[CfP] Contested & Erased Energy Knowledges
Call for Papers
Contested & Erased Energy Knowledges
A Trans-Disciplinary Conference
31 Oct – 2 Nov 2024
University of Dundee & University of Edinburgh
Edinburgh, Scotland
a service provided by www.english.upenn.edu |
FAQ changelog |
Call for Papers
Contested & Erased Energy Knowledges
A Trans-Disciplinary Conference
31 Oct – 2 Nov 2024
University of Dundee & University of Edinburgh
Edinburgh, Scotland
As an interdisciplinary academic field devoted to examining and critiquing the social, cultural, and historical constructions of masculinity, masculinity studies explores how masculinity is defined, performed, and experienced across different societies and time periods. This field intersects with various disciplines, including sociology, gender studies, psychology, cultural studies, and history, among others. This often leads to the absence of dedicated departments or research centres in academic institutions focusing exclusively on masculinity studies which, in turn, makes it challenging to enable productive dialogues among disciplinary boundaries.
“Athena: Philosophical Studies” No. 19, 2024
Indexed in: Scopus (2023), CEEOL (Central and Eastern European Online Library) (2006), EBSCO Publishing, Humanities International Index (2006), The Philosopher’s Index (2006).
Chênière journal call-for-papers
Volume 8
Chênière, an online, interdisciplinary undergraduate journal based at Nicholls State University, invites papers for its eighth volume. Chênière is an MLA-indexed journal that welcomes submissions from any humanities field, broadly speaking, from history, communication, English, religion, art, music and everything in between. The journal welcomes submissions from any undergraduate work but particularly caters to students from the Gulf Coast and the American South, broadly speaking. The subject matter for this issue is completely open topic.
The 2024 Futures of American Studies Institute at Dartmouth College
http://www.dartmouth.edu/futures
MONDAY, JUNE 17 - SUNDAY, JUNE 23, 2024
Llamada a la participación (call for papers)
Notes from the Field, a publication of the TPS Collective, is accepting submissions on topics related to teaching and working with primary sources to be featured in peer-reviewed blog posts. While we ask that contributions fall into either our “Reflective Practice” or “Practical How-To” categories, this spring we are open to reviewing submissions from a range of contexts.
The 121st Annual Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association (PAMLA) Conference, Palm Springs, California, USA, Nov. 7-10, 2024
Abstract: Medieval Literature will study multiple aspects of medieval literature, with special consideration for work that engages with the conference theme, "Translation in Action." This panel welcomes a broad interpretation of the theme as it relates to Medieval literature as well as the field of medieval studies itself. We also welcome work that considers translation and other similar frameworks.
The 2024 PAMLA Conference will be held in Palm Springs, CA from November 6-10. We invite abstract submissions to a guaranteed, standing session on comics and graphic narratives; abstracts can be submitted through the PAMLA conference website: https://pamla.ballastacademic.com/Home/S/19117
This session seeks proposals that explore comics and comics studies generally, and how comics and comics studies engage with the conference theme of “Translation in Action” more specifically. In particular, we are interested in drawing out two distinct resonances of thinking about translation, both literally and figuratively, in comics:
Call for Papers
Medievalisms Area
Southwest Popular / American Culture Association (SWPACA)
2024 SWPACA Summer Salon
June 20-22, 2024
Virtual Conference
Proposal submission deadline: EXTENDED to April 22, 2024
DEADLINE EXTENDED!
Call for Papers
“Horror”
Southwest Popular / American Culture Association (SWPACA)
SWPACA Summer Salon
June 20-22, 2024
Virtual Conference
Proposal submission deadline: EXTENDED to April 22, 2024
DEADLINE EXTENDED!
Call for Papers
“War & Culture”
Southwest Popular / American Culture Association (SWPACA)
SWPACA Summer Salon
June 20-22, 2024
Virtual Conference
Proposal submission deadline: EXTENDED to April 22, 2024
“Field of Dreams”: The Popular Culture of Sports
PopCRN (the Popular Culture Network) is celebrating the games of the XXXIII Olympiad in Paris with a free online conference exploring of the wide world of sports. The conference will be held on Thursday 25th-Friday 26th July 2024.
