UPDATE: Transnational Romantic Women's Drama (5/1/05; collection)
DEADLINE EXTENDED: MAY 1
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DEADLINE EXTENDED: MAY 1
DEADLINE EXTENDED: MAY 1
8 April 2005
Nineteenth-Century Prose invites submissions for a special issue on Matthew
Arnold. We encourage a wide range of topics focusing on prose works by
Arnold as well as topics related to broader issues regarding Arnold's
influence on literature (including individual authors), literary and
cultural studies, religious studies, and education. Arnold's current
standing in cultural studies or other academic fields is of particular
interest. Interdisciplinary approaches are welcomed. Submissions which
discuss both Arnold's poetry and prose are appropriate, but not those which
focus exclusively on poetry.
8 April 2005
Nineteenth-Century Prose invites submissions for a special issue on Matthew
Arnold. We encourage a wide range of topics focusing on prose works by
Arnold as well as topics related to broader issues regarding Arnold's
influence on literature (including individual authors), literary and
cultural studies, religious studies, and education. Arnold's current
standing in cultural studies or other academic fields is of particular
interest. Interdisciplinary approaches are welcomed. Submissions which
discuss both Arnold's poetry and prose are appropriate, but not those which
focus exclusively on poetry.
_The Looking Glass_ invites scholarly submissions for the following
special topic to be highlighted in "Alice's Academy", its scholarly
refereed section:
Magic Realism in Children's Literature
Submission Deadline: 1 September 2005
Publication Date: January 2006
Articles are welcome on any critical or theoretical aspect of magic
realism in children's literature. Please see
http://www.the-looking-glass.net/contribute.html for submission
guidelines and editorial policies.
_The Looking Glass_ invites scholarly submissions for the following
special topic to be highlighted in "Alice's Academy", its scholarly
refereed section:
Magic Realism in Children's Literature
Submission Deadline: 1 September 2005
Publication Date: January 2006
Articles are welcome on any critical or theoretical aspect of magic
realism in children's literature. Please see
http://www.the-looking-glass.net/contribute.html for submission
guidelines and editorial policies.
Call For Papers: Christian Atheism (5/19/05; RSA 3/23-5/06)
Panel Proposed for the 2006 Renaissance Society
of America Annual Meeting in San Francisco, March
23-5.
Call For Papers: Christian Atheism (5/19/05; RSA 3/23-5/06)
Panel Proposed for the 2006 Renaissance Society
of America Annual Meeting in San Francisco, March
23-5.
CALL FOR PAPERS
Interdisciplinary Essays on Wilkie Collins
Papers are being sought for a collection of essays on Wilkie Collins.
Edited by Andrew Mangham, the collection will be printed by Cambridge
Scholars Press in Spring 2006. I am particularly interested in essays
exploring the work of Wilkie Collins in relation to art, science, law,
theatre and film adaptation. I am also interested in essays that explore
the historical, periodical context of Collins's work.
Deadline for submissions: 1st June 2005. Essays are to be 5-6,000 words
in length and follow the author/date system.
Inquiries to: andrewscottmangham_at_hotmail.com
____________________________
Call for Papers: Approaches to Language (Peer-reviewed)
Call for Papers (July issue deadline: May 1, 2005)
The International Journal of Motorcycle Studies (IJMS) is dedicated to the
study and discussion of motorcycling culture in all its forms and from all
over the world-including moped/scooter, street and racetrack, and
off-road/dirt bikes as well as every aspect of motorcycle culture past,
present and future. We hope the journal provides further opportunities to
explore these issues. The inaugural issue was published online in March,
2005: ijms.nova.edu.
We welcome submissions on all areas related to the cultural phenomenon of
motorcycling from not only academics but all members of the motorcycling
community or those interested in motorcycling.
