Fragments I: Putting the Worlds Back Together - Relaunched JMW Seeking Short Essay Submissions
Journal of Medieval Worlds
Call for Submissions
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Journal of Medieval Worlds
Call for Submissions
Greensboro, North Carolina, the host city for this year’s joint conference, is geographically, culturally, and historically a space between. Known as “Gate City” because of its key position on the rail network, it is not only a midpoint between the state capital, Raleigh, and North Carolina’s biggest city, Charlotte, but also an entrance to the South. At once an integral part of the region and open to the broader world, it has long exemplified the solidarities as well as the divisions that have marked the United States in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
CFP: Special Issue on Appalachian Animal Studies
To be published in Spring 2027, co-edited by Drs. Kathryn Kirkpatrick and Jessica Cory
Whether it’s the relationships we have with our animal companions, the meat we (may not) eat, or the countless more-than-human species with whom we share this region, animals are important to our lives and to Appalachian spaces.
CALL FOR PAPERS: VOICES
Representation, Recognition, Resistance
Scholarly book reviews sought for new book titled Madness and the Sea: A Literary History. To e published by Palgravve on March 26, 2026. Scholars with interests in the fields of Blue Humanities, Maritime literature, madness in literature and medical humanities and with links to review sites are welcome to contact me to arrange review copies.
Call for Chapters for an edited volume titled: Cyborg Voices: Identity, Artistry, and Performance in the Age of AI
Editor: Chloe Kirson-Jones
Publisher: Jenny Stanford publishing distributed through Taylor and Francis/Routledge
Projected Publication: January 2027
Overview
How does the voice change when it becomes digital, disembodied, and co-created with machines?
Neither ‘queer’ nor ‘beginnings’ are easy to pin down. Queerness is infamous for its ability to slip away from definition; it encompasses – but is not reducible to – sexuality, gender, race, ability, class, politics, and more. Beginnings, too, wriggle from our grasp. Choose a beginning for any historical event, movement, or narrative and there is always something which precedes it. Are beginnings focused into an inciting event, or do they reside in the feelings which precipitate such events? Who gets to decide?
Call for Proposals for a special issue of Studies in Musical Theatre on the films Wicked and Wicked: For Good.
View the full call here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/studies-in-musical-theatre#call-for-papers
Wallace Stevens’s poetry abounds with animals, from the bucks and firecat of “Earthy Anecdote” to the “gold-feathered bird” of “Of Mere Being.” This session invites papers on Stevens’s animals and animal imagery across his oeuvre. How do animals in Stevens’s poems reflect or complicate his sense of human perception, subjectivity, and the environment? In what ways do they trouble distinctions between the human and the nonhuman, the domestic and the wild, the material and the symbolic?
Proposals might consider individual poems or sequences, the wider bestiary of The Collected Poems, or Stevens’s animals in relation to earlier, contemporaneous, or later writers.
Possible topics include but are not limited to:
This is a CFP for an edited collection on Vestron horror.
This manuscript is almost complete, so we cannot offer authors more than two months to complete their essays. Please bear this in mind.
At present, we are only looking for three chapters to round off the collection. The chapters should focus on one of the following films:
Slaughter High
Beyond Re-animator or Dagon
Little Monsters
Chopping Mall
The Gate
The Unholy
Chud II: Bud the Chud
Sundown the Vampire in Retreat
A chapter dedicated to thrillers made by Vestron.
Please spread the word. Below is the original CFP with the new deadline.
Journal of American Studies of Turkey (JAST)
2026 Fall Issue: Science Fiction and the American Imagination
Guest Editor: Firuze Güzel, Ege University, Izmir, Türkiye
Deadline for Full-Text Submissions: July 15, 2026
Call for Articles
Quo vadis Romania Nr. 68 (QVR-2-2026)
Climate Fiction in der Romania
Koordination: Dr. Ana Carolina Torquato & Sophie Everson-Baltas, BA BA MA
Deadline for Abstracts: 15.03.2026
Deadline for Articles: 01.08.2026
The forming of the five senses is a labour of the entire history of the world down to the present.
— Karl Marx, Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts (1844)
Lose your mind and come to your senses.
