all recent posts

Meeting the (Re)Generated Other (In-Person only panel)

updated: 
Wednesday, June 25, 2025 - 11:07am
Northeast Modern Languages Association (NeMLA)
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

We invite papers for the panel “Meeting the (Re)Generated Other” at NeMLA 2026 annual convention. This panel is in-person only.

 

What will we want from the constructed companions and servants we build? And what will they want/take from us? SF writers, filmmakers, graphic novelists, and game designers imagine futures featuring sentient artificial beings—domestics, soldiers, sexual partners, protectors—interacting with the humans that make them. These texts operate as thought experiments about how we natural-born humans might coexist and interact with the posthumans we will shortly create.

Ecocritical Approaches to the Work of Cherrie Moraga (NEMLA 2026)

updated: 
Wednesday, June 25, 2025 - 11:07am
Northeast Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

In honor of the 45th anniversary of the publication of This Bridge Called My Back, this panel seeks to explore the many ways in which ecocritical theory has expressed itself in the critical writings, poetry, prose, memoirs, and plays of Cherrie Moraga. In a time of extreme climate change denialism and the continued increase in global temperatures, directly leading to such climate disasters as the January 2025 wildfires in Southern California and the flooding caused by Hurricane Helene in the southern Appalachias in September 2024, Moraga's work will be read for approaches to climate resistance and positive change.

NeMLA 2026 In-person Roundtable: "AI in the Composition Classroom: Game-Changer, Gimmick, or Grift"

updated: 
Wednesday, June 25, 2025 - 11:06am
Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA)
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Who’s afraid of Generative AI? At this in-person (only) roundtable session, we intend to find out by revisiting our post-pandemic practices in the composition classroom. In two of our previous peer-reviewed publications from 2013 and 2014, we questioned the acumen of the “digital native,” as Marc Prensky famously termed the respective generation of university students. To a large degree, and with sometimes surprising results, the collective COVID-era put the technological abilities of these students to the test. At our 2024 NeMLA roundtable, we again assessed this population in light of course design and delivery through the “emergency remote” and “blended” modes of instruction necessitated by the pandemic.

New Perspectives on Central American Literature and Cinema

updated: 
Wednesday, June 25, 2025 - 11:06am
Northeast Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

During the past years, there has been a renewed interest in the study of Central American cultural productions. As the geopolitical interests of the Americas and the world are shifting towards new configurations, the countries of Central America have also started garnering interest from scholars in the Americas and Europe. This panel seeks to foster a dialogue amongst scholars and researchers exploring new critical perspectives that analyze both new and classic works of literature and cinema from Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, El Salvador and Belize.

3RD UTAD Conference "Evolution" (Turkish Society for Theatre Research) (extended deadline 30 June)

updated: 
Wednesday, June 25, 2025 - 11:06am
Turkish Society for Theatre Research
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, June 30, 2025

3rd International UTAD Theatre Research Conference

“Evolution”

Transformations in Theatre, Drama, and Performance

Hosted by:
Turkish Society for Theatre Research (UTAD), Süleyman Demirel University, Departments of English Language and Literature and  Theatre, Türkiye
Conference Dates: 4-5-6 September 2025
Venue: Süleyman Demirel University, Isparta, Türkiye

 

Early Modern Stationers and their Shop Signs (RSA 2026 Paper Panel)

updated: 
Wednesday, June 25, 2025 - 11:04am
Andreas P. Bassett / San José State University
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, July 30, 2025

This panel interrogates early modern stationer signs by situating them within topographical and cultural contexts of the period. Before the advent of numbered street addresses, wooden signboards fixed in the frontages of printing houses and bookshops signaled sites of literary and social exchange. These signs did double duty: they were simultaneously public-facing trade emblems and paratexts in the title-page imprints of books they authorized. As uniquely biblio-visual arguments, then, they worked in concert to broadcast a stationer’s stock, specialization, and geopositioning in the book trade.

Previously on...: Queer Representation, Racist Ideologies, and the Cultural Navigation of Reality TV

updated: 
Wednesday, June 25, 2025 - 10:54am
Northeast Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

This virtual panel will discuss and argue how reality shows such as RuPaul’s Drag RaceWe’re HereSurvivorThe Rehearsal, and Nathan for You challenge expectations and limitations of narrative and media, and how these shows impact social and cultural understanding of underrepresented communities through spectacle, queerness, race, and gender.

