Annual Conference on "Violence and the Fantastic"
**Call for Papers for the 17th Annual Conference of the Association for Research in the Fantastic
Violence and the Fantastic
University of Cologne
September 17-19, 2026
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**Call for Papers for the 17th Annual Conference of the Association for Research in the Fantastic
Violence and the Fantastic
University of Cologne
September 17-19, 2026
CALL FOR PARTICIPANTS
35th International Conference Virginia Woolf
Open Forum “Virginia Woolf: Sound and Rhythm in Translation”, Istambul, Jun 24-Jun 28, 2026
Update: We are currently working to transform this forum into a hybrid format. When submitting your proposal, please indicate whether you would prefer to participate in person or online.
**DEADLINE EXTENDED to 13 April 2026**
Call for Papers:
Listening to Possible Worlds
Sound and Music in Speculative Literature and Culture
22-23 October 2026, Leiden University, the Netherlands (in-person)
Confirmed keynote speakers are Anna Snaith (King’s College London) and Chris Tonelli (University of Groningen)
Dear colleagues,
Faculty of Foreign Languages is pleased to announce two confirmed keynote speakers: Prof. Danimir Mandić (Faculty of Education, University of Belgrade) and Prof. Jozef Štefčik (Bratislava University of Economics and Business).
Our 15th International Conference on Language and Literary Studies will be held on 29 and 30 May 2026. The topic for this edition of our annual conference is
LANGUAGE, LITERATURE, AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
Narratives of Resistance and African Literature: Articulating Dissent, Disobedience and Pluriversal Futures
Special issue of English Academy Review (Taylor and Francis)
Link: https://think.taylorandfrancis.com/special_issues/narratives-of-resistan...
Special Issue Editor(s)
Goutam Karmakar, University of Hyderabad, India
goutamkarmakar@uohyd.ac.in
Archival Abundance and Silences in Islamic Studies: A Graduate Conference
Call for Proposals
October 2nd – 3rd 2026
Princeton University
Keynote Speaker: Nancy Khalek, Associate Professor of Religious Studies and Associate Professor of History at Brown University
Trans Studies, a book series published by Bloomsbury Academic, is seeking proposals for books that provide leading-edge scholarship on transgender and nonbinary topics from any discipline in the humanities, social sciences, and biological sciences. Bloomsbury’s Gender & Sexuality Studies list pioneers the publishing of innovative scholarly research from the Global South, and from marginalized gender identities and sexualities across global and transnational contexts.
The year 2026 marks the centenary of Michel Foucault’s birth, a milestone that invites a profound reassessment of a thinker whose "grey, meticulous" genealogies have fundamentally altered the landscape of the humanities. For the students of literature, Foucault remains an indispensable figure, not merely as a philosopher of the prison or the clinic, but as the premier architect of the "space of language." His move to dissociate the text from the sovereign "Author", famously articulated in his 1969 essay What is an Author?, transformed the literary work from a vessel of personal genius into a site of discursive struggle.
Date of Conference: 23-25 April, 2026
(EXTENDED) Deadline for Abstract Submission: 31 March 2026
Online, international, interdisciplinary conference titled:
(In-)Visible Wounds: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Discrimination and Violence
Call For Papers
The 3rd International Conference on Global Plant Humanities
Botanical Life in Art, Science, and Imagination
Conference Dates: 8–10 May 2026 (Fri–Sun)
Mode: Hybrid (Physical & Virtual)
Host: Department of English, North-Eastern Hill University, Shillong, Meghalaya, India
Under capitalism, we live separated from life. Capital’s extractive colonizing domination keeps us separated from nature, from each other, and from our own bodies, denying us a symbiotic and regenerative relationship with the natural world and with each other. Yet, certain types of bindings are integral to capitalism: capitalism depends on the combination of labour and nature for the production of value; the “emergence of capitalist accumulation and the reproduction of capitalist production” depends on “acts of violent dispossession”, on “tearing Indigenous societies, peasants, and other small-scale, self-sufficient agricultural producers from the source of their livelihood––the land” (Coulthard 2014).