— Frederich (Fritz) Perls, Gestalt Therapy Verbatim (1969)
JEASA - Journal of the European Association for Studies on Australia - permanent call deadline for submissions: 31 May 2026; 30 September 2026 full name / name of organization: Journal of the European Association for Studies on Australia contact email: marilena.parlati@unipd.it
CFP Journal of the European Association for Studies of Australia
Special Issue: Minding the Present. Bodies, Places, Matter in and between Australia and Europe
Deadline for proposals: 15 March 2026
Taking its cue from a very vibrant conference held in Padova (Italy) in September 2025, the Journal of the European Association for Studies of Australia is seeking articles that examine the shaping experiences, identities, and perceptions of the present as a catalyst to urgent action both in Australia—with a special alertness to the very rooted cultures of Indigenous Australia—and in the complex relations between Europe and Australia.
CFP – Extended Deadline – May 1, 2026
Interdisciplinary Humanities invites submissions for a special double issue dedicated to exploring Gothic literature. This double issue will be divided into two areas: one focusing on creative and scholarly activity, and the other on pedagogy in K-12 and higher education.
Volume 1: Gothic Literature: Creative Activity and Research
Creative and Scholarly Activity
We seek contributions that delve into the rich and diverse world of Gothic literature. Topics may include, but are not limited to:
Call for Papers:
I am pleased to share a call for chapter proposals for an edited collection currently in development titled Black Feminist Practices and AI in the Composition Classroom: Memoir, Pedagogy, and Futures. This volume invites scholars, teachers, and practitioners to explore how Black Feminist rhetorical traditions can guide ethical, humanizing, and culturally responsive uses of artificial intelligence in writing instruction.
No Longer in the “Waiting Room of Literary History”:
Accounting for Nineteenth-Century Indian Fiction
A Special Issue of The Global South, Fall 2028
CFP | Pauline Elizabeth Hopkins Society (PEHS) session
American Literature Association Annual Conference, Chicago, IL, May 20-23, 2026
Hopkins’s America, Then & Now
The Journal of Epistolary Studies is looking to build its fall 2026 issue and is seeking papers in any area of letters and letter writing, including epistolary fiction. Please submit at the journal's website (https://jes-ojs-utrgv.tdl.org/jes/index.php/jes) or query the editor by email.
CFP “A Vision for Liberating Our Democracy” Conference, February 27–28, 2026
The conference builds on a growing body of research that examines the theological, cultural, and political intersections of democracy, citizenship, and power. Participants will investigate how worldviews and faith traditions have informed concepts of governance, belonging, and personhood from the founding era to the present. The conference will highlight not only the Haudenosaunee Influence on American Democracy but also the historic and present contributions to Democratic thought by Black, Indigenous, and Latine communities, contributions which are often forgotten and ignored.
Featured Speakers
The Second Quarry Farm Graduate Student Workshop: “From Seminar Paper to Academic Article”The Center for Mark Twain Studies is happy to announce their second Graduate Student Workshop: “From Seminar Paper to Academic Article.” This in-person workshop will provide an intensive writing experience for students to transform a seminar or conference paper into an article ready to submit for publication. Although all approaches are welcome—and interdisciplinary approaches are encouraged – the paper must give substantial attention to Twain.
Elmira 2026: The Tenth International Conference on the State of Mark Twain Studies
Conference Theme: Irreverence, Rebellion, and Resilience
Science Fiction & Fantasy (SFF) continue to offer new ways of considering the relationships between gender and genre. This conference is interested in how women – writers, characters, fans – use, negotiate, and operate in SFF.
We are particularly interested in papers that have an interdisciplinary and/or creative focus. We welcome papers which consider how this operates across multiple forms, including text, film, TV and videogames.
This conference is open to students and researchers at any stage of their career.
We are pleased to invite participants to a four-day intensive book reading workshop on Antonio Gramsci (online), focused on questions of hegemony, culture, subaltern politics, and political struggle. This workshop brings together students, scholars, researchers, activists, and readers for a sustained and collective engagement with Gramsci’s writings. Written largely under conditions of imprisonment and censorship, Gramsci’s work challenges us to think about power not only as domination, but as consent, culture, and everyday common sense.
