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Seeking Participants for 2026 CCCC Roundtable on Research Writing in FYW

updated: 
Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - 1:49pm
Mafruha Shifat and Alexandra Rowe/North Dakota State University
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, May 15, 2025

Seeking Participants for 2026 CCCC Roundtable on Research Writing in FYW

Dear colleagues,

The 2026 Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) invites scholars to contribute what “matters to you most” through conversation and collaboration. In that spirit, we would like to facilitate a roundtable discussion on developing and/or expanding the horizons of how we teach established research genres in the first-year composition classrooms.

MVSA Summer Seminars (VIRTUAL) for work-in-progress

updated: 
Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - 1:41pm
Midwest Victorian Studies Association
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, May 25, 2025

Set writing goals & get feedback!
Applications due: May 25, 2025

NEW DIRECTIONS IN VICTORIAN STUDIES

Ah, May! When writing goals are full of promises to ourselves, and summer is full of time... MVSA Summer Seminars can help you reach that goal, with an end-of-summer draft deadline and feedback in a collaborative and congenial seminar group just as the next academic year is gearing up.

Philosophy and Theatre

updated: 
Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - 1:41pm
Emanuel Stelzer / University of Verona, Italy
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, June 30, 2025

CFP on Philosophy and Theatre

Verona, November 20-21, 2025

Organized by S. Bigliazzi, A. Stavru, E. Stelzer, G. Ugolini

 

The SKENÈ Research Centre organizes a conference on Philosophy and Theatre to be held next November in Verona (20-21 Nov). We invite papers by scholars who in the past years have been publishing and/or organizing events on topics related to the intersection of philosophy and theatre.

Follow the Money: Economic Concerns in Early Modern English Texts

updated: 
Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - 1:41pm
Revista Canaria de Estudios Ingleses
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 1, 2025

During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries markets expanded globally, transactions increased, and the circulation of capital accelerated. This new situation, that created an unprecedented concern with the nature of money (in different forms: bullion, coins, bills of payment, and promissory notes) and with economic concepts (inflation, interest, usury), made its way into all sorts of literary texts and cultural artefacts: plays, poems, pamphlets, or emblems, among others. People started to suspect that money, commercial exchanges, and economic transactions at large were becoming mysteriously free from bedrock referents (fixed value, fair prices) in order to be subjected to uncertain and fluctuating social rituals and conventions.

Feminisms Panel at PAMLA 2025 in San Francisco

updated: 
Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - 1:41pm
Sarita Cannon/Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, May 15, 2025

This session invites proposals on topics that will (as a session as a whole) embrace the plurality of Feminisms, enlivening current critical practice across languages, literatures, time periods, and genres. In particular, we welcome proposals that approach Feminisms through a transhistorical and/or global lens. We welcome proposals both related to the conference theme, "Palimpsests: Memory and Oblivion," and those not related.In their 2022 book Public Feminism in Times of Crisis: From Sappho’s Fragments to Viral Hashtags, Leila Easa and Jennifer Stager “examine the public practice of feminism in the age of social media and analyze the deep histories threaded through this new(er) enactment” (2).

PAMLA 2025: Queer Film and Media

updated: 
Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - 1:40pm
Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, May 15, 2025

This session invites paper submissions that explore the intersections of queer studies, film, media, and digital culture. In connection with this year’s conference theme, we particularly welcome papers that focus on palimpsestic media: how queer narratives have been remediated through new forms, how queer histories have been reimagined, rewritten, or overwritten in works of film, television, video games, and other forms of new media, broadly defined. Papers addressing other aspects of queer identities, communities, readings, and experiences are also encouraged.

