56
THE OSCHOLARS NEVER TALK DISRESPECTFULLY : THE SOCIETY PAGES _____ _____ HERO SOCIETIES MAY 2015 These pages were once reproduced in full inside each issue of THE OSCHOLARS, but the development of our website made this unnecessary, and to some extent undesirable. They then featured as a free standing section, regularly updated, with the addition of new Societies from time to time. In August 2010 we divided the page into two, one for hero societies, the other for subject societies. These were published in alternate months, until publication was suspended in 2011 with the departure of our webmaster. Publication is now resumed and new societies will be added regularly until the supply runs out. To come: Kipling, Edith Nesbit, Ruskin, Shaw, Jean Lorrain. The Societies’ websites can be reached by clicking their colophons or banners. Further research may be undertaken on our page devoted to SHRINES . TABLE OF CONTENTS Click to see the entry; then on the Society’s colophon or banner to reach its

THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

THE OSCHOLARSNEVER TALK DISRESPECTFULLY : THE SOCIETY PAGES

_____ _____

HERO SOCIETIESMAY 2015

These pages were once reproduced in full inside each issue of THE OSCHOLARS, but the development of our website made this unnecessary, and to some extent undesirable. They then featured as a free standing section, regularly updated, with the addition of new Societies from time to time. In August 2010 we divided the page into two, one for hero societies, the other for subject societies. These were published in alternate months, until publication was suspended in 2011 with the departure of our webmaster. Publication is now resumed and new societies will be added regularly until the supply runs out.

To come: Kipling, Edith Nesbit, Ruskin, Shaw, Jean Lorrain.

The Societies’ websites can be reached by clicking their colophons or banners.

Further research may be undertaken on our page devoted to SHRINES.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Click to see the entry; then on the Society’s colophon or banner to reach its website.

LITERARY SOCIETIES

Page 2: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Société des Amis de J.M. Barrie The Arthur Machen Society

The Arnold Bennett Society The George MacDonald Society

The E.F. Benson Society The Katherine Mansfield Society

The Friends of Borges The Octave Mirbeau Society

The Edward Carpenter Forum The William Morris Society

The Lewis Carroll Society The William Morris Society of Canada

The [G.K.] Chesterton Society

The William Morris Society of the U.S.A

G.K. Chesterton Society of Ireland The Arthur Morrison Society

The Kate Chopin International Society The Friedrich Nietzsche Society

The Joseph Conrad Society (UK)

The North American Nietzsche Society

The Louis Couperus Society

International Walter Pater Society

The Stephen Crane Society

The Society for Pirandello Studies

The Michael Field Society Les Amis de Marcel Proust

The Ford Madox Ford Society

Marcel Proust Vereniging / Association Néerlandaise

Page 3: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Marcel Proust

The Kenneth Grahame Society The Proust Society of America

The Rider Haggard Society

The Robert Louis Stevenson Club & Society

The Thomas Hardy Association

The Robert Louis Stevenson Society

The Thomas Hardy Society The H.G. Wells Society

The Heron-Allen Society The Edith Wharton Society

The A.E. Housman Society The Oscar Wilde Society

The J.-K. Huysmans Society The Yeats Society

The Henry James Society The Charlotte Mary Yonge Fellowship

The Jerome K. Jerome Society The Emile Zola Society

The Jack London Society The Équipe Zola

The Alliance of Literary Societies

The American Literary Association

THEATRE SOCIETIESThe Ibsen Society of America The Irving Society

Page 4: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

The Strindberg Society The American Society for Theatre Research

The Irish Society for Theatre Research

The Society for Theatre Research

1. SOCIETE DES AMIS DE J.M. BARRIECe site a été créé en vue de promouvoir et d’informer de l’existence de la première Société française qui rassemble les lecteurs de James Matthew Barrie, auteur Scots - père entre autres de Peter Pan -, trop méconnu en France. Cette nouvelle “maison” barrienne est mitoyenne de celle-ci (notre site internet, fondé en 2006 et toujours en construction, sans oublier le forum français qui lui est attenant).

The website of this Society has not greatly developed since we last reported in November 2010, and has not been updated since January 2011. The Society is the creation of Mme Céline-Albin Faivre.

Return to Table of Contents

2. THE ARNOLD BENNETT SOCIETYThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on Trent, the ‘Five Towns’ of Bennett. The Society's aim is to promote the study and appreciation of the life, works and times, not only of Arnold Bennett himself, but also of other provincial writers, with particular relationship to North Staffordshire.

Page 5: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Return to Table of Contents

3. THE E.F. BENSON SOCIETYThe aims of the E. F. Benson Society are :-‘The furtherance of the knowledge and appreciation of the Benson Family and in particular E. F. Benson, and to provide an opportunity for Benson enthusiasts to meet.’ To this end the Secretary in conjunction with the Executive Committee organises at least one literary event annually to bring members together for a talk on some aspect of E. F. Benson's life and work. We have an annual meeting in Rye (E F Benson's Tilling) each July and also aim to organise outings to other places of Benson interest and from time to time events which relate to other members of the Benson Family.

The Society was formed in 1984 events have included visits to Wellington College, Marlborough College, Cambridge University, Tremens (2001). The Society has also mounted exhibitions on the life and works of E. F. Benson. In 1990, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of E. F. Benson's death, the Society held a reception at Lambeth Palace followed by a Memorial service at the Church of St Mary the Virgin at Rye. The Society also produces its Journal ‘The DODO’ each year as well as a variety of other publications.

Page 6: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Return to Table of Contents

THE FRIENDS OF JORGE LUIS BORGES WORLDWIDE SOCIETY

Borges, not a man of the nineteenth century, earns his place on this page because of his devotion to Oscar Wilde. In Paris, he used to stay at L’Hôtel, and the plaque commemorating Oscar Wilde on the façade is matched by one commemorating Borges. According to its website the Society was born on 24th August 2000 out of a longstanding aspiration of a grateful reader: to reunite all readers who acknowledge an intellectual affiliation with the works Jorge Luis Borges and may desire to share with others the civilizing gifts of Poetry, Philosophy and the Arts. The website has been updated recently.

‘With this declaration of principle in mind, our programs want to encourage the study of Borges, to stimulating thus the personal education of each reader, developing the intellectual faculties and creative talents. In that way, we would like to support the acquisition of Socratic virtues, which Borges held as ethical ideal, in order to educate citizens as responsible actors of their everyday action in the world.

‘We aim in particular to support younger generations because among their possibilities is to build a better future for mankind.’

The Society issues an e-newsletter in Spanish, English and French, and this can be reached via their website, which has been completely overhauled since we last looked in 2010. Click the Borges Labyrinth logo.