CFP: Precarity Reimagined—Working-Class Representation since 2020
The last few years have seen the publication of a number of fantasy novels for young people written by authors from the postcolonial diaspora, including Tomi Adeyemi’s Legacy of Orisha trilogy, Jordan Ifueko’s Raybearer series, Nnedi Okarofor’s The Nsibidi Scripts series and Roshani Chokshi’s The Gilded Wolves series. Additionally, there are YA fantasy series that deal with hierarchies and inequities resulting from colonization and settler colonialism, such as Naomi Novik’s Scholomance series and Cherie Dimaline’s The Marrow Thieves duology.
Late Bowie: legacy, mortality and the archival impulse
Call for Papers
Kingston University, UK
Abstract
The “end of the world” names a methodological problem before it names an apocalypse: how do humanities scholars and artist-researchers think, make, and teach when climate disruption, extinction, extractive infrastructures, forced displacement, and slow violence reformat what counts as evidence, what counts as futurity, and what counts as responsibility? This conference convenes research and practice across film, theatre, performance, and allied arts to ask how (post)Anthropocene conditions are not only represented but produced, felt, and negotiated through aesthetic forms, production systems, embodied publics, and more-than-human milieus.
Conference online (via Zoom): 26-27 February 2026
CFP:
Coined by Marianne Hirsch in the 1990s, the term postmemory by now entered various disciplines who search to understand how memory form our identity and how we position, articulate or just make sense of our place in the society and our relations with it. The term postmemory problematizes the concept of memory by bringing attention to the memories that are not exactly personal but that keep on shaping one’s life and one’s way of seeing the world.
(Extended Deadline)
MEMORY
University of Virginia Department of English Graduate Symposium
March 27 & 28, 2026
[DEADLINE EXTENDED] LOOK! : a graduate student workshop
Institute for the Study of Sexuality and Gender
Columbia University
April 17–18, 2026
Dates: Thursday 25 June - Friday 26 June 2026
Venue: Jesus College, University of Cambridge
The Anaïs Nin Foundation and Nexus: The International Henry Miller Journal are pleased to announce the inaugural Anaïs Nin Essay Prize. We are seeking submissions of scholarly essays centered on the work, influence, relationships, or legacy of Anaïs Nin. Essays should aim to extend the academic conversation around her contributions to literature, art, and culture.
SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS
Culture, Food, and Literature in the New Millennium (Hybrid)
March 25-26, 2026
School of Liberal Arts
University of Management and Technology, Lahore
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
1725 to 2025: Historical & Contemporary Links Between Scotland and South Asia
Symposium date: 14 April 2026
Organisers: Dr Sheelalipi Sahana, Dr Fatima Z. Naveed
Symposium venue: Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland
"The Scottish connection with India really began in and around 1725…It is only from the 1720s that a remarkable number of Scots begin to appear abroad as servants of the East India Company.” (McGilvary 2011)
MICHIGAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCE, ARTS & LETTERS 614 Superior Street, Alma College, Alma, MI 48801 - Fax: 989-463-7970 - michiganacademy@alma.edu Call for Papers Women's & Gender Studies
INVITATION 2026 conference: Friday, March 27, 2026, virtual conference held via Zoom.
You are invited to submit a 200-word abstract of the paper you wish to present at the conference.
PROCEDURES Abstract submission deadline is 1/23/26.
Presentations are up to 20 minutes each, followed by discussion.
Undergraduates may present faculty co-authored or sponsored papers (section leaders may require proof that paper/research was reviewed by a faculty sponsor).
Call for Papers: Crossings: Journal of Migration & Culture
Special Issue: ‘Black Migrant Musicking in Contemporary Brazil’
Editors: Rose Satiko Hikiji, Jasper Chalcraft and Caetano Maschio Santos
Submissions due: 30 April 2026
View the full call here>>
MLA Annual Convention 2027
Los Angeles, California | 7–10 January 2027
Empathy in Action: Critical Perspectives from the Arts and Humanities
ARTS & HUMANITIES INTERDISCIPLINARY COLLOQUIUM
(Please read the full CfP before sending a proposal)
Deadline for abstract submissions: 20 March 2026
Notifications of acceptance: by 01 April 2026
Analog Game Studies and Game in Lab are proud to announce Generation Analog 2026. This year’s online conference will take place July 16-17, 2026. The online event is free and open to the public with registration. All presentations will be recorded and made available after the event. Check out the presentations from previous years via AGS’s YouTube channel (like and subscribe).
