Call for Papers : International Journal of Humanities Art and Social Studies
International Journal of Humanities, Art and Social Studies
*** April Issue***
https://flyccs.com/jounals/IJHASS/Home.html
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International Journal of Humanities, Art and Social Studies
*** April Issue***
https://flyccs.com/jounals/IJHASS/Home.html
Scope
CALL FOR PAPERS, ABSTRACTS, AND PANEL PROPOSALS
Midwest Popular Culture Association/
Midwest American Culture Association
2023 Annual Conference
Race & Ethnicity Studies
Deadline: April 30, 2023
Event Dates: Friday-Sunday, 6-8, October 2023
Location: DePaul University, Chicago, IL (in-person)
CALL FOR PAPERS, ABSTRACTS, AND PANEL PROPOSALS
Midwest Popular Culture Association/
Midwest American Culture Association
2023 Conference
East Asian Studies
Deadline: April 30, 2023
Event Dates: Friday-Sunday, 6-8, October 2023
Location: DePaul University, Chicago, IL (in-person)
EXTENDED--Call for East Asia Popular Culture FULL ESSAYS! 7-8000 words, including all citations in Chicago Manual of Style (Author-Date)
We have a publishing project in development with Cambridge Scholars Publishing and need a few supplementary chapters to round out our volume.
EXTENDED Deadline: Sunday, April 2 midnight PST
Contact: Vivienne Tailor vivienne.tailor@cgu.edu
*Topics should focus on East Asian Popular Culture media and social phenomena from China, Hong Kong, Japan, Macau, Mongolia, North Korea, South Korea, and Taiwan.
"20TH-CENTURY WAR-WRITINGS AND FILM: AN ANTHOLOGY OF CRITICAL APPROACHES"
Editor: Pinaki Roy
The proposed anthology of critical writings on 20th-century war-literature and war-movies is likely to be published from an old and reputed university-press located in northern U.K.
The last date for submissions is 31 July 2023.
"POSTHUMANISM: A STUDY IN TWENTY-FIRST-CENTURY PERSPECTIVES"
JOINT-EDITORS: PINAKI ROY AND TANIMA DUTTA
The world and human civilisation are governed by rapid and gradual changes. In order to perceive and explore these changes - among other disciplines of literature and social sciences - posthumanism was developed very late in the 20th century as a literary-philosophical approach to interpreting these changes.
‘Shakespeare Beyond All Limits’7-9 December 2023At the University of Sydney and the State Library of NSW
The Australian and New Zealand Shakespeare Association (ANZSA) is delighted to announce its next conference will be ‘Shakespeare beyond all Limits’ hosted by the University of Sydney from 7-9 December 2023. We are now inviting proposals for scholarly papers and panels.
Our keynote speakers are:
** Deadline Extended **
Bakhtin for the Twenty-First Century, a special issue of The Journal of Festivel Culture Inquiry and Analysis
We invite submissions for a special issue, Bakhtin for the Twenty-First Century, which will include a foreword by Prof Sue Vice, author of Introducing Bakhtin.
Conference: 25-26 May 2023 (online - via Zoom)
CFP:
It is widely known that ideologies of racism, nationalism, and xenophobia are dangerous and spread all over the world. We want to examine these terms as much as possible, from many perspectives and variable aspects: in politics, society, psychology, culture, and many more. We also want to devote considerable attention to how the phenomena of racism, nationalism and xenophobia are represented in artistic practices: in literature, film, theatre or visual arts.
Call for Chapter Proposals
Barbie in the Media: The Cultural Impact of Mattel’s Celebrity Doll
Edited by Emily R. Aguiló-Pérez and Rebecca C. Hains
Abstracts invited by May 1, 2023
Since her creation in 1959, Barbie has become a ubiquitous global presence and a touchstone of cultural consciousness. Those who have studied Barbie note that no other toy has generated so much sustained media and scholarly interest.
Call for Papers
ETKI: Journal of Literature, Theatre and Culture Studies
ETKI: Journal of Literature, Theatre and Culture Studies invites submissions for the fourth issue of the journal - a general issue on literature, theatre and culture studies.
Dalit Studies: Key Terms and Concepts
Editors: Dr Mahitosh Mandal & Dr Sanjeev Kondekar
Open Call for WSA Volume 30 (2024)
Deadline: 15 October 2023
Launched in 1995, Woolf Studies Annual will publish its thirtieth volume in the spring of 2024. The editor invites submissions for this important milestone volume.
Of particular interest would be articles that make use of the WSA Index (see vol. 28 and 29) to return to and expand/revise the insights of the scholarship and archival material published in the journal’s first 15 years. Of particular interest might be
Vara Neverow and Merry M. Pawlowski’s preliminary bibliography to Three Guineas’s notes (vol. 3),
Digital Rhetoric and Borders: Human Mobility Between Mexico and the United States
Editors: Dr. Rubria Rocha de Luna, Dr. Paloma Vargas Montes and Dr. Maricruz Castro Ricalde
With the support of the Tecnólogico de Monterrey Research Dean's Office, we are pleased to invite proposals for chapters of previously unpublished and original work to be included in Digital Rhetoric and Borders: Human Mobility Between Mexico and the United States, to be published by a high impact Scopus publisher in 2024.
