 72 - 10 - July, 2007
6. John Scanlan presented the Edna Steeves Prize to Emily King of Tufts University.
Speaking for the committee, John complimented Ms. King on her skillful control
of secondary material, her sensitivity to the context of Richardson’s religious
sympathies, and, finally, her graceful writing. John also noted the high quality of
the papers they reviewed for the prize.
7. John O’Neill presented the O’Neill Bursaries (in the amount of $250) to the
following students:
Jennifer Moore, University of Limerick
Jessica Crabill, University of Rochester
Aya Tanaka, Rutgers University
Jessica Lanier, Bard Graduate Center
Elizabeth Kimball, Temple University
8. President Larkin announced the sites of future NEASECS meetings.
2007: The meeting for 2007 will be held at Dartmouth College, Oct. 25-28. In
acknowledgement of the 200-year anniversary of the abolition of the slave trade,
the theme is “Transatlantic Destinies: Connections and Disconnections Across
the Atlantic Seaboard in the Eighteenth Century.” The plenary speaker will be
Madge Dresser, from the School of History, University of the West of England,
Bristol. The call for papers is already circulating. The website is
www.dartmouth.edu/~neasecs07/.
2008: The meeting for 2008 will be held in Geneva, NY, Oct. 30 – Nov. 2,
sponsored by Hobart and Smith Colleges.
2009: The meeting for 2009 will be a joint venture with CSECS (Canadian
Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies), hosted by Frans de Bruyn of the
University of Ottawa.
9. Heather Macpherson reminded everyone about the upcoming ASECS
conference, March 22-25, 2006, in Atlanta, GA.
10. Anna Battigelli, the new President, thanked Edward Larkin, now Past-President,
for his devoted service to NEASECS.
The meeting adjourned at 1:40 p.m.
Respectfully submitted,
Nancy E. Johnson
Secretary-Treasurer
NEASECS Newsletter 72 - 11 - July, 2007
Officers of the Society for 2007
President Past President
Anna Battigelli Edward T. Larkin
SUNY at Plattsburg University of New Hampshire
(English) (German)
First Vice President Second Vice President
John C. O’Neal J. T. Scanlon
Hamilton College Providence College
(French) (English)
Editor of Newsletter (elected 1989) Secretary-Treasurer (elected 2005)
John H. O'Neill Nancy E. Johnson
Hamilton College SUNY at New Paltz
(English) (English)
2007 Program Committee Chair
Peter Cosgrove
Dartmouth College
(English)
Elected Members of Executive Board: Elected Term Expires
Elizabeth Elbourne 2004 2007
McGill University (History)
Cassandra Albinson 2004 2007
Yale Center for British Art (Art History)
Katherine Quinsey 2004 (2nd term) 2007
University of Windsor (English)
Arnd Bohm 2005 2008
Carleton University (German)
Dennis Mahoney 2005 2008
University of Vermont (German)
Michael Suarez, S.J. 2005 2008
Fordham University (English)
Julie Hayes 2006 2009
University of Massachusetts (French)
Erik Seeman 2006 2009
SUNY at Buffalo (History)
Catherine Gallouet 2006 2009
Hobart & William Smith Colleges (French)
MEMBERSHIP DUES
The Society began its fiscal year 2006-2007 on September 1, 2006. Many members have paid 2006-07
dues with their registration for the 2007 Annual Meeting. If you have not already paid 2006-2007
dues, please send a check for $15 (all dues in U.S. funds, please) to Nancy E. Johnson, NEASECS
Secretary-Treasurer, SUNY New Paltz, 75 S. Manheim Blvd., New Paltz, NY 12561.
Name ________________________________________________________________________________
Discipline ______________________________Affiliation _____________________________________
E-Mail Address ____________________________________ Postal Address (note if change of address):
______________________________________________________________________________________
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NEWS OF MEMBERS
(Queries and notes also welcome)
Name ________________________________________________________________________________
Discipline and Affiliation _______________________________________________________________
Recently published books, articles, etc. (please include bibliographic information)
_____________________________________________________________________________________
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Return to John H. O'Neill, Department of English, Hamilton College, 198 College Hill Road, Clinton,
New York 13323-1292. Or reply by E-Mail to joneill@hamilton.edu
N.E.A.S.E.C.S NEWSLETTER
John H. O’Neill, Editor
Department of Englih
Hamilton College
198 College Hill Road
Clinton, NY 13323-1292