CFP: China Abroad (4/30/07; collection)
China Abroad: Travels, Spaces, Subjects (collection)
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China Abroad: Travels, Spaces, Subjects (collection)
CALL FOR ARTICLES
Defining Americanization
The February 2007 issue of Cercles (http://www.cercles.com) proposes to
examine the process and meaning of Americanization.
When Crèvecoeur asked in the eighteenth century "What is an American?"
he had a ready answer: Americans are "the scattered poor of Europe,"
"the persecuted," in short "a new race." But the mysterious process of
Americanization described by Crèvecoeur and later by Frederick Jackson
Turner in his famous but debated Frontier hypothesis is still to a
certain extent indefinable.
CALL FOR ARTICLES
Defining Americanization
The February 2007 issue of Cercles (http://www.cercles.com) proposes to
examine the process and meaning of Americanization.
When Crèvecoeur asked in the eighteenth century "What is an American?"
he had a ready answer: Americans are "the scattered poor of Europe,"
"the persecuted," in short "a new race." But the mysterious process of
Americanization described by Crèvecoeur and later by Frederick Jackson
Turner in his famous but debated Frontier hypothesis is still to a
certain extent indefinable.
CALL FOR ARTICLES
Defining Americanization
The February 2007 issue of Cercles (http://www.cercles.com) proposes to
examine the process and meaning of Americanization.
When Crèvecoeur asked in the eighteenth century "What is an American?"
he had a ready answer: Americans are "the scattered poor of Europe,"
"the persecuted," in short "a new race." But the mysterious process of
Americanization described by Crèvecoeur and later by Frederick Jackson
Turner in his famous but debated Frontier hypothesis is still to a
certain extent indefinable.
Call for Papers
Panel Title: Writing Hunger
38th Convention, Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA)
March 1-4, 2007
Baltimore, MD
This panel seeks to explore the multivalent representations of food and
hunger in American literature and culture. Please send abstracts of 250-500
words to Kirsten Bartholomew Ortega at kirstenbart_at_hotmail.com.
Call for Papers
Panel Title: Writing Hunger
38th Convention, Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA)
March 1-4, 2007
Baltimore, MD
This panel seeks to explore the multivalent representations of food and
hunger in American literature and culture. Please send abstracts of 250-500
words to Kirsten Bartholomew Ortega at kirstenbart_at_hotmail.com.
Call for Papers
Panel Title: Writing Hunger
38th Convention, Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA)
March 1-4, 2007
Baltimore, MD
This panel seeks to explore the multivalent representations of food and
hunger in American literature and culture. Please send abstracts of 250-500
words to Kirsten Bartholomew Ortega at kirstenbart_at_hotmail.com.
Abstracts are warmly invited for the Seventh Biennial Conference of the
Constance Fenimore Woolson Society, which will be held 22-25 February 2007 at
the Marshall House in Savannah, GA. The informal theme will be "Postbellum
Sojourns: The American South and the Example of Woolson, 1865-1890." Papers
on all Woolson topics are welcome; those on the conference's informal theme
enjoy the opportunity of publication.
FASHION, APPEARANCE AND CONSUMER IDENTITY
Popular Culture Association
Thirty-seventh Annual Meeting
April 4-7, 2007
BostonMarriott Copley Place
Boston, Massachusetts
Fashion, Appearance and Consumer Identity is concerned
with the areas of clothing, historical costume, fashion
aesthetics, fashion and appearance, fashion marketing,
merchandising, retailing, the psychological/sociological
aspects of dress, cultural appearances as well as any areas
relating to consumption and consumer identity. Papers
from all disciplines are welcome. Innovative and new research
in the areas of fashion and consumerism are encouraged!
Sites of Asian American Studies: 11/3-11/4, The Ohio State University,
Columbus, Ohio
Sites of Asian American Studies: 11/3-11/4, The Ohio State University,
Columbus, Ohio
Sites of Asian American Studies: 11/3-11/4, The Ohio State University,
Columbus, Ohio
Call for Chapters for the
Handbook of Research on Computer Mediated Communication
Editor: Sigrid Kelsey, MLIS
Louisiana State University
Antisemitism and English Culture
Advance notice and CALL FOR PAPERS
A major international conference on the histories and cultures of antisemitism in England, from the Middle Ages to the present day. To be held at Birkbeck College, University of London, 9-11 July 2007.
Key questions to be addressed include:
-Can we talk of a distinctly English kind of antisemitism?
-Is antisemitism inherent in Englishness?
-What is, or has been, the relationship between 'high' or intellectual English culture and antisemitism?
-How far can specific English contexts be seen to have engendered antisemitism?
-Is there a meaningful history of English philosemitism, and what is its relationship to antisemitism?
Antisemitism and English Culture
Advance notice and CALL FOR PAPERS
A major international conference on the histories and cultures of antisemitism in England, from the Middle Ages to the present day. To be held at Birkbeck College, University of London, 9-11 July 2007.
Key questions to be addressed include:
-Can we talk of a distinctly English kind of antisemitism?
-Is antisemitism inherent in Englishness?
-What is, or has been, the relationship between 'high' or intellectual English culture and antisemitism?