Call for Papers (July issue deadline: May 1, 2005)
The International Journal of Motorcycle Studies (IJMS) is dedicated to the
study and discussion of motorcycling culture in all its forms and from all
over the world-including moped/scooter, street and racetrack, and
off-road/dirt bikes as well as every aspect of motorcycle culture past,
present and future. We hope the journal provides further opportunities to
explore these issues. The inaugural issue was published online in March,
2005: ijms.nova.edu.
We welcome submissions on all areas related to the cultural phenomenon of
motorcycling from not only academics but all members of the motorcycling
community or those interested in motorcycling.
Call for Papers (July issue deadline: May 1, 2005)
The International Journal of Motorcycle Studies (IJMS) is dedicated to the
study and discussion of motorcycling culture in all its forms and from all
over the world-including moped/scooter, street and racetrack, and
off-road/dirt bikes as well as every aspect of motorcycle culture past,
present and future. We hope the journal provides further opportunities to
explore these issues. The inaugural issue was published online in March,
2005: ijms.nova.edu.
We welcome submissions on all areas related to the cultural phenomenon of
motorcycling from not only academics but all members of the motorcycling
community or those interested in motorcycling.
antiTHESIS, "The Event, Culture and Contingency"
Call for Papers
antiTHESIS, one of Australia's longest running postgraduate
interdisciplinary journals, now invites contributions for both the third
annual antiTHESIS Postgraduate Symposium entitled The Event, Culture
and Contingency and for Volume 16 (2006), "in the event …"
"Truth happens to an idea. It becomes true, is made true by events. Its
verity is in fact an event, a process: the process namely of its verifying
itself, its veri-fication." - William James
antiTHESIS, "The Event, Culture and Contingency"
Call for Papers
antiTHESIS, one of Australia's longest running postgraduate
interdisciplinary journals, now invites contributions for both the third
annual antiTHESIS Postgraduate Symposium entitled The Event, Culture
and Contingency and for Volume 16 (2006), "in the event …"
"Truth happens to an idea. It becomes true, is made true by events. Its
verity is in fact an event, a process: the process namely of its verifying
itself, its veri-fication." - William James
antiTHESIS, "The Event, Culture and Contingency"
Call for Papers
antiTHESIS, one of Australia's longest running postgraduate
interdisciplinary journals, now invites contributions for both the third
annual antiTHESIS Postgraduate Symposium entitled The Event, Culture
and Contingency and for Volume 16 (2006), "in the event …"
"Truth happens to an idea. It becomes true, is made true by events. Its
verity is in fact an event, a process: the process namely of its verifying
itself, its veri-fication." - William James
_The Looking Glass_, an online children's literature journal, invites
submissions to all columns and sections for the special issue on Japanese
Children's Literature and Culture.
Deadline for Submissions: 1 October 2005
Publication Date: April 2006
_The Looking Glass_, an online children's literature journal, invites
submissions to all columns and sections for the special issue on Japanese
Children's Literature and Culture.
Deadline for Submissions: 1 October 2005
Publication Date: April 2006
_The Looking Glass_, an online children's literature journal, invites
submissions to all columns and sections for the special issue on Japanese
Children's Literature and Culture.
Deadline for Submissions: 1 October 2005
Publication Date: April 2006
In conjunction with the theme of a future issue of the Shakespeare
Yearbook, "Shakespeare and Theory Re-thought." the journal will
sponsor a special session at the upcoming Annual Meeting of the
Renaissance Society of America (San Francisco, March 23-25, 2006.)
In conjunction with the theme of a future issue of the Shakespeare
Yearbook, "Shakespeare and Theory Re-thought." the journal will
sponsor a special session at the upcoming Annual Meeting of the
Renaissance Society of America (San Francisco, March 23-25, 2006.)
CFP for NEASECS 2005: Scots and Africans in the Transatlantic 18c
CFP for NEASECS 2005: Scots and Africans in the Transatlantic 18c
CALL FOR PAPERS
Money, Power and Prose: Interdisciplinary Studies of the Financial
Revolution in the British Isles, 1688-1756
Armagh, Northern Ireland
8-10 June 2006
This colloquium will gather scholars from the disciplines of history,
literature, economics, politics, sociology and law to study the
intersections between public finance, politics and literature during
Britain's so-called Financial Revolution.