This panel aims to explore the role of futuristic bodies as spaces for addressing contemporary issues such as gender and race equity, climate change, and income inequality. Science fiction and speculative fiction confront us with the uncanny, asking us to question the boundaries between our reality and fictional-yet-possible futures. Centering the body, often porous and precarious, in these texts positions us to imagine the future of humanity, and encourages us to think critically about perspective shifts we must make today to enable a better tomorrow. As Michel Foucault (1980) states, “the body is given meaning and wholly constituted by discourse.
What is the translator’s place within a body of literature, and how do we, as translators, navigate our place? How do translators share space with authors, editors, and audiences? Place is not only static, but dynamic: just as languages do not remain fixed in place, the place of translation is also constantly shifting and evolving. How does translation sit within and move across visible boundaries and invisible barriers? In what ways are we as translators grounded and supported, and in what ways are we trying to break free from what is deemed to be our place?
Literary theory has contributed towards the recovery of marginalised narratives and discourses in literature during the last three decades. The word, ‘minor’ has acquired a resonance of its own in the context of ‘national’ literature which tends to be part of a ‘great tradition’. Against such a background, the recovery of diverse indigenous traditions has become an important task of comparative studies of literature. Nations emerged as ‘imagined’ communities. However, nation-states were not ‘imagined’ in the crucible of prolonged struggles of anti-colonial resistance in Asia, Africa and Latin America, but were born of the political exigencies of imperial powers.
Online Conference Date: TBA
Registration is free to attend.
Call for papers
In our fourth annual event, we will examine the theme of 'connections, interconnections, and disconnections' in festive and celebratory culture.
Call for Abstracts for Edited Volume - New Religious Movements in Romantic and Victorian Print Culture
Type: Call for Papers
Deadline for Submissions: May 1, 2023
Subject Fields: History of the Book / History of Literature and Culture / Print Culture / Religious Studies/ Gender Studies / Transatlanticism / Romanticism / Victorian Studies
New Religious Movements in Romantic and Victorian Print Culture
(Edited by Abby Clayton and Colby Townsend)
Thinking with Sexology in South Asia: Science at the Boundary
Forms of (More Than) Human Relationality - Call for Papers
Haunted Shores is inviting contributions to our blog. Our online platform aims to broaden the reach of our academic work, generate discussion, and engage scholars, scientists, artists, and members of the general public.
The Captivating Criminality Network is delighted to announce its tenth conference, Captivating Criminality 10: Celebrating Crime Fiction, which will be held at Bath Spa University in Bath, UK. Building upon and developing ideas and themes of the previous successful conferences, Celebrating Crime Fiction will consider and reflect upon the growing interest in Crime Fiction scholarship over the past decade. We are particularly interested in examining the changes in the landscape of crime fiction study through the years of our Captivating Criminality conferences. The study of crime fiction has now emerged as a vital thread with the capacity to transform interdisciplinary academic discourse.
One of the first academic conferences devoted to videographic research was held at the Frankfurt Filmmuseum and Goethe University in Germany in 2013. Titled "The Audiovisual Essay: Practice and Theory," the conference emphasized practice in the presentation-based discussions. As the first speaker of the conference, Catherine Grant described the challenges of this then new scholarly format as "unknown, infinite, or variable" in terms of the experimentation of video production and the reception of this format in academia.
The editors of the interdisciplinary Australasian Journal of Irish Studies, and the Irish Studies Association of Australia and New Zealand, are delighted to announce the 2023 ISAANZ Irish Studies Postgraduate Essay prize, open to anyone enrolled in an MA or PhD between June 2022 and June 2023. Submissions can address Irish topics in any academic discipline.
The Prize:
Guidelines:
International conference
November 27-28, 2023
Alcalá de Henares, Madrid ES
The conference will focus on how the American imagination has shaped—and, in turn, has been shaped by—its frontiers and borderlands, marked by an intrinsic peripheral quality, sociocultural porosity, and a diverse range of experiences and identities. As Lee Bebout (2016) has highlighted discussing the US–Mexico border, representations of frontiers, the “other side,” and the people inhabiting these regions have been historically deployed to construct a dominant national identity—often exploiting, invisiblizing, or neglecting local identities in the process.
InVisible Culture — A Journal for Visual Culture
Call For Papers
Issue 36: “The Matter of Whiteness”
Future Nostalgia and Present Utopia: Reimaging Futurism in Film and New Media
Program in Film and Media Studies at the University of Pittsburgh
Keynote Speaker: Diana Flores Ruíz
Date: September 23-24
The University of Pittsburgh Film and Media Studies Program is pleased to announce “Future Nostalgia and Present Utopia: Reimaging Futurism in Film and New Media,” its twelfth Annual Graduate Student Conference, which will be held virtually on September 23–24, 2023.
Call for Papers: James Bond Studies Conference
30th June – 1st July 2023
University of Roehampton, London
In association with the Centre for Literature and Inclusion and the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Roehampton, the International Journal of James Bond Studies will host a 2-day international conference on the University’s beautiful parkland campus in South West London.