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CFP: MYSTERY & DETECTIVE FICTION AREA

updated: 
Tuesday, September 2, 2025 - 10:12pm
Popular Culture Association (PCA/ACA) National Conference
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, November 30, 2025

The Mystery & Detective Fiction Area of the Popular Culture Association invites proposals for the 56th annual conference in Atlanta, Georgia, April 8-11, 2026, to be held at the Atlanta Marriott Marquis.

We seek proposals from researchers, academics, graduate students, and independent scholars for scholarly discussions on all aspects and periods of mystery and detective fiction. Interdisciplinary approaches are strongly encouraged.

We ask that proposals extend existing scholarship in new directions and avoid plot summary or review. Proposals should have a clear and focused argument that can be developed adequately in a 15-minute presentation.

Some possible topics for the 2026 conference:

Founder’s Chic and America’s Future National Memory [ID 271]

updated: 
Tuesday, September 2, 2025 - 10:12pm
ASECS
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 22, 2025

I invite you to please consider submitting a abstract for the following panel to be hosted ASECS (American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies) at the 2026 Conference. This conference will be help April 9-11 in Philadelphia.

New Directions in Italian Language and Culture Teaching: North American Perspectives

updated: 
Tuesday, September 2, 2025 - 10:11pm
University of Guelph - CAIS
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 15, 2025

CAIS Fall Teaching Symposium

New Directions in Italian Language and Culture Teaching: North American Perspectives

October 25, 2025

University of Guelph and Online

 

The Canadian Association for Italian Studies invites proposals for a one-day conference, with in-person panels to be held at the University of Guelph and online panels via Zoom, that offers an opportunity to reflect on the current state of the evolving field of Italian language pedagogy in North America.

The World of World Literatures: Practices, Pedagogies, and Possibilities (ACLA 2026)

updated: 
Tuesday, September 2, 2025 - 2:58am
American Comparative Literature Association (ACLA), Annual Convention 2026
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, October 2, 2025


Seminar title: The World of World Literatures: Practices, Pedagogies, and Possibilities

Organizers: Dr. Mir Islam, Nalanda University, India. Arunav Das, University of South Carolina, USA

American Comparative Literature Association (ACLA), Annual Convention 2026, Montreal, Canada


Abstract Submission Deadline: October 2, 2025. Must be submitted through the ACLA portal. 

ACLA annual convention: February 26 - March 1, 2026. Montreal, Canada (In-person) 

More info: https://www.acla.org/annual-meeting 

Gendered Modalities of Remembering in South Asian Literatures

updated: 
Tuesday, September 2, 2025 - 2:21am
Department of Liberal Arts, Indian Institute of Technology Bhilai
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Department of Liberal Arts
Indian Institute of Technology Bhilai

presents

Gendered Modalities of Remembering in South Asian literatures

A National Conference
15–16 January 2026

Call for Papers

Concept Note:

Deadline Extended: Concealed Identities, Stage Personas, and Masked Singers in Heavy Metal

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 7:59pm
Studies in Heavy Metal Music & Culture
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 15, 2025

We invite chapters for a multi-disciplinary edited collection exploring heavy metal and rock bands that use concealed identities, stage personas and masks as a substantial part of their performance and aesthetic. Hidden identities are not a new phenomenon in either popular music generally or heavy metal/hard rock music more narrowly, as performers obscuring their identity through face paint, masks, and wigs goes back over half a century and encompasses bands including Kiss, Slipknot, and Gwar. New masked bands, including Sleep Token and Ghost, have recently risen to widespread popularity.

CFP ACLA 2026: Impudent Flesh: Thinking Bodies & Material Life

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 5:53pm
American Comparative Literature Association (ACLA) 2026 Seminar
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, October 2, 2025

“And away above all with the body, that idée fixe of the senses!” Nietzsche has philosophy proclaim. For it is “infected with every error of logic there is, refuted, impossible even,” and “impudent enough to behave as if it actually existed.” The body has long been one of philosophy’s more persistent preoccupations as it’s impossible to define without distortion yet impossible to fully discard. From Plato’s call to transcend the body in search of truth to Descartes’ relegation of the body to mere extension, philosophy has long sought to escape or sanitize embodiment. Even phenomenology, which counters the Cartesian account, privileges the lived body of perception over the objective, material body and its historical conditions.

