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The Black Sitcom

updated: 
Tuesday, June 16, 2026 - 11:56am
Danielle Lenáe Littlefield
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, August 31, 2026

The Black Sitcom:

A Comprehensive Survey with Critical Essays

1950 – 2000 

 

Twenty-Third International Conference on Environmental, Cultural, Economic & Social Sustainability

updated: 
Tuesday, June 16, 2026 - 11:40am
Common Ground Research Networks
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, January 20, 2027

Innovating for Sustainable Futures

The On Sustainability Research Network invites proposals for the Twenty-Third International Conference on Environmental, Cultural, Economic & Social Sustainability, to be hosted from 20 to 22 January 2027 by the Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, with integrated online participation via CGScholar Event (KX).

History and the Black Renaissance

updated: 
Tuesday, June 16, 2026 - 9:21am
NeMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, September 30, 2026

As its title indicates, this seminar will take a broad geographic and temporal view of the Harlem or New Negro Renaissance to invite considerations of the historicity and historiography of Black writing at the turn of the twentieth century. Seminar participants will be invited to consider how history shaped and was shaped by Black art, literature, and thought in the period stretching from approximately the end of Reconstruction through the Civil Rights era. How did Black writers, artists, and thinkers use historical concepts, forms, narratives, figures, events, philosophies, discourses, and other materials to craft original works of art and literature?

CFP: European Journal of Media, Art & Photography - 2/2026

updated: 
Tuesday, June 16, 2026 - 3:28am
European Journal of Media, Art & Photography
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 1, 2026

European Journal of Media, Art & Photography

 

ejmap.sk | Indexed in WoS Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) | Q1 in art journals category

 

CFP: European Journal of Media, Art & Photography (EJMAP)

updated: 
Tuesday, June 16, 2026 - 3:22am
European Journal of Media, Art & Photography
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 1, 2026

European Journal of Media, Art & Photography

 

ejmap.sk | Indexed in WoS Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) | Q1 in art journals category

 

English for Medical Purposes: Comparative Considerations

updated: 
Monday, June 15, 2026 - 9:34pm
Universidade Federal da Paraíba UFPB, Brazil/Peking University, China, University of Stuttgart, Germany
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, September 30, 2026

Edited by Juliana Luna Freire (Universidade Federal da Paraíba UFPB), Rong Huang (Peking University), Lucy Blaney-Liable (University of Stuttgart) 

Confirmed publisher Editora UFPB (Brazil)

 

Following Guan and Scott (2025), there is a need to rethink pedagogical practices in language teaching and their real impact on health students and their future work in the medical field. 

We propose, as discussed by Ferguson (2025), a deeper discussion on the contexts of English for Medical Purposes (EMP), as well as the prevalent use of English in this field. 

Elizabeth Bowen Review

updated: 
Monday, June 15, 2026 - 7:00pm
Nicola Darwood / University of Bedfordshire
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, September 30, 2026

The Elizabeth Bowen Review is an open access online journal, publishing essays on all aspects of Elizabeth Bowen’s work and life.  The Editors are now accepting submissions for Volume Eight. The focus for the volume is ‘Why Bowen Matters’, the title of the symposium organised by the Irish Writers’ Centre in June 2026, but essays on any area of her life and work will also be welcome. Completed essays should be submitted by 30th September 2026. Essays should be no more than 6,000 words in length excluding bibliography and footnotes, and use the Harvard referencing system. All essays are subject to double blind peer review.

Peripheral Plants and Animals In Early Modern Print

updated: 
Monday, June 15, 2026 - 4:34pm
Renaissance Society of America, 2027 Annual Conference
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, July 15, 2026

This panel considers the often overlooked presence of flora and fauna in early modern print, whether they appear as marginalia, within printers’ ornaments, or as materially integral to books. Animals and plants always carry symbolic value—a single image sometimes carrying diametrically opposed values—and participate in a broader network of signification through emblems, printers’ ornaments, marginalia, and engraven images. Do those values come into tension with each other via the margin, the marginal, and the marginalized? In what ways do peripheral plants and animals comment on questions of identity, like gender, race, or disability?

