all recent posts

Steve Tomasula: The Art of Representation

updated: 
Wednesday, September 18, 2024 - 3:34pm
Paris - University of Chicago in Paris
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, November 4, 2024

Steve Tomasula: The Art of Representation

June 12 and 13 2025The University of Chicago in Paris, in the presence of the author

 

Keynote speakersDavid Banash (Western Illinois University), Mary K. Holland (State University of New York, New Paltz)

 

Organized jointly by several institutions (Université Paris Cité, Université Paris 8 Vincennes-Saint-Denis, Sorbonne Université, Université de Rennes, Université de Rouen, Université de Strasbourg), this is the first international conference devoted to the work of Steve Tomasula.

Eudora Welty Society CFPs for ALA 2025

updated: 
Tuesday, September 17, 2024 - 2:37pm
Adrienne Akins Warfield/Mars Hill University
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, December 1, 2024

I'm writing to share the CFPs for the two Eudora Welty Society sessions that will be featured at the 2025 American Literature Association Conference in Boston at the Westin Copley Place (May 21-24, 2025). ******************** 1. Welty’s Sheltered Daring and Furtive FeminismEudora Welty concludes her literary autobiography One Writer’s Beginnings with the self-summation, “[a]s you have seen, I am a writer who came of a sheltered life. A sheltered life can be a daring life as well. For all serious daring comes from within” (104).

Humorous Perspectives on Perpetrators--special issue

updated: 
Tuesday, September 17, 2024 - 2:37pm
American Studies Program, University of Bucharest
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, January 20, 2025

This is a Call for Papers for a special issue of the online open-access double-blind peer-reviewed journal [Inter]sections, titled Laughing in the Face of Evil: Humorous Perspectives on Perpetrators in Contemporary American Literature and Popular Culture. We invite papers that ask what humor can contribute to our understanding of perpetrators by examining a selection of works from contemporary American literature and popular culture. Does humor help demythologize certain perpetrators whose international fame turned them into quasi-mythical figures? Can the ownership of humorous content about a traumatic situation or process endured by a specific marginalized community be transferred to other communities?

Elemental Unevenness: Place-making in Literary and Cultural Forms

updated: 
Tuesday, September 17, 2024 - 2:37pm
American Comparative Literature Association (2025 Virtual Annual Meeting)
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, October 13, 2024

The way we imagine, represent, and signify the relations between empire and environment significantly shapes contemporary discourses on climate change, development, and globalization. Colonial and neoliberal legacies produce a “combined and uneven development” of the world system, resulting in hierarchies of metropolitan and peripheral relations. The elemental composition of environments (such as air, water, soil, and fire) in literary and cultural forms maps the intensification of these uneven relations under the capitalist mode of production. Jason Moore argues that the economy and environment are not independent of each other and posits that capitalism is a way of organizing nature (2015).

CFP: Stardom and Fandom, Southwest Popular/American Culture Assn Conference, Feb 19-22 2025

updated: 
Tuesday, September 17, 2024 - 2:37pm
Southwest Popular/American Culture Association
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, October 31, 2024

Call for Papers

Stardom and Fandom

Southwest Popular / American Culture Association (SWPACA)

 

46th Annual Conference, February 19-22, 2025

Marriott Albuquerque

Albuquerque, New Mexico

https://www.southwestpca.org

Proposal submission deadline: October 31, 2024

 

MEMORY, GUILT AND SHAME - 6th International Interdisciplinaey Conference

updated: 
Tuesday, September 17, 2024 - 2:36pm
InMind Support
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 30, 2024

Conference online: 17-18 October 2024

Scientific Committee:

Professor Wojciech Owczarski – University of Gdańsk, Poland

Dr. Ricardo Rato Rodrigues –  Maria Curie-Sklodowska University, Poland

 

CFP:

Reclamation and Revolution: Translation as a Catalyst for Change

updated: 
Tuesday, September 17, 2024 - 2:36pm
Dr. Rebecca L. Thompson /Northeast Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 30, 2024

Since coalescing into a formal discipline in the 1970s, Translation Studies has both hinged upon and facilitated conversations about power. For better or for worse, the movement of a text from one form into another necessitates reflection upon hierarchy, periphery, and justice. From Spivak's native informant, to Chamberlain's feminist critiques of canonical translation theory, to Venuti's identification of translation as a seeking of utopia, analyses of the connection between (dis)empowerment and translation abound. However, what happens to and with translation when disempowered actors seek agency? How can translation be examined, utilized, and conceptualized when disempowerment demands revolution?

