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**Deadline Extended** (CFP: PAMLA 2025) Haunted Belonging: Memory, Erasure, and Identity in Diasporic Literatures

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
Wenyuan Wang / Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, June 30, 2025

This session explores how postcolonial and diasporic literatures grapple with memory, trauma, and cultural haunting. Rather than thinking of identity as fixed or linear, selfhood is complex and palimpsestic due to colonial violence, migration, and historical erasure. This session invites papers that analyze how characters or narratives navigate misremembering, inherited trauma, or overwritten histories to reclaim belonging and agency. Topics may include narrative voice, transgenerational memory, silence, storytelling, and archival gaps in multiethnic and immigrant literatures. This session welcomes interdisciplinary approaches and encourages work on Asian American, Black, Indigenous, and other diasporic communities.

Call for manuscripts: Towards a Global Understanding of Cultural Work

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
De Gruyter Publishers (Berlin/Boston)
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, December 31, 2025

De Gruyter Publishers hereby invite scholars to submit manuscripts for the new series

TOWARDS A GLOBAL UNDERSTANDING OF CULTURAL WORK


Series Editors:
  

Carlos Garrido Castellano, University College Cork, Ireland/University of Johannesburg, South Africa 
Minna Valjakka, University of Helsinki, Finland 

Migrations of the Self: Women’s Stories of Borders, Boundaries, and Becoming

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
Mussarat Shahid/ NeMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Modality: in-person only

Across cultures and histories, women have journeyed through visible and invisible migrations: geographic, emotional, spiritual, intellectual. This panel invites explorations of how these journeys and thresholds: both outer and inner, shape the evolution of selfhood. From the classroom to the kitchen, from the mother’s memory to the daughter's voice, from exile to homemaking, we seek narratives that dwell in moments and spaces of unfolding and becoming. These are stories of transition and tension, of belonging and othering, of rupture and reconciliation. 

Fascism and Literature

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
PAMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, June 30, 2025

This session explores the intersection between fascism and literature, particularly theatre, to ask how theatrical works, as well as other forms of poetry and art, can become a space for anti-authoritarian interruption.How do we break the cyclical myth with which fascism enchants the masses?

NeMLA 2026 (Panel) Regenerative Blackness—Skin, Flesh, and the Future of Being

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
Zay Dale/ University of Kansas
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

In her essay, “Mama’s Baby, Papa’s Maybe: An American Grammar Book,” Hortense Spillers articulates the enduring violence of racial enslavement through the concept of the “hieroglyphics of the flesh” (67). This term marks how the captive body, stripped of legal and social personhood, became inscribed with meaning through the violence of racial differentiation. This transformation rendered the Black body not only a surface upon which terror was written but also a metaphysical site from which alternative modes of being might be imagined. In attending to the duality of skin and flesh, Spillers distinguishes between Black skin as legible and social, and Black flesh as ungendered, unsovereign, and open—both wounded and full of radical potential. 

Queer-Class Relations Conference

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
CLAGS: The Center for LGBTQ Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 1, 2025

Queer-Class Relations Conference

Call for Proposals

April 17-18, 2026

CUNY Graduate Center, New York City

 

CLAGS: The Center for LGBTQ Studies at the CUNY Graduate Center will host a Queer-Class Relations conference April 17-18, 2026. Proposals are due by September 1, 2025. Successful applicants will be required to register by November 15, 2025.

Sally Rooney: Her Novels

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
Northeast Modern Language Assocation (NeMLA)
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

This NeMLA session critically discusses the novels of Sally Rooney. We will ask: is Rooney's oeuvre a critique, a snapshot, a suggestion, or a warning about a way forward for fiction, the novel form, feminism, and contemporary culture?

View full CFP here: https://cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/21883

 

Modality:

In Person Only: The session will be held fully in person at the hotel. No remote presentations will be included.

