CFP: Under the Surface: Visibility and Politics
The 17th Annual Research, Art, Writing Conference
February 21st, 2026, Saturday, University of Texas at DallasCall For Papers: RAW 2026
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The 17th Annual Research, Art, Writing Conference
February 21st, 2026, Saturday, University of Texas at DallasCall For Papers: RAW 2026
Call for Abstracts: “Cultures of Waste” International conference (Offline)
Deadline for abstract submissions: Now Dec 31, 2025
Full name / name of organization: Department of Liberal Arts. Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad, India and UNESCO Chair in Vulnerability Studies, Department of English, The University of Hyderabad
Contact email: culturesofwaste@gmail.com
THE THIRD ANNUAL WOMEN, GENDER, AND SEXUALITY STUDIES GRADUATE SYMPOSIUM
A Century of Black History Commemorations
“The Impact and Meaning of Black History and Life Commemorations in Transforming the Status of
Black Peoples in the Modern World”
Morgan State University, April 2, 2026
Call for proposals for the 35th Annual International Conference on Virginia Woolf
Virginia Woolf and Sound
24-28 June, 2026
İstanbul Bilgi University
İstanbul,Turkey
“I always think of my books as music before I write them”
Virginia Woolf to Elizabeth Trevelyan, The Letters of Virginia Woolf, Vol. 6, September 4, 1940.
Plant Lives: Sacred Interdependencies in the Arts of the Americas
A planting event and conference hosted by the Yale Institute of Sacred Music
April 11, 2026
In 1831, the preacher Nat Turner testified that hieroglyphics had appeared to him on leaves and corn stalks in a field. These hieroglyphics, he said, relayed divine messages that inspired him to lead a rebellion of enslaved Virginians. The starting point for this one-day conference is the many capacities of plants to transmit divine insights across time. This event at the Yale Institute of Sacred Music will explore the ways in which plants perform, evoke, and embody sacred relations throughout the Americas.
CONCEPT NOTE
Has theatre (as a form of literature or performing arts) always been ‘experimental’ to some extent? Describing the attempt to ‘situate the beginning of experimental theatre historically’ as ‘arbitrary,’ Professor Patrice Pavis has pointed out that all new forms of theatre ‘necessarily experiments as soon as it is no longer content to reproduce existing forms and techniques and no longer considers the meaning of its production as self-evident’ (133). It is important to note at this point that Pavis’s analysis does not depict the idea of Experimental theatre to be essentially ‘Eurocentric’. Rather it hints at the possible presence of Experimental theatre across cultures.
Mysteries and Mayhem is our fourth conference theme. Why do we continue to crave mystery stories? What do they tell us about our need for suspense and our desire to solve riddles, including the most famous of all:Whodunnit? What do these stories of murder and mayhem teach us about the nature of evil, ideas of sin, and the essence of a villain? What do we hope to see in the survivors of these threats? –And what do we expect from the detectives and heroes who reveal the truth in these stories? We seek papers and creative projects that explore these and related questions.
YSLS (Young Scholars Literary Sympsium) welcomes your undergraduate, graduate, educator, and independent scholar proposals!
Call for Publications
Women’s Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal (Taylor & Francis)
**Special Issue on
Haunting Revisions: The Female Gothic Across Time and Media**
Guest Editors:
Dr. Cindy Murillo, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
Dr. Jennifer Nader, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
Overview
… Ond þis geþeaht ic sylle eallum wyrhtum, þæt anra gehwylc cræft his geornlice begange, forþam se þe cræft his forlæt, he byþ forlæten fram þam cræfte. Swa hwæðer þu sy, swa mæsseprest, swa munuc, swa ceorl, swa kempa, bega oþþe behwyrf þe sylfne on þisum, ond beo þæt þu eart; forþam micel hynð ond sceamu hyt is menn nellan wesan þæt þæt he ys ond þæt he wesan sceal.
This year’s conference will be held July 22-26, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland.
The ATHE Religion & Theatre focus group invites current graduate students and/or independent scholars who have not presented at ATHE to submit papers for the 2026 Emerging Scholars Panel.
2026 Conference Theme: “Activating Imagination in/and Community”
This year’s conference theme, "Activating Imagination in/and Community," asks us to think deeply and courageously about the role of theatre and performance in shaping our shared presents and collective futures. It challenges us to contemplate not just what we do, but how and with whom we do it.
DATE: Feb. 25-27
Humanities Education and Research Association
Theme: “The Essential Humanities in Practice and Perseverance” (Virtual Conference)
In keeping with HERA’s mission to promote the study of the humanities across a wide range of disciplines and interdisciplinary studies, we invite proposals for the 2026 conference. Submissions are encouraged from educators at all levels (including undergraduate and graduate students) and from anyone with an interest in the arts and humanities. Proposals for papers, panels, or workshops must be submitted through the conference web portals.