4.Return to Table of Contents

Page 7: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

5. THE EDWARD CARPENTER FORUMNot exactly a Society, but an on-line association with free membership, set up in 2007. The Edward Carpenter Forum is dedicated to the exploration of the life, ideas, and work of the pioneering thinker, activist and visionary Edward Carpenter and his circle. It seeks to create connections and facilitate discussion among Edward Carpenter enthusiasts; increase public awareness and knowledge about Carpenter. The website (click the image) was completely updated in August 2010, and is being redesigned in May 2015.

Return to Table of Contents

6. THE LEWIS CARROLL SOCIETYThe Lewis Carroll Society was formed in 1969 with the aim of encouraging research into the life and works of Lewis Carroll (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson). The Society has members around the world, including many leading libraries and institutions, authors, researchers and many who simply enjoy Carroll's books and want to find out more about the man and his work. Why not join the LCS - for your own interest and entertainment or to make a contribution to Carroll scholarship? Our subscriptions are remarkably low for a society of this nature. Click here for Membership Details

We also have an e-mail list which enables us to keep you informed of interesting Carroll-related

Page 8: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

news and changes to our site. The list is primarily aimed at subscribing members of the Lewis Carroll Society as a supplementary means of receiving information to our regular printed publications. However, we welcome non-members to join the list.

2015 sees the 150th anniversary of one of the world's most loved books and celebrations are taking place in museums, theatres, libraries, schools, parks and numerous other venues in many countries.

The Lewis Carroll Society has an exciting programme of events running throughout the year. All are welcome to take part and details of our next meeting are given below ... click here for the full programme..

Return to Table of Contents

7. THE CHESTERTON SOCIETYThe Chesterton Society was founded in England in 1974, the centenary of the birth of Gilbert Keith Chesterton, to promote the understanding of his stature and continuing relevance.

Its website is part of that continuing effort; it is at present in a basic and minimal form, and they hope to develop it in the future

For the present, it gives details of how to join the society, of their most recent major event (a one-day conference on a little understood subject, ‘The Holiness of G.K. Chesterton’), and an introductory anthology of Chesterton’s works, which they hope will give some idea of the range and power of one of the great minds of the twentieth century.

The Chesterton Society must be distinguished from the Catholic G.K. Chesterton Society. The

Page 9: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

website of the latter proclaims that ‘The most important thing about the Catholic G.K. Chesterton Society is that it is not. It is not a society but merely a website to promote prayer to the said G.K. Chesterton’.

All the above from our November 2010 survey. To-day (May 2015) the website no longer exists, and we have not yet established whether the society is still in being.

Return to Table of Contents

8. G.K. CHESTERTON SOCIETY OF IRELANDCentral Catholic Library, 74 Merrion Square S Dublin

The G.K. Chesterton Society of Ireland was founded in 2010 and meet several times a year for Chesterton-themed discussions. For more information contact Maolsheachlann O Ceallaigh at [email protected] .

Return to Table of Contents

9. THE KATE CHOPIN INTERNATIONAL SOCIETYThe mission of The Kate Chopin International Society is to provide a network and forum for the study of American author Kate Chopin (1850-1904). The society encourages and supports scholarship and activities that illuminate Chopin’s contribution to the American literary tradition, and it seeks to preserve her literary significance for future generations. The Society was formed in 2004 by Heather Ostman and Avis Hewitt, both English professors at American universities, after the convention of the American Literature Association, an organization made up of scholarly societies devoted to the study of American authors. Most better-known American authors have a society of their own, and Heather and Avis thought Kate Chopin deserved a scholarly society focused on her work, even though the Kate Chopin Society of North America, with a different

Page 10: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

emphasis, already existed in St. Louis. Membership is free. The website is regularly expanded and updated and contains much useful information.

Return to Table of Contents

10.THE JOSEPH CONRAD SOCIETY (UK)The Society's mission is to offer scholars, advanced students, and persons interested in the work and life of Joseph Conrad (1857-1924) an opportunity to share in the study and appreciation of this writer of worldwide reputation.

Established in 1973, and a registered charity in the United Kingdom under the terms of the Charity Act of 1990, the Joseph Conrad Society (UK) provides a medium of communication for Conrad scholars throughout the world.

Through its activities the Society expands the possibilities for Conrad studies through an annual conference, support for scholarship, and The Conradian:

The very full website was is updated to 2015.

Return to Table of Contents

11.THE LOUIS COUPERUS SOCIETYThe Louis Couperus Genootschap is the biggest literary society in The Netherlands.

Page 11: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Couperus, who firmly believed in reincarnation, was convinced he had been an ancient Roman in a previous life. His best work in this respect, The Mountain of Light, on the rise and fall of the deified emperor Heliogabalus, became very popular in Germany. On the whole one can say that his psychological novels had more success in England and the USA, whereas his historical works were more appreciated by the German speaking public. Only a few of his books have been translated into French; a new English translation by Paul Vincent of Inevitable has recently been published by Pushkin Press. 320pp. ISBN 1 90128 559 6. £8.99.

The Society’s website is constantly extended. Click the banner to reach it.

Arabesken

The 44th issue of The Society’s journal, Arabesken, was published in November 2014. This can be reached by clicking the right hand picture below.

Return to Table of Contents

Page 12: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

12.THE STEPHEN CRANE SOCIETYFounded by the Crane scholar Paul Sorrentino in 1990, the Stephen Crane Society is devoted to research on and discussion about the author. The society grew out of a Crane conference sponsored by Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Virginia Tech) and held in Blacksburg in 1989. The society is officially associated with the American Literature Association (ALA) and holds its annual meeting, sponsors panels, and elects its officers at the ALA conference in late May/early June of each year. Its international membership includes specialists and non-specialists.

The society sponsors Stephen Crane Studies, a journal of notes, queries, hamberaphical material, and reviews. The journal is published semi-annually in the spring and fall; the most recent issue with its Table of Contents on line is Volume 18, Number 2 (Fall 2009). Since 1992 it has been published at by the Department of English, Virginia Tech. Manuscripts should follow the MLA Style Manual. Annual subscriptions are $10 for individuals and $20 for institutions; foreign subscriptions are $12 and $22. Checks should be made payable to the Stephen Crane Society.

Address all correspondence regarding subscriptions and manuscript submission to Paul Sorrentino, Editor, Stephen Crane Studies, Department of English, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061-0112. @

The Society’s admirably organised website, which contains much material devoted to Crane, can be reached by clicking the first banner. From there you will be directed to the Society’s second site, or go there directly by clicking the lower banner.