Submission Guidelines
The deadline for submissions is March 20th, 2026. Please submit a 300-word abstract with a short 50-word bio to our conference email address: otherothering@gmail.com
We are only accepting submissions written in the English language
Each participant is allocated 15 minutes for their presentation
Successful applicants will receive an invitation to the conference by 2nd April, 2026
Concept of other and othering
CFP: WHAT MIRACLE: NEW REVELATIONS ON THE PROSE POEM
**The deadline for this CFP has now been extended to Wednesday, April 1.**
October 15 and 16, 2026, in Rome, Italy
The LSL Language Change Forum invites proposals for the following panels at the 2027 MLA Annual Conference in Los Angeles:
Empowering Language Change
This guaranteed panel invites papers examining how linguistic changes enable—and emerge from—emancipatory practices across spoken, written, digital, pedagogical, and/or related contexts.
Listening to Language Change: Evidence of Emancipation
This guaranteed panel invites papers examining how emancipatory movements become visible through linguistic changes—historically, contemporarily, or in imagined futures—across disciplines.
In the early stages of understanding the scope of the most horrifying criminal empire in American history, we are grappling with academia’s role in it. Several faculty members and institutions have been implicated. A few were genuinely innocent and ignored Epstein’s invitations, and some were willingly complicit in crimes against humanity.
Epstein’s co-conspirators have fundamentally compromised the student-teacher relationship and the student-university relationship.
Please consider submitting an abstract to present in my conference panel. The conference is open to graduate students (MA and PhD-track), educators, practicing artists, and museum professionals. Details below:
Call for Abstracts – SECAC Panel
Immersive Threads: Narrative, Participation, and the Making of Experiential Worlds
How do narrative and participation become interwoven within immersive environments? How do we, as participants, become threads within experiential artworks, installations, museums, performances, digital platforms, or urban spaces?
The Journal of Therapeutic and Applied Geek and Gaming Culture (TAGGC) is a new academic journal for professionals studying the intersections of Geek and Gaming cultures and mental health to share their work.
Call for Papers: International Journal of Media & Cultural Politics
Special Issue: ‘Entertainment Video Games Within Wider Culture’
View the full call here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/international-journal-of-media-cultural-politics#call-for-papers
Context
Between Then and Now: Performing Archives
The Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester, 23-24 June 2026
Convened by the Performance Research Group, Manchester School of Theatre, Manchester Metropolitan University
Call for contributions
The Polish Academy of Sciences Scientific Centre in Paris and the Institute of Linguistics of the University of Silesia in Katowice cordially invite you to the academic conference entitled:
IN COLLABORATION ON COOPERATION: RESEARCH IN LINGUISTICS WITHIN FRENCH-POLISH TEAMS
9–10 July 2026
Scientific Centre of the Polish Academy of Sciences
74 Rue Lauriston, 75116 Paris, France
The way our current globally interconnected and digitally enabled capitalist formation continuously reshapes itself to reinforce categories of class and overarching capitalist structures requires analyses that engage and critique these adaptive forces of capital. Responding to this need, this seminar seeks to examine the relationship of texts to a global capitalist economy by asking how class and capitalism function within and exert force upon texts and their contexts—in film, literature, art, video games, social media, and other extratextual spaces such as fan sites. In concert with this year’s theme, we also invite examinations of representations of the capitalist ruling class and the material and ideological effects of these representations.
We invite submissions for a special session at the 2026 PAMLA meeting (Seattle, WA; November 12-15, 2026) on “Biblical and Middle Eastern Literatures.” All papers will be allotted about 20 minutes. Papers must be presented in person.
Conteseting Scientific Literacies: New Tools for a New WorldEdited by Meg M. Marquardt and Lourdes Cardozo Gaibisso, Mississippi State UniversitySend questions and proposals to: contestingsciliteracy@gmail.com
Genre has traditionally been seen as a framework or series of frameworks for organizing texts (and other artworks) so they may be analyzed with some degree of precision, yet the meaning of the term has always been unstable. Disagreements arise around specific classifications, and the term has often been redefined or simply deployed, without explanation, in different ways. The novel, for instance, has been subject to numerous and diverging definitions, from (to name only a few) Gyorgy Lukacs to Mikhail Bakhtin to Ralph Rader to Priya Joshi. Such classifications, no matter how numerous, are familiar.
Call for Papers: MLA 2027 - Los Angeles
The William Morris Society in the United States is soliciting proposals for two panels at next year's MLA (January 7-10, 2027 in Los Angeles). You are warmly invited to submit proposals for either session. Please submit your proposals to the email addresses listed with each CFP. Submissions must be received by March 22.