Pornographie à Babel/Pornography in Babel

updated: 
Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - 1:40pm
Philippe Vanhoof, University of Antwerp
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, June 30, 2025

Call for papers

 

PORNOGRAPHY IN BABEL

Translation, sexuality, obscenity

 

International bilingual conference

 

23–24 October 2025

University of Antwerp, Belgium

  

MORE PRIDE, LESS PREJUDICE: JANE AUSTEN AT 250

updated: 
Monday, May 12, 2025 - 9:11am
CETAPS / University of Porto
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, June 16, 2025

 

MORE PRIDE, LESS PREJUDICE: JANE AUSTEN AT 250

Faculty of Arts and Humanities I University of Porto

2-3 October 2025

 

Keynote Speakers

Fiona Stafford (University of Oxford) 

John Mullan (University College London)

 

Marginal Voices on Stage: Documenting Dalit and Tribal Performance Traditions in South Asia

updated: 
Sunday, May 11, 2025 - 1:56pm
Dr. Shubhendu Shekhar Naskar & Dr. Auritra Munshi
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, May 17, 2025

Call For Book Chapters

Marginal Voices on Stage: Documenting Dalit and Tribal Performance Traditions in South Asia

Editors:

 Dr. Shubhendu Shekhar Naskar, Assistant Professor, Department of English Literature, Language and Cultural Studies, Vidyasagar University, West Bengal

Dr. Auritra Munshi, Assistant Professor, Department of English, Raiganj University, West Bengal

Concept Note:

Call for Papers for NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction

updated: 
Sunday, May 11, 2025 - 10:29am
NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Novel: A Forum on Fiction is accepting submissions. Founded in 1967 at Brown University, Novel is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to the best new criticism and theory in novel studies. After several decades under the editorship of Nancy Armstrong, Kevin McLaughlin took over as the chief editor in Summer 2023. Novel holds to these general principles:

Call for Papers: Theatre Academy: Journal of World Theatre *Deadline: 31 July 2025*

updated: 
Sunday, May 11, 2025 - 12:49am
Theatre Academy: Journal of World Theatre
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, July 31, 2025

We invite submissions for the sixth issue of Theatre Academy: A Journal of World Theatre which will be published electronically in September. Theatre Academy is indexed in MLA International Bibliography, ERIH Plus, DOAJ, and Gale Cengage.

* Deadline is the end of July but we strongly advise the potential writers to send their manuscripts in as soon as possible.

* Original works, not published elsewhere or related to theatre in any context will be considered for publication.

* Please note that all manuscripts will be closely examined through Turnitin once they are received by the journal.

(CFP: PAMLA 2025) Animal Studies

updated: 
Saturday, May 10, 2025 - 9:07pm
Toshiaki Komura / Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, May 15, 2025

The 122nd annual conference of the Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association (PAMLA 2025) will be held at InterContinental San Francisco in San Francisco, California. The conference will begin on Thursday, November 20, and continue through November 23, 2025.

Horror Studies Special Issue: Women and Horror

updated: 
Saturday, May 10, 2025 - 8:02pm
Melanie A. Marotta and Miranda Corcoran
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 1, 2025

This special issue of Horror Studies aims to address female empowerment (cis- and transgender women) in literary and cinematic horror from 2010 to the present. The issue will showcase horror media (literature, films, television, and gaming) created by women. An intersectional approach should be applied to analyses, stressing categories of race, gender, sexuality, class and/or age in submissions. While we are interested in submissions focused on various forms of horror media, we are eager to receive submissions that foreground literary texts.

Call for chapters (Art volume in the series Oceans, Seas and Shorelines)

updated: 
Friday, May 9, 2025 - 3:12pm
Amin Heidari
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Please note that this call has expired! Thank you! 

 

This is a limited and urgent call for chapters in the Art Volume (part of the Routledge series Oceans, Seas, and Shorelines: Cultural, Environmental, and Natural Histories). Since some of the previous contributors were unable to complete their manuscripts, I am reaching out to those of you who have a fitting concept for a chapter within the already themed structure of the book and are able to complete the chapter by June 30. The volume is currently under contract with Routledge.