Page 13: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Return to Table of Contents

13.THE MICHAEL FIELD SOCIETYWe reported the foundation of this Society, concerned with a writer (that is to say, two writers) at the heart of our endeavour, and forming a connecting thread between Oscar Wilde and Vernon Lee. Once only the concern of a few specialists, ‘Michael Field’ studies have developed significantly in recent years.

At first, efforts were directed to founding an annual journal, The Michaelian, under the editorship of Sharon Bickle and Michelle Lee, and two issues were published on line. The Michaelian subsquently merged with The Latchkey, journal of New Woman Studies, and the Society has faded away.

Return to Table of Contents

14.THE FORD MADOX FORD SOCIETYThis international society was founded in 1997 to promote knowledge of and interest in Ford Madox Ford’s works and life. Ford, who disliked Wilde, is the link between Wilde and Violet Hunt.

The Society aims to organise at least two events each year, and to publish on-line one or two Newsletters. The latest downloadable Newsletter is (at 9th May 201() no. 26 (2014).

Page 14: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Return to Table of Contents

15.THE KENNETH GRAHAME SOCIETYFor those who detect something of Oscar Wilde in Mr Toad — as did Peter Parker in the TLS (26th June 2009 no 5543 p.11) and Isabel Quigley in the TLS (31st January 2014) — the Kenneth Grahame Society is for readers, literature students, potential sequel writers, illustrators and everyone else who appreciates the works of Kenneth Grahame. Membership is free and members from all over the world are welcome to join.

The aims of the Kenneth Grahame Society are:

– To encourage scholarly study and discussion of the works of Kenneth Grahame – To actively promote an expanded universe around The Wind in the Willows – To be a comprehensive and accurate resource (Body of Knowledge) on the life and works of Kenneth Grahame.

The society is primarily an online society and its website is supplemented by a Facebook.

If anyone has any relevant news, details of events, publications, and so forth, please email it at [email protected].

Return to Table of Contents

Page 15: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

16.THE RIDER HAGGARD SOCIETYThe Rider Haggard Society was formed in 1987 by a few fans of Rider Haggard's stories. The Society now contains members from Europe, United States, South Africa, Australia and Sri Lanka, and those from all walks of life, covering a wide age-span: the main qualification is a genuine interest in Haggard and his works.

Four times a year a Journal is issued which looks at a major title as well as including recent publications and items of news. See below for contents listing of past issues.

About every twelve or eighteen months a general meeting is held where members meet to buy and sell books, chat, listen to presentations or talks, which nearly always reveal something new about Rider Haggard and his works. In the evening a society dinner is held. Meetings have been predominantly in the Norfolk and Suffolk areas near Ditchingham, Kessingland and Bradenham.

17.Return to Table of Contents

18.THE THOMAS HARDY ASSOCIATIONThe Thomas Hardy Association was founded in 1997 to promote the study and appreciation of Hardy's work in every corner of the world. Both its organising principle and its membership reflect this global character. TTHA is governed by an international team of scholars. All are members of its Council of Honorary VPs and Board of Directors. Together they maintain a website with over two dozen different departments focusing on Hardy's life and work while also providing numerous

Page 16: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

links to Hardy-related websites on the internet.

The Association’s own website is very elaborate. but clicking the colophon now (çt May 2015)brings up a page that reads ‘The location of the TTHA web site is http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/~ttha/Welcome/welcomet.htm. Please update your bookmarks’, and this in turn brings up a page that reads ‘Page not found. Sorry, we can't find http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/~ttha/Welcome/welcomet.htm linked to from http://arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/ttha/. That page may never have existed, or it may have been moved or deleted. Or perhaps it floated out to sea. Sorry about that.’

Return to Table of Contents

19.THE THOMAS HARDY SOCIETYThe Thomas Hardy Society’s aim is to promote the British novelist and poet’s works for both education and enjoyment. It is for scholars, students, readers, enthusiasts and anyone with an interest in Thomas Hardy.

The Society began its life in 1968 in Dorchester. Today its two main publications are ‘The Hardy Society Journal’ and ‘The Thomas Hardy Journal’ with academic papers by leading scholars, critical reviews, competitions, comments and news. The Journals are sent free to members.

The Society engages in a range of cultural projects and presents academic and entertaining events. These include the biennial International Conference and Festival and, in each year, a programme of music, lectures, suppers, poetry readings, walks and tours. Its website is informative and up to date.

Page 17: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Return to Table of Contents

20.THE HERON-ALLEN SOCIETYThe Heron-Allen Society was formed at a meeting at the West Sussex Record Office in Chichester on 5th June 2000. The objectives of the Society are to study and record all aspects of the life and interests of Edward Heron-Allen, 1861-1943, and to promote his work. Heron-Allen was a friend of Oscar Wilde, and influenced the writing of ‘Lord Arthur Savile's Crime’.

The Society’s Newsletter no.25 was published the autumn of 2014.

Newsletter 18 (Spring 2011) contains the article 'Edward Heron-Allen, Oscar Wilde and the Ring of Death' by Timothy J. McCann.

THE HERON-ALLEN SOCIETY towards the appreciation of the life and works of

Edward Heron-Allen

Return to Table of Contents

21.THE HOUSMAN SOCIETY This was founded in 1973 and exists to promote knowledge and appreciation of the lives and works of A.E. Housman and other members of his family. The Society also promotes the causes of literature and poetry in general. It produces an annual Journal (index on line) organises discussions, visits and poetry readings. Commemorations are held in Bromsgrove on 26th March (A.E. Housman’s birthday) and in Ludlow on the last Saturday in April. It sponsors an annual lecture under the title ‘The Name and Nature of Poetry’ at the Hay Festival of Literature in

Page 18: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

May/June each year. Further information about the Society and books and merchandise is available from The Housman Society at 80 New Road, Bromsgrove, Worcs B60 2LA, England. Email: @

An article ‘The Letters of Oscar Wilde addressed to Laurence Housman’ by Stuart Hopkins appeared in The Housman Society Journal XXVI (1990) pp.46-53.

The programme announced for 2015 may be found on the Society’s website:

Return to Table of Contents

22.THE JORIS-KARL HUYSMANS SOCIETY / LA SOCIÉTÉ J.-K. HUYSMANS

The Society was founded in 1927 by Huysmans’ friend Lucien Descaves, and to-day has 236 members, including 62 institutional members. Annual bulletins are published, of which the latest (2013) is no. 106.