Archival Poetics: Fragmentation, Organization, Multimodality
Text Matters: A Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture (Issue 17, 2027)
University of Lodz, Poland
Co-editors of the issue:
Wojciech Drąg, PhD (University of Wrocław)
Elin Ivansson, PhD (Sheffield Hallam University)
Sacred Arts 2026:
Exploring the Spiritual Dimensions of Artistic Expression and Ritual
Conference webpage: https://labrc.co.uk/2025/12/11/sacred-arts-2026/
University of Oxford
and online
May 16-17, 2026
Registration fees (for both attendees and presenters):
*Imaginations - Journal of Cross-Cultural Image Studies (open access and peer-reviewed)*
Call for Abstracts for Special Issue of Rhetoric Society Quarterly Maternal Rhetorics: Deconstructing Expectations of Mother/Woman/ParenthoodCo-editors: Anna D'Orazio (University of Cincinnati), Wendy Sharer (East Carolina University), and Jurrita Williams (University of Alabama) In a 2021 interview with Tucker Carlson, then-Senate candidate and now-Vice President JD Vance criticized the Democratic Party “for becoming anti-family and anti-child.” He stated, “It's just a basic fact—you look at Kamala Harris, Pete Buttigieg, AOC [Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez]—the entire future of the Democrats is controlled by people without children….How does it make sense that we’ve
The London Journal Early Career Publishing Workshop
The London Journal is committed to supporting early career scholars develop work into a publishable journal article. To this end, we are hosting a free workshop to provide practical advice and support on developing research (which might include thesis chapters or conference papers) into publishable, full-length journal articles.
The Romantic Literature Student Society of the Jagiellonian University under the patronage of the Enlightenment and Romantic Literature Department of JU is pleased to extend the invitation to take part in the Romantics in Relation to Science and Technology Undergraduate and Graduate Student Conference. The conference will take place in Krakow on the 26th and 27th of March, 2026 (foreign speakers will have the opportunity to present online).
Fabulating history in contemporary bio/fiction
1 /2027
Studia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai. Philologia
Guest editors
Ágnes Zsófia Kovács, University of Szeged, Hungary
Anna Kérchy, University of Szeged, Hungary
Narrating Conflict:
Ethics, Identity, and the Stories We Tell
4/2026
Studia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai Philologia
Guest editors
Amelia Precup (Babeș-Bolyai University) amelia.precup@ubbcluj.ro
Lolly Willowes at 100: Sylvia Townsend Warner, Religion, and the Supernatural
IAS Common Ground, University College London, 29-30 May 2026
The 2026 Benedict College International Multidisciplinary Conference (2026 BCIMC)
Thursday and Friday, April 23-24, 2026, at 9:00 AM-5:00 PM
Sponsored by the School of Communication, Arts, and Social Sciences (CASS)
CONFERENCE WEBSITE
https://benedict.edu/bciimc
CONFERENCE FORMAT
Hybrid
In-Person and Virtual
CONFERENCE VENUE
Benedict College
Dr. David H. Swinton Campus Center
1616 Oak Street
Columbia, SC 29204
CONFERENCE THEME
The Age of Artificial Intelligence Across Academic Disciplines
Call for Nominations:
2026 Award for Best Scholarly Monograph on the American Gothic
The Society for the Study of the American Gothic (SSAG) invites nominations for its biennial Award for Best Scholarly Monograph. This award is open to all scholarly monographs published in the past two years that focus on some aspect of the American Gothic. The winner of the award will be announced at the Society for the Study of the American Gothic business meeting, at the American Literature Association conference in May 2026 (exact date TBA).
Eligibility
Call for Papers 2026
For the inaugural 2026 meeting of our research group, Race, Ethnicity, and Identity in the Bible and the Ancient Mediterranean, we invite papers that explore how ancient identities were forged, reshaped, or contested in contexts of conflict, tension, and instability. Our theme for this year is Contested Identities in the Bible and the Ancient Mediterranean: Identity Formation in Contexts of Struggle and Conflict.
Comparative Literature Graduate Student Organization, Binghamton University
Conference dates: April 17-18, in-person at Binghamton University (limited virtual accommodations by request)
Abstract deadline: January 16, 2026
This panel explores the intersections of literature, sociability, and the history of emotions in the Hispanic world during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Following Raymond Williams’s notion of “structures of feeling” and Barbara Rosenwein’s concept of “emotional communities,” as well as more recent work in affect theory (Ahmed 2004), we consider emotions not as private, psychological states but as cultural and social practices. Recent scholarship has also stressed the dual nature of emotion concepts—oscillating between natural and normative kinds (Scarantino 2025)—and their role in shaping both political discourses and collective identities.
