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CFP: Literary Mama (ongoing; e-magazine)

updated: 
Monday, October 18, 2004 - 3:31am
Elisabeth Rose Gruner

Literary Mama, an online literary magazine, seeks writing for a new
section, Literary Reflections, featuring writing by mother writers, both
professional and amateur, focused on the creative process. We're looking
for first-person reflections with an intellectual as well as personal
focus. Potential topics include:

Writing as a mother:

=95 the relationship between becoming a mother and becoming a writer

=95 the influence of motherhood on your craft

=95 the influence of writing on your mothering

=95 the outlets for mother writers, from the private (journals,
diaries) to the public (books and magazines) and those that attempt to
bridge the gap (weblogs).

CFP: The Child Archetype in America (12/15/04; collection)

updated: 
Monday, October 18, 2004 - 3:31am
Polette, Keith

Call for Papers--Essays Wanted for a Book on the Child Archetype
in America--Editors for a proposed collection of essays are
seeking works that are Jungian, Post-Jungian, or Archetypal in
orientation. The purpose and focus of the essays should be to ascertain
and describe the manifestations and underlying dynamics of the
constellation of energies and perspectives that are manifested in the
"Archetypes of the Child and/or the Puer/Puella Aeternus" that, it might
be argued, is currently informing the collective consciousness of the
United States. Topics for possible articulation may include, but are
not limited to, the media, politics, popular culture, education,

CFP: Gendered Space: Women and Architecture (11/19/04; journal issue)

updated: 
Monday, October 18, 2004 - 3:30am
Ellen Scheible

CFP: _Women's Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal_
Deadline: November 19,2004
PLEASE DIRECT INQUIRIES TO: womstudj_at_cgu.edu

A special issue:
Gendered Space: Women and Architecture

_Women's Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal_ is currently accepting
manuscripts for publication concerning the topic of women and
architecture. Women's Studies provides a forum for the presentation of
scholarship and criticism about women in the fields of literature,
history, art, sociology, law, political science, economics,
anthropology and the sciences. It also publishes poetry, film and book
reviews.

UPDATE: Hongloumeng: Dream of the Red Chamber (5/15/05; journal issue)

updated: 
Monday, October 18, 2004 - 3:29am
Mark S. Ferrara

Please note new contact information:

CALL FOR PAPERS

We seek papers for a special issue of _Tamkang Review: A Quarterly of
Comparative Studies Between Chinese and Foreign Literatures_ on any
aspect of the Qing Dynasty novel Hongloumeng (Dream of the Red Chamber
or Story of the Stone). Submissions need not be comparative in nature.

Essays must be in English, 15-30 pages in length, and should be
formatted according to the MLA Handbook stylesheet. Electronic
submissions are accepted as MS Word attachments. Alternately, two
double-spaced copies of the work and a disk may be submitted to the
address below.

Submissions should be sent by May 15, 2005.

UPDATE: Reading Stargate SG-1 and Beyond (11/1/04; collection)

updated: 
Wednesday, October 13, 2004 - 5:50pm
stan_at_unbc.ca

Abstract Submission Deadline Extention to November 1 2004

Reading Stargate SG-1 and Beyond: Stan Beeler and Lisa Dickson, eds.
 
Essay abstracts of 250 - 500 words should be forwarded by Nov 1 2004 to
Stan Beeler, stan_at_unbc.ca or
Lisa Dickson, dicksonl_at_unbc.ca

UPDATE: Reading Stargate SG-1 and Beyond (11/1/04; collection)

updated: 
Wednesday, October 13, 2004 - 5:50pm
stan_at_unbc.ca

Abstract Submission Deadline Extention to November 1 2004

Reading Stargate SG-1 and Beyond: Stan Beeler and Lisa Dickson, eds.
 
Essay abstracts of 250 - 500 words should be forwarded by Nov 1 2004 to
Stan Beeler, stan_at_unbc.ca or
Lisa Dickson, dicksonl_at_unbc.ca

UPDATE: Reading Stargate SG-1 and Beyond (11/1/04; collection)

updated: 
Wednesday, October 13, 2004 - 5:50pm
stan_at_unbc.ca

Abstract Submission Deadline Extention to November 1 2004

Reading Stargate SG-1 and Beyond: Stan Beeler and Lisa Dickson, eds.
 