In the words of the series editors:

Mapping Body Space Continuum in Urbanscapes

updated: 
Thursday, May 8, 2025 - 1:49am
Language, Literature, and Interdisciplinary Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, May 18, 2025

Space is not defined objectively, but in relation to bodies, as it is a manifestation of their needs, intentions, and desires. It is not a container in which objects exist but is intertwined with the body’s orientation in the world and its movements within the space. Human body, therefore, is at the centre of all spaces, which are more than a geometrical concept in abstraction. Individual bodies apprehend and appropriate space differently and give meaning to embedded systems and institutions through established and evolving associations. Any assumption of personalised space, whether private or public, is embedded with historical, cultural, and social meanings which help curate embodied experiences.

The Problem of Social Justice: Global Perspectives and Personal Narratives

updated: 
Thursday, May 8, 2025 - 1:49am
Language, Literature, and Interdisciplinary Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, May 18, 2025

Social justice is the virtue which guides us in creating those organized human interactions we call institutions. In turn, social institutions, when justly organized, provide us with access to what is good for the person, both individually and in our associations with others. Social justice also imposes on each of us a personal responsibility to work with others to design and continually perfect our institutions as tools for personal and social development.

–             The Center for Economic and Social Justice (CESJ), Washington, D.C., USA

Power in Urbanscapes: Rethinking Spatiality and Sociality

updated: 
Thursday, May 8, 2025 - 1:48am
Language, Literature, and Interdisciplinary Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, May 25, 2025

The second Issue of Volume 7 of LLIDS examines how structures of power constitute and shape urban spaces. It proposes to explore their influence in determining social values wherein varied social groups—marked by religion, class, race, gender, etc.—negotiate the power dynamics that constitute life in urban spaces. The modern, bustling city carries within itself a continuous sense of becoming. The urban dwellers, inhabiting segregated parts of the city, shape the lived experience of these spaces through their socio-cultural interactions and relationships.

Planned, Unplanned, and the In-between: Interactions of Architecture, Space, and Experience

updated: 
Thursday, May 8, 2025 - 1:48am
Language, Literature, and Interdisciplinary Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, July 15, 2025

For the first time in history, more than half of the world’s population now lives in urban areas in twenty-first century. Urbanization is understood as the mass movement of human population from rural to urban areas. The trend of urbanization is increasing at an unprecedented pace, especially in developing countries of the world. Now considered as an irreversible phenomenon, the imperative of urbanization necessitates a rethinking of how we imagine cities and rural areas of tomorrow to provide a meaningful and sustainable lifeworld. The challenges that come with such a dramatic shift are multifold and complex. It involves envisioning a way of life that is dignified, a society that is sustainable and equitable. 

The Creative Psyche and Arts-Based Research Conference

updated: 
Wednesday, May 7, 2025 - 7:16pm
London Arts-Based Research Centre
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, May 12, 2025

The Creative Psyche and Arts-Based Research Conference

June 14-15, 2025

 

Where: Association of Jungian Analysts Centre, London

and online

Proposal Deadline: May 12, 2025

Keynote Speaker: Prof. Susan Rowland

 Conference Page: https://labrc.co.uk/the-creative-psyche/

 

Call for Papers:

 

 

The Sea and the World (Nov 6-7, 2026) --Abstract due on July 1, 2025

updated: 
Monday, May 5, 2025 - 9:43pm
Taiwan Association of Classical, Medieval, and Renaissance Studies (TACMRS)
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, July 1, 2025

The 19th International Conference of Taiwan Association of Classical, Medieval, and Renaissance Studies (TACMRS)November 6-7, 2026National Central UniversityTaoyuan City, Taiwan---- 

The Art of Living: Living, Learning, and Liberal Education

updated: 
Monday, May 5, 2025 - 5:28pm
Frederick Whiting / Blount Scholars Program, University of Alabama
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, May 21, 2025

[CFP: DEADLINE EXTENDED TO MAY 21st]

The Art of Living: Living, Learning, and Liberal Education - October 29-31, 2025 

Keynote Speaker:

Julie Reuben

Professor of the History of American Education, Harvard University

Teaching Twenty-First Century Literature

updated: 
Monday, May 5, 2025 - 5:12pm
Mitch R. Murray
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Many teachers of 21st century anglophone literature would agree that the field’s strength lies in how it has opened literary study to new authors, genres, mediums, and methods. But the field lacks unifying vocabularies, canons, and pedagogies. Among teachers themselves, there is bafflingly little deliberation about the goals of our teaching and what we expect our students to learn from the study of the literature of the present. So, what exactly is the job of teaching 21st century literature?

