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Postcolonial Shakespeares - CFP for Postcolonial Interventions Vol I, Issue 2 -

updated: 
Thursday, December 31, 2015 - 12:16pm
Postcolonial Interventions: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Postcolonial Studies

2016 marks the quartercentenary of Shakespeare's death and the upcoming issue of Postcolonial Interventions would focus on the continued relevance of multiple Shakespeares in the culture-scape of the postcolonial world. It is true that not only were Shakespearean plays shaped in many ways by colonial discourses, especially discourses of racial difference, but Shakespearean plays also initially functioned as those "signs taken for wonders" through which the colonial administrators sought to consolidate imperial hegemony, as evident from such critical works as Post-Colonial Shakespeares (1999).

[UPDATE] Deadline extended for disClosure: A Journal of Social Theory, Volume 25: Transnational Lives

updated: 
Thursday, December 31, 2015 - 11:27am
University of Kentucky disClosure: A Journal of Social Theory

SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 1 February 2016, by 5pm EST

The editorial collective of disClosure seeks submissions that explore Transnational Lives as they are understood in a variety of areas and disciplines, including (but not limited to) Sociology; Gender and Women's Studies; History; Philosophy; Anthropology; Political Science; Hispanic Studies; Communications; Theories of Transnationality, Hybridity and Bifocality; and Literature (particularly analyses dealing with border studies, immigration, or transnational lives). Possible topics might include:

CALL FOR PAPERS: disClosure: A Journal of Social Theory, Volume 25: Transnational Lives

updated: 
Thursday, December 31, 2015 - 11:18am
University of Kentucky disClosure: A Journal of Social Theory

The editorial collective of disClosure seeks submissions that explore Transnational Lives as they are understood in a variety of areas and disciplines, including (but not limited to) Sociology; Gender and Women's Studies; History; Philosophy; Anthropology; Political Science; Hispanic Studies; Communications; Theories of Transnationality, Hybridity and Bifocality; and Literature (particularly analyses dealing with border studies, immigration, or transnational lives). Possible topics might include:

International Seminar on Exploring Trauma: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (January 28-29, 2016)

updated: 
Thursday, December 31, 2015 - 8:38am
Department of English, University of Gour Banga, West Bengal, India

Trauma Studies is a unique interdisciplinary platform that has acquired a prominent place in contemporary academic studies in the context of increasing visibility of violence in various spheres of human experience. It addresses socio-political issues of immense practical importance. While on the one hand it has been enriched by inputs from researches in different academic disciplines like history, philosophy, psychology, psychiatry, women's studies, ethnic studies, law and literature, it has also been strengthened and updated by sustained movements initiated by activist groups of different hues. Etymologically, 'trauma' means physical wounds but it has gradually absorbed the meaning of psychological wounds as well.

Call for papers on Theodore Dreiser for 2 panels at the 2016 American Literature Association Conference

updated: 
Thursday, December 31, 2015 - 12:54am
The International Theodore Dreiser Society

The International Theodore Dreiser Society will sponsor two panels at the American Literature Association Conference in San Francisco, CA on May 26-29, 2016.

Panel One: Open Topic
Papers are invited on any topic concerning Dreiser.

Panel Two: Global Dreiser
Papers are invited on topics concerning global contexts in Dreiser's life and work. Topics may include Dreiser's politics, travel writing, translations, transatlantic reception of his works, and other global issues relating to Dreiser.

Presentations will be limited to 20 minutes. Panelists are not required to be members of the International Theodore Dreiser Society.

The Nightmare of History: Modernism and Con/Text - MadLit Conference 2/25/16-2/27/16

updated: 
Wednesday, December 30, 2015 - 8:49pm
Modernisms/Modernities Colloquium (MMC) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison

This panel will explore new directions within the field of modernist studies that reconsider the boundary between text and context. The early New Critical reception of modernism often privileged form at the expense of context, whether biographical, socio-political, or historical. More recently, a historicist turn in modernist studies has reintroduced context as crucial to the study of modernist texts. In yet another dialectical swing of the pendulum, "new formalism" has attempted to renovate the concept of form by rethinking its relation to context.