 

Questions/Comments:

Contact Kimberlyjcoates@gmail.com

Feeling the Nation: Emotion, Identity, and Memory in Literature and Media

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
NeMLA 2026
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

What does it mean to experience national belonging through emotion? This session brings together papers that consider the layered connections among feeling, identity, and cultural memory as they unfold across literature and media. In periods marked by rupture or transformation, emotion often anchors or unsettles the stories through which nations come to know themselves. Heritage dramas steeped in nostalgia, literary depictions of estrangement, and audiovisual forms of cultural longing all point to this dynamic. National identity, in these works, emerges not as a fixed concept but as a lived and felt experience.

Creative Explorations of the Post-Industrial City: (Re)generations of the Rust Belt

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:40am
Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA) Conference 2026
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

This year’s conference theme and location offer timely opportunities for creative engagement with the post-industrial city and (re)generations of the so-called “Rust Belt.” This session will enable participants to read/present and discuss original creative short-form work crafting and exploring narratives, concepts, identities, images, locations, perspectives, and/or experiences of the Rust Belt, a term coined in the 1980s to describe the decline of industries (particularly large-scale blue-collar production and manufacturing) and resultant economic decline and decay.

The Minotaur: From Antiquity to Today

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:40am
North East Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

The Minotaur and the Labyrinth from multidisciplinary perspectives, specifically on how the symbol of the Minotaur and the Labyrinth has been used from antiquity to now. How has the Minotaur been used, or abused, throughout time? How has the mythology surrounding it been used to generate or regenerate cultural structures? Referencing Jeffrey Jerome Cohen’s Monster Culture, what does the Minotaur reveal about the cultures he exists within?

Poetics of Embedded Narratives and Images in the Literature and Arts of the English-speaking World: Moving Borders

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:40am
University of Pau (France)
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 15, 2025

Poetics of Embedded Narratives and Images in the Literature and Arts of the English-speaking World: Moving Borders

Université de Pau et des Pays de l’Adour (July 2-3, 2026)

 

Organisers: Françoise Buisson, Fabienne Gaspari and Arnaud Schmitt 

(ALTER, UR 7504)

 

Europe from Its Margins: Toward Alternative Visions of the West

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:39am
NeMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, September 26, 2025

Since its tangential emergence in Said’s Orientalism in 1978, the term Occidentalism accrued multiple significations. Most notably, the term is argued to stage a counter- or reverse-discourse of Orientalism, operating on analogous dichotomic and oppositional paradigms. Most notable, in this context, is Ian Buruma and Avishai Margalit’s Occidentalism: The West in the Eyes of Its Enemies, which labels Occidentalism as “dehumanizing picture of the West painted by its enemies” (5). This panel queries if we can conceive East-West relations differently, apart from the Orientalist logic that inheres in studies of Occidentalism.

Special Issue: Apocalypse and the Biopolitics of Time

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:37am
Käte Hamburger Centre for Apocalyptic and Post-Apocalyptic Studies (CAPAS) at Heidelberg University
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, September 20, 2025

Link: https://heiup.uni-heidelberg.de/journals/apocalyptica/cfpsi

 

Apocalyptica is an international, interdisciplinary, open-access, double-blind peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Käte Hamburger Centre for Apocalyptic and Post-Apocalyptic Studies (CAPAS) at Heidelberg University.

Deconstructing Knowledge Derived from the Gendered Lens of AI

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:37am
SAMLA 2025 (Special Session)
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, July 10, 2025

Generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) is already recasting numerous aspects of human life. By all accounts, AI has an intense and manifold impact on society, incorporating both positive and negative traits. This session aims to explore how the gendered lens of AI is creating disruptions both for the academic field and the society at large. This panel invites educators, scholars, and researchers to critically investigate the consequences of gendered biases projected through AI stratification. Papers which explore the conference theme (Knowledge) and connect to knowledge production through the gendered lens of AI are especially welcome.

