International Anniversary Symposium
"In Memoriam FPG:1879-1948-1998"



CALL FOR PAPERS
for the International
IN MEMORIAM FPG 1879-1948-1998
Anniversary Symposium


Frederick Philip Grove - FPG - Felix Paul Greve in Context



September 30 - October 3, 1998
at the Historic Downtown
Ramada-Marlborough Hotel (1914)

Winnipeg, Manitoba
September 30 - October 3, 1998


To commemorate the 50th Anniversary of his death in 1948, the University of Manitoba is hosting an International FPG Symposium for Frederick Philip Grove. The Canadian author lived in Manitoba from 1912 to 1929, and obtained a B.A. as well as an Honorary Doctorate from this University. Invited are contributions from Grove/Greve scholars in Canada, the United States, and abroad, particularly from Germany where FPG was born, raised and educated (1879-1909). Papers in a variety of related fields are equally encouraged.

Deadline for submissions: February 15, 1998

Send a title and a one-page abstract of your proposal for a 20-minute presentation, your name & affiliation, and a brief biographical note to the Program Chair:
Dr. Gaby Divay, 339, Bldg. Dafoe, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Man. R3T 2N2
Fax (204) 474 75 77; Tel. 474 6483 ; e-mail: divay@cc.umanitoba.ca

or to the Conference Coordinator:

Professor Myroslav Shkandrij, Head, Dept. of German & Slavic Studies,
326, Bldg. Fletcher Argue, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Man. R3T 2N2
Fax (204) 474 76 01 ; Tel. 474 6605 ; e-mail: shkandr@cc.umanitoba.ca.

For Further Information about the conference and the University of Manitoba Archives’ FPG Collections:



SUGGESTED TOPICS:

FPG'S LIVES in Europe and North America:
FPG’s Studies at the universities of Bonn, Munich and Manitoba; FPG’s Teaching Career in Manitoba; Manitoba Topography; FPG’s tenure at a Bonanza Farm near Fargo; FPG’s Contacts With Contemporaries (Stefan George; K. Wolfskehl; A. Endell; A. Furtwängler; Th. Mann; Gide; H. G. Wells; H. Hesse; J. Conrad; G. Meredith; A. Swinburne; K. Hamsun; L. Hémon, and others); FPG’s Relationships With Women (Helene Klages; Else von Freytag-Loringhoven; Catherine Wiens); Publishers (Insel-Verlag; J.C.C. Bruns; Oesterheld; Reiss; McClelland & Stewart; Graphic Publishers (Henry Miller); At the mercury Press (Louis Carrier); Macmillan; Ryerson); Role Models (O. Wilde, Flaubert, Swift, Stefan George, Heine, Goethe, Nietzsche, Rousseau, Thoreau, etc.); Pseudonyms (F. C. Gerden, Konrad Thorer, Andrew Rutherford)

FPG'S WORKS:
creative works in poetry, fiction & prose; Critical Writings; Lecture Tours; Autobiographies; Fictionalized Experiences (Sparta, Ky., in Settlers of the Marsh; Bonanza Farm in Fruits of the Earth & Master of the Mill; early life in A Search for America & In Search of Myself); Translating in Germany and Canada

ELSE BARONESS VON FREYTAG-LORINGHOVEN (b. Else Ploetz, divorced Endell, 1874-1927:
FPG's"wife", 1903-1911): Berlin, Italy, Dachau, Munich, Wollerau, Paris-Plage, Pittsburgh, Sparta, Ky., Cincinnati, New York, Berlin again, Paris; Else’s Contribution to New York Dada & The Little Review, Broom, The Liberator, etc; Else’s Relations with Marcus Behmer, Melchior Lechter, Ernst Hardt,, August Endell, Richard & O.A.H. Schmitz; Man Ray, Marcel Duchamp, Djuna Barnes, Bernice Abbott, W. C. Williams, Hart Crane; Else’s Memories of FPG in her autobiography, letters and poems; Reflections of Else in FPG's Fanny Essler (1905) and Settlers of the Marsh (1925); their jointly created "Fanny Essler" Poems (1904/5), etc. --

COMPARATIVE APPROACHES:
Prairie Literature; Realism; Decadence; Archaeology & Classical Philology, ca. 1900; Aesthetist vs. Realistic Poetry; Neo-Romantic vs. Expressionist Style; Literary Journals; Publishing & the Book Trade, 1900-1950; Literary Archives; Psychology (i.e., Jung/Hesse); Intellectual Life in Hamburg, Bonn, Munich, Rome, Paris, Zürich, Berlin, London, 1900-1910; Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Sparta, Ky., New York, Fargo & Casselton, N.D.; Halifax, Winnipeg, Ottawa, Simcoe, Toronto, Montreal, 1910-1950.

Biographical Note About FPG (Greve/Grove)

Frederick Philip Grove came to Manitoba in September -- not December! -- 1912. He claimed to be of Anglo-Swedish descent and made himself seven years older, but he was actually born as Felix Paul Greve in 1879 in Radomno, "a Russian-German border town." Raised in Hamburg, he graduated from the famous Gymnasium Johanneum in 1898. He then studied classical philology and archaeology in Bonn and Munich where he frequented circles surrounding Stefan George, the leading poet of his time. In Berlin he became involved with Else, wife of his friend, the architect August Endell, and all three set out for Palermo in January 1903. After Greve had served a prison term for fraud in Bonn in 1903/04, "the Greves" lived in Switzerland, France, and Berlin until the now highly prolific translator abruptly left for America in 1909. Else joined him in Pittsburgh a year later. Greve left her on a farm near Sparta, Kentucky, in 1911, and made his way towards Canada. Else posed in Cincinnati, Philadelphia and New York where she married and became known as the dadaist Baroness von Freytag-Loringhoven. After a decade of teaching in remote districts of Manitoba, Grove started his career as a Canadian writer from Rapid City in 1922. His very first publication had been the essay "Rousseau als Erzieher" (Der Nordwesten, 1914). He was an extra-mural student at the University of Manitoba since 1915, and obtained his B.A. in French and German in 1922. In 1914, he had married his fellow teacher Catherine Wiens. After their daughter died shortly before her twelfth birthday in 1927, the Groves left Manitoba to settle in Ontario in 1929. Their son Leonard was born in Ottawa in 1930, while Grove was involved with Graphic Publishers. In spite of ill health, Grove continued to write and publish from his Simcoe estate until his death on August 19, 1948. Among other honours, he received an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Manitoba in 1946. -- The UM acquired Grove's manuscripts in the early 1960s. Since then, a host of related papers have been added to the FPG collections, notably, the Spettigue Collections documenting FPG's German identity (1986/1995); Stobie's papers, exploring Grove's teaching in Manitoba (1974); Divay's sources (1990-), including poetry by Greve and Else, a 1910 Pittsburgh directory entry, and Bonanza Farm material. Grove's library was donated by Leonard Grove in 1992, and letters to A. L. Phelps were acquired in 1997.



For more information about the FPG & FrL collections, see the website at the UML Archives.



University of Manitoba, Archives & Special Collections
Winnipeg, MB, Canada R3T 2N2, 204-474-6483 Fax 7913
Questions or Comments? Email gaby_divay@umanitoba.ca
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