Border Disputes: Global Modernism and World Literature - MadLit Conference 2/25/16-2/27/16

updated: 
Wednesday, December 30, 2015 - 8:48pm
Modernisms/Modernities Colloquium (MMC) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison

Recently scholars of modernism have advocated for a "global turn". Accordingly, the field of modernist studies has expanded to encompass times and places, authors and texts, which have been overlooked by traditional, canonical accounts of modernism. Extending the spatial and temporal boundaries of modernism has opened new avenues of inquiry and discovery. The decentering of modernist studies from its European focus has led to the inclusion of many non-European traditions and literatures. However, some argue that a global approach to the study of modernism ignores the particularities of history, culture, and language.

Different Drummers: Military Unit Cohesion and Its Discontents

updated: 
Wednesday, December 30, 2015 - 4:51pm
Tad Tuleja

One goal of military basic training is to replace recruits' focus on their own individuality with an unquestioned devotion to group solidarity. No military unit—whether as small as a squad or as large as an army—can survive unless its members subordinate their personal desires to collective action. This "de-individualization" is evident in everything from dress codes to forms of address, from small-arms drill to a reverence for "proper channels" and "chain of command." To be a member of the armed forces is, by definition, to be subordinate not only to those higher in rank but also to a protocols, regulations, and orders designed to ensure the efficient functioning of the whole.

The Problems of Literature Genres --- "hate speech", "styles of hatred"

updated: 
Wednesday, December 30, 2015 - 9:38am
The Problems of Literary Genres, University of Lodz, Poland

Call for Papers 
A renowned Polish academic journal "The Problems of Literary Genres" (Zagadnienia Rodzajów Literackich) invites contributions for 59 issue (vol. 1/2016 and 2/2016). We are waiting for critical, original, unpublished and innovative submissions written from any theoretical angle, which can attract both oversees and Polish readers. In 2016, we are especially interested in papers about different aspects of "style of hatred" and "hate speech" in contemporary, especially literary discourses.

The deadline: 30th April 2016

2016 Theatre Symposium: Pages, Stages, Audiences

updated: 
Wednesday, December 30, 2015 - 6:47am
Qatar University, Doha Department of English Literature and Linguistcs

Full Title: Theatre Symposium 2016: Pages, Stages, Audiences

Date: 08-May-2016 - 09-May-2016
Location: Qatar University Campus, Doha, Qatar
Contact Person: Dr. Anastasia Remoundou-Howley ts2016@qu.edu.qa
Call Deadline: February 28, 2016
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1652348941703221/

The Department of English Literature and Linguistics at Qatar University inaugurates a two-day Theatre Symposium open to scholars and theatre practitioners with an interest in theatre and theatrical praxis in and about the Middle East.

Reflections of Exile, Migration, and Diaspora in European Languages and Literatures [September 30 – October 1, 2016]

updated: 
Wednesday, December 30, 2015 - 2:38am
National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan

As Europe is currently facing the worst displacement crisis since the Second World War, the dominant public discourse on the issue is characterized by a curious mixture of xenophobia and humanitarianism. What is forgotten in this debate is that, historically speaking, Europe has always been a place of migrations. After all, the rough outlines of today's national composition of the continent is to a very great extent the result of the Great Migration (4–8 century AD). The people who came to Europe at that time met populations, like the Greeks and the Romans, who were themselves the children of earlier migrants.

[UPDATE] CFP: Intermediality/Intermédialité

updated: 
Tuesday, December 29, 2015 - 11:48pm
Équinoxes Graduate Conference, Brown University Dept. of French Studies

*Deadline for abstract submissions extended to January 20, 2016*

CALL FOR PAPERS
Intermediality
April 8-9, 2016
Brown University | Providence, Rhode Island
Keynote: Morgane Cadieu
Assistant Professor of French, Yale University

(Un)stable Identities: How the Self is Forged and Found - March 19, 2016

updated: 
Tuesday, December 29, 2015 - 8:05pm
English Graduate Student Association, University of North Carolina at Greensboro

Interdisciplinary Graduate Conference: (Un)Stable Identities: How the Self is Forged and Found

"There will be time / to prepare a face to meet the faces that you meet."­ Eliot, Prufrock
"We know what we are, but now what we may be."­ Shakespeare, Hamlet
"I am not an angel...and I will not be one till I die. I will be myself." ­ Bronte, Jane Eyre

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