Edited collection: Entanglements: Place-Based Literatures for Ecological Liberation

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:35am
Dr. Gayathri Goel (Boston College) & Dr. Jennifer Horwitz (RISD)
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 15, 2025

Please submit a 300-word abstract for an edited collection, tentatively titled, Entanglements: Place-Based Literatures for Ecological Liberation

Please read the CFP below for details about the collection. We are expanding our search to include diverse geographies including South America, African countries, the Caribbean, the Middle East, Pacific Islands, and South East Asian countries. In addition to a “place” framework, we welcome diverse theoretical approaches and lenses including ones that apply Marxism, feminism, postcolonialism, New Materialism, indigeneity, critical race, nonhumanism, among others.

 

Pilgrimage, Liberation, and Flux: The (Re)Generated Reader

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:33am
Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA)
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

In her 1981 study of surrealist poetry, The Metapoetics of the Passage, Mary Ann Caws considers the capacity of poetic language to simultaneously arrest itself and enable forward movement: "The word is situated, as Jacques Garelli reminds us, between two deaths, so that each cluster of sounds located within this regenerating rhythm is able to resume its impetus, thus refreshed, as if it were starting again." It is the practice of architextural reading, Caws argues, that reveals the sustained surface tension at work in written texts, a tension often concealed beneath plot, message, the presence of characters, or particularly potent visual images.

Pedagogies of Archetypes: A Roundtable on Teaching the Inner Curriculum

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:30am
Mussarat Shahid/ NeMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Category: Pedagogy & Professional 

Session Type: Roundtable

Modality: F2F/ In-person, only

As educators navigate increasingly complex and emotionally demanding teaching landscapes, the question of ‘who we are when we teach’ becomes as important as what or how we teach’ This roundtable invites participants into a collaborative exploration of pedagogies of archetypes: the idea that teaching is guided not only by rational methods and explicit beliefs, but also by symbolic, emotional, and archetypal energies.

From High School to Higher Ed: Did You Take the Leap? (NeMLA roundtable, March 5-8 2026, Pittsburgh)

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:30am
Northeast Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Are proms, homecoming parades, lunch lines, hall passes, detentions, and study halls part of your past work life?

Or maybe show and tell, milk break, and recess duty?

And are you now awash in committee work, grant writing, abstract proposals, and syllabus templates?

If so, we want to hear your stories!

This roundtable seeks narrative presentations from academics who have previously taught in elementary, middle school, or high school settings. We will discuss the challenges of transitioning from a PK-12 environment to higher education, the benefits that our backgrounds bring to the higher ed table, and the lived experiences of professors who once taught in the elementary, middle, or secondary classrooms.

Human or Human-ish: Generating, Regenerating, Degenerating Humanity in Fiction (NeMLA panel, March 5-8 2026, Pittsburgh)

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:30am
Northeast Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Many fictional works tackle ethical challenges regarding human relationships with emergent technologies. Specifically, fiction presents issues about generation (invention and use of technologies), regeneration (cloning, simulated people and realities), and degeneration (collapsing of virtual worlds, discarding of clones and simulations).

Revisiting the Uncanny

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:30am
NeMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

In his essay “The Uncanny” (1919), Freud theorized the psychological implications of those aesthetic effects which disturb us without us quite knowing why.  While, according to Freud, the uncanny or das unheimlich evokes a peculiar form of affect within “the field of the frightening” (123), it is a type of fear distinct from that produced by horror and terror.  The uncanny, he argues, registers the traumatic return of “what was once known and had long been familiar” (124), but which had been repressed.  Explorations of the uncanny have linked the affect to repetition and the death drive (Royle 84), surrealism (97), uncertainty (Jentsch 7), and “a certainty that goes beyond any certainty that science can provide” (Dolar 22).  

Black Studies - MAPACA November 6-8

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:30am
Mid Atlantic Popular & American Culture Association (MAPACA)
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, July 31, 2025

Proposals are welcome on all aspects of popular and American culture for inclusion in the 2025 Mid-Atlantic Popular & American Culture Association (MAPACA) conference in Philadelphia, PA. Single papers, panels, roundtables, and alternative formats are welcome.