This panel welcomes papers, presentations, and works-in-progress (?!) on reality television and how this genre intersects with critical race and gender studies, critical media studies, fan studies, and digital fandom subcultures.

https://cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/21837

 

 

Transcendental Rhetoric in the Times of Rise of GenAI

updated: 
Wednesday, June 25, 2025 - 10:53am
NeMLA's 57th Annual Convention, March 8-6, 2026, Pittsburgh, PA
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

In the words of Nathan Crick, transcendentalism is a “rhetorical genre of public advocacy” and “a way of crossing a divide or reconciling a contradiction through a radical act of imagination whereby people are able to see and judge themselves from the perspectives of some distant and different ‘beyond’ (9). How can the transcendentalist philosophy of learning inform our 21st-century pedagogy of higher education, when GenAI is rising? GenAI's one challenge in higher education, especially in teaching writing and interpreting literature, is its increasingly seamless integration into digital devices, which has posed a threat of erasing learners' self or individual voice and perpetuating algorithmic bias.

The Pittsburgh Review of Books (PRoB)

updated: 
Wednesday, June 25, 2025 - 10:53am
Carnegie Mellon University
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, January 1, 2026

This September the English Department at Carnegie Mellon University will be launching a new publication called the Pittsburgh Review of Books (or PRoB). To be edited by author and Public Humanities Special Faculty Ed Simon, PRoB will be a home for engaged, creative, and interdisciplinary cultural criticism and analysis across the humanities. The tone of the publication will be similar to other para-academic publications intended for both specialists and a general audience. In addition to book reviews and excerpts, essays and criticism across the humanities and social sciences will be published. Queries and pitches are to be sent to Ed Simon at esimon@andrew.cmu.edu

Recovering Southeast Asian Identity through the Postcolonial Archive

updated: 
Wednesday, June 25, 2025 - 10:53am
James Matthew Villanueva / Temple University
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Northeast MLA, March 5-8 2026

This session explores how postcolonial Southeast Asian literature grapples with memory, trauma, archival recovery, and cultural identity. Rather than thinking of identity as fixed or linear, selfhood is complex and palimpsestic due to colonial violence, migration, and historical erasure. This session invites papers that analyze how characters or narratives navigate misremembering, inherited trauma, or overwritten histories to reclaim belonging, agency, and identity. Topics may include narrative voice, transgenerational memory, silence, storytelling, and archival gaps in multiethnic and immigrant literatures.

International Conference on Ethics and Spectatorship in Film and Screen Media

updated: 
Wednesday, June 25, 2025 - 10:53am
Giacomo Leoni, University College Cork
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, July 31, 2025


International Conference
Ethics and Spectatorship in Film and Screen Media
University College Cork, Ireland
29–30 November 2025

The International Conference “Ethics and Spectatorship in Film and Screen Media” will take place on 29–30 November 2025 at University College Cork (UCC), Ireland. 

We are pleased to announce that our keynote speakers will be:

“One cannot have too large a party”: a 250 años del nacimiento de Jane Austen

updated: 
Monday, June 23, 2025 - 10:18pm
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, June 30, 2025

La Cátedra Extraordinaria Virginia Woolf

El Colegio de Letras Modernas 

El Departamento de Letras Inglesas

 

Convocan al Coloquio

 

“One cannot have too large a party”: a 250 años del nacimiento de Jane Austen

 

Indigenous Knowledge System and Decolonial Turn: Global South in Focus

updated: 
Monday, June 23, 2025 - 3:46am
Bodoland University
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, July 15, 2025

International Seminar

Indigenous Knowledge System and Decolonial Turn: Global South in Focus

16 & 17 October 2025

Venue: Bodoland University, Kokrajhar

A Special Issue will be published in Bandung: Journal of the Global South (De Gruyter Brill)

 

Peter Nicholls Essay Prize 2026

updated: 
Saturday, June 21, 2025 - 6:11am
Science Fiction Foundation
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, January 11, 2026

We are pleased to announce our next essay-writing competition. The award is open to all post-graduate research students and to all early career researchers (up to five years after the completion of your PhD) who have yet to find a full-time or tenured position. The prize is guaranteed publication in Foundation in 2026. To be considered for the competition, please submit an original article on any topic, period, theme, author, film or other media within the (broadly defined) field of science fiction and its academic study. Approximate length should be 6000-8000 words. All submitted articles should comply with the guidelines to contributors as set out on the journal pages of the SF Foundation website.

