CFP: The Jewish Graphic Novel (11/30/06; collection)
The Jewish Graphic Novel
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The Jewish Graphic Novel
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The Jewish Graphic Novel
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The Jewish Graphic Novel
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Call for Papers: =93Works of Fancy: Women, Literature, and Science=94 =
ASECS =96 March 22-25, Atlanta, Georgia
This panel explores women and scientific discourse in the long =
eighteenth century. Genres include, but are not limited to, poetry, =
prose (fiction and non-fiction), drama, and art. This session focuses =
particularly on women utilizing scientific discovery, discourse, and/or =
representation in the context of their work rather than women =
specifically writing about science, although this would be of interest =
as well.
Please forward a 300-500 word abstract and vita by September 1, 2006 to =
jhayden_at_ut.edu or by regular mail to arrive by September 1,2006 to:
Call for Papers: =93Works of Fancy: Women, Literature, and Science=94 =
ASECS =96 March 22-25, Atlanta, Georgia
This panel explores women and scientific discourse in the long =
eighteenth century. Genres include, but are not limited to, poetry, =
prose (fiction and non-fiction), drama, and art. This session focuses =
particularly on women utilizing scientific discovery, discourse, and/or =
representation in the context of their work rather than women =
specifically writing about science, although this would be of interest =
as well.
Please forward a 300-500 word abstract and vita by September 1, 2006 to =
jhayden_at_ut.edu or by regular mail to arrive by September 1,2006 to:
Call for Papers: =93Works of Fancy: Women, Literature, and Science=94 =
ASECS =96 March 22-25, Atlanta, Georgia
This panel explores women and scientific discourse in the long =
eighteenth century. Genres include, but are not limited to, poetry, =
prose (fiction and non-fiction), drama, and art. This session focuses =
particularly on women utilizing scientific discovery, discourse, and/or =
representation in the context of their work rather than women =
specifically writing about science, although this would be of interest =
as well.
Please forward a 300-500 word abstract and vita by September 1, 2006 to =
jhayden_at_ut.edu or by regular mail to arrive by September 1,2006 to:
Early Modern Automata
Edited by Wendy Beth Hyman
Early Modern Automata
Edited by Wendy Beth Hyman
Early Modern Automata
Edited by Wendy Beth Hyman
Women and the everyday realities of war
Call for contributions
Essay collection
Whether living through the British Civil War in the seventeenth century or the American Civil War in the nineteenth century or today's conflicts in the Middle East, women writers have historically chronicled their responses to war in ways that merge politics and domesticity. Despite vast differences in time and place, works like Jane Cavendish's manuscript writing (ca. 1640) shares with Hanan al-Shaykh's more recent evocations of war-torn Beirut a sense that women's acts of everyday resistance--making bread even when food supplies have been raided, for example--impact the way war works, on metaphoric, physical, political, and ideological levels.
Women and the everyday realities of war
Call for contributions
Essay collection
Whether living through the British Civil War in the seventeenth century or the American Civil War in the nineteenth century or today's conflicts in the Middle East, women writers have historically chronicled their responses to war in ways that merge politics and domesticity. Despite vast differences in time and place, works like Jane Cavendish's manuscript writing (ca. 1640) shares with Hanan al-Shaykh's more recent evocations of war-torn Beirut a sense that women's acts of everyday resistance--making bread even when food supplies have been raided, for example--impact the way war works, on metaphoric, physical, political, and ideological levels.
Women and the everyday realities of war
Call for contributions
Essay collection
Whether living through the British Civil War in the seventeenth century or the American Civil War in the nineteenth century or today's conflicts in the Middle East, women writers have historically chronicled their responses to war in ways that merge politics and domesticity. Despite vast differences in time and place, works like Jane Cavendish's manuscript writing (ca. 1640) shares with Hanan al-Shaykh's more recent evocations of war-torn Beirut a sense that women's acts of everyday resistance--making bread even when food supplies have been raided, for example--impact the way war works, on metaphoric, physical, political, and ideological levels.