Call for Papers : “Translators” special issue
Yale French Studies no. 151 (Autumn-Winter 2027)
“I, I wear a plastic suit / Plastic is my food / Perhaps, I’m plastic too,” sang the iconic Yugoslav New Wave band Idoli in their 1981 song “Plastika” (“Plastics”). These lyrics captured a 1980s moment in which Yugoslav production, import, and consumption of plastics reached their peak. Yet the groundwork for it had been laid in the preceding decades, since plastics production had begun shortly after the Second World War and rapidly permeated all aspects of everyday life (see Filipović 2023). Importantly, Yugoslavia’s trajectory differed from that of the Eastern Bloc.
June 2026 Graduate Symposium on the Work of D.H. Lawrence
The DHLSNA plans to host a day-long symposium for graduate students on 12 June 2026. The symposium will consist of panels of micro-papers (5-7 minutes), a plenary dialogue between a senior Lawrence scholar and graduate student respondents, and an ac/alt-ac professional workshop.
Call for Papers
Following the success of the I International Conference on Gender Studies & Intermedial Narratives (UCM, 2024), this new edition seeks to go further, deeper, and bolder. If last year we worked around the idea of intermediality, this year we want to explore its most visceral and material dimension: how gender is inscribed on, through, and as bodies—and how bodies themselves become texts, interfaces, archives, and narrative machines.We begin with a simple premise: every text is a body, and every body is a text.
AICED-27
THE 27th ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT,
UNIVERSITY OF BUCHAREST
5-6 June 2026
CALL FOR PAPERS
Representations of
Crime in Literature and the Arts
University of Bucharest, Faculty of Foreign Languages and Literatures
7-13 Pitar Moș Street, Bucharest, Romania
This is a Call for Papers for a special issue titled, "Mapping the Diverse Horizons of Oral History in India: Theory, Method, Practice." The central idea of the special issue is to map the multiple directions in which oral history is evolving within India today and to highlight its significance in understanding lives, histories, and identities that often remain outside conventional archives. The issue will be published in collaboration with The Oral History Review [ https://www.tandfonline.com/journals/uohr20 Scopus, Q1].
We invite interested individuals to send us an abstract based on the following themes, but not limited to:
Call for Papers:
Conventions and Subversions in Sino-Western Theatrical Settings
Edited by Kelly Kar Yue CHAN, Chi Sum Garfield LAU and Chi Chun CHAN
We are soliciting chapter proposals for an edited volume that contains 8-10 chapters of research articles which represent the efforts from both members of the academia and practitioners of theatre to sustain the tradition of Sino-Western theatrics, while demonstrating the evolving aspects of contemporary performances under the inexorable trends of digitalization and globalization.
NATIONAL SEMINAR ONDigital Futures and Beyond: Emerging Paradigms in English Studies
27 December 2025
Organised by
Department of English, Hill-Top Degree College, Mohana, Gajapati, Odisha
Venue: Seminar Hall, Hill-Top Degree College
Website:www.hilltopdegreecollegemohana.edu.in
Invitation
The UI English Graduate Association is excited to announce our 2026 conference theme “(k)no(w) books, (k)no(w) people: Multidisciplinary Studies of Narrative, Media, and the Anthropocene.” At the forefront of our conference is the power of narratives. Humans are storytellers by nature, and for thousands of years we have used stories to remember our pasts and envision our futures. We have used them to entertain and inspire us, to empower us in the face of oppression, and to understand the world around us. And, as the Anthropocene makes strikingly clear, human stories have shaped the world, to an irreversible degree.
Perennially understudied, Eurasia – as both a geographical and conceptual constellation – opens up a novel and fertile space for scholarly contributions. This call for papers invites submissions that engage with the region’s alternative media, information, and communications histories, bridging past and future frameworks, methodologies and forms.
Watermark, the annual, peer-reviewed scholarly journal published by English graduate students at California State University, Long Beach, is now seeking submissions for its twentieth volume. Our journal is dedicated to publishing original, critical, and theoretical papers concerned with literature of all genres and periods or current issues in the field of rhetoric and composition. We also accept submissions from other areas including but not limited to: Comparative World Literature, Medieval Studies, Translation Studies, and Gender & Women’s Studies. As this journal is intended to provide a forum for emerging voices, only graduate and undergraduate student work will be considered.
