CFP: Psychoanalysis and Asian American Literary Studies (4/30/05; collection)
CALL FOR PAPERS
For a Collection of Essays Tentatively Entitled
PSYCHOANALYSIS AND ASIAN AMERICAN LITERARY STUDIES
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CALL FOR PAPERS
For a Collection of Essays Tentatively Entitled
PSYCHOANALYSIS AND ASIAN AMERICAN LITERARY STUDIES
CALL FOR PAPERS
For a Collection of Essays Tentatively Entitled
PSYCHOANALYSIS AND ASIAN AMERICAN LITERARY STUDIES
Kritikos: an international and interdisciplinary journal of postmodern
cultural sound, text and image (ISSN 1552-5112),
http://garnet.acns.fsu.edu/~nr03/
is currently accepting submissions for publication in 2004/2005.
The purpose of the journal is to publish work that materializes theoretical
renderings of, and practical approaches to culture. In particular, Kritikos
seeks to publish work that is focused upon the currency of the postmodern
period. Kritikos publishes material continuously; please allow 1-3 months for
review.
Conrad and the Orient
Edited by Amar Acheraiou and Nursel Icoz
The Eastern and Western Perspectives series devotes a volume to _Conrad and
the Orient_. We are seeking innovative and challenging essays addressing
topics relating to Conrad and the Oriental world in its geographical breadth
and cultural diversity. Comparative and interdisciplinary approaches are
welcome.
Subjects include (but are not limited to):
CALL FOR PAPERS
Special Issue of Literature and Medicine
Health and Human Rights
Volume 25, Number 1
Issue Editor: Priscilla Wald
UPDATE: New submission deadline is December 7, 2004
CFP: Representing the other (12/07/04; journal issue)
Litteralis: Studies and debates in literature, linguistics and arts
seeks submissions for a special issue devoted to the representation of the
other.
Visions and representations of alterity may be analyzed from multiple
points of view, including but not being limited to literary, linguistic
and/or, phonetic/phonological perspectives.
Specially welcome are, now, essays focusing on representations of the
other in the Renaissance (esp. Shakespeare) and XVIII and XIX century
prose.
UPDATE: New submission deadline is December 7, 2004
CFP: Representing the other (12/07/04; journal issue)
Litteralis: Studies and debates in literature, linguistics and arts
seeks submissions for a special issue devoted to the representation of the
other.
Visions and representations of alterity may be analyzed from multiple
points of view, including but not being limited to literary, linguistic
and/or, phonetic/phonological perspectives.
Specially welcome are, now, essays focusing on representations of the
other in the Renaissance (esp. Shakespeare) and XVIII and XIX century
prose.
In-between: Essays & Studies in Literary Criticism
James Joyce
While the James Joyce issue of _In-between: Essays & Studies in Literary
Criticism_ is ready for the printers, it still has space, on account of
delayed peer reviews, for 2-3 long articles (6000 words) or 4-5 short pieces
(2 to 3000 words) on any aspect of Joyce studies, excluding _Ulysses_.
Scholars who have essays ready or are likely to be able to complete
submissions within the next couple of weeks may please immediately contact
the editor, Gulshan Taneja, <grtaneja47_at_hotmail.com>,
<inbetween_at_rediffmail.com>
In-between: Essays & Studies in Literary Criticism
James Joyce
While the James Joyce issue of _In-between: Essays & Studies in Literary
Criticism_ is ready for the printers, it still has space, on account of
delayed peer reviews, for 2-3 long articles (6000 words) or 4-5 short pieces
(2 to 3000 words) on any aspect of Joyce studies, excluding _Ulysses_.
Scholars who have essays ready or are likely to be able to complete
submissions within the next couple of weeks may please immediately contact
the editor, Gulshan Taneja, <grtaneja47_at_hotmail.com>,
<inbetween_at_rediffmail.com>
Call for Completed Essays Presented at, and for additional abstracts
related to, New York College English Spring 2003 Conference, Anatomy of
Violence: Examining Conflict
Papers presented at NYCEA's Spring Conference, 2003, Anatomy of
Violence: Examining Conflict, are requested for inclusion in a
collection that is under serious consideration by a leading university
press.
Additional abstracts are invited for this collection of essays.