Translators, Texts, and Contexts: Reclaiming Human Agency in the Age of AIHosted by the Department of Translation, Lingnan University, Hong Kong11-12 December 2026 | M+, Kowloon, Hong Kong
As artificial intelligence (AI) sweeps through the landscape of language mediation, the classical trio of Translators, Texts, and Contexts remains central to understanding the art, ethics, and politics of translation. While AI tools offer unprecedented efficiencies in text processing, they often lack the human capacity for nuanced judgment and cultural contextualisation that remain essential to traditional translation studies scholarship.
Queer Ecologies Across Socialisms
15-16 October 2026
University of Regensburg, October 15-16, 2026 | CfP deadline: Feb 15, 2026
Organizers: Martyna Miernecka, Paweł Matusz
In literary and arts research on socialist worlds, both queer studies and environmental histories have been expanding – yet we still lack approaches that would systematically integrate these strands across global state socialisms. This conference responds to that gap by inviting work that reads queer practices alongside institutional and environmental policies and traces the queer ecological impulses emerging from socialist contexts across the globe.
Food& (https://foodand.eu/) is an experimental publishing project based in Berlin that examines encounters between food and wider social, cultural and political contexts. Previous issues have addressed themes such as Food & Bathrooms, Food & Nuclear War, Food & Gravity and Fast Food & Patents. Food& invites contributions for its upcoming themed issue on Food and Censorship. The issue explores how questions of restriction, regulation, visibility, silence and control shape the production, circulation and mediation of food, food knowledge and food cultures.
The International Congress on Narrative and Aesthetics in Film, Series, TV, and Audiovisual Experimentation is a platform for discussion and dissemination of studies and projects related to audiovisual creation in its various areas of production and distribution. It encompasses research related to cinematography and film history across a wide range of fields (sociology, industry, aesthetics, etc.), formats (fiction, documentary, animation, music videos, etc.), and genres (from thrillers and comedies to the connections between film and comics or video games).
ATRAS Journal is now inviting scholars from around the globe to submit their unpublished manuscripts for publication. The journal aims to contribute to the body of knowledge by publishing original papers in the fields of literature, gender studies, cultural studies, linguistics, education, language studies, translation, social sciences, and the arts. Researchers are invited to submit their manuscripts in English, Arabic, and French.
Presentation
ATRAS Journal is inviting researchers from the international academic community to submit their unpublished manuscripts for publication.
Accepted papers after review will be published for volume 7, issue 2 on July 15th, 2026
Osgood Perkins is emerging as one of the most significant directors of horror in the 21st century. His films are wildly diverse and have elicited an equally wild diversity of response from viewers and critics. Perkins has thought a lot about horror, has frequently spoken about its larger meanings in interviews, and is committed to its centrality as a genre – something he articulates in this 2025 conversation with Interview Magazine:
The journal Studies in Popular Culture publishes reviews of books in the field. If you are interested in reviewing a book submitted to the journal or would like to suggest one to review, please contact the Book Reviews Editor, Caesar Perkowski, at cperkowski@gordonstate.edu. If you have not already reviewed a book for the journal, please include either a CV or a brief description of your interests and qualifications in the email.
Members of the Popular Culture Association in the South who have published a book are encouraged to inform the Book Reviews Editor of that fact.
The Department of English and Cultural Studies, School of Humanities and Performing Arts, CHRIST (Deemed to be University), Delhi NCR Campus, is hosting its 3rd International Conference on Global Digital Cultures: Texts, Technologies, and Audiences (Hybrid Mode).
Date: 23 - 24 February, 2026
In the era of rapid technological change, digitalization, globalization, and platformization are reshaping film, media, and creative industries. This conference critically explores the intersections of texts, technologies, and audiences in global digital cultures, with a focus on South Asia and the Global South.
Welcome to Hawkins: A Special Issue on Stranger Things
Slayage plans a special issue on Stranger Things for publication in late June 2026. Slayage is an international and interdisciplinary refereed scholarly journal concerned with the “fuzzy set” with Buffy the Vampire Slayer at its center, and Stranger Things, a multi-season television series with kick-ass heroines, the irruption of the supernatural into the mundane, high-stakes action, strong characterizations, snarky humor, and an emphasis on relationships and the complexities of queerness and race, fits our definition nicely. It’s even got a Hellmouth in a library!