CFP: Autobiographical Lit Crit (3/15/03; e-journal)
CALL FOR PAPERS
a service provided by www.english.upenn.edu |
FAQ changelog |
CALL FOR PAPERS
Academic Exchange Quarterly Summer '03 Special Issue
Call for Papers: Writing and Social Awareness
This message is being cross-posted; please excuse duplication.
The Academic Exchange Quarterly is looking for articles for the Summer 2003
expanded issue, with a special section on WRTING AND SOCIAL AWARENESS.
Seven going on seventeen: Tween culture in girlhood studies
Editors
Claudia Mitchell
Faculty of Education
McGill University
Tel. 514 398 1318
Fax 514 398 8260
Claudia.mitchell_at_mcgill.ca
Jacqueline Reid-Walsh
McGill Centre for Research and Teaching on Women
Tel 514 398-3680
Fax 514 398-3986
Jacqueline.reid-walsh_at_mcgill.ca
Overview
Special Issue: Terror/ism and the Postmodern Novel
For an upcoming special issue of Studies in the Novel, I seek critical
studies of novels since the mid-20th century dealing with terror or
terrorism in a postmodern, globalist, biological/nuclear, and/or
high-tech context. All analyses of contemporary novels (or fiction by
contemporary novelists) dealing with the disturbing implications of "the
global village" are welcome, as are theoretical considerations of terror
(and horror?) in the postmodern age, as opposed to their pre-nuclear (or
pre-9/11) conceptualizations. Analyses of novels whose themes include
intra-state terrorism inflicted upon ethnic and sexual minorities are
also sought.
Americana: The Journal of American Popular Culture (1900-present) is
currently accepting submissions for its spring 2003 edition due out in May
and published online at www.americanpopularculture.com.
The deadline for submissions is 15 April 2003. Please see the call for
papers link at
http://www.americanpopularculture.com/journal/call_for_papers.htm
for additional requirements.
Americana: The Journal of American Popular Culture (1900-present) is
currently accepting submissions for its spring 2003 edition due out in May
and published online at www.americanpopularculture.com.
The deadline for submissions is 15 April 2003. Please see the call for
papers link at
http://www.americanpopularculture.com/journal/call_for_papers.htm
for additional requirements.
CALL FOR PAPERS
The United States through the Prism of American and British Popular Music.
For over a century and in modes ranging from hagiography to protest, popular
music has been a prime theatre of observation and representations of the
United States on record, in concert and more generally in the performing
arts. Studying this field, with its senders-artists and their
productions-and its receivers-gatekeepers and audiences-could enable us to
cast a different light on the USA as a source of inspiration, rejection and
attraction for musicians on both sides of the Atlantic in order to explore
certain visions of that country, or at least to examine some of the forces
that shape and/or distort it.
CALL FOR PAPERS
The United States through the Prism of American and British Popular Music.
For over a century and in modes ranging from hagiography to protest, popular
music has been a prime theatre of observation and representations of the
United States on record, in concert and more generally in the performing
arts. Studying this field, with its senders-artists and their
productions-and its receivers-gatekeepers and audiences-could enable us to
cast a different light on the USA as a source of inspiration, rejection and
attraction for musicians on both sides of the Atlantic in order to explore
certain visions of that country, or at least to examine some of the forces
that shape and/or distort it.
Proposals for a collection of essays on Dr. John Arbuthnot are sought; the
collection, Essays in Criticism on John Arbuthnot, is scheduled to be
published at the beginning of 2004 (February). Essays may deal with any
aspect of Arbuthnot’s (literary) career as an influential critic and
satirist who had strong ties with the Scriblerus club.
Proposals of about 500 words should be sent to the editor, Sandro Jung at
Sandro.Jung_at_btinternet.com by March 2003. Completed essays of about
5000-8000 words are due by 1 December 2003.
Proposals are especially encouraged that deal with the very diverse
correspondence of Arbuthnot.