Henry Miller in the 21st Century

updated: 
Monday, September 16, 2024 - 4:22pm
Nexus: The International Henry Miller Journal/The Henry Miller Memorial Library
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, January 15, 2025

HENRY MILLER'S PLACE IN THE 21ST CENTURY

 

From 16-19 October of 2025, Nexus: The International Henry Miller Journal and the

Henry Miller MemorialLibrary will host aconference at Asilomar in Pacific Grove,

California, with an excursion to the Henry MillerMemorial Library in Big Sur. We will

examine Miller in light of contemporary thinking, asking the question: Is Henry

Miller relevant today?

 

Although presentations on any aspect of Miller's writing, artwork, and life are

welcomed, the conference organizers particularlyencourage consideration of the

theme of Miller's place in the 21st Century.

 

Topics for presentations might include, but are not limited to:

(Revised Deadline!) Migrant Institutions: The Impact of Postwar Newcomers on British Cultural Life

updated: 
Monday, September 16, 2024 - 3:00pm
Institute of English Studies, University of London
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, September 26, 2024

Migrant Institutions: The Impact of Postwar Newcomers on British Cultural Life

Institute of English Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London

Monday, 9 December 2024

 

The Institute of English Studies invites proposals for a symposium exploring the impact of postwar migration on British cultural institutions. This one-day event will be held at Senate House, University of London on December 9th, 2024.

 

Universal Declaration of (Post)Human Rights: (R)evolution of the Clones, Robots & AIs--NeMLA 2025 Panel

updated: 
Monday, September 16, 2024 - 2:19pm
Martha Zornow
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 30, 2024

Speculative fiction creators regularly interrogate the question of who/what is entitled to human rights. As the created, grown, augmented, and manufactured beings of imagination become more sentient, is it ethical to maintain them as labor-saving devices or will they start to become entitled to, or even demand, rights? Is there a Posthuman Rights Movement in our future or a post “human rights” movement? How will this movement accommodate already-existing arguments for the rights of non-human beings, such as the rights of animals, corporations, and even fetuses, while accounting for humans who are not entitled to human rights? Does one need a human-ish form to deserve rights including around one’s labor?

ACLA 2025 Seminar: Working with Tainted Legacies

updated: 
Monday, September 16, 2024 - 1:33pm
American Comparative Literature Association
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, October 14, 2024

Weeks after the death of Nobel Prize-winning author Alice Munro this year, her daughter Andrea Skinner disclosed the longstanding sexual abuse she'd suffered as a child at the hands of her stepfather, Munro’s husband, Gerald Fremlin—abuse about which Munro had known and stayed silent. The disclosure is but the latest revelation to throw into question the legacy of a revered cultural icon. Neil Gaiman, Louis CK, Jean Vanier, and Avital Ronell are only a few public figures to be reassessed in recent years in the wake of accounts of sexual abuse.

Forwarding: The Reach of Black Mountain Poetry

updated: 
Monday, September 16, 2024 - 1:33pm
The Charles Olson Society
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, January 27, 2025

The Charles Olson Society will sponsor a session at the annual American Literature Association Conference, to be held in Boston, May 21-24. We are interested in abstracts that examine the influence of Charles Olson and/or other Black Mountain Poets on poetic practices and on subsequent generations of poets. A variety of poets took up the innovative ideas of figures like Charles Olson, Robert Creeley, Robert Duncan, John Wieners, Ed Dorn and others associated with Black Mountain. How have the practices of this fundamentally important school of poetics been extended, transformed, and/or resisted by poets from subsequent generations?

Call for Papers: ‘The Curatorial and Painting’

updated: 
Monday, September 16, 2024 - 1:33pm
Journal of Contemporary Painting
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 15, 2025

Call for Papers: Journal of Contemporary Painting

Special Issue: ‘The Curatorial and Painting’, Issue 12.1

Journal of Contemporary Painting invites submissions for issue 12.1 (to be published in April 2026) on the theme ‘The Curatorial and Painting’.

For the issue of JCP ‘The Curatorial and Painting’, we want to explore the contexts made for painting to be shown and painting’s impact on those contexts. We are interested in two ways of understanding an exchange between painting and the curatorial: through spatial/durational dimensions and through social practices.