-How far can specific English contexts be seen to have engendered antisemitism?
-Is there a meaningful history of English philosemitism, and what is its relationship to antisemitism?
Call for Chapters for the
Handbook of Research on Computer Mediated Communication
Editor: Sigrid Kelsey, MLIS
Louisiana State University
Call for Chapters for the
Handbook of Research on Computer Mediated Communication
Editor: Sigrid Kelsey, MLIS
Louisiana State University
Antisemitism and English Culture
Advance notice and CALL FOR PAPERS
A major international conference on the histories and cultures of antisemitism in England, from the Middle Ages to the present day. To be held at Birkbeck College, University of London, 9-11 July 2007.
Key questions to be addressed include:
-Can we talk of a distinctly English kind of antisemitism?
-Is antisemitism inherent in Englishness?
-What is, or has been, the relationship between 'high' or intellectual English culture and antisemitism?
-How far can specific English contexts be seen to have engendered antisemitism?
-Is there a meaningful history of English philosemitism, and what is its relationship to antisemitism?
Antisemitism and English Culture
Advance notice and CALL FOR PAPERS
A major international conference on the histories and cultures of antisemitism in England, from the Middle Ages to the present day. To be held at Birkbeck College, University of London, 9-11 July 2007.
Key questions to be addressed include:
-Can we talk of a distinctly English kind of antisemitism?
-Is antisemitism inherent in Englishness?
-What is, or has been, the relationship between 'high' or intellectual English culture and antisemitism?
-How far can specific English contexts be seen to have engendered antisemitism?
-Is there a meaningful history of English philosemitism, and what is its relationship to antisemitism?
Antisemitism and English Culture
Advance notice and CALL FOR PAPERS
A major international conference on the histories and cultures of antisemitism in England, from the Middle Ages to the present day. To be held at Birkbeck College, University of London, 9-11 July 2007.
Key questions to be addressed include:
-Can we talk of a distinctly English kind of antisemitism?
-Is antisemitism inherent in Englishness?
-What is, or has been, the relationship between 'high' or intellectual English culture and antisemitism?
-How far can specific English contexts be seen to have engendered antisemitism?
-Is there a meaningful history of English philosemitism, and what is its relationship to antisemitism?
Update: Location is NOT the UK, as implied in our previous posting; we are
holding "Sexing the Text" at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada.
Sexing the Text: Gendered Works and Working Gender
November 3rd and 4th, 2006
Simon Fraser University
Vancouver, Canada
Update: Location is NOT the UK, as implied in our previous posting; we are
holding "Sexing the Text" at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada.
Sexing the Text: Gendered Works and Working Gender
November 3rd and 4th, 2006
Simon Fraser University
Vancouver, Canada
Update: Location is NOT the UK, as implied in our previous posting; we are
holding "Sexing the Text" at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada.
Sexing the Text: Gendered Works and Working Gender
November 3rd and 4th, 2006
Simon Fraser University
Vancouver, Canada
Update: Location is NOT the UK, as implied in our previous posting; we are
holding "Sexing the Text" at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada.
Sexing the Text: Gendered Works and Working Gender
November 3rd and 4th, 2006
Simon Fraser University
Vancouver, Canada
Update: Location is NOT the UK, as implied in our previous posting; we are
holding "Sexing the Text" at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada.
Sexing the Text: Gendered Works and Working Gender
November 3rd and 4th, 2006
Simon Fraser University
Vancouver, Canada
Update: Location is NOT the UK, as implied in our previous posting; we are
holding "Sexing the Text" at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada.
Sexing the Text: Gendered Works and Working Gender
November 3rd and 4th, 2006
Simon Fraser University
Vancouver, Canada
For the Fall issue of the Virginia Woolf Miscellany, the subject is
Virginia Woolf and Deviancy. Possible topics might be: "How and why did
Woolf present what the dominant culture found deviant? How and why was
Woolf deviant in her own writing? How did Woolf change the meanings of
deviancy or the understandings of what was deviant in her culture? Is
Woolf deviant for readers today? How has Woolf's deviance influenced
later writers? How have later writers or visual artists interpreted
Woolf's deviancy into their own texts? How did Woolf create textual or
narrative deviancy? How, in Woolf's incorporation of other texts into her
writing, did she create deviancy?
For the Fall issue of the Virginia Woolf Miscellany, the subject is
Virginia Woolf and Deviancy. Possible topics might be: "How and why did
Woolf present what the dominant culture found deviant? How and why was
Woolf deviant in her own writing? How did Woolf change the meanings of
deviancy or the understandings of what was deviant in her culture? Is
Woolf deviant for readers today? How has Woolf's deviance influenced
later writers? How have later writers or visual artists interpreted
Woolf's deviancy into their own texts? How did Woolf create textual or
narrative deviancy? How, in Woolf's incorporation of other texts into her
writing, did she create deviancy?
CALL FOR PAPERS
IMAGINING TRANSATLANTIC SLAVERY AND ABOLITION
16-17 MARCH 2007
CALL FOR PAPERS
IMAGINING TRANSATLANTIC SLAVERY AND ABOLITION
16-17 MARCH 2007