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UPDATE "Poe & World LIterature, Poe as World Literature" at ACLA 2011 in Vancouver, Submissions due Nov. 12full name / name of organization: Emron Esplin contact email: eesplin@kennesaw.edu The deadline for submitting papers for the upcoming ACLA convention has been extended to November 12. Please see our original invitation below for our seminar on “Poe & World Literature, Poe as World Literature.” Many thanks, Emron Esplin I am sending out this CFP for a seminar I have co-organized with Caroline Egan for the upcoming convention of the American Comparative Literature Association (ACLA) held from March 31-April 3, 2011 in Vancouver, Canada. ACLA’s annual convention uses a seminar format in which 8-12 participants meet together for 2-3 days to share their papers. To submit a paper, go to the ACLA website at www.acla.org, click on the Vancouver, Canada (2011) link under ACLA Annual Meetings, click on Propose a Paper, then fill out the proposal form and make sure that to select “Poe & World Literature, Poe as World Literature” in the Seminar drop box. The deadline for submissions is (now) November 12. If you are doing work on Poe from an international angle, we would enjoy receiving your submissions. Also, if you have questions about this seminar, feel free to email me directly at eesplin@kennesaw.edu. The CFP is below. Many thanks, Emron Esplin Caroline Egan Poe & World Literature, Poe as World Literature In their preface to the recent republication of Julio Cortázar’s famous Spanish translations of Edgar Allan Poe’s tales—Cuentos completos: Edición comentada—editors Jorge Volpi and Fernando Iwasaki claim that “todos somos descendientes de Edgar Allan Poe. Somos Poe & cia” [we are all descendants of Edgar Allan Poe. We are Poe & Company” (14). Poe’s current world popularity—as manifested in the widespread celebration of his recent bicentennial in 2009— suggests a resounding global confirmation of Volpi’s and Iwasaki’s claim. Regardless of any assertions made by the cities of Boston, Richmond, Philadelphia, New York, or Baltimore, Poe’s legacy now belongs to the world. “Poe & World Literature, Poe as World Literature” hopes to continue the fruitful discussion of Poe’s relationship to the world and to world literature that grew out of a seminar from last year’s ACLA convention entitled “Cosmopolitan Poe.” We invite proposals from former and new participants that treat Poe as an international writer. Paper topics could include: In short, we are interested in any essay that looks at Poe and/as world literature. cfp categories: american cultural_studies_and_historical_approaches film_and_television general_announcements interdisciplinary international_conferences poetry popular_culture twentieth_century_and_beyond
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