Minimalist Digital Humanities Pedagogy

updated: 
Monday, June 16, 2025 - 11:39pm
Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, June 30, 2025

Issue Editors:

Patricia Belen, Fordham University

Stefano Morello, The Graduate Center, CUNY

Gregory Palermo, Emory University

Danica Savonick, SUNY Cortland

Brandon Walsh, University of Virginia

2025 Harry Potter Academic Conference (HPAC) at Chestnut Hill College (virtual)

updated: 
Monday, June 16, 2025 - 8:02pm
Harry Potter Academic Conference (HPAC) at Chestnut Hill College
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 1, 2025

CALL FOR PAPERS: Harry Potter Academic Conference (HPAC) at Chestnut Hill College (virtual conference)

2025 Harry Potter Academic Conference (HPAC) at Chestnut Hill College

Friday and Saturday, October 17–18, 2025 (Eastern Time)

Virtual conference (digiHPAC)

Deadline for proposals (academics & community members): September 1, 2025

Call for Abstracts: Barbie in Latin America (Special Issue)

updated: 
Monday, June 16, 2025 - 12:53pm
Emily R. Aguiló-Pérez (West Chester University of Pennsylvania)
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 15, 2025

Call for Proposals: Special Issue on Barbie in Latin America

Deadline for Abstract Submissions: August 15, 2025
Edited by: Emily R. Aguiló-Pérez(West Chester University of Pennsylvania) and M. Paula Bontempo(National Science and Technology Research Council and the National University Arturo Jauretche)

NeMLA 2026 Panel: The Volcanic Imagination in Print and Visual Culture, 1780s-1880s

updated: 
Monday, June 16, 2025 - 9:57am
Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA)
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Volcanic matter really matters. During a one hundred year span from the 1780s to 1880s, a series of volcanic eruptions occurred that altered the atmosphere, disrupted weather conditions, and caused unprecedented loss due to famine and widespread disease: Laki Iceland (1783-1784); Vesuvius, Italy (1794); Pico Viejo, Canary Islands (1798); Tambora, Indonesia (1815); Ferdinandea, Sicily (1831); Hekla, Iceland (1840, 1845); and Krakatoa, Indonesia (1883). Various critics have written about the systemic effects geologically, meteorologically, and ecologically such as Richard Altick, David Higgins, Monique Morgan, Marilynn Olsen, Nicholas Robbins, Jesse Oak Taylor, and Gillen D’Arcy Wood.

NeMLA 2026 Roundtable: Reading as a Political Act: Exploring the Confluence of Literacy and Politics

updated: 
Monday, June 16, 2025 - 9:57am
Daniel C. Charlton / Montana State University
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

From book bans to executive orders, the question of academic freedom and the freedom to read has become increasingly urgent. In the wake of the 2024 election, debates around “parental rights” and ideological control have intensified, fueling challenges to literacy and intellectual freedom. According to preliminary data from the American Library Association, 1,128 unique titles were challenged between January 1 and August 31, 2024 (“American Library Association reveals preliminary data on 2024 book challenges,” September 23, 2024).

The (Re)generation of the Nonhuman: Nature and Text in Dialogue

updated: 
Monday, June 16, 2025 - 9:57am
Israel Eweka/NeMLA (Northeast Modern Language Association)
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

The last decade has seen a surge in scholarly interdisciplinarity, exploring the nonhuman in a broad range of critical perspectives. Whether through Glenworth et al (2024)’s conservationist prism which contextualises ‘Rewilding’ as a way of restoring ‘non-human autonomy’; or perhaps, through Bram Büscher (2021)’s capitalist reflections on nature’s alienation and entanglement, both of which are recent approaches that seek to champion the cause of ‘decentering the human in favor of a concern for the nonhuman’ (Grusin, 2015: 1), we see a growing pace of intersectionality within which nature and literature are brazenly intertwined.

