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FRIDAY, May 31
from 9:00 REGISTRATION (corridor of the Institute of English and American Studies, 1st floor,
Main Building)
10:00-10:30 OPENING CEREMONY (venue: Lecture Hall X)
Welcome addresses by:
Emma Nagy, Cultural Attaché, US Embassy, Budapest
Tibor Glant, President of HAAS
Péter Csató, Chair of the North American Department, IEAS, UD
10:30-11:30 PLENARY 1 by Dr. Leah Perry (SUNY-Empire State College): “They are
Bringing Drugs, Crime, and Rape”: The Cultural Politics of U.S. Immigration and
Renegotiating American Identities in Hungary
Venue: Lecture Hall X
Chair: Dorottya Mózes (University of Debrecen)
11:30-12:00 Coffee break (Room 119)
12:00-13:30 SESSION 1
SESSION 1 Room 109
Pál Rosti and
Photos of the
Americas
Chair:
Balázs Venkovits
Room 121
Identity
Construction and
Narratology
Chair:
Katalin G. Kállay
Studio 111
Renegotiating
Narratives
Chair:
Judit Szathmári
Lecture Hall X
Early Republic
Chair:
Máté Gergely Balogh
12:00
Balázs Venkovits:
Travel Writing and
Photography: Pál
Rosti in the Americas
László B. Sári: Jew
as Joy: The
Construction of
Jewish Identity in
Jonathan Safran
Foer’s Everything Is
Illuminated
Orsolya Putz:
Identity Construction
in American
Presidential Speeches
Megan King:
Regenerate Souls’:
The Origins of
Patriot
Fundamentalism in
Colonial Boston
12:30
Éva Fisli: “The Rosti
Album”: A Problem
and Opportunity
Péter Csató:
Autobiograpy,
Confession, and
Metalepsis in Paul
Auster’s Invisible
Olga Thierbach-
McLean:
Reinventing
American
Individualism:
Traditional Notions
of Self-Reliance in a
Global Reality
Csaba Lévai: Two
Virginian Founding
Fathers and Two Last
Wills: The Problem
of Slavery and the
Testaments of
George Washington
and Thomas
Jefferson
13:00
Zsófia Bán: The
Photo Album as
Discursive Object:
Apropos Pál Rosti’s
Imola Bülgözdi:
Surviving the
Biopolitics of
Disposability in the
American South:
Scott Manning
Stevens:
“Confronting the
American Master
Narrative: Native
Zoltán Vajda:
Thomas Jefferson on
Native Americans as
Indigents
Five Photographic
Albums
Alternative
Narratives in Jesmyn
Ward’s Novels
American Histories
of Place”
13:30-14:15 Luncheon and launch of the spring 2019 issue of the Hungarian Journal of
English and American Studies (Room 119 and IEAS corridor)
14:15-14:30 Book Presentation (venue: Lecture Hall X)
14:30-15:15 ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION: American Studies in the US and Hungary
Venue: Lecture Hall X
Chair: Enikő Bollobás (Eötvös Loránd University);
Participants: Leah Perry (SUNY-Empire State College), Tibor Frank (Eötvös
Loránd University), Scott Manning Stevens (Syracuse University)
15:30-17:00 SESSION 2
SESSION 2 Room 109
Black Ecology
Respondent:
Jim Casey
Room 121
Arts and Identity
Chair:
Lenke Németh
Studio 111
Race and Gender in
Film
Chair:
Imola Bülgözdi
Lecture Hall X
Legacies of Power
Chair:
Balázs Venkovits
15:30
Dorottya Mózes: The
Heat’s on:
Racializing
Assemblages,
Vernacular Noise
and Breath-work in
Chester Himes’
Hardboiled
Detective Series
Vanessa Vollmann:
“Hamilton:” Hip
Hop Dancing Non-
White Founding
Fathers Now Make
Sense. What of the
Founding Mothers?