Oxford Handbook of Camp and Screen Cultures

updated: 
Monday, May 5, 2025 - 4:26pm
Barbara Jane Brickman / University of Alabama
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, July 31, 2025

For at least the last fifty years, critics, commentators, and celebrity cognoscenti have repeatedly resounded the death knell of camp. First, facing the political crucibles of the queer civil rights and feminist protests of the 1960s and 1970s, gay men, lesbians, and trans folks were supposed to abandon the shameful practice and kill their darlings. Yet, twenty years later, they found camp coming gloriously back into vogue, striking a pose on the ironic drag stages of the queer 1990s. Now, come forward another twenty years, when self-conscious postmodern parody and biting double entendre are the fuel that makes meme culture go, and we are obliged to wonder at camp’s ubiquity and to question its possible utility.

Time Trial: Advancing an Understanding of Temporality in Play and Games

updated: 
Monday, May 5, 2025 - 1:58pm
Emma Kostopolus
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, June 13, 2025

Whether it is made an explicit mechanic via countdown clocks and quick-time events, or is simply a natural part of the narrative, games are always already inherently concerned with the passage of time. While it is easy to think of mechanics as being about player control, the relationship of input to output, and how a game’s particular physics engine is encoded, every game has a unique relationship with temporality that players must learn to navigate in order to play successfully, whether that is perfecting the timing of their jumps in a platformer or remembering to log in to complete daily tasks in an MMO.

Marianne Moore Generations Conference

updated: 
Monday, May 5, 2025 - 1:58pm
Jon Tadmor (Stanford), Celine Shanosky (Harvard)
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, June 1, 2025

Call for Papers: Marianne Moore Generations Conference October 23 and 24, 2025
Organizing Committee: Jon Tadmor (Stanford), Celine Shanosky (Harvard)
Speakers: Elizabeth Gregory (University of Houston), Virginia Jackson (UCI), Cristanne Miller (University at Buffalo SUNY)
Location: Stanford Humanities Center

The Marianne Moore Generations Conference is an invitation to join in consideration of one poet in the broadest sense, and with a spirit of experiment. How does Moore contribute, or not contribute, to a variety of fields and approaches within literary studies? How might this poet be carried forward?

Call for Book Chapters -- Fans, Fandoms, and Tabletop Roleplaying Games

updated: 
Monday, May 5, 2025 - 1:58pm
Fans, Fandoms, and Tabletop Roleplaying Games
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, June 15, 2025

Call for Book Chapters
on Fans, Fandoms, and Tabletop Roleplaying Games

 


Deadline for submissions: Sunday, June 15, 2025

Contact email:fans.fandoms.and.ttrpgs@gmail.com 

 

Editors: 

Maria K. Alberto, University of Utah

Adrianna Burton, University of California – Irvine

 

We are seeking proposals for chapters to be included in a peer-reviewed edited collection on fans, fandom(s), and tabletop roleplaying games (TTRPGs). The University of Michigan Press has expressed interest in this collection and the book proposal is currently underway. 

 

Fan Studies Network North America (FSNNA) 2025 conference

updated: 
Monday, May 5, 2025 - 1:58pm
Fan Studies Network North America (FSNNA)
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, May 16, 2025

Get Ready – CFP for FSNNA 2025! Call for Participation

Fan Studies Network North America Conference 2025 (virtual)

October 23-26, 2025

 

REPUTATION: Influence, Power, and Capital

FSNNA Annual Conference 2025

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