Veiled Visions: The (Re)generation of Image in Literary, Literal, and Liminal Veils

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 4:58pm
Northeast Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Veiling obscures, but also reveals. It holds symbolic and aesthetic power that spans centuries, from the medieval and Victorian periods to contemporary expressions in visual, fashion, and social media culture. Further, it frames visibility itself and shapes how identity is hidden, controlled, surveilled, or disclosed. To veil is not only to conceal, but to shape what others are allowed to see and what they are left to imagine. Veiling shrouds, but also frames; withholds, but also invites interpretation. These tensions give veiling its interpretive depth, sustaining its power to provoke, unsettle, and reframe. 

FRAME 39.1 “Controlling the Narrative”

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:17pm
FRAME, Journal of Literary Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, September 5, 2025

Dissension exists on a spectrum. It can be expressed on an individual scale—by rejecting challenges to ethical or moral beliefs—or within collectives that object to systems that harm or subjugate. Literature can be used as an act of protest and resistance, to create counter narratives that combat oppressive agendas; it can mirror the outcry of societies that wish to test the limits of oppression but lack the voice to do so. Now more than ever, it is imperative that we listen to those voices that systems continually work to silence. Authoritarianism, protest, incarceration, and revolution are interwoven themes that dominate allegorical genres such as dystopian fiction.

ACLA 26 - Law and Literature: Rethinking the Interdiscipline

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:12pm
Nimisha Sinha (Binghamton University)
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, October 2, 2025

This seminar reflects on the relationship between law and literature, particularly on how literary forms and narratives interact with political and social legal orders. Julie Peters credits the “antidisciplinarity” of both law and literature as central to the movement that emerged in the 1980s. Bringing this conversation to the 21st century, this seminar seeks to bring fresh perspectives on this interdisciplinary approach by expanding its theoretical scope. Sub-fields like trauma studies have long reflected on the challenges and possibilities of representing and aestheticizing atrocity and suffering.

Ceræ at Leeds IMC 2026: Call for Papers

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:12pm
Ceræ - An Australasian Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 15, 2025

CERÆ: An Australasian Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies

invites submissions for hybrid panels at the Leeds International Medieval Conference 2026 (July 6-9) on the theme of

Premodern Timeliness and Timelessness

Time is a construct with notoriously blurry definitions and boundaries. The artificiality of time can evoke anything from comforting nostalgia to worrying anachronism. Ceræ invites papers that deal with the unfocused and unreal aspects of premodern temporality, including but not limited to:

 

TRANSLATION IN THE AGE OF AI (Roundtable)

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:11pm
NeMLA-Pittsburg 2026
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Open to any languages, this roundtable explores how instructors are integrating AI tools in the context of translation—whether through small tasks, full assignments, or larger projects—and how these technologies can be leveraged to enhance students’ linguistic and cultural competencies. More specifically, how can AI support the development of students’ intercultural awareness, stylistic sensitivity, and translation skills? In what ways might it help students better understand grammar, vocabulary, idiomatic expressions, and register in both the source and target languages? What kinds of assignments can we design to foster a critical and effective use of AI without compromising learning outcomes or creative engagement?

CALL FOR POETRY & VISUAL ART / THEME : THE URGE

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:11pm
the engine idling litmag
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 22, 2025

9/1/25 - 9/22/25: Litmag Subs are OPEN!The theme is: The Urge

 

… as in the many faces of “the feminine urge” — to cave-dwell or home-make, towards tenderness or violence, giddiness or belligerence, nurturing or devouring, and so on.

We’d like to explore a full spectrum of “the female experience,” and especially showcase her inner world. What makes her tick? What’s behind the mask and under her skin? Which desires and urges are rarely spoken but always just below the surface?