Fatma Chenini: The
Quest for Identity:
Representations of
African-American
Male Characters in
Early Twentieth-
Century Films
Dániel Cseh:
Constructing the
Image of the Enemy
Alien:
The Portrayal of
Japanese People in
Political Cartoons
16:00
Mark Harris:
Caribbean DIY
Sonic and Linguistic
Resistances
Katalin G. Kállay:
What Is Lost? A
Comparative
Reading of Carson
McCullers’
”Wunderkind” and
Géza Ottlik’s
”Nothing Is Lost”
Lívia Szélpál:The
Controversy behind
the Green Book:
Image versus Reality
Máté Gergely
Balogh: Changes in
American Society in
the 1960s Through
the Eyes of the
Hungarian State
Security
16:30
Péter Gaál-Szabó:
Nature in Black and
White in James H.
Cone’s Theology
Enikő Maior: Art
and Jewish
Orthodoxy in the
Works of Chaim
Potok
Holly Lynn
Baumgartner and
Susan Duran: One is
the Loneliest: Male
Silence, Isolation,
and Rage in Cinema
at the Turn of the
Millennium
Rasha Awale:
Counterculture and
Communism/
Socialism Then and
Now: The
Neoconservative
Take on the New
Left Revisited
17:00-17:30 Coffee break (Room 119)
17:30-18:30 HAAS Presidential Address and HAAS General Assembly (venue: Lecture Hall X)
19:30 CONFERENCE RECEPTION (venue: 3rd floor, Main Building)
SATURDAY, June 1
from 9:00 REGISTRATION (corridor of the Institute of English and American Studies, UD, 1st
floor, Main Building)
9:00-11:00 SESSION 3
SESSION 3 Room 109
Diasporic and
Ethnic Writing
Chair:
Andrea Szabó F.
Room 121
The Fantastic
Chair:
László B. Sári
Studio 111
Black
Women’s
Experiences
of Trauma
Respondent:
Dorottya
Mózes
Lecture Hall II
Migration,
Identity and
Politics
Chair:
Gabriella T.
Espák
Lecture Hall X
21st-Century
Challenges
Chair:
Zoltán Vajda
9:00
Agustín Cadena:
The Work of
C.M. Mayo:
Building
Bridges, Not
Walls
Ildikó Limpár:
Monstrosity and
Identity in Jon
Skovron’s
Frankenstein-
Themed Man
Made Boy
Zsuzsanna
Lénárt-
Muszka:
“From our own
lips”:
Narrative
Authority
and/as Healing
in Sherley
Anne
Williams’s
Dessa Rose
Mónika Fodor:
Ethnic
Subjectivity
Construction
in Post-
memory
Narratives of
Late
Generation
European
Americans
Irén Annus: Anger
to the nth Degree
9:30
Judit Molnár:
The Deixis of
˝here˝ and
˝there˝ in
Rohinton
Mistry’s Early
Fiction
Hajighasemi
Mahdokht:
American
Society in
Popular
Imagination:
Frank Baum’s
Fairy Tales
Yasmina
Khedhir:
“Bodies can
tell stories”:
Remembering
Katrina in
Jesmyn
Ward’s
Salvage the
Bones
Katalin Pintz:
Choosing
Between Two
Homelands:
The Ethnic
Return
Migration of
Second and
Later
Generation
Hungarian
Americans
from New
Jersey
Júlia Fodor: The
Story of Jane Roe
from Roe v. Wade
and the
Appointment of
Justice Kavanaugh
to the Supreme
Court
10:00
Anett Schäffer:
The Emigrant’s
Home: Space
and Identity in
Chimamanda
Magdalena
Wąsowicz :
Imagining
Trauma: Nazism
and American
Babett
Rubóczki:
Ruptured
Bodies and
Narrative Re-
Membering:
Orsolya
Kolozsvári:
Social Class
and
Stigmatization
in Appalachian
Éva Eszter Szabó:
The United States–
Canada Border and
the Changing
Security Landscape
Ngozi Adichie’s
Americanah
Alternate
History Novel
Edwidge
Danticat’s The
Farming of
Bones and
“Nineteen
Thirty-Seven”
Identities:
Sociological
and Literary
Perspectives
10:30
Rashideh
Badran:
Conflicts in the
Construction of
Diasporic
Female
Identities:
Mohja Kahf’s
The Girl in the
Tangerine Scarf
as a Case Study
11:00-11:30 Coffee break (Room 119)
11:30-12:30 PLENARY 2 by Dr. Jim Casey (Arcadia University): Fantastic Identities: Selves and
Others in Speculative Fiction
Venue: Lecture Hall X
Chair: Donald E. Morse (University of Debrecen)
12:30-13:30 Lunch Break (meal not provided) /Optional HAAS Presidential Lunch for PhD
students
Nearby restaurants: Villa Krúdy Restaurant (Medgyessy stny), Régi Vigadó (Pallagi út 2.),
Pálma Pub (Simonyi út 44.), Roy Café (Poroszlay u. 55.), PepePanini Sandwich Bar and Café
(Egyetem tér 1.), Both-Dega Büfé (Nagyerdei krt. 96.)
