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June 2004, Week 4

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Subject:
From:
Debra White-Stanley <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Film and TV Studies Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 21 Jun 2004 15:36:36 -0700
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Representations of nursing and military medicine

The Film & History League, with the Literature/Film Association, will be holding
its conference on "War in Film, Television, and History," November 11-14, 2004,
near Dallas, TX. Full details on the location, registration procedures, and
additional area topics can be found on the web site
www.filmandhistory.org.

The conference features a number of accomplished speakers, including:
? Jeanine Basinger, Professor and Chair of the Film Studies Program at
Wesleyan University in Connecticut, is the author of numerous articles and
eight books on film, including The World War II Combat Film: Anatomy of a
Genre, which has been adopted in genre study courses around the country,
Anthony Mann: A Critical Study, and A Woman's View: How Hollywood Spoke to
Women 1930-1960.
? Lawrence Suid, a Maryland-based military historian and author of Guts and
Glory: The Making of the American Military Image in Film (Revised; UP of
Kentucky, 2002).
? Former U.S. Air Force sergeant Adrian Cronauer, who co-authored the original
story for the Robin Williams/ Barry Levinson film Good Morning, Vietnam (1987).
 Mr. Cronauer currently serves as Assistant to the Director of the Pentagon?s
POW/MIA Office, and has made guest appearances on media outlets ranging from
Hennity & Colmes on the Fox News Channel, to Politically Incorrect with Bill
Maher.
? Frank Thompson, author of over thirty books and numerous articles and
scripts, is a nationally-recognized expert on the Alamo. Recently, he acted in
and served as consultant for the Touchstone production The Alamo (April, 2004).
 His rich and varied lifetime?s work in media production has included
documentary film, television shows, newspaper writing and other accomplishments
discussed in his biographical portrait on the web site.

Call For Papers
Area CFP: Representations of nursing and military medicine
The Nursing and Military Medicine Area for the 2004 Film and History Conference
invites paper and panel proposals that examine representations of nursing and
military medicine in war novels, films, journalism, propaganda, posters, and
other modes of representation. Medical personnel witness the pain of war, and
narrate a history of pain that has historically been censored and,
alternatively, reshaped as propaganda. Representations of the figure of the
nurse construct a persuasive discourse that engages nationalism, race, gender
and sexuality, modernity and aesthetics. Papers can focus on literary,
cinematic, artistic, and/or propagandistic modes of representing nursing and/or
military medicine from any military conflict, using diverse approaches such as
textual/visual analysis, cultural criticism, aesthetics, and theory.

Films and texts that may be considered could include any of the following
(however, we encourage proposals about the many other films, television
programs, journalism, and multimedia products, and/or texts not on this list):

Texts:
? A Farewell to Arms (Hemingway, 1932)
? A Journal of Impressions in Belgium (May Sinclair, 1915),
? Testament of Youth (Vera Brittain, 1933)
? The Forbidden Zone (Mary Borden, 1929)
? The Backwash of War (Ellen La Motte)
? NOT SO QUIET Y Stepdaughters of War. (Helen Zenna Smith)
? Adolescent and adult romance fiction
? Home Before Morning: The Story of an Army Nurse in Vietnam (Lynda Van
Devanter with Christopher Morgan, 1983).
? (American) Daughter Gone to War: The True Story of a Young Nurse in Vietnam
(Winnie Smith, 1992).
? The English Patient (Michael Ondaatje, 1992)
? ?Pale Horse, Pale Rider? (Katherine Ann Porter)
? Journalism and other media texts representing nursing figures like Florence
Nightingale, Clara Barton, and Edith Cavell.

Films:
? Pearl Harbor (Bay, 2001)
? Since You Went Away (Cromwell, 1944)
? The Best Years of Our Lives (Wyler, 1946).
? Gone With the Wind (Fleming, 1939)
? M*A*S*H (Altman, 1970)
? Arch of Triumph (Erich Maria Remarque, 1945)
? Lifeboat (Hitchcock, 1944)
? So Proudly We Hail (Sandrich, 1943)
? Cry Havoc (Thorpe, 1943)
? Nurse Edith Cavell (Wilcox, 1939)

Send any inquiries or proposals by the July 30, 2004 deadline (earlier if
possible) to Debra White-Stanley at [log in to unmask]

Chair for the nursing and military medicine area:
Debra White-Stanley
Department of English
University of Arizona
Tucson AZ 85701
[log in to unmask]

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