NRITYAJYOTI FESTIVAL: VIRTUAL CONFERENCE 2025

updated: 
Friday, June 20, 2025 - 12:01pm
Foundation for Developed India
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, July 15, 2025

NRITYAJYOTI FESTIVAL: VIRTUAL CONFERENCE 2025

Organised by 

Foundation for Developed India

 

20th September, 2025

Call for Papers

 

Concept Note:

Embodied Masculinities: Reconfiguring the Hegemony

updated: 
Thursday, June 19, 2025 - 9:07pm
Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA)
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Feminist scholar Peggy Phelan (1993) famously said that “visibility is a trap” and argued for the immense power of the unmarked. Such a theory of the unmarked finds utmost relevance in the case of what R.W. Connell calls hegemonic masculinity, which often maintains its superiority by being the norm and thus abstract, untraceable. However, material bodily practices among marginalized groups of men often subvert such invisibility tactics, expose the nodes of hegemonic and normative masculinities, and articulate a language of resistance. For example, dance scholar Mark Broomfield (2024) observes that black gay male dancers in America use “straight acting” as a way of passing and surviving in a world where white heterosexual masculinity is the norm.

Hegel and Literature

updated: 
Thursday, June 19, 2025 - 9:05am
Northeast Modern Language association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

In Positions, Derrida stated that “we will never be finished with the reading or rereading of the Hegelian text.” Hegel's impact on all areas of thought cannot be overstated. Recent decades have seen the efflorescence of publications such as Hegel and the Foundations of Literary Theory (Habib 2018), or Reading Hegel: Irony, Recollection, Critique (Scott 2025), which attempt to retrace the pervasiveness of Hegel's thought, the hostility as well as hospitality it underwent in literary critical discourse, or Hegel and Shakespeare on Moral Imagination (Bates 2010), which cross-reads Hegel and Shakespeare to reciprocally shed light on each other.

Working With Tainted Legacies (virtual NeMLA panel)

updated: 
Wednesday, June 18, 2025 - 10:10am
Northeast Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Weeks after the death of Nobel Prize-winning author Alice Munro last year, her daughter Andrea Skinner disclosed the sexual abuse she'd suffered as a child—abuse about which Munro had known and stayed silent. The disclosure is but one of many revelations in recent years to upend the legacy of a cultural icon. Neil Gaiman, Louis CK, Jean Vanier, and Avital Ronell are only a few public figures to be reassessed in the wake of accounts of sexual abuse. Similarly, disputed claims to Indigenous ancestry touted by artists including novelist Joseph Boyden and singer-songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie have generated outrage and heartbreak among Indigenous groups and innumerable admirers, compounding generational traumas.

Indigenous and Creole Transcultural Encounters

updated: 
Wednesday, June 18, 2025 - 5:56am
Karine Germoni
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

The CfP for the hybrid panel "Indigenous and Creole Transcultural Encounters" (NeMLA 2026 convention) is now open (please see abstract and description below). 

 The convention will take place in Pittsburgh, PA on March 5-8, 2026.

Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot (Worldview Critical Edition)

updated: 
Wednesday, June 18, 2025 - 5:56am
Dr Subashish Bhattacharjee and Dr Indrajit Mukherjee
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

We invite original, unpublished essays (maximum 5,000 words) for an upcoming Worldview Critical Companion to Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot. This volume aims to serve as both a scholarly resource and a generative site of contemporary dialogue on one of the most significant dramatic works of the twentieth century. Contributors are encouraged to revisit canonical readings while also offering new, boundary-pushing approaches that open Godot to current critical, theoretical, and performative discourses.