Margins of Edibility: Non-food in Postcolonial South Asian Literatures Edited Volume — Call for Abstracts

updated: 
Monday, June 16, 2025 - 9:57am
University of Würzburg and IIT Kanpur
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Food, in any society, is defined as much by what is consumed as by what is excluded. The concept of edibility is shaped not only by nourishment or taste but also by cultural, religious, political, and social boundaries. This edited volume investigates non-food—items or substances that are technically ingestible but culturally rejected, stigmatized, or taboo—in postcolonial South Asian literature. From famine-induced substitutes to ritually impure matter, we seek to explore how literary representations of non-food reflect evolving dynamics of power, identity, and cultural values in a region deeply shaped by colonialism and its afterlives.

Embodied Experience, Emotions, and Creativity

updated: 
Monday, June 16, 2025 - 9:25am
Interface -Journal of European Languages and Literatures
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, July 30, 2025

Dear Colleagues,"Interface" calls for papers for a conference on the topic: Embodied Experience, Emotions, and CreativityConference Date: September  17-19, 2025Conference Place: Doğuş University, Istanbul, TurkeyAbstract Submission Deadline: July 30, 2025 "Interface" would like to thank Trier University (Centre for Advanced Studies "Poetry in Transition”), Kobe University (Graduate School of Humanities), and Seoul National University (Institute of Classical Studies) for their kind support and co-operation in organizing this conference. 

Art as resistance: protest as art, art as protest

updated: 
Monday, June 16, 2025 - 9:24am
Meredith Martin / NeMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

An online panel on the art of protest and political dissent. This includes artists who engage in socio-political protest through their work, or protestors who use art to disseminate their message.

Call for papers: An Awkward Marriage: Considering the serial killer’s social standing in a changing British culture

updated: 
Monday, June 16, 2025 - 3:57am
University of Worcester
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 29, 2025

Great Britain has a rich and varied history when it comes to true crime. This statement applies as much to the crimes themselves as it does to media producers’ coverage of them. While a global canon of true crime is forming, there has to date still been an emphasis placed on Western narratives according to American culture, with crimes from this region dominating media attention. However, Britain itself has a long history of true crime that warrants further critical attention, to include some of the most prolific serial killers within the genre: Fred and Rose West; Harold Shipman; John Christie; Dennis Nilsen; and, more recently, and controversially, Lucy Letby.

Haunted Cities: Spaces, Spectres, and Urban Hauntologies

updated: 
Sunday, June 15, 2025 - 7:00am
Editors - Marko Lukic and Irena Jurkovic/University of Zadar
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, July 1, 2025

Reminder:

Call for Papers

Haunted Cities: Spaces, Spectres, and Urban Hauntologies

Edited Collection

Journal article submissions for William Carlos Williams Review

updated: 
Friday, June 13, 2025 - 6:31pm
Williamm Carlos Williams Review
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, July 28, 2025

Call for submission of academic articles on William Carlos Williams for consideration by the William Carlos Williams Review. Articles must be between 20 to 30 pages in length. All topics welcome. Queries to the editor at copers@gmail.com. Deadline for submissions: July 28, 2025. To submit, register as an author and upload your article here: https://www.editorialmanager.com/wcwr/default.aspx

Early Modern Women: Figures, Labors, Afterlives (RSA 2026)

updated: 
Thursday, June 12, 2025 - 1:59pm
Renaissance Society of America
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 1, 2025

This panel invites papers that examine how early modern women were imagined and represented across genres and cultural contexts. From historical figures to literary characters, how were women positioned in relation to authority, virtue, sexuality, or empire?  How were women written, circulated, obscured, or celebrated in early modern texts? What roles did women play in shaping narratives of gender, race, and power? This panel welcomes work that attends to both the forms of representation and the structures that produced or obscured women’s presence in the early modern world. What kinds of authority or ambivalence did gendered figures carry, and how did race, class, and empire shape their depiction or erasure?