The following articles have appeared:

Yves Clogenson : « Huysmans et Oscar Wilde (I) », Bulletin de la Société J.-K. Huysmans, n° 46 1963, pp. 77-8

Yves Clogenson : « J.-K. Huysmans et Oscar Wilde (II) », Bulletin de la Société J.-K. Huysmans, n° 47, 1964 pp. 167-174

Mme de Crisnoy : «La curieuse opinion d’Oscar Wilde sur En route de Huysmans»,

Page 19: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Bulletin de la Société J.-K. Huysmans, n° 57, 1971 p.47

Geoff Woollen:: « La fortune d’À rebours  et l’infortune d’Oscar Wilde », Bulletin de la Société J.-K. Huysmans, n° 76, 1984 pp. 15-22

Richard Griffiths, « Huysmans, Barrès, Wilde et Cie : les habitués du “Château Rouge” », Bulletin de la Société J.-K. Huysmans, n° 106, 2013 pp. 15-34.

The Society maintains an informative and up-to-date website, recently much augmented, and reached by clicking below.

Ø       More information about Huysmans can be found on the excellent English website of Mr Brendan King.

Return to Table of Contents

23.THE HENRY JAMES SOCIETYFrom their website:

Our mission is to offer Henry James scholars and other interested persons an opportunity to share in the study and appreciation of the life and works of the author. A non-profit educational

Page 20: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

organization, the Henry James Society provides a medium of communication for Henry James scholars and expands the possibilities for Henry James studies through annual meetings, special symposiums, and The Henry James Review.

The Society’s up to date website can be found by clicking the banner. For Henry James studies on the web, the reader is also referred to the elaborate http://www2.newpaltz.edu/~hathaway/ , the creation of Richard D. Hathaway, Professor Emeritus of English, SUNY New Paltz, and to Mr Adrian Dover’s The Ladder : a Henry James website at http://www.henryjames.org.uk/. This continues to develop new texts and new services.

Return to Table of Contents

24.THE JEROME K. JEROME SOCIETY‘This site contains information and resources that can't be found elsewhere; resources that have been lovingly compiled by society members. Please do join up to receive a biannual Society newsletter and access to various members-only resources.’

Return to Table of Contents

25.THE JACK LONDON SOCIETYThe Jack London Society, Inc., an international non-profit organization that promotes study of the life and work of Jack London, was founded in 1990 as an author society affiliated with the American Literature Association. It numbers over 200 members and continues to grow each year. Membership is open to anyone interested in London.

Page 21: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

The Society publishes a biannual magazine, The Call, which features short articles, announcements, news about member activities, book collecting information, photographs, notices of recent publications, reviews, and research notes. It is indexed by the Library of Congress and mailed out in late winter and late summer each year. Kenneth Brandt, Savannah College of Design, serves as editor of The Call. For more information on submissions, contact him by e-mail.

Beginning in 1992, the Society has held biennial Symposia: in Sonoma, California (1992); the Huntington Library in San Marino, California (1994, 1998); Santa Rosa, California (1996, 2000, 2004), Lihue, Hawaii (2002), and Alaska (2006). The Symposia offer formal papers, workshops, films, and plenary speakers, as well as informal excursions and social events. Speakers include leading London scholars from major universities as well as presentations designed for high school instructors and interested readers. The Symposia are known for their combination of outstanding scholarly presentations and relaxed pace.

The Society’s old website may be found by clicking the banner. The new website is http://jacklondonsociety.org/, with more information given at the Jack London Online Collection.

Return to Table of Contents

26.THE ARTHUR MACHEN SOCIETY‘…Machen’s dismissal from the London Evening News in 1921 was not solely due to the libelling of Lord Alfred Douglas in the premature obituary: the malaise, said Machen, had set in some time before. Machen told John Gawsworth why he believed he was not invited to contribute to The Yellow Book, the famous Nineties periodical: he had expressed enthusiasm for the Sherlock

Page 22: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Holmes stories to the editor Henry Harland and felt this counted against him…’

‘The Friends of Arthur Machen is a fellowship which exists to foster interest in Machen and his work, to aid research, and for the pleasure of its members. The Friends of Arthur Machen grew out of the remains of the British Arthur Machen Society, which was originally formed in the 1980s. The current membership of the Friends is very diverse, reflecting the very diverse currents which have drawn it together. Interest in mysticism, in the occult, in both paganism and Christianity, in the decadence of the 1890s, in the landscapes of Gwent, not to mention love of good reading and good living, are all very variously represented: in fact all that really unites the membership is admiration for a writer who has qualities not found elsewhere.’

The Society publishes Faunus, the literary journal of the Friends, which has appeared twice yearly since the inauguration of The Friends. Contents are both articles of interest to admirers of Machen and examples of his work, often articles and pieces not easily available in any other form. Machenalia, the Friends’ newsletter, is more informal, less literary in tone and style. It deals with items of topical interest, about Machen, and about the Friends. It too appears twice yearly.

Officially connected with the Society is an active Arthur Machen discussion and announcements forum, with 190 subscribers. The Society’s website, which is kept up to date, can also be reached by clicking the banner:

Return to Table of Contents

27.THE GEORGE MACDONALD SOCIETYFrom their website:

Page 23: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

George MacDonald (1824-1905) was one of the most original of nineteenth century thinkers. His writing and lecturing brought him wide recognition in his own day, and into the company of many of the leading Victorians of the time.

MacDonald’s writing has an outstanding imaginative power, largely influenced by the German and English Romantics. It is in the realms of fantasy and children’s literature, along with his visionary theology, that has made his greatest contribution.

The importance of George MacDonald’s work is being rediscovered and the Society works to further this interest. Formed in 1981, it publishes an annual journal, North Wind, which carries articles related to his life and work, reviews of new books, and other publications relevant to MacDonald Studies. For back copies of North Wind, please write to Mrs. Rachel Johnson, 18 Tappenhall Road, Fernhill Heath, Worcester, WR3 7TR, England.

A quarterly newsletter, Orts, is also produced to provide news of events, meetings, lectures, or visits and any other information of interest to members: we do not know when the last one appeared.

A research collection of works on and by MacDonald has been established at King’s College, London, where he taught at one time, and is available to anyone wishing to use it.

That there are affinities here with Oscar Wilde is apparent; if they have ever been explored, we have yet to learn of it. The Society can be reached by clicking on the colophon.

Return to Table of Contents

Page 24: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

28.THE KATHERINE MANSFIELD SOCIETYThe Katherine Mansfield Society is a charitable entity registered in New Zealand. Formed in December 2008, following the successful Katherine Mansfield Conference in London in September that year, this international organisation has been set up to promote and encourage the worldwide study and enjoyment of Katherine Mansfield’s writing. It is a forum for the exchange of information and for research collaboration, but as a member there are a wide range of additional benefits.