Essay abstracts of 250 - 500 words should be forwarded by Nov 1 2004 to
Stan Beeler, stan_at_unbc.ca or
Lisa Dickson, dicksonl_at_unbc.ca

CFP: Tayo Olafioye (1/15/05; collection)

updated: 
Wednesday, October 13, 2004 - 5:46pm
beth virtanen

CALL FOR PAPERS
The notion of a global village has demolished all
cultural barriers with the emergence of a global
literary culture where works of great writers can
receive adequate global attention on the world's
literary playground . . .
My co-editor Sola Owonibi, of Adekunle Ajasin
University, Ondo State, Nigeria, and I, Beth Virtanen,
at the University of Puerto Rico, U.S.A, have received
confirmation of interest from our publisher Rasmed
Publications of Ibadan, Nigeria, for our proposed book
of collected essays on the work of the Nigerian-born
poet Tayo Olafioye who has spent the last thirty years
writing and working in the United States. This

CFP: Tayo Olafioye (1/15/05; collection)

updated: 
Wednesday, October 13, 2004 - 5:46pm
beth virtanen

CALL FOR PAPERS
The notion of a global village has demolished all
cultural barriers with the emergence of a global
literary culture where works of great writers can
receive adequate global attention on the world's
literary playground . . .
My co-editor Sola Owonibi, of Adekunle Ajasin
University, Ondo State, Nigeria, and I, Beth Virtanen,
at the University of Puerto Rico, U.S.A, have received
confirmation of interest from our publisher Rasmed
Publications of Ibadan, Nigeria, for our proposed book
of collected essays on the work of the Nigerian-born
poet Tayo Olafioye who has spent the last thirty years
writing and working in the United States. This

UPDATE: Nebula: Generalist/All Topics (11/12/04; e-journal)

updated: 
Wednesday, October 13, 2004 - 5:43pm
nebula_at_nobleworld.biz

Nebula is currently preparing its third and Super 2004/2005
issue. The deadline for submissions has been extended to 12
November 2004.

Nebula aims to represent as many diverse and various
intellectual systems of thought as possible in each issue. We
encourage articles that represent sound research and logical
argumentation in any field of academic study,provided that
the article is written in non-specialist language and is
therefore accessible to an inter- disciplinary readership.
Referencing style is open, however both consistency and
thoroughness are required.

CFP: Encyclopedia of Prostitution (no deadline noted; collection)

updated: 
Wednesday, October 13, 2004 - 5:39pm
Rachel Given-Wilson

The Historical Encyclopedia of Prostitution is a
reference work about prostitution past and present,
both worldwide (mostly in the West) and in the United
States to be published by Greenwood Press. With
approximately 600 entries on health, cultural issues,
migration, boom towns, legislation, technology,
literature, movies, and more, this three-volume
encyclopedia promises to be a foremost resource
devoted to this high-interest yet sensitive topic.

Entries related to literature which remain unassigned
include:

African Literature

American Literature

Colette

English Literature

Fallen Woman trope

Fanny Hill

French Literature

Literature

CFP: Literary/Cultural Studies (undergrad) (11/1/04; journal issue)

updated: 
Wednesday, October 13, 2004 - 5:29pm
Hotel: Critical Review / Revue Critique

Hotel: Critical Review / Revue Critique, an undergraduate journal of
literary
and cultural studies based at McGill University, is calling for papers for
its
Spring 2005 issue. We are looking for critical writing from undergraduates
on
any subject having to do with literature, culture, and the arts for a
non-specialist readership. We are especially interested in essays that take
interdisciplinary or unusual approaches to cultural issues while using
lively
language and formats. For more information about the journal, and to
download
our most recent issue, please see our website:

CFP: Literary/Cultural Studies (undergrad) (11/1/04; journal issue)

updated: 
Wednesday, October 13, 2004 - 5:29pm
Hotel: Critical Review / Revue Critique

Hotel: Critical Review / Revue Critique, an undergraduate journal of
literary
and cultural studies based at McGill University, is calling for papers for
its
Spring 2005 issue. We are looking for critical writing from undergraduates
on
any subject having to do with literature, culture, and the arts for a
non-specialist readership. We are especially interested in essays that take
interdisciplinary or unusual approaches to cultural issues while using
lively
language and formats. For more information about the journal, and to
download
our most recent issue, please see our website:

CFP: Anne Hebert: Essays On Her Work (2/1/05; collection)

updated: 
Monday, October 11, 2004 - 5:43pm
Lee Skallerup

CFP: Anne Hébert: Essays On Her Work

Guernica Editions will be publishing a book on Québecois author Anne
Hébert for their Writers Series in 2006. New essays on any aspect of
Hébert's work are being solicited for the publication. Particular
preference will be given to studies that include more than one of
Hébert's works, or that focus on her later publications (Poèmes pour
la main gauche, Aurélien, Clara, Mademoiselle, et le Lieutenant
anglais, Un habit de lumière, Est-ce que je te derange?). All essays
will be published in English, but French submission are welcome, and
if accepted will be translated by the editor.

CFP: Postmodern Culture (10/30/04; journal issue)

updated: 
Monday, October 11, 2004 - 5:03pm
PMC

PMC: Postmodern Culture
Call for Reviews
Deadline 30 October 2004.

REPLY TO: pmc_at_jefferson.village.virginia.edu

Postmodern Culture is looking for reviews of recent books, films, CDs,
plays, TV shows, concerts, sporting events, performances, exhibitions,
conferences and conventions, happenings, and so forth, for our January
2005 issue. Reviews should be approximately 2000-3500 words long and
should follow the journal's format guidelines below.

UPDATE: Teaching the Novel and Short Fiction (11/30/04; journal issue)

updated: 
Monday, October 11, 2004 - 4:56pm
James Kelley

UPDATE: This call has been expanded to include teaching both novels and
short fiction.

Academic Exchange Quarterly, a peer-reviewed journal appearing in print and
electronic format, will include in its Spring 2005 issue a special focus on
Teaching the Novel and Short Fiction. Literature and creative writing
instructors at all levels (universities, community colleges, and high
schools) are invited to submit manuscripts to the journal.

To be considered for the Spring 2005 issue, please submit your manuscript of
2,500 to 3,000 words by November 30, 2004. (Publication in later issues is
also a possibility.) Submissions will undergo a double-blind peer review.

CFP: Distributed Aesthetics (12/20/04; journal issue)

updated: 
Monday, October 11, 2004 - 4:54pm
Anna Munster

Distributed Aesthetics =96 Call for Papers for fibreculture journal,=20
issue to be published May 2005

It has been widely argued by sociologists, cultural and media theorists=20=

such as Manuel Castells, Arjun Appardurai and Geert Lovink that we now=20=

live in a landscape shaped by the flows and traffic of globally=20
networked information. We have become, in Castells words, a =91networked=20=

society=92 and our cultural, social and economic practices must operate=20=

within this global space of flows. The geography of place and history=20
in which association through physical proximity and tradition such as=20
neighbourhood, or through identification based upon race, class or sex,=20=

CFP: Distributed Aesthetics (12/20/04; journal issue)

updated: 
Monday, October 11, 2004 - 4:54pm
Anna Munster

Distributed Aesthetics =96 Call for Papers for fibreculture journal,=20
issue to be published May 2005

It has been widely argued by sociologists, cultural and media theorists=20=

such as Manuel Castells, Arjun Appardurai and Geert Lovink that we now=20=

live in a landscape shaped by the flows and traffic of globally=20
networked information. We have become, in Castells words, a =91networked=20=

society=92 and our cultural, social and economic practices must operate=20=

within this global space of flows. The geography of place and history=20
in which association through physical proximity and tradition such as=20
neighbourhood, or through identification based upon race, class or sex,=20=

CFP: Virginia Woolf and Music (1/10/05; collection)

updated: 
Monday, October 11, 2004 - 4:52pm
avarga_at_indiana.edu

Critical Anthology: Virginia Woolf and Music

Deadline: January 10, 2005

"Novels," she repeated. "Why do you write novels? You ought to write music."
Rachel Vinrace's advice to Terence Hewet shows that the relationship between
music and text was an important concern for Virginia Woolf beginning with her
very first novel. Her active interest in music influenced her writings in
significant ways throughout her career. In 1940, she was writing to Elizabeth
Trevelyan: "Its [sic] odd, for I'm not regularly musical, but I always think of
my books as music before I write them" (Letters, VI, 425).

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