The Handbook of Bengali Cinema

updated: 
Wednesday, June 18, 2025 - 5:56am
Dr Subashish Bhattacharjee and Dr Indrajit Mukherjee
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

We invite original and unpublished essays for inclusion in a forthcoming Handbook of Bengali Cinema. This interdisciplinary volume will offer a comprehensive and critical survey of Bengali cinema across periods, geographies, genres, styles, and theoretical frameworks. It will serve as a key reference for students, scholars, and practitioners interested in one of South Asia’s most influential regional cinemas.

Essays should be no longer than 5,000 words, inclusive of notes and works cited, and must follow the MLA citation style (current edition). Contributions may be historical, thematic, theoretical, or practice-based, and are expected to demonstrate critical rigor and originality.

 

CFP: (Chapter Abstracts) German Romantic Humour (Aug. 1, 2025)

updated: 
Wednesday, June 18, 2025 - 5:55am
Pascale LaFountain
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 1, 2025

CFP: (Chapter Abstracts) German Romantic Humour (Aug. 1, 2025)

 

Call for Chapter Abstracts

Due: August 1, 2025

Subject fields: German Romanticism, Humour Studies, Philosophy, Literature Studies, Musicology, Art History, History of Religion

 

This is a call for abstracts for book chapters to be included in an edited volume on “German Romantic Humour”

 

Edited by Dr. Pascale LaFountain (Montclair State University, USA)

 

The Roles of 20th Century Regionalisms: Past and (Re)Generation.

updated: 
Wednesday, June 18, 2025 - 5:55am
NeMLA 57th Annual Convention
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

This NeMLA panel invites proposals exploring the social, cultural, and political uses of regionalist aesthetics throughout the 20th cnetury.

Representing Authoritarianism in Modern Latin American Politics and Literature

updated: 
Wednesday, June 18, 2025 - 5:55am
Joseph Mulligan, Weber State University
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Throughout the nineteenth, twentieth and into the twenty-first century, authoritarianism has proven to be an enduring leadership style in Latin American and has manifested in diverse forms, including the uprisings of regional caudillos, the ascendency of personalist rulers, the formation of solemn cults of personality, the imposition of military dictatorships, the establishment of single-party States, the totalitarian perpetuation of the state of exception, the cultural promotion of ethnonationalism, and the installation of illiberal technocracies, among others.

NeMLA 2026 Roundtable - Villains Reborn: Redemption and (Re)Generation of Comic Book Antagonists

updated: 
Wednesday, June 18, 2025 - 5:55am
Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA) | Sydney Nelson and Josie Kochendorfer
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

From brainwashed assassins to complicated anti-heroes to villains on a redemption arc, comic books, films, television, and novels frequently present readers with complicated antagonists-turned-superheroes, many of which become beloved characters. Through varied processes of regeneration, former antagonists remake themselves into superheroes in fascinating and often unexpected ways.

Children’s Rights &/in Popular Culture

updated: 
Wednesday, June 18, 2025 - 5:55am
Northeast Popular Studies Conference (Virtual)
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, July 13, 2025

Children’s Rights &/in Popular Culture (panel/roundtable for NEPCA conference taking place virtually Oct 9-11 2025) 

How are children’s rights represented in current popular culture (e.g., videogames, board games, graphic novels, film, TV, social media, music, toys etc.)? In what ways does pop culture today curtail children’s rights (e.g., cellphone apps, tracking devices, surveillance equipment)? How do children themselves define their rights, notions of justice, law and order in their interactions with popular culture (e.g., toys, games, art, fashion, hobbies, social media etc.)?

(Re)generating Pynchon (NeMLA 2026 panel)

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 10:08am
NeMLA - Northeast Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

The 57th annual NeMLA Convention is taking place Thursday, March 5, through Sunday, March 8, 2026, at the Wyndham Grand Pittsburgh Downtown in Pittsburgh, PA.  For more information, see https://www.nemla.org/.

The Literary Love Letter

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
Northeast Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

In Nick Bantock's Griffin and Sabine, Sabine Strohem and Griffin Moss have never met--not really. They have, though, shared an extraordinary epistolary correspondence. And through this correspondence, Griffin wonders how he can feel so close to someone through letters, only, "How can I miss you this badly when we've never met?" (39).