"Making Trouble: Subversions and Reclamations in American Imaginaries"

updated: 
Monday, June 15, 2026 - 12:43pm
Review of International American Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, December 30, 2026

"Making Trouble: Subversions and Reclamations in American Imaginaries"
RIAS Vol. 21, Fall-Winter (2/2028)

This issue of RIAS invites contributions on the theme of “Making Trouble: Subversions and Reclamations in American Imaginaries.” Engaging ongoing debates in global American Studies on power, representation, dissent, and cultural transformation, the issue seeks contributions that examine how American cultural, political, and social imaginaries are challenged, reworked, and reclaimed across diverse historical and geographical contexts. It invites interdisciplinary perspectives from the global field of American Studies and welcomes submissions from scholars worldwide.

*Call for Chapters* for Adaptive Learning and AI: Global Socio-Technical Discourses

updated: 
Monday, June 15, 2026 - 11:54am
Tanmoy Putatunda
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, June 30, 2026

*Call for Chapters* for our upcoming edited volume, Adaptive Learning and AI: Global Socio-Technical Discourses, co edited with Dr. Debanjali Roy , Dr. N P Subheesh, and Dr. Sobin C.C.The book has already received a Letter of Intent (LOI) from Peter Lang and, upon publication, will be submitted for indexing in Scopus.This volume brings together interdisciplinary perspectives on AI-driven adaptive learning, moving beyond technocentric frameworks to engage with its epistemological, pedagogical, and socio-political implications.

"Archipelagic Imaginaries and the Americas"

updated: 
Monday, June 15, 2026 - 10:52am
Review of International American Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, October 30, 2026

 

"Archipelagic Imaginaries and the Americas: Islands - Narratives - Mythologies"
RIAS Vol. 20, Fall-Winter (2/2027)

"Imaginarios Archipelágicos y las Américas: Islas – Narrativas – Mitologías"
RIAS Vol. 20, Otoño–Invierno (2/2027)

 

Constructing Silence: Authorial Control in Hispanic Caribbean Literature

updated: 
Monday, June 15, 2026 - 10:04am
Kenya C. Dworkin y Méndez / NeMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, January 6, 2027

The Hispanic Caribbean literary canon of the 19th and 21st centuries—spanning Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic—frequently wrestles with the complex dynamics of narrative erasure and authorial control. While these vibrant traditions offer profound insights into regional identity, certain texts replicate systemic marginalization by silencing minoritized characters or speaking entirely for them or over them. Whether rendering Afro-Caribbean, Indigenous, queer, or working-class figures completely voiceless, or problematically assuming their perspectives through a privileged lens, authors within this geographic sphere can inadvertently reinforce colonial and class hierarchies.

Acts of Care and Remembrance That Empower

updated: 
Monday, June 15, 2026 - 9:43am
Northeastern Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, September 30, 2026

This panel invites proposals that examine acts of remembrance and care of an individual’s or a collective’s past that lead to empowerment and change. Papers may address historical or contemporary works in art, architecture, film, recordings, and literature, and may engage theoretical, critical, pedagogical, or archival practices. Drawing from Valérie Perrin’s novels Forgotten on Sundays (2015) and Fresh Water for Flowers (2019), soon to be on the screen by Jean-Pierre Jeunet, memory work enables individuals to feel visible, situate themselves in a collective, and solve piece puzzles through inquiry. Such work is often relegated to women’s labor, caregivers, and hired help who go beyond roles and job duties to make personal connections.

Alchemy: Exploring Metaphorical Transformations and Arts-Based Research

updated: 
Monday, June 15, 2026 - 5:53am
London Arts-Based Research Centre
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, August 31, 2026

Alchemy: Exploring Metaphorical Transformations and Arts-Based Research

 

Date: November 14-15, 2026
Location: University of Oxford, UK and online
Conference page: 
https://labrc.co.uk/2026/06/15/alchemy-2026/

Fees (for both attendees and presenters):
£180 (In person participation)
£100 (Online participation)
Prices exclude Eventbrite fees

