Malacca to Dracula: Colonial Extraction Culture and its Citational Circuits

Speaker: Winter Jade Werner, Associate Professor of English, Wheaton College

Moderator: Daniel Elam, Assistant Professor, Department of Comparative Literature, HKU

Date: Wednesday, April 8, 2026
Time: 4:00 pm Hong Kong Time
Venue: Faculty Lounge (Room 430), 4/F, Run Run Shaw Tower, HKU

How do we see more clearly the non-Western intellectual labor embedded in popular Victorian fiction? This talk proposes “citation chaining” as an archival methodology for that project, tracing how the penanggalan—a Malay vampiric figure—traveled from Abdullah bin Abdul Kadir’s 1819 description in a missionary periodical through colonial print networks to Bram Stoker’s research notes for Dracula, unattributed.

Winter Jade Werner is Associate Professor of English at Wheaton College and Visiting Scholar at Universiti Malaya. She is the author of Missionary Cosmopolitanism in Nineteenth-Century British Literature (Ohio State UP, 2020), and her book in progress traces the entanglements of British missionary print culture and Victorian ideas of “world literature.” Her work is forthcoming or appears in ELH, Victorian Studies, Comparative Literature, and MLQ.

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Women’s Transnational Networks of Solidarity: Anti-Colonial and Anti-Fascist Movements across the Mediterranean

Speaker: Christina Bezari, Senior Post-doctoral Fellow, University of Brussels

Moderator: Daniel Elam, Assistant Professor, Department of Comparative Literature, HKU

Date: Wednesday, April 8, 2026
Time: 12 noon Hong Kong Time
Venue: Faculty Lounge (Room 430), 4/F, Run Run Shaw Tower, HKU

Recent studies have theorized the Mediterranean as a privileged site for the study of literary and geopolitical interactions in the twentieth century. Despite these advances, Southern Europe and the Maghreb have often been studied in isolation and have occupied a “peripheral” position with regard to the more “dominant” centers of political power. The main objective of this lecture is to shed light on Southern European and Maghrebi women’s participation in transnational anti-colonial and anti-fascist movements by analyzing their contributions as writers, journalists and editors of periodicals. Long regarded as “marginal actors” in the public sphere, women’s participation in the press and in transnational networks of solidarity has been obscured due to a long history of censorship, colonial domination and dictatorial rule on both sides of the Mediterranean. By considering women as cultural mediators and agents of resistance within a comparative, trans-Mediterranean framework, this lecture aims to challenge traditional Eurocentric narratives and examine women’s texts as sites of political engagement.

Christina Bezari is a senior post-doctoral fellow at the University of Brussels (ULB). Her research is located at the intersection of comparative literature, Mediterranean studies and women’s history. She is the author of Transnational Modernity in Southern Europe: Women’s Periodicals and Salon Culture (Routledge, 2023) and the co-editor of the special issue “Latinity and Modernity: Cultural Identities and Transnational Exchange in a Globalizing World” (2025). Her research focuses on transnational networks of writers, editors, translators and cultural mediators in Southern Europe and the Maghreb. She has previously co-directed an international project on the “imaginaries of translation” at Sorbonne University (Paris-IV).

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