Papers should address contemporary public responses to one or more of
the following aspects of the Financial Revolution:
* Banking (Public or Private)
* Joint-Stock Companies
* Stock Markets
* Projecting
* Public Debt
* Paper Money
CALL FOR PAPERS
Money, Power and Prose: Interdisciplinary Studies of the Financial
Revolution in the British Isles, 1688-1756
Armagh, Northern Ireland
8-10 June 2006
This colloquium will gather scholars from the disciplines of history,
literature, economics, politics, sociology and law to study the
intersections between public finance, politics and literature during
Britain's so-called Financial Revolution.
Papers should address contemporary public responses to one or more of
the following aspects of the Financial Revolution:
* Banking (Public or Private)
* Joint-Stock Companies
* Stock Markets
* Projecting
* Public Debt
* Paper Money
CALL FOR PAPERS
Money, Power and Prose: Interdisciplinary Studies of the Financial
Revolution in the British Isles, 1688-1756
Armagh, Northern Ireland
8-10 June 2006
This colloquium will gather scholars from the disciplines of history,
literature, economics, politics, sociology and law to study the
intersections between public finance, politics and literature during
Britain's so-called Financial Revolution.
Papers should address contemporary public responses to one or more of
the following aspects of the Financial Revolution:
* Banking (Public or Private)
* Joint-Stock Companies
* Stock Markets
* Projecting
* Public Debt
* Paper Money
SYNOPTIQUE, the online journal of film and film studies, is seeking
contributions for Edition 9, to be published May 13th, 2005.
Less consciously thematic than some of our past editions, SYNOPTIQUE 9
is currently anchored by two fascinating articles:
***********
"Is My World Your World? Neurophenomenology as a Discourse for Postmodernism"
Call for Journal Submissions
Postcolonial Studies Journal (published by the postcolonial list)
The Journal will be a biannual journal produced by the moderators of the
Postcolonial Studies list-
serv at: POSTCOLONIAL-LIST-request_at_LISTSERV.DEPAUW.EDU (More information
about the listserv can be obtained from this address). The journal is
open to graduate and undergraduate students interested in the field of
Postcolonial Studies. The journal will publish scholarly articles that
deal with questions of
postcoloniality, treatment of the sub-altern, and post-colonial
perspectives in different fields of
study.
CFP: Narratives in English by Women Explorers and Travellers 1700-1940
(France) (9/15/05; 2/3/06-2/4/06)
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE
FEBRUARY 3-4, 2006
UNIVERSITY OF SAINT-ETIENNE (FRANCE)
While 18th and 19th century women were usually confined to the domestic
and national spheres some women indulged their dreams and travelled to
unexplored territories: their journeys to the Orient (Lady Montagu, Lady
Blunt, Gertrude Bell, Amelia Edwards, Freya Stark), to India (Emily Eden,
Fanny Parks), to America (Isabella Bird, Clara Bromley, France Trollope), to
Africa (Mary Kingsley) or to Australia (Daisy Bates) gave rise to
narratives.
CFP: Narratives in English by Women Explorers and Travellers 1700-1940
(France) (9/15/05; 2/3/06-2/4/06)
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE
FEBRUARY 3-4, 2006
UNIVERSITY OF SAINT-ETIENNE (FRANCE)
While 18th and 19th century women were usually confined to the domestic
and national spheres some women indulged their dreams and travelled to
unexplored territories: their journeys to the Orient (Lady Montagu, Lady
Blunt, Gertrude Bell, Amelia Edwards, Freya Stark), to India (Emily Eden,
Fanny Parks), to America (Isabella Bird, Clara Bromley, France Trollope), to
Africa (Mary Kingsley) or to Australia (Daisy Bates) gave rise to
narratives.