CALL FOR PAPERS AS CHAPTERS IN AN EDITED BOOK

updated: 
Monday, June 15, 2026 - 5:15am
Prof. Jaydeep Chakrabarty and Arnab Bhattacharjee
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway (1925) remains a cornerstone of the modernist literary canon. Often celebrated as Woolf’s greatest novel, the plot is set in post-World War I London and revolves around a single day in the life of its protagonist, Mrs Clarissa Dalloway, as she prepares to host an evening party. Beneath its seemingly simple plot, the novel exemplifies a profound exploration of consciousness, time, and the inner lives of characters through its extensive use of the stream-of-consciousness technique. Although narrated in a third-person omniscient voice, the narrative primarily focuses on the inner consciousness of the characters.

International Conference "The Artificial Mind: Art and Philosophy after AI"

updated: 
Monday, June 15, 2026 - 4:53am
Lithuanian Culture Research Institute
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, August 10, 2026

International Conference

The Artificial Mind: Art and Philosophy after AI

 

24-25 September 2026

National Gallery of Art

22 Konstitucijos Ave. 

Vilnius, Lithuania

 

The title “Artificial Mind” references Claude Lévi-Strauss’ The Savage Mind (La Pensée sauvage (1962), a foundational work in anthropology, in which he argues that “savage” and “civilized” thought share the same epistemological architecture – differing not in structure but in mode of operations. While the “civilized” engineer works with purpose-built concepts and tools toward a specific end, the “savage” bricoleur thinks with whatever is at hand, constructing new meanings from fragments.

Two-Day National Conference - Narratives of the Mind: Media, Literature and Culture in the Indian Context

updated: 
Monday, June 15, 2026 - 4:26am
St. Xavier's University, Kolkata
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, July 10, 2026

About the Conference

 

The conference, “Narratives of the Mind: Media, Literature and Culture,” is conceived as an interdisciplinary platform for examining the complex and evolving representations of the human mind across diverse branches: literature, culture, and media . In this context, the “mind” is not regarded solely as a structural or biological entity, but as a dynamic site shaped by language, narrative, ideology, technology, and cultural practices. By foregrounding narratives, the conference aims to illuminate how mental experiences are constructed, expressed, mediated, and contested across time and space.

Emergence of New World Imagination in the 20th Century Asia:Understanding the Asian Colonial Countries through the Lens of Travelogues, Memoirs, Testimonies and Archival Documents

updated: 
Monday, June 15, 2026 - 1:41am
Dr. Barnali Chanda, Dept. of Language and Literature, Adamas University
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, July 31, 2026

We invite original book chapter proposals for the upcoming edited volume“Emergence of New World Imagination in the 20th Century Asia:Understanding the Asian Colonial Countries through the Lens of Travelogues, Memoirs, Testimonies and Archival Documents" to be published with an International publishing house. This edited book aims to provide a multidisciplinary platform for advanced doctoral students, researchers, academicians and faculty members to publish their original works with us.

Brief Synopsis :

CfP: Themed Dossiers for Mediapolis – A Journal of Cities and Culture

updated: 
Sunday, June 14, 2026 - 11:33pm
Linda Kopitz | Mediapolis – A Journal of Cities and Culture
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, June 19, 2026

Mediapolis – International Journal of Humanities, Art and Social Studies y open access online journal, drawing a connection between culture and the built environment – understood in the broadest sense. We publish research in different forms, from research articles to Q&A interviews and readings list, and across different academic fields, including but not limited to media studies, urban studies, geography, architecture and art history as well as digital humanities. 

Call for Submissions for “Ariel’s Corner” (Miranda e-journal)

updated: 
Sunday, June 14, 2026 - 5:15am
Miranda e-journal
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 15, 2026

Call for Submissions for “Ariel’s Corner” (Miranda e-journal)

 

Submissions for ‘Ariel’s Corner’ section of Miranda e-journal are open.

 

Miranda is a scholarly e-journal focusing on a wide range of social and cultural practices of the English-speaking world and encouraging the broadest possible spectrum of scholarly approaches. A special section, called ‘Ariel’s Corner,’ is dedicated to the arts in the English-speaking world.