New Approaches to Literatures of the Early Americas

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:11pm
Northeast Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

The groundbreaking anthology Early American Writings (2001)edited by Carla Mulford, Angela Vietto, and Amy E. Winans, incorporated writing that represented a range of authors and texts that showcased the broad diversity of literature of the early Americas. The volume not only reflected but inspired new areas of research and teaching that have continued today. In keeping with the theme of the 2026 NeMLA conference, (Re)generation, the goal of this session will be to continue this expansive vision of the literature of the early Americas and showcase scholarship that represents innovative ways of thinking about these literatures.

Visual Culture Area: Popular Culture Association National Conference 2026

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:11pm
Ivy Roberts / Popular Culture Association
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, November 30, 2025

Popular Culture Association 2026 (PCA 26): Atlanta, GA

April 2026

 

"Visual Culture’s Pasts, Presents, and Futures"

The VISUAL CULTURE area of the Popular Culture Association welcomes proposals in anticipation of its 2026 conference, which will be held in Atlanta, Georgia, April 8-11.

The International Conference on Tourism, Archaeology, Heritage and History

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:11pm
PAH
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, February 1, 2026

All are cordially invited to present their research regarding current issues of tourism, archaeology, heritage and history in English or Arabic.

 

The full articles of the conference will be published as the book of conference (provided with International Standard Book Number (ISBN), and according to the Governmental Approval (The Ministry)), and also will be indexed in CIVILICA (however, the book of abstracts will be published too).

 

You may select either Virtual Presentation or In-Person Presentation.

 

Conference Themes

A) Tourism (Any issue related to tourism)

On A (Not-So) Global Scale: Dissecting the Spatio-Temporal Complexities of Slow Violence

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:10pm
American Comparative Literature Association
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, October 2, 2025

Rob Nixon describes, ‘slow violence’, as “a violence that occurs gradually and out of sight, a violence of delayed destruction that is dispersed across time and space”, one “that is neither spectacular nor instantaneous, but rather incremental and accretive, its calamitous repercussions playing out across a range of temporal scales” (2). This seminal work raised the critical question of the strategic difficulties of representing the impact of such violence, especially as it crossed national, ethnic, cultural, linguistic and even gendered borders.  

Unresolved Feeling, Fragments of Belonging: Emotion Across Text and Screen

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:07pm
ACLA 2026
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, October 2, 2025

This seminar investigates how repression, repetition, and unresolved rhythms shape emotional experience across Anglophone literature, heritage film, and contemporary media. It emphasizes stalled movements of feeling, looping tensions, and residues that resist closure. Such affective patterns disrupt inherited memories and unsettle formations of Englishness and other post-imperial identities. At the center of this seminar lies a guiding question: how do patterns of emotion simultaneously sustain and fracture collective identity?

Edited Volume: Tastes of Text: Food and Indian Literature

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:07pm
Editors: Auritra Munshi & Surabhi Jha
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Call for Abstracts for an Edited Volume

 

                                       Tastes of Text: Food and Indian Literature

                                                                  Editors

                         Dr.Auritra Munshi, Assistant Professor, Raiganj University

                   Dr. Surabhi Jha, ICSSR Postdoctoral Researcher, Aliah University

 

 

Concept Note

Miniature as Method

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:07pm
American Comparative Literature Association
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, October 2, 2025

In a world that constantly urges us to scale up—to dream bigger, to grow up, to grasp the “big picture”—what does it mean to think small? This seminar turns to the miniature, not merely as an object of study but as a method of inquiry. To think with the miniature is to reconsider scale itself—not as a neutral or fixed formal property of things, but as a way of seeing and knowing, shaped by desire, enabled by technology, and embedded within power relations. 

Heavy Childhoods 2026

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:07pm
Dr. Ruth Barratt-Peacock / University of Huddersfield
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, December 15, 2025

After an enriching conference in 2025, Heavy Childhoods 2026 will run under the title “Curating Future Nostalgia inHeavy Times”

Forms in Dialogue

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:05pm
Irmtraud Huber / University of Konstanz
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, October 15, 2025

Forms in Dialogue

Universität Konstanz, 11-13 Juni 2026

 

ASECS Panel: Swift and His Circle

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:04pm
American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 22, 2025

Note: All abstracts must be submitted through the Annual Meeting and Membership portal at  https://www.xcdsystem.com/asecs/member/

You do not need to be a member to submit an abstract through the portal; however, you must be a member of ASECS to present at the conference. The panel chair cannot submit the abstract on your behalf.

