all recent posts

UPDATE: Writing Macao: Teaching, Creative Writing, Non-Native Contexts (3/1/03; journal issue)

updated: 
Monday, January 27, 2003 - 9:57pm
kitkelen_at_umac.mo

Writing Macao:
creative text and teaching

Submissions are now sought for the first number of Writing Macao:creative
text and teaching, to appear in June of 2003. Contributions are
particularly sought in the area of theory and practice relating to the
teaching of creative writing in English in non-native contexts. The
deadline for papers is extended to 1st March, 2003. Submissions of creative
work towards future issues will also now be accepted.

CFP: Gender and Dis-ease in the Francophone Diaspora (3/10/03; journal issue)

updated: 
Monday, January 27, 2003 - 9:52pm
Enrique Morales-Diaz

Call For Papers
Phoebe: Journal of Feminist Scholarship

Editors seek additional essays for an issue on Gender and Dis-ease in the
Francophone Diaspora.

Deadline: 10 March 2003 (for completed essays)
If interested, please send a 300 word abstract ASAP to the editors at
phoebe_at_oneonta.edu <mailto:phoebe_at_oneonta.edu>

Topics include but are not limited to:
-Gender / Sexuality / Identity
-Dis-ease (physical/mental maladies, discomfort and resistance, stress)
-Comparative cultural analysis
-English-language “representations” of Francophone literatures and cultures

The editors are open to considering a wide variety of essay from
cross-disciplinary perspectives.

CFP: Scribbling Women: The Form of the Short Story, 1850-present (3/1/03; collection)

updated: 
Monday, January 27, 2003 - 9:49pm
Ellen Harrington

The Society for the Study of the Short Story is currently accepting
submissions for a collection, SCRIBBLING WOMEN: THE FORM OF THE SHORT
STORY, focusing on women writers of the short story in Britain and
America from 1850 to the present. Submissions should address genre as
well as historical context. New approaches and lesser-known subjects
are welcome.

Submissions should be no more than 5000 words and should follow the MLA
Style Sheet. Please submit essays in an MS Word-format attachment to
The Society for the Study of the Short Story at s4mail_at_aol.com by March
1, 2003.

CFP: Scribbling Women: The Form of the Short Story, 1850-present (3/1/03; collection)

updated: 
Monday, January 27, 2003 - 9:49pm
Ellen Harrington

The Society for the Study of the Short Story is currently accepting
submissions for a collection, SCRIBBLING WOMEN: THE FORM OF THE SHORT
STORY, focusing on women writers of the short story in Britain and
America from 1850 to the present. Submissions should address genre as
well as historical context. New approaches and lesser-known subjects
are welcome.

Submissions should be no more than 5000 words and should follow the MLA
Style Sheet. Please submit essays in an MS Word-format attachment to
The Society for the Study of the Short Story at s4mail_at_aol.com by March
1, 2003.

CFP: Agora: All Humanities Topics (grad) (e-journal)

updated: 
Monday, January 27, 2003 - 9:48pm
James Gifford

CFP: open issues, 2.2 and after

Agora, (ISSN 1496-9580; <http://www.arts.ualberta.ca/agora/>) is an
internationally refereed online graduate journal that provides a public
forum for dialogue and debate about literary criticism and pedagogy. Agora
welcomes submissions in electronic and/or multimedia formats (i.e. images,
audio files, etc) that examine issues or media in the Humanities,
literature, literary culture, and the history of communication from the
eighteenth century to present-day. Submissions on the teaching in the
Humanities and scholarly research that use a multimedia format in its
exposition are especially welcome.

CFP: Agora: All Humanities Topics (grad) (e-journal)

updated: 
Monday, January 27, 2003 - 9:48pm
James Gifford

CFP: open issues, 2.2 and after

Agora, (ISSN 1496-9580; <http://www.arts.ualberta.ca/agora/>) is an
internationally refereed online graduate journal that provides a public
forum for dialogue and debate about literary criticism and pedagogy. Agora
welcomes submissions in electronic and/or multimedia formats (i.e. images,
audio files, etc) that examine issues or media in the Humanities,
literature, literary culture, and the history of communication from the
eighteenth century to present-day. Submissions on the teaching in the
Humanities and scholarly research that use a multimedia format in its
exposition are especially welcome.

CFP: Agora: All Humanities Topics (grad) (e-journal)

updated: 
Monday, January 27, 2003 - 9:48pm
James Gifford

CFP: open issues, 2.2 and after

Agora, (ISSN 1496-9580; <http://www.arts.ualberta.ca/agora/>) is an
internationally refereed online graduate journal that provides a public
forum for dialogue and debate about literary criticism and pedagogy. Agora
welcomes submissions in electronic and/or multimedia formats (i.e. images,
audio files, etc) that examine issues or media in the Humanities,
literature, literary culture, and the history of communication from the
eighteenth century to present-day. Submissions on the teaching in the
Humanities and scholarly research that use a multimedia format in its
exposition are especially welcome.