 

Czech & Slovak Speculative Fiction in Translation: Essays and Reviews

updated: 
Sunday, June 14, 2026 - 1:32am
Astral Courier
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, July 31, 2026

In this CFP, we are looking for essays that take up the issues of the Speculative Genre (you can interpret this in many ways, though the sciences, technologies, and alternative social structures are usually instrumental in these realms) as it is manifest in the literary production of the Czechs and Slovaks, whether this was during the 1800s or it is a current manifestation.

We are interested in review essays, literary scholarship, and in translations of original works from Czech or Slovak.

You can submit essays and reviews for consideration here: https://astralcourier.subfolios.com/submit/578/essays-reviews

"Live Long and Prosper": 60 Years of Star Trek in Popular Culture

updated: 
Saturday, June 13, 2026 - 10:37pm
The Popular Culture Research Network, University of New England, Australia
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, September 10, 2026

 

Call for Conference Papers

"Live Long and Prosper": 60 Years of Star Trek in Popular Culture - 10-11 September 2026

Free and Online

The Popular Culture Research Network, Australia

In September 1966, the first episode of Star Trek aired on American television, introducing audiences to a future shaped by exploration, diplomacy, scientific discovery, and the possibility of social progress beyond the limitations of the present.

Disability and Horror: A Companion

updated: 
Saturday, June 13, 2026 - 7:27pm
Michael Wheatley
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, July 31, 2026

Disability and Horror: A Companion

Call for Chapters

 

CFP African/Black Diasporic Fathers Making Home - Proposed Panel for Tunisian Association for English Language Studies International Conference

updated: 
Saturday, June 13, 2026 - 5:40pm
Nicole R. Diop California State University, Sacramento
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, June 27, 2026


This proposed panel for the November 2026 Tunisian Association for English Language Studies International Conference invites papers that examine Black and African fatherhood as a site of un-homing, home-making, and reinvention across Anglophone literatures and cultures. While scholarship on families has often centered mothers and children, fathers remain understudied as agents of domestic life, memory work, and cultural transmission. This panel asks: How do Black and African fathers across the continent and diaspora imagine, build, and sustain home under conditions of enslavement, displacement, invasion, colonialism, anti-Blackness, and historical rupture?

Roundtable: Global Literary and Intellectual History in the Renaissance World

updated: 
Saturday, June 13, 2026 - 4:37pm
Rhema Hokama / Renaissance Society of America sponsored session for English Literature
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Call for Papers

Roundtable: Global Literary and Intellectual History in the Renaissance World

Renaissance Society of America Conference

March 11–13, 2027

Philadelphia

The Queer Experience Section for The American Research Handbook on Diversity, Equity & Inclusion

updated: 
Saturday, June 13, 2026 - 4:20pm
Julian Quesenberry
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, July 15, 2026

As the section editor for The Queer Experience, I invite you to submit a chapter proposal for consideration to be included in The American Research Handbook on Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, an edited scholarly volume that examines the evolving role of diversity, equity, and inclusion within American democracy and educational institutions.

 

The Queer Experience Section Seeks:

  • Well-researched and evidence-based analyses that examine gender identity, sexuality, intersectionality, and/or the evolving role(s) of queer people in society at the present moment.

International Conference on 'Re-storying India: Metamorphoses in 21st Century Storytelling'

updated: 
Saturday, June 13, 2026 - 12:24pm
Department of English, Tezpur University
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, July 3, 2026

Concept Note:

Storytelling, from the metamorphic narratives of the Indian epics such as the Mahabharata and the Ramayana and Ovid’s ancient transmutations to the evolving interfaces of the present, has been an act of survival through transformation. Metamorphosis is the underlying imperative of the twenty-first century; it is not just a biological inevitability but a relentless ontological pulse beating beneath the surface of our global narratives. We inhabit a world amid a grand moulting, where the traditional mediums of storytelling, like the printed page, the physical body, and the ancestral soil, are being reshaped under the pressures of a planetary crisis.