As a member, you will receive: 3 newsletters a year, packed with information on Mansfield and KMS activity – A free copy of the annual Journal of Katherine Mansfield Studies – Regular email news alerts – Discounted rates for the biennial KM conference, and all other KMS events – Access to Mansfield scholars worldwide – Notice of new publications. You will also be supporting: The development and maintenance of the most comprehensive Katherine Mansfield website, including a comprehensive KM time line, all extant KM photographs and artistic representations, and all KM stories – The pursuit of strategies to ensure KM is on school and university curricula – A biennial Katherine Mansfield Literary Scholarship, giving the opportunity for an outstanding scholar to pursue Mansfield and modernist research – A Mansfield memorial in her home town of Wellington, New Zealand – The preservation and recognition of one of the world’s leading modernist writers whose influence is still felt by contemporary writers and readers.

Clicking the colophon will bring you to the Society’s admirable websie.

Return to Table of Contents

Page 25: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

29.SOCIÉTÉ OCTAVE MIRBEAUFounded in Angers on 28th November 1993 and chaired by Dr Pierre Michel, Mirbeau’s editor and biographer, the aim of the Octave Mirbeau Society is to contribute by all the means at its disposal to the knowledge of the life, struggles and work of this great Norman writer (1848-1917). Its principal publication is the annual Cahiers Octave Mirbeau. Mirbeau both defended Wilde, and satirised him in the Journal d’une femme de chambre.

The Society maintains an elaborate multi-lingual website, with all membership details and much information about Mirbeau.

The most recent Cahier is no 21, and its Table of Contents is on the Society’s website (click below).

Return to Table of Contents

30.THE WILLIAM MORRIS SOCIETYFounded in London in 1955, the Society aims to make the life and work of Morris and his associates better known. Its programmes–which involve affiliated groups in Canada and the United States–include lectures, conferences, tours, museum visits, and social gatherings. A Newsletter is published quarterly (two issues with U.S. supplements) and there is a biannual

Page 26: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Journal: both free to members. The Society publishes an array of books and pamphlets dealing with Morris. One of the Morris Society’s next big projects will be the Morris Online Edition. It is hoped to reproduce and create scholarly editions of nearly all of Morris’s writings and make them available to the public for free. Watch http://www.morrisedition.org/ for new developments. This is still in the planning phases.

The website has the following pages:

New in the William Morris Society: Conferences, exhibitions, lectures, and social gatherings in the UK, US, and Canada related to William Morris and his circle.

Current US Newsletter: get involved with your Society.

About the William Morris Society: Society bylaws, history, and membership directory.

The Journal of William Morris Studies: The scholarly organ of the Society since 1961.

The Life and Work of William Morris: Examples of and links to Morris’s writings, poetry, and designs.

The Worldwide Morris: Morris in English, Español, Català, Português, Magyar, Dutch, Dansk, Polska, Cesky, Svenska, Deutsch, & Français.

Society Archive: Worldwide announcements (1996 – present) and US newsletters (1988 – present).

Links to Related Sites: Arts & Crafts • Printing & book arts • Products & services • Victorian links

The Journal of William Morris Studies (formerly the Journal of the William Morris Society) is edited by Dr Patrick O’Sullivan (of the University of Plymouth) who has taken over from Dr. Rosie Miles. The Editor (JWMS, Kelmscott House, 26 Upper Mall, Hammersmith, London, W6 9TA, England) welcomes inquiries: the e-mail address can be activated by clicking on the image below. The Journal (ISSN: 0084-0254) invites contributions on all subjects relating to William Morris’s life and works and his varied circles of influence.

On the web site are announced items of interest to scholars, researchers, and everyone interested in William Morris, his circle, and the Pre-Raphaelite movement, such as:

Page 27: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

News of Morris Society events in the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, and worldwide.

Events and exhibitions related to the life and works of Morris and his associates.

Calls for papers and essays for conferences and book collections.

Biographical information and examples of Morris’s works in many media.

Books by and about William Morris.

Products and services dealing with William Morris and his circle.

Links to related web resources.

·         The Society’s newsletter appears to have been replaced by a blog, News from Anywhere.

Return to Table of Contents

31.THE WILLIAM MORRIS SOCIETY OF CANADA87 Government Road, Toronto, Ontario, M8X 1W4. Tel. 416-233-7686. E-mail: @

Future events are announced on their website, and these and other information about the Society can be found by clicking the banner.

Return to Table of Contents

Page 28: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

32.THE WILLIAM MORRIS SOCIETY IN THE UNITED STATES

Founded in New York in 1971 as an affiliate of the UK William Morris Society, the William Morris Society in the United States strives to publicize the life and work of William Morris and his associates. We coordinate our activities with our fellow Morris Societies in the UK and Canada, and distribute UK and US Newsletters and a biannual Journal of William Morris Studies.

Books for review, news of conferences, book sales, calls for papers, and news of tours are welcome.

More from Shannon L. Rogers, Newsletter Editor, William Morris Society in the United States. @

Return to Table of Contents

33.THE ARTHUR MORRISON SOCIETYThe Arthur Morrison Society is an offspring of the Loughton Festival in the English county of Essex. As with many hero societies, its task is to rescue its subject from undeserved neglect. The Society maintains a website, modest but becoming, ‘dedicated to Arthur Morrison (1863 - 1945) who wrote books and collected Japanese prints.’

Page 29: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Return to Table of Contents

34.THE FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE SOCIETYThe Friedrich Nietzsche Society was founded in 1990. Its aim is to promote the study of the life, work and influence of Friedrich Nietzsche. The Society currently has around 200 members in the UK and worldwide, and welcomes new members with an interest in Nietzsche, whether professional or private. The Society's activities are organised around its annual conference, and its members are entitled to subscribe at a substantially reduced rate to the Journal of Nietzsche Studies, which is published twice yearly.

The fee for annual membership of the Society is currently £10/€15/$20 for those in employment, £5/€7.50/$10 for postgraduates and the unwaged.

To join the Friedrich Nietzsche Society, click here.

The Society’s website was inaccessible, 11.v.2015

Return to Table of Contents

35.NORTH AMERICAN NIETZSCHE SOCIETYThis Society maintains a modest presence on the website of the University of Illinois. Click here.

Return to Table of Contents

Page 30: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

36.INTERNATIONAL WALTER PATER SOCIETYDoubtless inspired by the reticence of its eponym, this Society is rather modest about itself, tucking itself away within the website of The Pater Newsletter, from which the following is taken. The website has not been updated since 2013.