CFP: j_spot: Violence and Social Theory (5/15/03; e-journal issue)

updated: 
Monday, January 27, 2003 - 9:45pm
M. Michael Schiff

j_spot the Journal of Social and Political Thought
http://www.yorku.ca/jspot

*Call for submissions* for Vol. II, No. 2 . j_spot invites submissions for
"Violent Ends | Violence Ends." Deadline: May 15, 2003.
http://www.yorku.ca/jspot/cfs.htm

Call for Submissions for "Violent Ends | Violence Ends"
for an issue of j_spot the Journal of Social and Political Thought
j_spot_at_yorku.ca

CFP: AIDS and Cinema (no deadline noted; collection)

updated: 
Monday, January 27, 2003 - 9:45pm
A.Moor

CFP: essay on Aids and Cinema -for forthcoming volume of essays on Medicine and
Cinema.

The editors of a volume of essays on Medicine and cinema are seeking an
original and quality piece on AIDS and cinema. Anyone interested in submitting
such a piece for consideration should write, with a precis and a cv, to Dr
Andrew Moor, Lecturer in Film, Univ. of Wales, Bangor on els604_at_bangor.ac.uk

CFP: AIDS and Cinema (no deadline noted; collection)

updated: 
Monday, January 27, 2003 - 9:45pm
A.Moor

CFP: essay on Aids and Cinema -for forthcoming volume of essays on Medicine and
Cinema.

The editors of a volume of essays on Medicine and cinema are seeking an
original and quality piece on AIDS and cinema. Anyone interested in submitting
such a piece for consideration should write, with a precis and a cv, to Dr
Andrew Moor, Lecturer in Film, Univ. of Wales, Bangor on els604_at_bangor.ac.uk

CFP: AIDS and Cinema (no deadline noted; collection)

updated: 
Monday, January 27, 2003 - 9:45pm
A.Moor

CFP: essay on Aids and Cinema -for forthcoming volume of essays on Medicine and
Cinema.

The editors of a volume of essays on Medicine and cinema are seeking an
original and quality piece on AIDS and cinema. Anyone interested in submitting
such a piece for consideration should write, with a precis and a cv, to Dr
Andrew Moor, Lecturer in Film, Univ. of Wales, Bangor on els604_at_bangor.ac.uk

CFP: New Writing: Practice and Theory of Creative Writing (7/1/03; journal)

updated: 
Monday, January 27, 2003 - 9:45pm
G.E.Harper

New Writing: International Journal for the Practice and Theory of Creative Writing

Special Issue (October 2003, copy deadline July 2003)
Future Issues

This exciting new international creative writing journal, to be published by MLM
(UK/USA), is being launched with a Special Issue in October 2003.

Peer Review board members include Paul Muldoon (Princeton), Jon Cook
(East Anglia), Peter Ho Davies (Michigan), Rob Pope (Oxford Brookes), Liam
Browne (Brighton Literary Festival) and so on . . .

The Editors are Graeme Harper (University of Wales, Bangor) and Richard Kerridge
(Bath Spa University College), both of the UK Centre for Creative Writing
Research Through Practice.

CFP: Writing of the 1930s (10/1/03; journal issue)

updated: 
Tuesday, January 21, 2003 - 9:17pm
Chris HOPKINS(SCS)

This issue of Working Papers on the Web (http://www.shu.ac.uk/wpw/) titled The
Thirties Now! will contain an Introduction by the editors (Chris Hopkins and
Mary Grover) which outlines the critical history of the Thirties as a literary
period and field from its formulation during the 1930s until the present. The
issue focusses on how we respond to the writing of the nineteen thirties now.
Scholars of the period are invited to contribute essays responding to one or
more of the following set of related questions:

CFP: Cultural Studies/Cultural Materialism (6/1/03; journal issue)

updated: 
Tuesday, January 21, 2003 - 9:17pm
Barnett, Stuart (English)

Connecticut Review seeks articles that explore cultural studies and/or
cultural materialism. Theoretical reflections as well as focused
cultural analyses are welcome. Past contributors include Andrew
Benjamin, Geoffrey Hartman, Carol Jacobs, Alberto Manguel, and Richard
Wilbur. Connecticut Review is the recipient of the CLEJ’s Phoenix
Award for significant editorial achievement and has been selected
several times for the Pushcart Prize and Best American Poetry.
Please format articles according to the MLA style sheet. Send two
copies of work to: Vivian Shipley, Editor, English Department,
Southern Connecticut State University, New Haven, CT 06515.