Abstracts of 500 words for essays on this topic will be accepted for
consideration until November 29th 2004. Responses will be sent by
December 15th 2004.
Completed essays based on accepted proposals will be required by
January 31st, 2005.
Carbon is a *new* electronic journal devised and disseminated by
students at California State University, Fresno.
Carbon is the pervasive element. It is the common substance of organic
life. The idea for the e-journal, not unlike the chemical element, is a
product of forces. Electronic publications continue to challenge
traditional notions of academic discourse. Patricia Bizzell provides a
useful definition for considering language-use in the academy:
"A primary way to define academic discourse is to see it as the language
of a community," which "shapes participants' way of looking at the world
– their worldview – including notions of what's real, normal, natural,
good, and true."
Deadline extended:
UPDATE: Philament: Retrospective (12/03/04)
Philament invites contributions to its upcoming issue, Retrospective.
[nostalgia, or déjà vu, or the retrospective classification of the cannon;
testimony; memoirs – personal or cultural; commemoration; immortalization; text
vs. oral; print vs. cybertext; mnemonics; advertising; an author's collected
works or anthologies; "best of" music compilations; marginalia, editor's
footnotes, translation; reincarnation; reinvention; etc.]
Isn't writing immortalization? Publishing with us certainly is. Barthes would
kill me for that. And so blatant too.
Call for Papers
for the first edition of
Jung: The e-Journal of the Jungian Society for Scholarly Studies
Deadline February 5, 2005
To be published on-line April 10, 2005
Papers of up to 7500 words on any topic that implements, utilizes, or
critiques the relevance and application of Jungian and post-Jungian theory
for scholarly study. Topics may include (but need not be constrained to)
literature, the arts, humanities such as drama, visual art, myth and fairy
tale, pop culture, education, religion, film, music, architecture,
psychology, science, masculinity, and Jungian theory itself.
"Bile: The Journal of Discontent"
Face it, you're angry.
There's a lot to be angry about. Bile is a new on-line journal of art,
letters, media and politics that seeks to embrace your indignation and
harness it as a trigger for progressive discussions and important
debates. Bile seeks to berate injustice, scold weak thinking, rebuke
the successes of the undeserving, and generally reprimand those who
produce, market, legislate, or enforce maddening drivel.
CALL FOR PAPERS:
Western Folklore, the academic journal of the California Folklore Society,
is soliciting submissions for a special issue of the journal that will focus
on the relationship between Film and Folklore. Submissions on the following
or related topics are particularly welcome:
CALL FOR PAPERS:
Western Folklore, the academic journal of the California Folklore Society,
is soliciting submissions for a special issue of the journal that will focus
on the relationship between Film and Folklore. Submissions on the following
or related topics are particularly welcome:
CALL FOR PAPERS:
Western Folklore, the academic journal of the California Folklore Society,
is soliciting submissions for a special issue of the journal that will focus
on the relationship between Film and Folklore. Submissions on the following
or related topics are particularly welcome:
Call for Papers: The Figure of the Coquette
The proposed collection of essays seeks to explore the figure of the
coquette in the long eighteenth century (1660-1830), with the aim of
understanding and theorizing the cultural context that produced the figure,
her historical evolution, and her representation in European culture. We
are particularly interested in the coquette as a key site for debates about
women's nature and female roles during this period, ranging from the
misogynist critique of the coquette to explorations of her social power.
Comparatist analyses and cultural studies approaches are welcome, as are
essays addressing modern or contemporary rewritings of the figure of the
coquette
Studies in American Culture
Call for Submissions
Studies in American Culture welcomes the submission of essays on all
aspects of American culture and from all scholarly and critical
approaches. We especially invite interdisciplinary studies of the
literature, language, visual arts, and history of the United States.*
Our diverse readership includes academics and non-academics who come
from a variety of disciplines and backgrounds. We prefer fresh,
innovative essays that are informed by research and current critical
theories but which avoid alienating jargon.
Studies in American Culture
Call for Submissions
Studies in American Culture welcomes the submission of essays on all
aspects of American culture and from all scholarly and critical
approaches. We especially invite interdisciplinary studies of the
literature, language, visual arts, and history of the United States.*
Our diverse readership includes academics and non-academics who come
from a variety of disciplines and backgrounds. We prefer fresh,
innovative essays that are informed by research and current critical
theories but which avoid alienating jargon.