In the fall of 1998 the name of the society of subscribers to The Pater Newsletter was changed from The Pater Society of the UK and the USA to the International Walter Pater Society, in recognition of current contributions of European and Japanese scholars to Pater studies. The change of name was introduced in The Pater Newsletter, No. 37. The Pater Society of the UK and the USA had been organized at the Modern Language Association of America Convention in New York City on 28 December 1978. The history behind the formation of this Society and its significance follows. Laurel Brake and Billie Inman had become acquainted in London during the summer of 1977 and had decided to found a newssheet for scholars in Britain and the United States who were interested in Walter Pater, feeling that there was duplication of effort among scholars, internationally, because of lack of communication. Inman would issue News of Pater Scholarship each fall from The University of Arizona; and Brake, each spring from The University College of Wales. At the 1977 MLA Convention, Sharon Bassett, Alana Brown, Billie Inman, and Gerald Monsman got together and decided that a Pater Society should be formed at the 1978 Convention. News of Pater Scholarship, No. 3, which was sent to 110 scholars known to have published writings on Pater, announced the formation of the Society at the 1978 MLA Convention. It was decided at this Convention that the name of the Pater publication would be changed from News of Pater Scholarship to The Pater Newsletter and that all subscribers to the newsletter would be, ipso facto, members of the Society. Officers were elected, and a committee was chosen to write a proposal for a special session at the 1979 MLA Convention in San Francisco.

Correspondence can be addressed to Dr Laurel Brake, Centre for Extramural Studies, Birkbeck College, Russell Square, London, UK WC1B 5DQ, e-mail l.brake[@]bbk.ac.uk. fax 44 207 631 6688.

Return to Table of Contents

Page 31: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

37.SOCIETY FOR PIRANDELLO STUDIESFormerly the British Pirandello Society, the Society for Pirandello Studies has greatly increased its web presence. The Tables of Contents of the thirty-four volumes of the Society’s journal are given, and details about productions; conferences and membership.

Return to Table of Contents

38.LES AMIS DE MARCEL PROUSTLa Société des Amis de Marcel Proust et des Amis de Combray, créée en 1947, a pour but de réunir les lecteurs de Proust et de promouvoir l'œuvre de ce dernier. Elle a pour président Claude Contamine et pour secrétaire générale Mireille Naturel, maître de conférences à Paris 3-Sorbonne nouvelle. Son siège est la Maison de tante Léonie, à Illiers-Combray, et ses services administratifs sont installés au 6, rue du Docteur Proust, grâce au Conseil général d'Eure-et-Loir. C'est au rez-de-chaussée de cette Maison de Combray que s'aménagent progressivement une bibliothèque proustienne et une salle de travail destinée à tous ceux qui veulent se documenter sur place.

La SAMP propose à ses adhérents, outre les traditionnelles Journées des aubépines à la mi-mai, différentes manifestations culturelles (expositions, concerts, colloques, théâtre, etc.) à Illiers-Combray, à Paris et éventuellement dans d'autres lieux. Elle participe également aux manifestations proposées par leMinistère de la Culture et les collectivités territoriales. Ses adhérents reçoivent, en fin d'année, le Bulletin Marcel Proust.

Page 32: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Coordonnéesadresse : 4-6, rue du Dr Proust. BP 20025 - 28120 Illiers-Combraytél/fax : 02.37.24.30.97e-mail : [email protected]

Return to Table of Contents

39.MARCEL PROUST VERENIGING / ASSOCIATION NEERLANDAISE MARCEL PROUST

De Marcel Proust Vereniging – opgericht in 1972 – zet zich al ruim dertig jaar in om het oeuvre van Proust in Nederland grotere bekendheid te geven. Daartoe organiseren wij lezingen, werkmiddagen en leeskringen, en geven wij een tweetalig tijdschrift uit, Marcel Proust Aujourd’hui/Today, alsmede een tweejaarlijks, Nederlandstalig, Bulletin / L´Association Marcel Proust – créée en 1972 – s´occupe de la diffusion de l´œuvre de Proust aux Pays-Bas. Dans ce but, elle organise des réunions et des conférences et publie la revue bilingue Marcel Proust Aujourd´hui/Today (cf. Publications) et un Bulletin bisannuel (en langue néerlandaise).

Last update: 7th April 2015.

Page 33: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Return to Table of Contents

40.THE PROUST SOCIETY OF AMERICAThe Proust Society of America is a permanent program of The Mercantile Library Center for Fiction. Established in 1997 by the Center director Harold Augenbraum, the Society's mission is to encourage the reading, study and enjoyment of the works of Marcel Proust (1871-1922), whose primary achievement, À la recherche du temps perdu, continues to be considered by most critics as one of the world's great works of fiction, almost a century after its composition was begun. The Society presents several lectures for the public, which are free to Proust members, holds an annual dinner to commemorate Proust's birthday, and sends additional information through its regular e-mail list. Members also take part in groups that read and discuss À la recherche du temps perdu.

Return to Table of Contents

41.THE ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON CLUBThe RLS Club was formed in 1920 by those who had known Stevenson and who wanted to care

Page 34: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

for his memory.

The Club’s main objective is ‘to foster interest in Stevenson’s life and works’. Over the years this has been met by the organisation of exhibitions, lectures and readings, the presentation of prizes for literary competitions, and the maintenance of the first Edinburgh museum dedicated to RLS at his birthplace at 8 Howard Place. The fine collection of memorabilia originally displayed there has been transferred to the City of Edinburgh’s Writers’ Museum in the Lawnmarket.

The Club, which has members all over the world, has close links with the RLS Club of Monterey, California, and is twinned with L’Association sur le Chemin de RLS in the Cévennes, France.

The Club badge is based on the palm tree device used on the famous ‘Tusitala’ edition of RLS’s works in 35 volumes published by Heinemann in 1923-4.

The RLS Club is a registered charity in Scotland: SC016582 and is not to be confused with the (American) Robert Louis Stevenson Society, of which more below.

Return to Table of Contents

42.THE ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON SOCIETYThe Society’s website contained the statement of purpose in the next paragraph, but its link was broken when we checked on 15th July 2008 and remained broken, 7th January 2009, nor had it been restored as of 5th July 2009. It was then brought under the ægis of http://www.robert-louis-stevenson.org/stevenson-societies, but the link given there

Page 35: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

(http://www.n3carts.org/Stevenson/society.html) was broken when we tried on 1st July 2010 and again on 24th September 2010. It was still broken on 7th November 2010. Returning to the chase on 11th May 2015, we found the Society’s site at http://www.robertlouisstevensonmemorialcottage.org/society.html. This rather basic site no longer contains the statement.

The historic Stevenson Society of America was established in 1915 and in 1920 was incorporated as a not-for-profit educational entity and remains so today under the requirements of the New York State Education Department. The Society, which owns and operates the Robert Louis Stevenson Memorial Cottage and Museum in Saranac Lake, N.Y., has a two-fold purpose: 1) to perpetuate the memory of Robert Louis Stevenson, author, in Saranac Lake by the collection and preservation of records, manuscripts, books and objects pertaining to his life and works. 2) to educate the public about him and provide a research center for scholars which includes documents pertinent to local history. To these ends the Robert Louis Stevenson Memorial Cottage and Museum is open to visitors daily on a seasonal basis and by appointment year round. The Museum is staffed by knowledgeable volunteers and membership is open to all who are interested in the author and his works and desire to spread his brave philosophy of living.