Trans-scriptions: Cultural Codings and the Poetics of the Body

updated: 
Monday, September 1, 2025 - 3:03pm
University of Szczecin & University of Wrocław
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, September 14, 2025

                                Trans-scriptions: Cultural Codings and the Poetics of the Body
                     International Conference organized by University of Szczecin & University of Wrocław
                                                       
                                                                    11-13 February 2026

                Institute of English Studies, University of Wrocław, Poland Hybrid On-site Conference

Alchemy 2025: Exploring Metaphorical Transformations and Arts-Based Research

updated: 
Sunday, August 31, 2025 - 7:18pm
London Arts-Based Research Centre
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Date: November 8-9, 2025
Location: University of Oxford, UK
Online option available
Conference page: https://labrc.co.uk/2024/11/20/alchemy-2025/

 

Cost:  180 GBP (In person)
100 GBP (Online)
Prices exclude eventbrite fees

“Many have said of Alchemy, that it is for the making of gold and silver. For me such is not the aim, but to consider only what virtue and power may lie in medicines.” – Paracelsus

"Memory, Trauma and Recovery" 6th International Interdisciplinary Conference

updated: 
Sunday, August 31, 2025 - 4:54pm
InMind Support
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, August 31, 2025

Conference online: 18-19 September 2025 (via Zoom)

Scientific Committee:
Professor Wojciech Owczarski – University of Gdańsk, Poland
Professor Polina Golovátina-Mora – NTNU, Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Professor Ryan Habermeyer -  Salisbury University, USA

CFP:

LASA 2026 (Paris) - Extreme Geographies in Latin American Cultural Imaginaries

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 4:45pm
Lu Han/Cornell University; Salvador Alanis/University of Toronto
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, September 3, 2025

This panel invites presentations that explore “extreme geographies”—sites at the limits of habitability and at the horizon of speculation—in literary, visual, and cinematic archives of Latin America. Drawing from David J. Nemeth’s working definition (entry in Encyclopedia of Geography, 2010), we consider both material environments beyond human thresholds, such as polar zones, tropical belts, deserts, volcanic craters, deep-sea trenches, and outer space, and imagined loci including utopias/dystopias, lost islands, fantastic and counterfactual frontiers.

Rust Belt Studies Special Issue: The Regenerative Rust Belt

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:54am
The Rust Belt Humanities Lab at Ursuline College
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Rust Belt Studies Special Issue
The Regenerative Rust Belt: Environment, EcoLogy, Ecosystems

For too long, the narrative of the Rust Belt has been one of emptiness, decay, decline, and vacancy —
and often, our stories are neglected in the national sphere or controlled by cultural outsiders.

In this issue, we will consider the following and more :

How can the humanities imagine regenerative Rust Belt futures and learn from industrial history?
How can the humanities activate the environmental movement in new ways in the Rust Belt?
How can we use art, literature, and music to teach the environmental Rust Belt in the classroom?
How can we use the humanities to reflect on ecosystems both natural and human?

Video Essays about Video Games (special issue)

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:08am
The Digital Review
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, October 6, 2025

Video essays are inevitably entwined with today’s content industry, which relies on engagement metrics, personal branding, and like-and-subscribe platforms to generate revenue and increase time-on-device. Perhaps for this reason, they are frequently associated with advertising or edutainment and rarely appear in journals and other scholarly venues.

Lists as Sources

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:08am
Martha Rust
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Kalamazoo 2026, session #7559: Lists as Sources
Any list serves as a direct “source” for the information it contains. A grocery list tells a shopper what to buy. But it may also serve as a source in several other fields: the history of advertising, the history of culinary trends, or the history of an individual family. This panel seeks papers that consider medieval lists that serve as sources in similarly direct and tangential ways. Such lists might include inventories, mnemonics, itineraries, bede rolls, and word lists, as well as lists in literature. We especially welcome papers that take the properties of lists into account in their analyses.