UPDATE: Academic Exchange Quarterly editors (journal)

updated: 
Tuesday, January 21, 2003 - 9:17pm
Ben Varner

Call for Editors and Submissions

Colleagues--

Academic Exchange Quarterly, one of the fastest-growing
peer-reviewed academic journals in the U.S., is looking
for subject editors who would propose and then oversee
topics of interest to our readers.

If you are interested in joining our editorial staff and
becoming a member of a fine print journal that begins with
a virtual organization, please follow the information in
the link below:

http://www.rapidintellect.com/AEQweb/willkex3.htm

We are also eager to complete our online survey:

UPDATE: Academic Exchange Quarterly editors (journal)

updated: 
Tuesday, January 21, 2003 - 9:17pm
Ben Varner

Call for Editors and Submissions

Colleagues--

Academic Exchange Quarterly, one of the fastest-growing
peer-reviewed academic journals in the U.S., is looking
for subject editors who would propose and then oversee
topics of interest to our readers.

If you are interested in joining our editorial staff and
becoming a member of a fine print journal that begins with
a virtual organization, please follow the information in
the link below:

http://www.rapidintellect.com/AEQweb/willkex3.htm

We are also eager to complete our online survey:

CFP: Culture, Theory and Critique (6/1/03 &amp; 6/1/04; journal)

updated: 
Sunday, January 19, 2003 - 6:26pm
Carles Gutierrez-Sanfeliu

CULTURE, THEORY AND CRITIQUE

Call for papers (3) and contents of 43.1.

Unless specified otherwise, please direct all correspondence regarding =
CTC to: ctc_at_nottingham.ac.uk ; apologies for cross-postings.=20

For full details on _Culture, Theory and Critique_, submission =
information, instructions to authors, a free online sample copy and =
contents listings from volume 43 on, please visit the journal's website =
at:

http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/routledge/14735784.htm

CFP: SELIM Medieval Journal (journal)

updated: 
Sunday, January 19, 2003 - 6:23pm
Jorge Luis Bueno Alonso

The Journal of the Spanish Society for Medieval English Language and
Literature (SELIM) accepts contributions for its forthcoming issues
-numbers 11 & 12- on any aspect of Medieval English studies. In its new
shape and editorial trend, the journal is eager to receive articles,
notes, review articles and reviews on a wide range of medieval
linguistic and literary topics. Once we have received the contributions,
you may expect a decision from the referees in about eight weeks' time.
Submissions must follow the journal's guidelines as the appear in
http://www.uniovi.es/~selim/SelimStyleSheet.htm, and should be sent to

CFP: SELIM Medieval Journal (journal)

updated: 
Sunday, January 19, 2003 - 6:23pm
Jorge Luis Bueno Alonso

The Journal of the Spanish Society for Medieval English Language and
Literature (SELIM) accepts contributions for its forthcoming issues
-numbers 11 & 12- on any aspect of Medieval English studies. In its new
shape and editorial trend, the journal is eager to receive articles,
notes, review articles and reviews on a wide range of medieval
linguistic and literary topics. Once we have received the contributions,
you may expect a decision from the referees in about eight weeks' time.
Submissions must follow the journal's guidelines as the appear in
http://www.uniovi.es/~selim/SelimStyleSheet.htm, and should be sent to

CFP: Eighteenth-Century Music (new journal)

updated: 
Sunday, January 19, 2003 - 6:15pm
EisenLists_at_aol.com

Cambridge University Press is pleased to announce a new journal,
Eighteenth-Century Music, edited by Cliff Eisen (King's College London) and
W. Dean Sutcliffe (St Catharine's College, Cambridge). The reviews editor is
Simon Keefe (Queen's University, Belfast). The editorial board and advisory
panel for the journal will be found below.

CFP: Eighteenth-Century Music (new journal)

updated: 
Sunday, January 19, 2003 - 6:15pm
EisenLists_at_aol.com

Cambridge University Press is pleased to announce a new journal,
Eighteenth-Century Music, edited by Cliff Eisen (King's College London) and
W. Dean Sutcliffe (St Catharine's College, Cambridge). The reviews editor is
Simon Keefe (Queen's University, Belfast). The editorial board and advisory
panel for the journal will be found below.

CFP: Eighteenth-Century Music (new journal)

updated: 
Sunday, January 19, 2003 - 6:15pm
EisenLists_at_aol.com

Cambridge University Press is pleased to announce a new journal,
Eighteenth-Century Music, edited by Cliff Eisen (King's College London) and
W. Dean Sutcliffe (St Catharine's College, Cambridge). The reviews editor is
Simon Keefe (Queen's University, Belfast). The editorial board and advisory
panel for the journal will be found below.

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