Emergence of New World Imagination in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Asia: Understanding Asian Colonial Countries through Travelogues, Memoirs, Testimonies and Archival Documents

updated: 
Saturday, June 13, 2026 - 11:01am
Department of English, Adamas University
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, August 31, 2026

Brief Synopsis: 

The nineteenth and twentieth centuries witnessed profound political, social, and cultural transformations across Asia. This edited volume, Emergence of New World Imagination in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Asia: Understanding Asian Colonial Countries through Travelogues, Memoirs, Testimonies and Archival Documents, seeks to examine how autobiographical narratives, letters, memoirs, travelogues, oral narratives, and archival documents written in various Indian languages engage with the colonial and postcolonial histories of East Asia, Southeast Asia, West Asia, and South Asia.

The Aquatic Presence-Absence in World Literatures

updated: 
Saturday, June 13, 2026 - 10:21am
Shahriyar Mansouri / Shahid Beheshti University
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, August 10, 2026

The Aquatic Presence-Absence in World Literatures

Critical Language and Literary Studies (CLLS) invites original, unpublished research articles for a themed issue to be published in Fall 2026. The theme is examining aquatic presences and absences in world literatures.

Children's Literature Forum, 2028 volume on IMMIGRATION

updated: 
Saturday, June 13, 2026 - 9:33am
Children's Literature (Hollins)
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, June 13, 2026

The twenty-first century has seen a world-wide immigration crisis to which Children and YA authors have responded with a wonderful explosion of literature capturing immigrant  and refugee experiences. From picture books to YA novels, authors present stories about immigrants from South America, the Caribbean,  Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. Each author explores the reasons for leaving “Home” (politics, economics, religious oppression, adoption, etc.) and youths’ experiences adjusting in their new “homes.”  These writers present readers with stories concerning the joys and sorrows that immigrants experience, challenge dehumanization, and deepen reader empathy. 

Call for Submissions: The Pocket Poet (Inaugural Autumn Issue 2026)

updated: 
Saturday, June 13, 2026 - 7:23am
The Pocket Poet
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, August 25, 2026

Call for Submissions: The Pocket Poet (Inaugural Autumn Issue 2026)

We are thrilled to announce the launch of The Pocket Poet, a new international poetry journal dedicated to powerful poems in small spaces. We are officially opening submissions for our Inaugural Autumn 2026 Issue and invite poets from every corner of the world to share their work with us. What We SeekWe are looking for original, engaging poetry that thrives in brevity. This includes: 

  • Haiku, Senryu, & Tanka

 

  • Micro Poetry & Short Free Verse

 

  • Short Prose Poems

 

Occulture as Method Symposium

updated: 
Saturday, June 13, 2026 - 6:18am
Manchester Metropolitan University
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, July 10, 2026

Occulture as Method Symposium

 

September 10-11, 2026

Manchester Metropolitan University

Manchester, UK

Organised by the Dark Arts Research Kollective

 

Submission deadline: 10th July 2026

EXTENDED DEADLINE of June 30 for "The Intimacies of Kith: Collaborative Poetry Scholarship and Practice Between Asian North America and Southeast Asia”, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, Oct 2- Oct 4 2026

updated: 
Friday, June 12, 2026 - 8:32pm
Samuel Caleb Wee, Nanyang Technological University
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, June 30, 2026

The Intimacies of Kith seeks to bring together scholars who are also practitioners of poetry from Asian North American and Southeast Asian communities. Our goal is to create a shared space for poet-scholars to engage one another directly, creating opportunities for sustained dialogue across geographic and disciplinary boundaries.

Ruling the Waves? Germans, Power, and the Pacific Imaginary (PAMLA, Seattle, Nov 12-15

updated: 
Friday, June 12, 2026 - 7:30pm
PAMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, June 30, 2026

This panel examines how Germans have claimed, imagined, and narrated the Pacific from the nineteenth century to the present. From the colonial administration of Samoa, New Guinea, and Micronesia to missionary encounters, ethnographic expeditions, settler migration along the Pacific coast, and contemporary literary reckonings with colonial pasts, German engagements with the Pacific raise questions about imperial ambition, cultural fantasy, and the politics of memory.