CFP: Conservative Cultural Criticism

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:08am
Camilo Peralta
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, December 31, 2025

This is an updated CFP for an edited collection representing contemporary “conservative cultural criticism” of books, film, TV, and other media. We are taking a broad view of what conservatism entails, but common influences cited by contributors include Russell Kirk, C. S. Lewis, Paul Elmore More, and Roger Scruton. I have 12 chapters so far on the following topics / authors:

Eugenics in Literature: Genealogies and Afterlives (ACLA Annual Meeting 2026)

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:06am
Anna Derksen, Göttingen
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, October 2, 2025

From its origins in racialised heredity science to its violent implementation in 20th-century state policies, eugenics has shaped how modern societies imagine health, heredity, and the value of life. Literature has long played a key role in this history – at times reflecting or affirming eugenic ideals, at others exposing their violence or imagining forms of life beyond them. 

Biography, Autobiography, Memoir, & Personal Narrative

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:06am
Southwest Popular / American Culture Association (SWPACA)
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, October 31, 2025

Call for Papers

Biography, Autobiography, Memoir, & Personal Narrative

Southwest Popular / American Culture Association (SWPACA)

 

47th Annual Conference, February 25-28, 2026

Marriott Albuquerque

Albuquerque, New Mexico

https://www.southwestpca.org

Submissions open: September 1, 2025

Proposal submission deadline: October 31, 2025

 

Handbook to Kurt Vonnegut

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:06am
Susan Farrell / College of Charleston
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, December 1, 2025

Call for Abstracts--Seeking abstracts for articles for the forthcoming Bloomsbury Handbook to Kurt Vonnegut, which will include 25-35 brand-new essays on Vonnegut of about 5,000-6,000 words each.  The book will be part of a new series with Bloomsbury Publishing UK, aimed at an audience of post-graduates and above.  

Books already published in the series include volumes about Toni Morrison and F. Scott Fitzgerald, among others.

Beside You in the C19: Elizabeth Freeman’s Legacies

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:06am
The Society of Nineteenth-Century Americanists Biennial Conference March 12-14, 2026, Cincinnati, OH
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, August 31, 2025

Beside You in the C19:

Elizabeth Freeman’s Legacies

 

The Society of Nineteenth-Century Americanists Biennial Conference

March 12-14, 2026, Cincinnati, OH

 

ACLA 2026: Marxism & Lyric

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:06am
George Kovalenko (New York University)
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, October 2, 2025

ACLA 2026: Marxism & Lyric

This seminar examines the lyric as a central and contested form in Marxist literary theory. Often viewed as the genre most resistant to historical materialist analysis—associated with interiority, formal autonomy, and expressive immediacy—lyric has nonetheless emerged, across multiple Marxist traditions, as a nexus for theorizing the contradictions of subjectivity, value, and mediation under capital.

Series on Travel Writing

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:05am
Instituto Nuevos Horizontes
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, August 1, 2026

Tinta regada (Spilled Ink) a multilingual publication, invites submissions for a Series on Travel Writing (Literatura de viajes). 

The editors of the literary magazine of the Instituto Nuevos Horizontes welcome personal commentaries, essays, poetry, short story and other forms, in any language, up to 2,500 words.

Send questions and submissions to nuevos.horizontes.uprm@gmail.com

MELUS 2026

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:05am
The Society for the Study of Multi Ethnic Literatures of the United States
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, November 15, 2025

CALL FOR PAPERS

 

MELUS 2026 | Austin, Texas

 

Beyond the Page: Storytelling Across Media and Borders in Precarious Times

 

Co-Hosted by Southern Methodist University and The University of Texas at Austin

Co-Organizers: Frederick Luis Aldama (UTexas-Austin) and Christopher González (SMU)

Conference Dates: Thursday, April 30 – Saturday, May 2, 2026
Optional outings and welcome activities will take place on Wednesday evening, April 29, and Sunday morning, May 3.