**Deadline Extended** (CFP: PAMLA 2025) Haunted Belonging: Memory, Erasure, and Identity in Diasporic Literatures

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
Wenyuan Wang / Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, June 30, 2025

This session explores how postcolonial and diasporic literatures grapple with memory, trauma, and cultural haunting. Rather than thinking of identity as fixed or linear, selfhood is complex and palimpsestic due to colonial violence, migration, and historical erasure. This session invites papers that analyze how characters or narratives navigate misremembering, inherited trauma, or overwritten histories to reclaim belonging and agency. Topics may include narrative voice, transgenerational memory, silence, storytelling, and archival gaps in multiethnic and immigrant literatures. This session welcomes interdisciplinary approaches and encourages work on Asian American, Black, Indigenous, and other diasporic communities.

Call for manuscripts: Towards a Global Understanding of Cultural Work

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
De Gruyter Publishers (Berlin/Boston)
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, December 31, 2025

De Gruyter Publishers hereby invite scholars to submit manuscripts for the new series

TOWARDS A GLOBAL UNDERSTANDING OF CULTURAL WORK


Series Editors:
  

Carlos Garrido Castellano, University College Cork, Ireland/University of Johannesburg, South Africa 
Minna Valjakka, University of Helsinki, Finland 

Migrations of the Self: Women’s Stories of Borders, Boundaries, and Becoming

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
Mussarat Shahid/ NeMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Modality: in-person only

Across cultures and histories, women have journeyed through visible and invisible migrations: geographic, emotional, spiritual, intellectual. This panel invites explorations of how these journeys and thresholds: both outer and inner, shape the evolution of selfhood. From the classroom to the kitchen, from the mother’s memory to the daughter's voice, from exile to homemaking, we seek narratives that dwell in moments and spaces of unfolding and becoming. These are stories of transition and tension, of belonging and othering, of rupture and reconciliation. 

Fascism and Literature

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
PAMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, June 30, 2025

This session explores the intersection between fascism and literature, particularly theatre, to ask how theatrical works, as well as other forms of poetry and art, can become a space for anti-authoritarian interruption.How do we break the cyclical myth with which fascism enchants the masses?

NeMLA 2026 (Panel) Regenerative Blackness—Skin, Flesh, and the Future of Being

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
Zay Dale/ University of Kansas
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

In her essay, “Mama’s Baby, Papa’s Maybe: An American Grammar Book,” Hortense Spillers articulates the enduring violence of racial enslavement through the concept of the “hieroglyphics of the flesh” (67). This term marks how the captive body, stripped of legal and social personhood, became inscribed with meaning through the violence of racial differentiation. This transformation rendered the Black body not only a surface upon which terror was written but also a metaphysical site from which alternative modes of being might be imagined. In attending to the duality of skin and flesh, Spillers distinguishes between Black skin as legible and social, and Black flesh as ungendered, unsovereign, and open—both wounded and full of radical potential. 

Queer-Class Relations Conference

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
CLAGS: The Center for LGBTQ Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 1, 2025

Queer-Class Relations Conference

Call for Proposals

April 17-18, 2026

CUNY Graduate Center, New York City

 

CLAGS: The Center for LGBTQ Studies at the CUNY Graduate Center will host a Queer-Class Relations conference April 17-18, 2026. Proposals are due by September 1, 2025. Successful applicants will be required to register by November 15, 2025.

Sally Rooney: Her Novels

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
Northeast Modern Language Assocation (NeMLA)
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

This NeMLA session critically discusses the novels of Sally Rooney. We will ask: is Rooney's oeuvre a critique, a snapshot, a suggestion, or a warning about a way forward for fiction, the novel form, feminism, and contemporary culture?

View full CFP here: https://cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/21883

 

Modality:

In Person Only: The session will be held fully in person at the hotel. No remote presentations will be included.

 

Questions/Comments:

Contact Kimberlyjcoates@gmail.com

Feeling the Nation: Emotion, Identity, and Memory in Literature and Media

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
NeMLA 2026
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

What does it mean to experience national belonging through emotion? This session brings together papers that consider the layered connections among feeling, identity, and cultural memory as they unfold across literature and media. In periods marked by rupture or transformation, emotion often anchors or unsettles the stories through which nations come to know themselves. Heritage dramas steeped in nostalgia, literary depictions of estrangement, and audiovisual forms of cultural longing all point to this dynamic. National identity, in these works, emerges not as a fixed concept but as a lived and felt experience.

