PaMLA Francophone Graphic Novels/Bande dessinée: Authority and Resistance
Dear colleagues,
|
a service provided by www.english.upenn.edu |
FAQ changelog |
Dear colleagues,
https://jnr2.hcommons.org/ | ISSN: 1759-3085
Call for Submissions
We are currently inviting submissions for our next open issue on any aspect of cultural practice in Northern Europe in the period 1430-1650, including but not limited to the following disciplines:
☞ Literature
☞ Art & Architectural History
☞ Musicology
☞ Philosophy
☞ Theology
☞ Political Studies
☞ History
☞ Rhetorics
☞ Dance & Performance
☞ Manuscript and Archival Studies
Submit a Manuscript to the Journal
Sport in Society
For a Special Issue on
Artificial Intelligence and Sport from Social and Scholarly PerspectivesAbstract deadline01 May 2026Manuscript deadline01 December 2026 Special Issue Editor(s)
Shu Wan, University at Buffalo
shuwan@buffalo.edu
Huijie Zhang, South China Normal University
huijiezhang199@163.com
Panel proposal #6 for the ASAP 17 Conference
Madison, WI | October 15-17, 2026
How Soon is Now? Co-Constructing Hope for the Collective Present
Ekphrasis, the verbal representation of visual representation, is one of art’s oldest preoccupations. Over the past decade, we have seen a rise in British and Irish innovative ekphrastic poetry and visual art that responds to poetry. Concurrently, there has been a new wave of interest in the efficacy and function of ekphrasis, that focuses on its role as a type of creative practice and a way of thinking through aesthetic judgement. Despite all this activity, no formal consideration of the field of ekphrasis itself has emerged. Ekphrasis underwent a paradigmatic shift in which it was no longer defined by its ‘paragonal’ energy.
As the section editor for The Queer Experience, I invite you to submit a chapter proposal for consideration to be included in The American Research Handbook on Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, an edited scholarly volume that examines the evolving role of diversity, equity, and inclusion within American democracy and educational institutions.
The Queer Experience section seeks rigorous, thoughtful, and evidence-based analyses that examine gender identity, sexuality, intersectionality, and the evolving role(s) of queer people in society at the present moment.
This special issue aims to cultivate greater convergence and contribute to the broader discourse on cross-cultural exchange, particularly in contexts beyond the Euro-American center. We encourage investigations into how cultural values, ideological frameworks, and aesthetic sensibilities shape the translation and reception of children’s literature across diverse cultural contexts. We also encourage the integration of new theoretical lenses and trends, such as transcreation, affect theory, audiovisual translation, cognitive translation studies, and interdisciplinary approaches to gender and ecology, and the impact of AI, in the discussion of translational convergences and divergences in global children’s literature.