Women and the everyday realities of war
Call for contributions
Essay collection
Whether living through the British Civil War in the seventeenth century or the American Civil War in the nineteenth century or today's conflicts in the Middle East, women writers have historically chronicled their responses to war in ways that merge politics and domesticity. Despite vast differences in time and place, works like Jane Cavendish's manuscript writing (ca. 1640) shares with Hanan al-Shaykh's more recent evocations of war-torn Beirut a sense that women's acts of everyday resistance--making bread even when food supplies have been raided, for example--impact the way war works, on metaphoric, physical, political, and ideological levels.
CFP: HORROR (LITERATURE/FICTION/FILM/CULTURE)
2007 NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE
POPULAR & AMERICAN CULTURE ASSOCIATIONS
The "Horror" Area Chair of the Popular Culture Association
invites interested scholars to submit papers on any aspect
of horror in literature, cinema, television, or general culture
for the 2007 PCA National Convention to be held at the
Boston Marriott at Copley Place in Boston, MA.
The conference runs from April 4-7.
If you are interested in being a presenter, please send a
100-250 word abstract, including title, through email or regular mail.
You may send as a Word attachment or in the body of the email.
CFP: ALL AREAS OF THE PCA/ACA
2007 National Popular Culture and American Culture Associations' Joint Conference
April 4 - 7, 2007
Boston Marriott Copley Place
Boston, Massachusetts
The National PCA/ACA Conference is interested in receiving submissions/abstracts for next year's conference at the beautiful Boston Marriott Copley Place hotel in the historic Boston Back Bay area.
We have a broad spectrum of topic areas in all fields of academics, business, entertainment, personal interests, and politics, from various types of literature, to ethnographic studies, to technology, to everyday life.
For more information on the conference, please visit:
CFP: HORROR (LITERATURE/FICTION/FILM/CULTURE)
2007 NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE
POPULAR & AMERICAN CULTURE ASSOCIATIONS
The "Horror" Area Chair of the Popular Culture Association
invites interested scholars to submit papers on any aspect
of horror in literature, cinema, television, or general culture
for the 2007 PCA National Convention to be held at the
Boston Marriott at Copley Place in Boston, MA.
The conference runs from April 4-7.
If you are interested in being a presenter, please send a
100-250 word abstract, including title, through email or regular mail.
You may send as a Word attachment or in the body of the email.
ADAPTATION ADAPTING CULTURE IN LITERATURE, FILM, AND NEW MEDIA
Deadline for Abstracts: Nov 1, 2006
For the 2007 Popular Culture Association (PCA)/
American Culture Association (ACA) Conference
in Boston, Massachusetts, from April 4th to April 7th.
Adaptation studies, long the step-child to both literary studies
and film studies, has begun to mature into its own discipline
spanning the gaps between film, literature, and translation
studies. Since at least the time of George Bluestone a handful
of scholars has worked to understand adaptation not simply
as a way of thinking about literary works that have been
ADAPTATION ADAPTING CULTURE IN LITERATURE, FILM, AND NEW MEDIA
Deadline for Abstracts: Nov 1, 2006
For the 2007 Popular Culture Association (PCA)/
American Culture Association (ACA) Conference
in Boston, Massachusetts, from April 4th to April 7th.
Adaptation studies, long the step-child to both literary studies
and film studies, has begun to mature into its own discipline
spanning the gaps between film, literature, and translation
studies. Since at least the time of George Bluestone a handful
of scholars has worked to understand adaptation not simply
as a way of thinking about literary works that have been
ADAPTATION ADAPTING CULTURE IN LITERATURE, FILM, AND NEW MEDIA
Deadline for Abstracts: Nov 1, 2006
For the 2007 Popular Culture Association (PCA)/
American Culture Association (ACA) Conference
in Boston, Massachusetts, from April 4th to April 7th.