Creative Explorations of the Post-Industrial City: (Re)generations of the Rust Belt

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:40am
Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA) Conference 2026
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

This year’s conference theme and location offer timely opportunities for creative engagement with the post-industrial city and (re)generations of the so-called “Rust Belt.” This session will enable participants to read/present and discuss original creative short-form work crafting and exploring narratives, concepts, identities, images, locations, perspectives, and/or experiences of the Rust Belt, a term coined in the 1980s to describe the decline of industries (particularly large-scale blue-collar production and manufacturing) and resultant economic decline and decay.

The Minotaur: From Antiquity to Today

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:40am
North East Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

The Minotaur and the Labyrinth from multidisciplinary perspectives, specifically on how the symbol of the Minotaur and the Labyrinth has been used from antiquity to now. How has the Minotaur been used, or abused, throughout time? How has the mythology surrounding it been used to generate or regenerate cultural structures? Referencing Jeffrey Jerome Cohen’s Monster Culture, what does the Minotaur reveal about the cultures he exists within?

Poetics of Embedded Narratives and Images in the Literature and Arts of the English-speaking World: Moving Borders

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:40am
University of Pau (France)
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 15, 2025

Poetics of Embedded Narratives and Images in the Literature and Arts of the English-speaking World: Moving Borders

Université de Pau et des Pays de l’Adour (July 2-3, 2026)

 

Organisers: Françoise Buisson, Fabienne Gaspari and Arnaud Schmitt 

(ALTER, UR 7504)

 

Europe from Its Margins: Toward Alternative Visions of the West

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:39am
NeMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, September 26, 2025

Since its tangential emergence in Said’s Orientalism in 1978, the term Occidentalism accrued multiple significations. Most notably, the term is argued to stage a counter- or reverse-discourse of Orientalism, operating on analogous dichotomic and oppositional paradigms. Most notable, in this context, is Ian Buruma and Avishai Margalit’s Occidentalism: The West in the Eyes of Its Enemies, which labels Occidentalism as “dehumanizing picture of the West painted by its enemies” (5). This panel queries if we can conceive East-West relations differently, apart from the Orientalist logic that inheres in studies of Occidentalism.

Special Issue: Apocalypse and the Biopolitics of Time

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:37am
Käte Hamburger Centre for Apocalyptic and Post-Apocalyptic Studies (CAPAS) at Heidelberg University
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, September 20, 2025

Link: https://heiup.uni-heidelberg.de/journals/apocalyptica/cfpsi

 

Apocalyptica is an international, interdisciplinary, open-access, double-blind peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Käte Hamburger Centre for Apocalyptic and Post-Apocalyptic Studies (CAPAS) at Heidelberg University.

Deconstructing Knowledge Derived from the Gendered Lens of AI

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:37am
SAMLA 2025 (Special Session)
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, July 10, 2025

Generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) is already recasting numerous aspects of human life. By all accounts, AI has an intense and manifold impact on society, incorporating both positive and negative traits. This session aims to explore how the gendered lens of AI is creating disruptions both for the academic field and the society at large. This panel invites educators, scholars, and researchers to critically investigate the consequences of gendered biases projected through AI stratification. Papers which explore the conference theme (Knowledge) and connect to knowledge production through the gendered lens of AI are especially welcome.

Edited collection: Entanglements: Place-Based Literatures for Ecological Liberation

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:35am
Dr. Gayathri Goel (Boston College) & Dr. Jennifer Horwitz (RISD)
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 15, 2025

Please submit a 300-word abstract for an edited collection, tentatively titled, Entanglements: Place-Based Literatures for Ecological Liberation

Please read the CFP below for details about the collection. We are expanding our search to include diverse geographies including South America, African countries, the Caribbean, the Middle East, Pacific Islands, and South East Asian countries. In addition to a “place” framework, we welcome diverse theoretical approaches and lenses including ones that apply Marxism, feminism, postcolonialism, New Materialism, indigeneity, critical race, nonhumanism, among others.

 

Pages