Potential themes include:

Eighteenth-Century Cats!

updated: 
Monday, September 16, 2024 - 1:32pm
American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, September 20, 2024

What is an Internet-based conference without addressing the Internet’s favorite topic: cats!? This panel seeks papers interested in exploring eighteenth-century cats in their many facets and figurations. Cats abound during this period: from big cats in the natural histories, moralizing cats in fables and children’s stories, mysterious and symbolic cats in the art of Fragonard or Chardin, to real-life cats in the lives of Samuel Johnson or Horace Walpole.

Labor, Service, & Digitization Projects

updated: 
Monday, September 16, 2024 - 1:32pm
American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, September 20, 2024

The roundtable addresses the field of 18th-century-centered digital humanities and digitization projects through the lens of labor, service, and alt-ac career prospects. Extending out of previous ASECS panels on Transkribus-a-thons, challenges in digitization, and collaborative work in DH, this roundtable proposes to focus more closely on these issues in specifically graduate and early career contexts, to ask questions such as “What are the skills required for digitization projects?” and “Do networking/alt-ac skills building opportunities in digitization outweigh the labor demands?

Medieval Monstrosities

updated: 
Monday, September 16, 2024 - 1:31pm
Illinois Medieval Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, October 15, 2024

2024-2025 Illinois Medieval Association Symposium

November 8, 2024

Online and completely free

Submission Deadline: October 15

The Illinois Medieval Association is now accepting proposals for our annual Halloween session: Medieval Monstrosities. This session is part of our annual Symposium, which runs online throughout the year. Topics are open to any work being done on the monstrous, supernatural, strange, and/or bizarre. The session will be free and online, and papers presented at the session are eligible for submission to Essays in Medieval Studies, IMA's annual proceedings volume.

Celebrating Firebrand Books

updated: 
Monday, September 16, 2024 - 10:51am
Katharine O. Kittredge
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, January 1, 2025

Firebrand Burns On!

Conference to Celebrate Firebrand Books

Ithaca College

April 18-19, 2025

 

From 1984 to 2000 editor Nancy Bereano working out of a tiny office in Ithaca, New York published 104 books, including some of the most influential LGBTQIA+ titles ever produced.  This two-day conference celebrates the achievements and legacy of Firebrand Books.  For a complete overview of Firebrand publications see https://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/htmldocs/RMM07670.html. We invite papers on a variety of topics:

Discussions of the work of Firebrand authors, including:

Training Translators and Interpreters Today: Perspectives and Evolutions

updated: 
Monday, September 16, 2024 - 10:23am
Iulm University, Milan
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 30, 2024

In the last few years, increasing recourse to ever more efficient technologies and artificial intelligence has radically changed the interpreting and translating professions, triggering an evolution process whose outcomes are currently difficult to predict, but what is certain is that translators and interpreters have to do their best to respond to the changing requirements of a highly diversified market.

The Romantic (R)Evolution: De-bordering Romanticism

updated: 
Monday, September 16, 2024 - 5:50am
NeMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 30, 2024

This panel seeks proposals to approach Romanticism as a (r)evolutionary mode of thinking. We invite abstracts to revolutionize and de-border the conventional Eurocentric Romantic boundaries in genres, forms, styles, themes, cultural legacies, and critical methods. Proposals are invited to transcend Romanticism of the Romantic Era to a new timeless global Romanticism of both historicity and modernity that contributes to ideological diversity. From the old pan-European Romanticism to a new international Romanticism, reading Romantic Literature as World Literature, this panel welcomes new creative approaches to interpret works by the Romantics.

18th-Century Cats!

updated: 
Monday, September 16, 2024 - 5:50am
American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, September 20, 2024

Eighteenth-Century Cats! [ID 68]
Chair: Taylin Nelson, ASECS Graduate and Early Career Caucus, Rice University, tpn2@rice.edu

Weekend: March 28/29

What is an Internet-based conference without addressing the Internet’s favorite topic: cats!? This panel seeks papers interested in exploring eighteenth-century cats in their many facets and figurations. Cats abound during this period: from big cats in the natural histories, moralizing cats in fables and children’s stories, mysterious and symbolic cats in the art of Fragonard or Chardin, to real-life cats in the lives of Samuel Johnson or Horace Walpole.