Adaptation studies, long the step-child to both literary studies
and film studies, has begun to mature into its own discipline
spanning the gaps between film, literature, and translation
studies. Since at least the time of George Bluestone a handful
of scholars has worked to understand adaptation not simply
as a way of thinking about literary works that have been
CFP: Digital Games
PCA/ACA National Conference
April 4-7, 2007
Boston Marriott Copley Place
Boston, Massachusetts
Abstract Submission Deadline: November 1, 2006
The Digital Games area of the Popular Culture Association
invites papers/panels on digital games (video games, computer
games, arcade games, etc.) and digital game studies for the Popular
Culture Association/American Culture Association National
Conference to be held April 4-7, 2007, at the Boston Marriott
Copley Place in Boston, Massachusetts. All topics related to
digital games and digital game studies will be considered.
CFP: Digital Games
PCA/ACA National Conference
April 4-7, 2007
Boston Marriott Copley Place
Boston, Massachusetts
Abstract Submission Deadline: November 1, 2006
The Digital Games area of the Popular Culture Association
invites papers/panels on digital games (video games, computer
games, arcade games, etc.) and digital game studies for the Popular
Culture Association/American Culture Association National
Conference to be held April 4-7, 2007, at the Boston Marriott
Copley Place in Boston, Massachusetts. All topics related to
digital games and digital game studies will be considered.
American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies
38th Annual Meeting
Atlanta, Georgia, 22-25 March, 2007
The Ecocritical Eighteenth Century
American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies
38th Annual Meeting
Atlanta, Georgia, 22-25 March, 2007
The Ecocritical Eighteenth Century
Submission deadline extended. We will also be accepting 500-word abstracts in lieu of full articles.
Call for Papers
Writing Against the Curriculum:
Anti-Disciplinarity in the Writing and Cultural Studies Classroom
Submission deadline extended. We will also be accepting 500-word abstracts in lieu of full articles.
Call for Papers
Writing Against the Curriculum:
Anti-Disciplinarity in the Writing and Cultural Studies Classroom
_Florilegium_, the journal of the Canadian Society of Medievalists/Société
canadienne des médiévistes, invites submissions for its next volume. Papers on any
aspect of Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages (including the post-medieval
representation of the medieval period) are welcome. Submissions intended for the
next volume should arrive by the end of August 2006.
For information about the journal, please visit
<http://www.csm.wlu.ca/Florilegium/florilegium.htm>.
_Florilegium_, the journal of the Canadian Society of Medievalists/Société
canadienne des médiévistes, invites submissions for its next volume. Papers on any
aspect of Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages (including the post-medieval
representation of the medieval period) are welcome. Submissions intended for the
next volume should arrive by the end of August 2006.
For information about the journal, please visit
<http://www.csm.wlu.ca/Florilegium/florilegium.htm>.
The First International Making Books, Shaping Readers Conference
University College, Cork, April 18th - 20th 2007
http://www.ucc.ie/en/mbsr
Theme: "Making an Audience"
This conference encourages a broad interpretation of the notion of an
audience in keeping with the etymology of the word. (The term audience,
which derives from the Latin audenita, "a hearing, listening", from awis,
"to perceive physically, to grasp", and from the nineteenth century
transformation of the sense of the word to "readers of a book", reflects the
way in which technologies of the word have changed throughout history, from
oral, to manuscript, to print).
Panel Proposal for 2007 Society for Cinema and Media Studies Conference
Chicago, March 8-11, 2007
European Cinema in Postwar America
Organizers, Karl Schoonover and Chris Cagle
The First International Making Books, Shaping Readers Conference
University College, Cork, April 18th - 20th 2007
http://www.ucc.ie/en/mbsr
Theme: "Making an Audience"
This conference encourages a broad interpretation of the notion of an
audience in keeping with the etymology of the word. (The term audience,
which derives from the Latin audenita, "a hearing, listening", from awis,
"to perceive physically, to grasp", and from the nineteenth century
transformation of the sense of the word to "readers of a book", reflects the
way in which technologies of the word have changed throughout history, from
oral, to manuscript, to print).