Call for Papers on two Topics: Hemingway and Material Culture /
Hemingway and Africa
Hemingway and Material Culture.
Call for Papers on two Topics: Hemingway and Material Culture /
Hemingway and Africa
Hemingway and Material Culture.
1000-word Essays on Wharton Novels
and
Other American Novels,Classic and Contemporary
I am preparing a 2-volume Companion to the American Novel for Facts on File,
sequel to The Facts on File Companion to the American Short Story,
and still have openings for essays on specific Wharton titles, along with
other American fiction titles.
Essays written in a lively, jargonfree style, should be approximately 1000
words exclusive of bibliography, and authors are encouraged to include
original and intriguing interpretations of the novels.
The deadline is 5 December 2004.
For further information and a list of available titles please contact me via
any of the methods listed below.
1000-word Essays on Wharton Novels
and
Other American Novels,Classic and Contemporary
I am preparing a 2-volume Companion to the American Novel for Facts on File,
sequel to The Facts on File Companion to the American Short Story,
and still have openings for essays on specific Wharton titles, along with
other American fiction titles.
Essays written in a lively, jargonfree style, should be approximately 1000
words exclusive of bibliography, and authors are encouraged to include
original and intriguing interpretations of the novels.
The deadline is 5 December 2004.
For further information and a list of available titles please contact me via
any of the methods listed below.
The electronic peer-reviewed English Studies Forum (www.bsu.edu/web/esf) is committed to publishing innovative creative and critical writing. The editors are seeking aesthetically adventurous work that experiments with language and thought, challenging conventional techniques of literary expression.
******************************************************************
CFP: Hypnosis and Trance in Literature & Poplular Culture (journal, no deadline)
CALL FOR PAPERS
Hypnosis and Trance in Literature, Film, Television, Media
Papers related to hypnosis and other trance themes in literature, film, television, and popular culture are welcome. No deadline. Open submission policy journal.
JOURNAL OF HYPNOTIC ARTS AND SCIENCES
An International Multi-Discipline Peer-Reviewed Journal of Hypnosis, Trance, and Changework
Theory and Practice for Therapy, Education, Entertainment, and Recreation
******************************************************************
CFP: Hypnosis and Trance in Literature & Poplular Culture (journal, no deadline)
CALL FOR PAPERS
Hypnosis and Trance in Literature, Film, Television, Media
Papers related to hypnosis and other trance themes in literature, film, television, and popular culture are welcome. No deadline. Open submission policy journal.
JOURNAL OF HYPNOTIC ARTS AND SCIENCES
An International Multi-Discipline Peer-Reviewed Journal of Hypnosis, Trance, and Changework
Theory and Practice for Therapy, Education, Entertainment, and Recreation
Reflections on Writing: Pedagogy, Expectations, and Best Practices
________________________________
________________________________
With the renewed influence on writing competency, instructors at all levels of the educational system are revisiting the ways in which they conceive of good writing and good teaching practices, as well as the ways in which they present these ideas to their students. Further, the current focus on composition pedagogy emphasizes the reflective aspect of the process and serves to encourage instructors to conceive of writing not merely as a sequence of assignments or activities, but as a deliberate representation of the theoretical framework that informs those activities.
We have received numerous inquiries on the submission of visual =
representations of text. As such, nasty would like to extend the CFP to =
include representation of text in image, image and text, and textual =
studies of art forms apart from comics and graphic novels.
Here is the original CFP=20
nasty
Call for Papers
Issue #15: Pics and Bits
In the Humanities, we long ago redefined the concept of "text" to
include architecture, clothing, furniture, and any other material
object, artistic or otherwise, that can be a vessel for narrative. It is
possible, in fact, that the printed word as we know it is merely a blip
in the history of human communication.
We have received numerous inquiries on the submission of visual =
representations of text. As such, nasty would like to extend the CFP to =
include representation of text in image, image and text, and textual =
studies of art forms apart from comics and graphic novels.
Here is the original CFP=20
nasty
Call for Papers
Issue #15: Pics and Bits
In the Humanities, we long ago redefined the concept of "text" to
include architecture, clothing, furniture, and any other material
object, artistic or otherwise, that can be a vessel for narrative. It is
possible, in fact, that the printed word as we know it is merely a blip
in the history of human communication.