Call for Reviews on Free Speech and Censorship

updated: 
Monday, September 16, 2024 - 5:50am
Randy Robertson / Modern Language Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, March 1, 2025

Modern Language Studies, the journal of the Northeast Modern Language Association, is seeking reviews for the summer 2025 issue. In recent years, the temperature has risen around free speech debates, and books on censorship and free speech come out with such frequency that it is hard to keep abreast of the new scholarship. I am interested in receiving reviews and review essays on academic books published in the last several years that are in some way related to free speech. The books to be reviewed can center on any historical, geographical, or disciplinary context, and the reviews and review essays can be written from (almost) any theoretical perspective.

Remembering and (Re)remembering Social Justice in the 21st Century

updated: 
Monday, September 16, 2024 - 5:50am
Ben Alexander. Columbia University
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, October 20, 2024

Call for Papers

 

New Volume: Remembering and (Re)remembering Social Justice in the 21st Century 

Publisher: FACET

Please Submit a 500 word Abstract by October 20.    

Ben Alexander: Bea3@columbia.edu

 

We are looking for 3, maybe 4, chapters to complete our volume that is in-contract with FACET.  Verne Harris will be authoring our Forward, Trudy Peterson our Introduction and Verne Harris our Afterword.  Chapter titles include:

 

Call for themed submissions: The "Freak" Issue (creative writing)

updated: 
Sunday, September 15, 2024 - 4:47pm
Puerto del Sol Literary Journal
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, November 17, 2024

Call for themed submissions: the "freak" issue (creative writing only - we do not accept academic writing) Puerto del Sol is seeking work which engages with the theme of freak. Freaking, to freak, to be freaked. A freaky thing. Freak has a past: a rotten one. Freak as a scorn, as a label tied around necks by hierarchy, ableism, transphobia, racism. Freak as pushback. Freak getting freaked the freak up. The grotesque growing despite. Revel in it. Leather-clad tunnel vision. Maximalism. That house in the woods we all want to see. Who is brave enough to look? And let me see your browser history. What are you hiding? What is it that lives behind those walls, under the skin, in the darkest corner of the attic?

Narrative Fracture in East and Southeast Asian Art and Literature

updated: 
Sunday, September 15, 2024 - 3:24am
American Comparative Literature Association / ACLA
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, October 14, 2024

For the 2025 Annual ACLA Conference (May 29th-June 1st 2025, held virtually)

This panel asks presenters to consider the logics of fracture, at the level of idenity, artisitic production, and national scales as it realtes to East and Southeast Asian art and literature. 

ACLA Remote Panel Interdisciplinary Study of Homemaking: Mapping the Places, Routines, Memories, and Locales We Call Home

updated: 
Sunday, September 15, 2024 - 3:24am
May 29 - June 1, 2025 American Comparative Literature Association Annual Meeting
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, October 14, 2024

Please submit an abstract and bio on the ACLA Portal link by October 14, 2024 https://www.acla.org/node/add/paper?destination=/interdisciplinary-study-homemaking-mapping-places-routines-memories-and-locales-we-call-home&seminar=47603  We welcome papers that reflect on the diverse, layered, and fluid representations of homemaking for a seminar focused on three key thematic units: Homemaking: Spaces, Architecture, and Urban Geographies; Mapping the Everyday: Visual Arts, Objects, and Media; Gendered Spatial Configurations.

Call for thematic issues for Film Journal

updated: 
Sunday, September 15, 2024 - 3:23am
Film Journal SERCIA
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, March 31, 2027

Film Journal invites submissions for thematic issues to be published in 2026, 2027, 2028. We are looking for thematic issues that offer new perspectives on film history, theory, narrative and aesthetics.

Call for English Translations of Telugu Short Stories

updated: 
Sunday, September 15, 2024 - 3:23am
Antonym Publications
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, December 31, 2024

Inviting English translations of Telugu short stories for an edited anthology of Contemporary Telugu Short Stories (published between 1975-2024) to be published by Antonym Publications, Kolkata. The translated stories need to be between 1000 and 5000 words.Please mail details of the story you plan to translate by the 15th of October 2024.The translated stories need to be mailed in word format (Times New Roman, 12 font, double spaced) to pulunishi@gmail.com within 31st December 2024. Please add a brief bio of both the author and the translator.

Pages