Call for Papers
We are organizing panels and seeking papers for them on Asian
literature, including Asian film, for the 9th International Conference
on Intercultural Communication to be held at California State
University, Fullerton, July 24-28, 2003. Papers on any topic relevant
to Asian literature and film are invited, but we are particularly
interested in those which focus on over-crossing phenomena in Asian
literature and film, such as:
International relationships
Inter-Asian influences
Literary affinities between the old and new
Intertextuality
Call for Papers
We are organizing panels and seeking papers for them on Asian
literature, including Asian film, for the 9th International Conference
on Intercultural Communication to be held at California State
University, Fullerton, July 24-28, 2003. Papers on any topic relevant
to Asian literature and film are invited, but we are particularly
interested in those which focus on over-crossing phenomena in Asian
literature and film, such as:
International relationships
Inter-Asian influences
Literary affinities between the old and new
Intertextuality
Call for Papers
We are organizing panels and seeking papers for them on Asian
literature, including Asian film, for the 9th International Conference
on Intercultural Communication to be held at California State
University, Fullerton, July 24-28, 2003. Papers on any topic relevant
to Asian literature and film are invited, but we are particularly
interested in those which focus on over-crossing phenomena in Asian
literature and film, such as:
International relationships
Inter-Asian influences
Literary affinities between the old and new
Intertextuality
Call for Papers
In 2004 we will be celebrating the sesquicentennial of the
publication of Henry David Thoreau's Walden. To celebrate that
anniversary the 2004 issue of The Concord Saunterer will be a special
issue devoted to
Walden, the book,
and
Walden Pond, the place.
The editor of The Concord Saunterer invites papers for possible
publication in this issue on a variety of related topics, such as
=85 the literary significance of Walden
=85 structures and themes in Walden
=85 readers' responses to Walden
=85 the history of Walden Pond and the Walden Woods
=85 the ecology of Walden Pond and the Walden Woods
Call for Papers
In 2004 we will be celebrating the sesquicentennial of the
publication of Henry David Thoreau's Walden. To celebrate that
anniversary the 2004 issue of The Concord Saunterer will be a special
issue devoted to
Walden, the book,
and
Walden Pond, the place.
The editor of The Concord Saunterer invites papers for possible
publication in this issue on a variety of related topics, such as
=85 the literary significance of Walden
=85 structures and themes in Walden
=85 readers' responses to Walden
=85 the history of Walden Pond and the Walden Woods
=85 the ecology of Walden Pond and the Walden Woods
Call for Contributors: Seeking 500 - 600 word proposals for essays in an
anthology tentatively titled Resistance and Rage: Women of Color Respond
to Violence. This constellation of work seeks to explore topics such as
the dialectical approaches to the relationship among individual action,
selfhood and collective identity; womenís rights and feminist struggle
as articulated by women of color; traditions of resistance; legal
discursive formulations of rape and self-defense as applied to cases
involving women of color. Essays that expressly address the cases of
Inez Garcia, Joann Little, Yvonne Wanrow, Dessie Woods are encouraged.
Persons invited to submit completed essays will be asked to meet an
Call for Contributors: Seeking 500 - 600 word proposals for essays in an
anthology tentatively titled Resistance and Rage: Women of Color Respond
to Violence. This constellation of work seeks to explore topics such as
the dialectical approaches to the relationship among individual action,
selfhood and collective identity; womenís rights and feminist struggle
as articulated by women of color; traditions of resistance; legal
discursive formulations of rape and self-defense as applied to cases
involving women of color. Essays that expressly address the cases of
Inez Garcia, Joann Little, Yvonne Wanrow, Dessie Woods are encouraged.
Persons invited to submit completed essays will be asked to meet an
Call for Contributors: Seeking 500 - 600 word proposals for essays in an
anthology tentatively titled Resistance and Rage: Women of Color Respond
to Violence. This constellation of work seeks to explore topics such as
the dialectical approaches to the relationship among individual action,
selfhood and collective identity; womenís rights and feminist struggle
as articulated by women of color; traditions of resistance; legal
discursive formulations of rape and self-defense as applied to cases
involving women of color. Essays that expressly address the cases of
Inez Garcia, Joann Little, Yvonne Wanrow, Dessie Woods are encouraged.
Persons invited to submit completed essays will be asked to meet an
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.
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.
>Contributors are being sought for the Dictionary of
>Literary Biography Volume on Asian American Authors,
>edited by Deborah L. Madsen. Entries are due July 1st,
>2003. The list of unassigned writers follows.
>
>If you are interested in contributing, please contact
>Prof. Madsen at:
><mailto:deborah.madsen_at_ntlworld.com>deborah.madsen_at_ntlworld.com
>
>Contributors are being sought for the Dictionary of
>Literary Biography Volume on Asian American Authors,
>edited by Deborah L. Madsen. Entries are due July 1st,
>2003. The list of unassigned writers follows.
>
>If you are interested in contributing, please contact
>Prof. Madsen at:
><mailto:deborah.madsen_at_ntlworld.com>deborah.madsen_at_ntlworld.com
>
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.
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.
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: 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: 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: 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.
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: 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: 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