Return to Table of Contents

43.THE H.G. WELLS SOCIETYAims and Functions of the Society

The H.G. Wells Society was founded in 1960. It has an international membership, and aims to promote a widespread interest in the life, work and thought of Herbert George Wells (see ‘Statement of Objects’). It publishes an annual journal, The Wellsian, and issues a biannual

Page 36: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

newsletter. It has published a comprehensive bibliography of Wells's published works, and other publications, including a number of works by Wells which have been out of print for many years.

Here is a list of H.G. Wells works currently in print (but only updated through February 2005), an important note on Wells and Copyright, and a full bibliography.

The Society organises a weekend conference each year when aspects of Wells's life and work are discussed in a congenial atmosphere. Topics discussed in recent years have included

The Short Stories of H.G. Wells – Publishing and Publicising Wells – Wells's Literary Friendships – The War of the Worlds – Wells and his Critics.

Subscription and other society information is available through the Society’s website, updated 4th November 2010, which can be reached by clicking the colophon.

Return to Table of Contents

44.THE EDITH WHARTON SOCIETYFirmly grounded in academe, the Edith Wharton Society offers Wharton scholars and other interested persons an opportunity to share in the study and appreciation of the life and works of this author. Through annual meetings, sessions, special conferences, and its journal, The Edith Wharton Review, the Society provides a forum for Wharton studies. Their website is well-stocked with information about the Society, Wharton and Wharton studies. It was last updated on the 4th May (or possibly the 5th April) 2010.

An article by Dr Ailsa Boyd on ‘“The Decoration of Houses”: The American Homes

Page 37: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

of Edith Wharton’ appeared in The Journal of the Decorative Arts Society, vol.XXX.

Return to Table of Contents

45.THE OSCAR WILDE SOCIETYFounded in 1990, The Oscar Wilde Society is a literary society devoted to the congenial appreciation of Oscar Wilde. It is a non-profit making organisation which aims to promote knowledge, appreciation and study of Wilde's life, personality, and works. It organises lectures, readings, and discussions about Wilde and his works, and visits to places associated with him. The Society's Journal of Oscar Wilde Studies, "The Wildean", essential reading, is published twice a year. The illustrated Newsletter Journal ‘Intentions’ is published five times a year. The website is full of vibrations.

Return to Table of Contents

46.THE YEATS SOCIETYThe Yeats Society was founded in Sligo in 1958 in order to commemorate and honour the

Page 38: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

memory of W.B. Yeats, and to promote appreciation of his poetry and other writings, and an awareness of the other members of this talented family.

The Society operates from the Yeats Memorial Building in the very centre of Sligo, overlooking the River Garavogue. The building is the administrative centre of the Society and houses the Yeats Exhibition Centre of the Society, The Sligo Art Gallery, and the Yeats River Café.

The Library provides reading and learning space for students who wish to consult its unique collection of books, and to listen to and view the DVD collection of lectures given at Years Summer Schools over more than forty years.

Highlights of the year are undoubtedly the Yeats International Summer School, held each year in the first fortnight of August, and the Yeats Winter School, held over the last weekend of January, but each year sees other specific events, and the office remains busy all year answering queries and keeping in touch with Yeatsian scholars and students from all over the world.

Two discussion groups are worth joining, one official, the other unofficial. These are, respectively, [email protected] and http://groups.yahoo.com/group/yeatsian/.

The website, reached by clicking the banner, is packed with information and kept well up to date.

Return to Table of Contents

47.THE CHARLOTTE MARY YONGE FELLOWSHIPThe Fellowship maintains a very informative and up-to-date website which features not only its

Page 39: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

own activities but a great deal of material relating to Yonge. Click the signature.

The website devoted to Yonge’s letters (http://www.yongeletters.com/wordpress/) is now incorporated into this one as http://www.cmyf.org.uk/index.html.

Return to Table of Contents

48.THE EMILE ZOLA SOCIETYThe Emile Zola Society was founded in 1990 at the Institut Français du Royaume Uni. We offer friendly and well-informed contacts for members who are interested in Emile Zola, his life, works and times. We meet regularly at the Institut Français, 17 Queensberry Place, London SW7 2DT, for talks and discussions (generally in English) on Zola and his contemporaries, on films based on his novels, on fin-de-siècle Paris, Impressionist painters, and other relevant subjects. In the summer and autumn, we organise visits to places of interest. Our annual Bulletin publishes articles, reviews and details of our activities.

In recent years we have, among other things, organised a conference in London with international speakers, and collaborated in another, in Cambridge, on new approaches to Zola. We have published papers from both conferences, as well as an English translation of essays by the distinguished French scholar, Henri Mitterand. In October 2007 we held an International Conference in Aix-en-Provence, with fifty or so contributors from across the world, and with Guests of Honour Henri Mitterand and Martine Le Blond Zola. Selected papers from the Aix conference have been published (Visages de la Provence, Emile Zola Society, 2008) and are available from us.

Page 40: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Return to Table of Contents

49.L'ÉQUIPE ZOLAWe also draw attention to L'équipe Zola, directed by Alain Pagès (Université de la Sorbonne Nouvelle – Paris III), which has ‘comme tâche principale, l'étude génétique des dossiers préparatoires des romans d'Emile Zola (analyse des scénarios des romans, des ébauches, des plans, du discours programmatique, etc.)’. Completely unconnected with either the Society or the Équipe, there is a small and usually torpid Zola forum.

Return to Table of Contents

50.THE ALLIANCE OF LITERARY SOCIETIESThe Alliance of Literary Societies was formed in 1973 as a result of a correspondence in The Times related to a threatened building with Dickens associations. Mrs. Kathleen Adams, Secretary of the George Eliot Fellowship, suggested that through a close co-operative literary society, societies could provide a more powerful voice in defence of the British literary heritage.

The Alliance now has a membership of some 125 societies and is thus able to provide support and advice on a variety of subjects as well as promoting co-operation between member societies in the preparation of their programmes. Their website lists these. The Alliance is very much British rooted.

Page 41: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

A journal is produced annually. Articles are welcomed by the editor, though she should be contacted before writing the article. The co-editors are Linda Curry, @, and Robin Healey, @. A Newsletter is also produced twice a year; and two websites are maintained, one for the Alliance’s own business, the other for its members (click the colophon).

