Christian Scholars’ Conference includes Updike papers

This past June 5-6, the Thomas H. Olbricht Christian Scholars’ Conference at Lipscomb University (Nashville, Tenn.) featured an emphasis on John Updike. In addition to  attending the world premier of “John Updike’s Roger’s Version,” which was announced in an earlier post, attendees could sit in on a session convened by Kimberly Reed (Lipscomb University) on “John’s Version: Updike and Christian Faith,” with panelists Ralph C. Wood (Baylor University), Ami McConnell (Sr. Fiction Editor, Thomas Nelson Publishers), and David Dark (Belmont University).

Another session on “John Updike and Christian Thought” was convened by Steve Weathers (Abilene Christian University) and featured papers on “Impudence and Desperation: John Updike and his Childhood’s Faith” (Mark Cullum, Abilene Christian University), “John Updike’s ‘Pigeon Feathers,’ Fear of Annihilation, and God” (Michael Potts, Methodist University), and “Run on Home: Updike’s Celebration of Ceremonies in ‘Packed Dirt, Churchgoing, a Dying Cat, a Traded Car'” (James W. Thomas, Pepperdine University).

A third session was offered on the topic of “The Flesh Became Word: A Discussion of the Themes From and Sciences Behind the Stage Adaptation of John Updike’s Roger’s Version,” with Greg Greene of Blackbird Theater convening a panel featuring the play’s director, Wes Driver, and Clifford Anderson (Vanderbilt University).

Here’s the link to the complete schedule.

Florida publication features Updike short story analyses

UpdikeFlaglerLive.com, an online Florida publication named after the man whose railroad brought tourists to the Florida Keys, has published a series of summaries and analyses of short stories from the recent Library of America editions of Updike’s short fiction.

“This series is a re-reading of John Updike’s short stories in the wake of publication of ‘The Collected Early Stories’ and ‘The Collected Later Stories,’ the twin-volume set by the Library of America (2013).” It includes a “comprehensive table of the complete stories with links to each story summary” and a consideration of the Maple and Bech stories, “most of which are excluded from the Library of America edition.”

Thirteen summaries/analyses have been posted thus far:

John Updike: The Complete Stories (Click on Links for Summaries and Analysis)

Journal features an article on Updike and second-wave feminism

Screen Shot 2014-05-25 at 10.23.49 AMFeatured in Volume 5, Issue No. 4 [2014] of the International Research Journal of Management Sociology & Humanity, is an article by Anshu Chaudhary titled “Analysis of the Select Novels of John Updike from the Perspective of the Second Wave Feminism,” which appears on pages 84-91.

In it, Chaudhary writes, “It can’t be ignored that Updike was reflecting the point of view of male characters of a particular age and class, and in that context they demonstrated psychological insight. But if we analyze Couples and Marry Me the two most interesting and sympathetic novels in which the women characters are most keenly drawn we see that he has presented the mystery of man’s sexuality from the perspective of the female characters. In both these novels he entered the mystery of woman’s sexuality as well.

“Updike’s views and depiction of female characters may be prejudiced but are not misogynistic. His works don’t show him to be against the growth and liberalization of domestic women. He just reflects the ‘other’ side of things.”

She concludes her essay, “Thus, female characters exist and develop and survive in his fiction. They also help the male characters to find their own identity and ‘Search for the Self.’ Although he fails to give them their own identity but as he himself says,

“‘American fiction is notoriously thin on women, and I have attempted a number of portraits of women, and we may have reached that point of civilization, or decadence, where we can look at women. I’m not sure Mark Twain was able to.'”

 

Arabic Updike scholars to present a paper on The Coup

Not much information is available, but Updike scholars have kindred spirits in Saudi Arabia and Jordan.

Asad Al-Ghalith (The University of Tabuk, Saudi Arabia) and Mahmoud Zaidan (The University of Jordan) will present a paper on “John Updike’s Treatment of Islam in The Coup” at The Clute Institute International Academic Conference in Las Vegas, Nevada, October 5-8, 2014. Here is the abstract.

In 2009, Ziadan wrote his Master’s thesis on “The Image of Islam in John Updike’s Terrorist and The Coup.”

more information is available.