Willa Cather’s Letters/Willa Cather and Letters:
A Symposium Commemorating The Complete Letters of Willa Cather
October 10, 2022
Platte River Room, Nebraska Union
University of Nebraska–Lincoln

Schedule
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8:45 a.m. Welcome
- Melissa Homestead, co-editor of The Complete Letters of Willa Cather and director of the Cather Project
9:00-10:15 a.m. Panel 1: Cather’s letters and fandom
- Charles Johanningsmeier, University of Nebraska-Omaha, “Cather’s Letters to – and from – Her Readers, and the Challenge They Represent.”
- John Flannigan, Prairie State College (retired), “The ‘Very Especial Pleasure’ of Places: Fan Letters from Willa Cather”
10:15-10:30 a.m. Break
10:30-11:45 a.m. Panel 2: Cather’s correspondence with women artists
- Jessica Tebo, University of Colorado at Boulder, “Letters from Olive Fremstad to Willa Cather: A View Beyond the Song of the Lark”
- Sara Bryant, Swarthmore College, “Queer Affinity and Mass-Culture Fame: The Letters and Friendship between Willa Cather and Zoë Akins”
11:45 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Lunch break
1:00-2:00 p.m. Panel 3: “Patterns and Outliers Across Cather’s Correspondence”
- Gabi Kirilloff, Washington University in St. Louis, presenting on work in collaboration with Matthew Lavin, Denison College, and Sean McCollough, TCU
- Conversation led by Andrew Jewell, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
2:15-3:30 p.m. Panel 4: Personal correspondence, professional correspondence, and the blurred line between them
- Troy Hassinger, Independent Scholar, “Print Media Ecologies and Editorial Visions: Willa Cather’s Letters to McClure’s Magazine and the Emergence of the Early Twentieth-Century Periodical Press.”
- Laurie Weber, Independent Scholar, “‘My Dear Boy’: Willa Cather’s Correspondence with Roscoe Cather”
3:45-5:00 Roundtable on digital editing American women authors’ letters
- Chair: Andrew Jewell
- Melissa Bradshaw, Loyola University Chicago
- Nicole Gray, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
- Melissa Homestead, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
- Emily Rau, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
This symposium is free and open to the public. For more information, contact Melissa Homestead at mhomestead2@unl.edu.