To contact the Alliance of Literary Societies, please e-mail Julie Shorland who has succeeded Rosemary Culley as Secretary.

Return to Table of Contents

51.THE AMERICAN LITERATURE ASSOCIATIONThis is a coalition of societies devoted to the study of American authors. In June 1989, members of the major societies devoted to American authors met at the Cal State Symposium on American Literature in San Diego, to discuss ways to provide specialists in American authors with new opportunities for scholarly interaction. The result was the American Literature Association: a coalition of societies devoted to the study of American authors. The major activity of the American Literature Association is its annual conference. The first conference was held at the Bahia Resort Hotel in San Diego on May 31- June 2, 1990, and firmly established the success of the new organization.

At its organizing meeting, the members of the American Literature Association agreed to the following statement of purpose: The primary purpose of the American Literature Association is the advancement of humanistic learning by encouraging the study of American authors and their works. The American Literature Association shall actively encourage fellowship and scholarly interaction among persons interested in American authors, their art, their ideas, and their times.

Page 42: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

Specifically, the American Literature Association shall provide means for the various societies devoted to the study of American authors to cooperate in arranging conferences and other scholarly activities. The American Literature Association recognizes the importance of encouraging a wide variety of approaches, both established and innovational, to the study of American authors, including biographical and historical studies of an author's life and times, bibliographical examinations and close readings of literary texts, as well as all other critical approaches. To achieve its goals, the American Literature Association shall sponsor an annual American literature conference. The American Literature Association may also arrange other conferences and symposia, publish or support the publication of journals and books devoted to the study of American literature, offer both competitive and honorary awards to individuals, encourage the formation and development of literary societies with similar goals, and engage in other appropriate activities. The American Literature Association exists for educational and charitable purposes. It is opposed to discrimination based on sex, race, nationality, or religion, but the Association does not take positions on political or social issues.

Theatre Societies52.THE IBSEN SOCIETY OF AMERICA

The Ibsen Society of America (ISA) was founded in 1978 at the close of the Ibsen Sesquicentennial Symposium held in New York City to mark the 150th anniversary of Henrik Ibsen’s birth. Distinguished Ibsen translator and critic Rolf Fjelde, Professor of Literature at Pratt Institute and the chief organizer of the Symposium, was elected Founding President. In December, 1979, the ISA was certified as a non-profit corporation under the laws of the State of New York.

The purpose of the Ibsen Society of America, as set out in its Bylaws, is to foster through lectures, readings, performances, conferences, and publications an understanding of Ibsen's

Page 43: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

works as they are interpreted in texts and produced on stage and in film and other media. The Society is The Ibsen Society of America by virtue of its location and the citizenship of most of its members, but it is concerned with Ibsen activities throughout the world. Membership in The Ibsen Society of America is open to anyone with an interest in Ibsen.

The ISA publishes an annual journal, Ibsen News and Comment, distributed free to all members.

Return to Table of Contents

53.THE IRVING SOCIETYThe Irving Society was established in 1996 to bring together individuals and organisations interested in promoting appreciation of British theatre in the age of the actor-manager Sir Henry Irving, and of his cultural and artistic contribution to the Victorian Era. It publishes both a journal, First Knight, and a newsletter, The Irvingite.

The Society also sponsors the annual Brian Chitty memorial lecture in honour of Sir Henry Irving. In 2004 this was ‘Wilde about Henry (and Nell, and Marion, and Flo and Bram)’, given by D.C. Rose at the Theatre Museum, London, 8th February.

Please also note the Ellen Terry and Edith Craig Database, a Guide to the Papers from Smallhythe Place.

Return to Table of Contents

Page 44: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

54.THE STRINDBERG SOCIETYWelcome to join The Strindberg Society! The Society was founded in 1945 and is thus one of the oldest literary societies devoted to a single person. The purposes of the Society are to

support the Strindberg Museum as well as the research on Strindberg

collect, register and look after different kinds of Strindberg memorials

publish texts and documents

arrange conferences such as the 13th International Strindberg conference in Linz

The Society is the publisher of Strindberg's collected letters.

A membership includes a subscription to Strindbergiana (only in Swedish) which is published once a year.

As a member you have free admission to the Strindberg Museum. There you also will find a Bookstore where you can buy Strindberg literature to reduced prices.

The Museum and the Society arrange programmes on a regular basis. Information about upcoming events you will find in the Society's Newsletter.

You can join the Strindberg Society by paying the annual fee of SEK 175,- to postal account: 25 02 78 - 9

For further information, please contact the secretary Carl Olof Johansson, Danneliden 2, 439 34 Onsala, Telephone: Int +46 300-613 3

Return to Table of Contents

Page 45: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

55.THE SOCIETY FOR THEATRE RESEARCHFor all those interested in the history and technique of the British theatre.

The Society publishes Theatre Notebook, which contains the following articles on Wilde:

Title Number Page

1993 conference 46 162

biographer of 54 151

book reviewed 45 1056*

contract for new play 1900  50 11315*

Importance of Being Earnest, The 50 114

—“— 57 26

—“— 58 97

international conference 50 176

Lady Windermere's Fan 46 5973*, 67

Simla A.D.C. repertoire 62 878

star system 56 126

theatre contract 48 468

* Although taken from http://www.str.org.uk/notebook/indexes/w.html, these numbers seem

Page 46: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

suspect.

Return to Table of Contents

56.THE IRISH SOCIETY FOR THEATRE RESEARCHThe purposes of the ISTR are

i) To facilitate research on Irish theatre in its national and international contexts in terms of anengagement with the full spectrum of Irish theatre from page to stage.

ii) To facilitate interdisciplinary research between theatre studies in Ireland and the wider community of theatre and performance studies in its international contexts.

iii) To organize meetings, conferences and symposia.

Given the richness of the subject, the Society’s website is rather meagre, with no search engine,

few links and little text. Its journal, launched in 2008, is only recorded as having two further

issues, in 2009 and 2014.

Return to Table of Contents

Page 47: THE OSCHOLARS Web viewThe present Arnold Bennett Society was re-formed in 1954 and has members throughout the United Kingdom as well as abroad. It is based in the City of Stoke on

57.THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR THEATRE RESEARCHThe American Society for Theatre Research (ASTR) is a U.S.-based professional organization that fosters scholarship on worldwide theatre and performance, both historical and contemporary. Members of the American Society for Theatre Research say the Society is a space to share scholarship and a home for networking within the profession.

ASTR also sponsors or coordinates several awards, grants, fellowships, and prizes to support and recognize outstanding scholarship in theatre and performance studies. ASTR awarded over $25,000 in 2014.

Return to Table of Contents

For THE OSCHOLARS home page, please click here