13:30-15:00 SESSION 4
SESSION 4 Room 109
Hungary and the
Anglo-American
World
Chair:
Csaba Lévai
Room 121
Exploring
Identities through
Popular Culture
Chair:
Péter Csató
Studio 111
Literary
Representation
and Visual Arts
Chair:
Judit Molnár
Lecture Hall X
Language and
Identity
Chair:
Sándor Czeglédi
13:30
Tibor Glant:
Supporting the
Vanquished: The
U.S. and Hungary
in the Second Half
of 1919
Eszter Susan
Csorba:
Disappearing in the
Mainstream: from
Italian Americans
to American
Italians
Katinka Krausz:
Assumed Identities:
Photography as a
Means of Control in
Margaret Atwood's
Sándor Czeglédi:
Renegotiating
Identity Politics—
Towards “Trump
2020”?
14:00
Ágnes Beretzky:
President Wilson
and the Founders of
The New Europe-
Weekly: Allied
Warriors of
National Self-
Determination?
Andrea Szabó F.:
You Are What You
Eat: Foodscapes
and Female Gothic
Romances
Pál Hegyi: Multiple
Framing in the
Making-of The
Man Who Killed
Don Quixote
Éva Forintos: The
Communication
Spaces of Identity
in the USA and
Canada
14:30
Zoltán Peterecz:
Royall Tyler and
Hungary in the
Interwar Years
Brigitta Hudácskó:
Crime and
Detection in
Netflix’s American
Vandal
Donald E. Morse:
Mr. Otis, America's
Foremost Primitive
Moderne Painter
Zoltán Dragon and
Dávid Levente
Palatinus: This Is
Not A.I.
Technology in the
Age of Artificial
Intelligence and
Post-Photography
15:00-15:30 Coffee break (Room 119)
15:30-17:00 SESSION 5
SESSION 5 Room 109
Investigating the “Us vs
Them” Binary
Chair:
Péter Gaál-Szabó
Room 121
Queering Affect,
Identity and Narrative
Respondent:
Leah Perry
Lecture Hall X
Real and Imagined
Borders
Chair:
Tibor Glant
15:30
Ágnes Bodnár: The
Transformative Power of
Self-Narration
Performed Self and
Narrated Self in An
Affecting Narrative of the
Captivity and Sufferings
of Mrs. Mary Smith
(1818)
Malou Kürpick: Sharing
is Caring: Queerness,
Intersubjectivity and
(Trans)Nationalism in
Sense8
Mónika Szente-Varga:
Legends and Identity. The
Case of Justo Armas
16:00
András Tarnóc: ”The real
war was about to begin:”
The Prisoner of War
Narrative as a Building
Block of the American
Myth of Origination
Bianka Szendrei:
Revolution of Love:
Deconstructing Identity
Barriers in Janelle
Monáe’s Dirty Computer
Borbála Bökös: On
Debrecen and Nagyvárad:
Border Cities in 19th
Century Anglo-American
Travel Writing
16:30
Neena Gandhi: Power
and Identity in Melville:
A Study of Typee, Omoo
and Moby Dick
Noémi Vona: Towards a
Broader Framework:
Recognizing Womxn-to-
Womxn Sexual Violence
Ibolya Csengel-Plank: A
Comparison of Hungarian
and American Civil
Airport Architecture in
the 1920s and 30s: A
Case Study of Budaörs
17:00 Farewell, closing of the conference (venue: Lecture Hall X)
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