2024 MMLA Annual Convention: November 14-16, 2024, Chicago, Illinois
Creative Writing II: Poetry Permanent Section CFP
“Health in/of the Humanities”
Call for Papers
PCAoF[1] International Conference
October 9 - 11, 2024
University of La Rochelle
“Climate Emergency:
When Popular Cultures Cry Ecological Awakening.”
Translating Literatures of the Global South: Challenges, Questions, and Debates
18-20 July 2024
Department of English, Utkal University
Vani Vihar, Bhubaneswar
Climate Fiction and the Limits of Representation
Future Humanities Special Issue
Edited by Dr Caleb Ferrari and Dr Lenka Filipova
Conference Date: September 27-29
Conference Fee: $250.00 (includes some meals, snacks, and a reception)
Location: Harbourfront Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Hosts: Faculty of Liberal Arts & Sciences (FLAS) and the Toronto International Festival of Authors (TIFA)
Keynote: Suzanne Methot
Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies
Vol. 51 No. 2 | September 2025
Call for Papers
Environmental Health Humanities:
Microbes, Plagues, and Healing
Guest Editors
Pin-chia Feng (National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University)
Robin Chen-Hsing Tsai (Tamkang University)
Deadline for Submissions: December 31, 2024
Call for Contributions to edited volume
Reconciliatory Spaces: Post-Conflict Interventions in Anglophone Women's Writing
Ed. Lourdes López-Ropero (University of Alicante, Spain)
Special Issue: Blaga the Poet and/or/vs. Blaga the Philosopher, December 2024
Submission Deadline: 1 October 2024
Guest Editor:Michael Jones (Liberty University, USA),msjones2@liberty.edu
Teaching literary analysis invariably includes learning activities involving reading, deciphering, and applying theory to a text understudy. For many undergraduate and dual- or cross-enrolled students, this activity is no small feat. Rather than tossing critical theory to the wayside as "too tough," we persevere! This session seeks presentations from educators who have had varying degrees of success bringing critical theory into their humanities courses. In order to render accessible to students the complex and insightful ideas sandwiched within the academic jargon of critical theory, how are we translating the rigor into palpable bites?
2024 University of Pittsburgh Grad Student Conference
Film and Media Studies
“Crisis and the Everyday”
Keynote Speaker: Gil Hochberg, Columbia University
Date: September 21-22, 2024
Surveying the absence on her shelf where Elizabethan women’s writing ought to be, Virginia Woolf (in)famously dismissed the possibility of Shakespeare’s sister ever finding “a room of her own” to develop her voice. Recent decades of literary scholarship have shown the invention with which early modern women built out their own textual “rooms,” finding voice in surprising places and forms (even in silence, as Christina Luckyj heard [2002]), in visions of new political subjectivities (in a radically equal imaginary, as seen by Mihiko Suzuki [2003]), and through networks of overlooked community (in coteries and in letters, as traced by James Daybell [2006]).
Call for Papers: Journal of Gaming & Virtual Worlds
Special Issue: ‘Time, Play and Games’
Guest Edited by Federico Alvarez Igarzábal and Chris Hanson (jgvwtime@gmail.com)
Deadline for Submissions: 15 May 2024
View the full call here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-gaming-virtual-worlds#call-for-papers
Memory in Exile: 80 Years since the Liberation of the Nazi Camps
Special issue of Word and Text, publication in December 2025
In 2025 there will be 80 years since the Nazi camps were liberated.
Penn State’s Center for American Literary Studies presents
American Working-Class Art and Literature Now
Friday, April 19, 2024, Noon—1:00 p.m. EDT via Zoom
Register here
https://psu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_9UMcE5aFRHqzqZZfW6VL6w
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email
Critical Companions to Contemporary Directors SERIES
TRANSMEDIA VILLAINS AND CREATURES
This new series by Lexington Books aims to cover the fascinating subject of villains and threatening creatures through an interdisciplinary perspective represented by fields as different as literary, film, religious, gender and art studies as much as philosophy and sociological and ecocritical approaches. Each volume will focus on a single figure (or group of figures) and examine it in its multiple incarnations, from their origins in myth, folklore and history as well as in a literary text, to their various adaptations in different media, including comics, graphic novels, cinema, TV, exhibitions, the visual arts, merchandise, fandom and tourist attractions.
FILM REVIEWS FOR THE QUINT