ATHE 2026
“ACTIVATING IMAGINATION IN/AND COMMUNITY”
July 22–26, 2026 | Baltimore, Maryland
This year’s conference theme, "Activating Imagination in/and Community," asks us to think deeply and courageously about the role of theatre and performance in shaping our shared presents and collective futures. It challenges us to contemplate not just what we do, but how and with whom we do it, while recognizing that, in the face of growing political repression and institutional instability, our collaborations—across disciplines, communities, and identities—are simultaneously more vulnerable and vital than ever.
WANT TO PUBLISH YOUR SCHOLARLY WORK?
WHAT IS JURH?
Strangeness and Oddity:
Embracing the Extraordinary in Arts-Based Research
Conference Webpage: https://labrc.co.uk/2025/12/08/strangeness-and-oddity-2026/
A Transdisciplinary Conference
March 10-11, 2026
Online
Abstract Submission Deadline: January 31, 2026
Institute for the Humanities, University of Manitoba, February 5–6, 2026
The Institute for Humanities at the University of Manitoba invites proposals for papers and panel presentations for the international conference Identity in Motion: Literary Representations of Refugees, Exiles, and Immigrants. This conference seeks to explore the diverse literary portrayals of displacement, migration, exile, and the refugee experience across genres, languages, and cultures. We welcome interdisciplinary approaches, including but not limited to literary studies, cultural studies, history, and sociology.
Focusing on the past decade – particularly the summer of 2020 and its aftermath, which witnessed an unprecedented wave of iconoclastic acts against monuments and statues linked to colonialism, white supremacy, and slavery, alongside renewed calls for the decolonisation of museums and urban toponyms – much of the subsequent scholarly attention in English has centred on developments in the Anglophone world.
Concept Note
Website: westcoastreview.org
West Coast Review (SDSU Press) is seeking art, flash fiction, short stories, and any creative prose that falls in-between. This includes creative non-fiction, memoires, craft essays and experimental prose pieces. We accept all genres--we just want pieces that are bold and embrace the diversity found on the west coast!
Guidelines:
We accept simultaneous submissions, but please withdraw your submission if accepted elsewhere. We do not accept previously published work. We do not consider work posted to blogs, personal websites, or social media to be previously published. We do not accept work that has been created with AI.
For Critical Insights volume under contract:
Madness in Literature
DEADLINE FOR PROPOSALS: January 9, 2026
Call for Papers:
Conventions and Subversions in Sino-Western Theatrical Settings
Edited by Kelly Kar Yue CHAN, Chi Sum Garfield LAU and Chi Chun CHAN
We are soliciting chapter proposals for an edited volume that contains 8-10 chapters of research articles which represent the efforts from both members of the academia and practitioners of theatre to sustain the tradition of Sino-Western theatrics, while demonstrating the evolving aspects of contemporary performances under the inexorable trends of digitalization and globalization.
Please consider submitting an abstract for the edited collection, Reconfiguring Critical Thinking in Higher Education for the 21st Century (Springer, Education).
We welcome research on critical thinking in higher education in Southeast Asia. The first section of the collection endeavours to define critical thinking in the current climate. The essays of the second section share classroom activities and curriculum design that aim to teach critical thinking. And the final section considers how LLMs can both facilitate and inhibit the cultivation of critical thinking in student learners.
We aim to have completed articles ready for submission by August, 2026.
This call invites the submission of proposals for a dossier that will be submitted for consideration to A Contracorriente: A Journal of Latin American Studies. The dossier will focus on the following theme:
Material Plots: Commodity, Capitalism, and National Imaginaries in Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Hispanic American Literature
FOR LANCELOT ANDREWES
September 25th 2026 marks the 400th anniversary of Lancelot Andrewes’ death. It also marks the 100th anniversary of an essay by T. S. Eliot which appeared first in the TLS and was later collected into the volume named after it: For Lancelot Andrewes. This essay instigated modern critical interest in Andrewes’ intellectual and imaginative legacy, and is a significant event not just for sermon studies but for the conjunction of modernism and early modernism, and the influence of the renaissance period on the poets and thinkers of the twentieth century and beyond.
Nesir: Journal of Literary Studies invites submissions for its 10th issue (April 2026) and 12th issue (April 2027), dedicated to the twin special issues “Theoretical Inquiries, Critical Dialogues I–II.”
These issues welcome original research articles that explore classical or contemporary literary theories, modes of interpretation, textual analysis, narrative studies, world literature, comparative approaches, and interdisciplinary perspectives.
Prioritizing conceptual depth and metaphorical dynamism, Nesir seeks contributions that move beyond descriptive analysis of a single work, period, or national context. We encourage articles that:
Queering food in the 21st Century