Pulse vol 13 (2026) CFP - Zines and STS: The Remix

updated: 
Thursday, June 12, 2025 - 1:59pm
Pulse: the Journal of Science and Culture
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, January 31, 2026

PULSE – the Journal of Science and Culture

ISSN 2416-111X

 

VOL 13 (2026) CALL FOR PAPERS

Zines and STS: The Remix

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Foreclosure, a Special Issue of Key Words: A Journal of Cultural Materialism

updated: 
Thursday, June 12, 2025 - 1:59pm
Chloe Ashbridge (Newcastle University) and Owain Burrell (Warwick University)
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, July 18, 2025

British cultural production has a long history of foreclosure. Understood as a premature abandonment, or an abortive failure, of radical political projects, foreclosure has an imaginative and material register in working-class writing, which has been read since the 1930s as failing to experiment, relying on realism without meaningful engagement with questions of literary form. This view has been challenged by literary scholars, who have demonstrated that formal experimentation did exist, though not in ways that comfortably align with the usual reading of middle-class modernism (Clarke Working Class Writing, 2018).

Victorians and AI

updated: 
Thursday, June 12, 2025 - 1:59pm
Northeast Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Perhaps the most relevant question we are facing today, both in and out of the university, is how to deal with AI. In academia, different disciplines handle this question in a myriad of ways, some insisting that to not embrace AI in the classroom is harmful to the students, while others believe the utilization of AI must weaken critical thinking skills. Regardless of the differing opinions on how to use it appropriately, no one disagrees that it is here to stay.

The Writing's on the Wall

updated: 
Thursday, June 12, 2025 - 1:59pm
Institute of Faith and the Academy
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 1, 2025

Institute of Faith and the Academy Conference 

Call for Papers 

September 26, 2025 

Theme: Writing's on the Wall

10th Annual Siedlce Forum for Contemporary Issues in Language and Literature

updated: 
Thursday, June 12, 2025 - 1:58pm
University of Siedlce
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 15, 2025

 

10th Annual Siedlce Forum for Contemporary Issues

in Language and Literature

to be held online for the purpose of presenting unpublished research findings in English

on November 13th-14th, 2025.

The leitmotif of the conference is:

Totality and fragmentation

in literature, linguistics, philosophy and culture

Forum for Contemporary Issues in Language and Literature 7/2026

updated: 
Thursday, June 12, 2025 - 1:58pm
University of Siedlce
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, May 31, 2025

CALL FOR PAPERS

vol. 7/2026

Forum for Contemporary Issues in Language and Literature is an international multidisciplinary periodical that welcomes for review any innovative and challenging research article encroaching upon the fields of literature, linguistics, philosophy and cultural studies.

The editorial board encourages researchers and young scholars to submit their article proposals that  comprise with the profile of the journal. The proposals can be sent in English, German, French, Spanish, Catalan and Polish. The manuscript submitted for publication is to be original and unpublished. It should not have been simultaneously submitted for review in any other journal.

Old English Literature, including Beowulf

updated: 
Thursday, June 12, 2025 - 1:58pm
Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, June 30, 2025

The Old English Literature session is open to any and all papers that explore some aspect of Old English poetry, prose, and/or Beowulf studies. We welcome proposals both related to the conference theme, "Palimpsests: Memory and Oblivion," and those not related.

Please submit an abstract here: 

 https://pamla.ballastacademic.com/Home/S/19648

 

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PAMLA 2025 Theme:

Trans-scriptions: Cultural Codings and the Poetics of the Body

updated: 
Thursday, June 12, 2025 - 1:58pm
International Conference organized by University of Szczecin & University of Wrocław
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, August 10, 2025

Trans-scriptions: Cultural Codings and the Poetics of the Body
International Conference organized by University of Szczecin & University of Wrocław
11-13 February 2026

Institute of English Studies, University of Wrocław, Poland
Hybrid On-site Conference

Critical Minerals Symposium

updated: 
Thursday, June 12, 2025 - 1:58pm
University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 15, 2025

Critical Minerals Symposium

7 November 2025
University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland

Keynote Speaker: Associate Professor Tom Nurmi, Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Recent geopolitical contestations over Ukraine’s rare earths, global debates on ‘critical’ minerals in the context of green energy transitions, and growing scholarly engagement – such as Museum and Society’s recent special issue on minerals – have all highlighted the ethical, political, and environmental stakes of minerals.

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