Superheroes of the Squared Circle - Chapter Contributors

updated: 
Friday, June 12, 2026 - 7:22pm
Forrest C. Helvie / CT State Community College
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, July 15, 2026

CALL FOR CONTRIBUTORS

Superheroes of the Squared Circle:

The Intersection of Comics and Professional Wrestling

An Edited Academic Collection for McFarland & Co. Publishing

Editor: Forrest C. Helvie, Ph.D.

Connecticut State Community College

About the Project

Adventures in Ecocriticism: Call for Contributions

updated: 
Friday, June 12, 2026 - 6:22pm
Jency Wilson and Will Underland
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, July 20, 2026

We invite chapter proposals for an edited collection of essays based upon our split-panel session, Adventures in Ecocriticism, at SAMLA 97. We plan to propose this collection for the Bloomsbury Ecocritical Theory and Practice Series, at the encouragement of the series editor, Douglas Vakoch.

 

Call for Contributions

Verge 14.2 CFP

updated: 
Friday, June 12, 2026 - 2:14pm
Global Asias Initiative
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, May 15, 2027

Issue 14.2:The Cultural Labor of Internationalism: Reorienting Solidarities in Times of StruggleEdited by Yawen Li, Ajay Bhardwaj, Anup Grewal, and Nicolai Volland. Deadlines | verge@psu.eduConvergence proposals: September 30, 2026Essays: May 15, 2027On the Theme    As militarism, authoritarianism, and chauvinistic nationalism ascend globally, and “Asia” becomes a contested site in geopolitical rivalries, the need to imagine alternative forms of solidarity, including forms of grassroots internationalism, becomes ever more urgent.

Friendship in Children’s and Young Adult Literature, Film and Television

updated: 
Friday, June 12, 2026 - 11:11am
Jade Dillon-Craig, NTNU
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, August 17, 2026

Friendship occupies a central place in children’s and young adult literature, film, and television. It functions as a key site through which processes of Bildung, selfhood, community, and belonging are imagined and negotiated. However, despite its centrality to narratives for young audiences, friendship has received comparatively limited sustained attention as a distinct object of study within children's literature and media scholarship.

CFP: Teen Entertainment History Symposium

updated: 
Friday, June 12, 2026 - 10:47am
Mary Celeste Kearney / University of Notre Dame
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, October 16, 2026

April 2-3, 2027

University of Notre Dame

Notre Dame, Indiana USA

 

Call for Papers

 

Literary Reception and Human Creativity in the Age of AI

updated: 
Friday, June 12, 2026 - 10:23am
Asya Sigelman/Bryn Mawr College
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, October 1, 2026

Call for Papers: Literary Reception and Human Creativity in the Age of AI
Bryn Mawr College, April 16–17, 2027

Co-organizers: Asya Sigelman (Classics) and Margaret Strair (German Studies)

Keynote speaker: Barbara Graziosi (Princeton University)

 

The rapid integration of generative AI in everyday life brings renewed urgency to fundamental questions about human creativity: what constitutes the human act of writing, and how does human literary production differ from that of large language models (LLMs) — algorithms trained on vast textual corpora to predict and generate language?

 

NeMLA CFP: 'Hieroglyphics of the flesh:' Embodied Archives in French and Francophone Contexts (Panel)

updated: 
Friday, June 12, 2026 - 8:23am
NeMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, September 30, 2026

This panel explores archives beyond the traditional frame and instead as embodied spaces of cultural memory and histories inscribed on skin. Building upon Hortense Spillers’ important essay Mama’s Baby, Papa’s Maybe (1987), we seek papers from humanities scholars in the French and Francophone worlds that reframe the body not as a passive victim but as a living text, a site of memory, and an alternative space that rescripts official records. By retracing histories through the reading of the body, we can activate affect, unleash unexpected memories, and create generative spaces for art that centres on cultural knowledge to empower communities.

“The American Literary Studies Periodical as Form”

updated: 
Friday, June 12, 2026 - 3:14am
Tim Lanzendörfer
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, July 15, 2026

“The American Literary Studies Periodical as Form”

Special Issue of American Periodicals

Ed. Tim Lanzendörfer, Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main

Pages