William Morris, Labor & the Nineteenth Century
The Dance and Movement Analysis Section of the American Folklore Society is looking for papers, panels, workshops, and lec/dems for the 138th AFS Annual Meeting, to be held at the Renaissance Asheville Downtown Hotel in Asheville, North Carolina from October 27–31, 2026. Deadline is April 6, 2026 for emailing us with ideas and questions, at dance.section@afsnet.org.
Extended Deadline (MLA 2027): William Morris, Collections Technology & the Virtual Archive
Call for Papers: MLA 2027 - Los Angeles
The William Morris Society in the United States is soliciting proposals for two panels at next year's MLA (January 7-10, 2027 in Los Angeles). You are warmly invited to submit proposals for either session. Please submit your proposals to the email addresses listed with each CFP. Submissions must be received by March 22.
William Morris, Collections Technology & the Virtual Archive
I am writing to invite you to consider submitting a chapter proposal for consideration to be included in The American Research Handbook on Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, an edited scholarly volume that examines the evolving role of diversity, equity, and inclusion within American democracy and educational institutions.
I have been invited to serve as the section editor for The White Rural Experience. This section seeks rigorous, thoughtful, and evidence-based analyses that examine how rural white communities engage with, experience, interpret, or resist DEI discourse and policy across educational, civic, cultural, and economic contexts.
See below for a call for papers to the upcoming ASAP (Association for the Arts of the Present), which takes place in Madison, WI on October 15-17, 2026. We invite contributions on the narrative dimensions of any contemporary "brainrot" or "slop" media- with particular interest in genre, grand narrative, minimal narrative, short form, segmentivity, seriality, plot, character, etc.
11–12 June 2026
Hosted by the Manchester Game Centre, in collaboration with the Poetry Research Group and the Manchester Poetry Library.
CALL FOR PAPERS
Title: Welsh, Irish, and Polish Migration and Diaspora to Argentina
Editors: María Eugenia Crusetand Aleksander Bednarski
Proposals (500 words): May 15, 2026
Completed chapters (7,000 words): September 15, 2026
Languages: English and/or Spanish
Call for Papers -- The Sixteenth Century Society: A Society for Early Modern Studies
Chicago, IL, October 29-31, 2026
In recent years, critiques of human exceptionalism and extractivism have prompted scholars to reconsider the role of translation as a communicative practice capable of engaging with nonhuman voices. Dominant strands of Western thought, from Descartes to Heidegger, have long reinforced the perceived superiority of humans over other forms of life and expression. Challenging this hierarchy requires not only rethinking human–nonhuman relations but also reconsidering how communication itself is understood within translation studies.
Please consider submitting a short (250 word) proposal for this guaranteed panel sponsored by the Robert Graves Society.
In “Narrating the Past,” British historian Alun Munslow defines “history as a ‘literature of fact’” (23), “an aesthetic undertaking” (17), and a “storied form of knowledge” (17). Continuing the conversations related to “Times and Places,” to be held at the 17th International Robert Graves Conference in Palma, Mallorca, Spain (July 2026), this panel deliberates Graves’s and his literary associates’ historical, geographic, and historiographic legacies.
JSR: Journal for the Study of Radicalism—an academic journal published by Michigan State University Press—announces a call for articles and book reviews.JSR seeks articles on political and religious forms of radicalism across the political spectrum. "Radicalism" here refers not to social reform, but to those who seek through violent or non-violent means to bring about sudden political transformation. In particular, we are interested in articles that consider such topics as both historical or contemporary anarchist figures or groups, ecological radicalism, antifa, communism, and radical violence.
“The American Literary Studies Periodical as Form”
Special Issue of American Periodicals
Ed. Tim Lanzendörfer, Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main
We are delighted to invite chapter proposals for our upcoming edited volume:
Sociolinguistics of Emojis: Implications for Customer Psychology and Behavior
(Under consideration with Springer, Edward Elgar, and Bentham Science)
This book explores how emojis function as sociolinguistic tools in digital communication—shaping tone, politeness, stance, and perception across platforms like customer service chat, CRM, B2B messaging, influencer ecosystems, and D2C apps. We are especially interested in work that links language use to outcomes such as trust, persuasion, complaint resolution, and user experience.
We welcome submissions across:
I am creating a panel for the OAH 2027 conference in San Francisco. Its focus will be women's engagement with the lived and natural environment, indigeneity, and ecofeminism. My paper will also include women's photography from México and the U.S. in the 19th century. I am open to any theory or topics while maintaining a focus on women and the environment. I'm presenting at OAH 2026 in Philly if you'd want to meet up and chat about 2027. tmorgan@ccp.edu
Internationale Tagung
Istituto Storico Austriaco a Roma
Austrian Negatives
In the Darkroom of the Habsburg Empire
Maria Giovanna Campobasso, Flavia Di Battista, Matteo Zupancic
7-8 October 2026
Deadline: 10th May, 2026
Conference dates: December 10-11, 2026
Location: University of Verona, Verona (Italy) – hybrid
Organiser: Prof. Emanuel Stelzer (emanuel.stelzer@univr.it)
Guest Reviewers
New Writing: the International Journal for the Practice and Theory of Creaive Writing (Taylor and Francis / Routledge) seeks guest reviewers with the requisite expertise to join its international Guest Reviewer pool. Reviewers should have knowledge of contemporary creative writing studies. Some understanding of current critical discussions in Creative Writing Studies, Literary Studies or related fields would be well-received.
New Writing is one of the world's leading journals in Creative Writing and Creative Writing Studies.
The journal can be found here: https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rmnw20/current
he Jagiellonian University’s Comparative Civilization Studies Research Club cordially invites you to the International Academic Conference titled “In the Shadow of the Sky — speculative worlds, xenolinguistic futures, and UFO imagery in postmodern media.”
Date and venue: May 29–30, 2026, at the Institute of Comparative Studies of Civilisations, Jagiellonian University, 52 Grodzka Street, Kraków
Format: hybrid, May 29–30, 2026
Meditations on The Black Garden
Special Issue of African American Review, 2027
Guest-edited by Brandy Underwood (California State University, Northridge); Mia Alafaireet (The University of Texas at Austin); Samantha Pinto (The University of Texas at Austin)
Abstracts due to AARBlackgardensSI@gmail.com by May 1, 2026.
Call for Abstracts:
In a world increasingly marked by geopolitical strife, cultural polarization, and digital fragmentation, literature continues to stand as one of humanity’s most profound instruments for fostering peace, empathy, and human solidarity. From ancient oral traditions to contemporary narratives, literary expression has served as a repository of shared human experience—preserving collective memory, resisting violence, and envisioning alternative futures grounded in compassion and coexistence. The pursuit and preservation of peace have remained among the fundamental purposes and aesthetic aspirations of literature since antiquity.
About Time: Temporality in Theatre and Drama
Special Section of Skenè. Journal of Theatre and Drama Studies 12.2 (Dec 2026)
(https://skenejournal.skeneproject.it/index.php/JTDS)
Edited by Alessandro Grilli – Università di Pisa – alessandro.grilli@unipi.it
Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association
English Nineteenth-Century Literature Panel
October 8-10, 2026
Ogden, Utah
Abstract Deadline: April 1, 2026
The 2026 Convention of the Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association welcomes abstracts related to English Nineteenth-Century Literature. Ranging from the Regency to the Victorian era, the Nineteenth Century was an eclectic time facing significant social, political, and economic changes. Considering this period of change (and perhaps even how our own time is one of change) we invite abstracts dealing with how 19th Century British Literature explored topics such as, but not limited to:
This year’s convention theme, “After the Archive,” lends itself well to the study of Religion and Literature. The cultural importance of folklore and sacred stories means that keeping an archive of them for posterity through written and oral storytelling is imperative. However, the nature of that archive is unique in that these stories are ever-changing as they are retold and adapted over the generations.
Evidence, Experience, and Authority in Contested Knowledge
International Interdisciplinary Workshop
Online | 27 - 28 August 2026
When we want to convince others of our beliefs, we usually offer arguments, and, crucially, evidence. Sometimes this evidence is mundane and undisputed; more often it is complex, contested, or ambiguous. But what happens when claims concern phenomena that, by their very nature, resist empirical verification?
Panel Title: New Perspectives on the Federal Writers’ Project in the American West
Dates: August 26–29, 2026
Location: Eugene, Oregon
Deadline for Submissions: Friday, March 27, 2026
Contact Email: Noreen.Rivera@utrgv.edu
Panel Description
Act quickly! Less than one month remains before the editorial deadline for Volume 53 of The Victorians Institute Journal.
Through April 1st, we are still accepting manuscripts between 7k-9k words on any aspect of Victorian and Edwardian literature, art, and culture for publication in Volume 53 of the journal, which will be published later this year.