CONFERENCE THEME

(Dis)enchanting Modernity: Witchcraft, Magic, and the Occult in Global Literatures (ACLA 2026)

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:04am
Kayla Penteliuk, Université de Montréal
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, October 2, 2025

In a 1918 speech at Munich University, sociologist Max Weber observed a widespread cultural loss of belief in magic and the supernatural: “the fate of our times is characterized by rationalization and intellectualization, and above all, by the ‘disenchantment of the world.’… the ultimate and most sublime values have retreated from public life." Weber’s idea of disenchantment is borrowed from the Enlightenment-era playwright Fredrich Schiller's exploration of Entzauberung, the "de-divinizing" of art, literature, culture, and existenceAs Richard Jenkins clarifiesWeber's disenchantment is “right at the heart of modernity,” a product of the world becoming “knowable, predictable, and manipulable by humans ...

Making Space: Locating (Re)Generation in Asian American Literature, Film, and Television

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:04am
Northeast Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

This panel explores how Asian American literature, film, and television depict the diasporic struggle to assimilate, resist, and reconstruct identity within spaces and places in the United States. Spaces and places here refer to the urban/suburban/rural, the home, institutions, transitory spaces like highways, but also the lack of space, moments of displacement, and the absence of place. Where do we as readers and audiences find the Asian American physically? What are the affordances of such spaces and places in their construction of the Asian American individual? We welcome submissions that consider when and where Asian Americans can or cannot exist within the diasporic canon.

Addressing Ocean and Space Pollution Through the Arts: New Considerations on Indigenous Knowledges and Collaborative Practices

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:04am
OSPAPIK - Université de Bretagne Occidentale, Brest
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, January 15, 2026

 

Addressing Ocean and Space Pollution Through the Arts: New Considerations on Indigenous Knowledges and Collaborative Practices

 

A conference organized by the ERC-funded research project OSPAPIK, the Centre des métiers d’art de la Polynésie française (CMAPf) and the Université de la Polynésie française (UPF, Vice-Présidence Dialogue Sciences, Cultures & Sociétés)

 

(For the CFP in French, please scroll down)

26-28 October 2026

 

Call for Papers - Digital & Analog Cultures

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:04am
Southwest Popular / American Culture Association (SWPACA)
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, October 31, 2025

Call for Papers

Digital & Analog Cultures

Southwest Popular / American Culture Association (SWPACA)

47th Annual Conference, February 25-28, 2026

Marriott Albuquerque

Albuquerque, New Mexico

https://www.southwestpca.org

Submissions open: September 1, 2025

Proposal submission deadline: October 31, 2025

TWO-DAY NATIONAL CONFERENCE on Precarity and Resistance: Bengali Muslim Experience and Contemporary India on 15-16 November 2025

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 8:00am
Organised by Bengali Academia for Social Empowerment (BASE), Kolkata, West Bengal in collaboration with Department of English, Nagar College, Nagar, Murshidabad, West Bengal & Department of English, Dr. B. R. Ambedkar College, Betai, Nadia, West Bengal
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

TWO-DAY NATIONAL CONFERENCE

 on

Precarity and Resistance:  Bengali Muslim Experience and Contemporary India

on

15-16 November 2025

(Tentative Dates)

 

Organised by

Bengali Academia for Social Empowerment (BASE), Kolkata, West Bengal

in collaboration with

Department of English, Nagar College, Nagar, Murshidabad, West Bengal &

Edited Volume “Formats and Institutions of American Literary Culture in the Long Nineteenth Century”

updated: 
Thursday, August 28, 2025 - 7:55am
Alexander Starre (FU Berlin) & Philipp Loeffler (U Heidelberg)
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, October 31, 2025

“Formats and Institutions of American Literary Culture in the Long Nineteenth Century” Editors: Philipp Löffler (Universität Heidelberg) and Alexander Starre (Freie Universität Berlin) Deadline for Abstracts: October 31, 2025 This edited collection addresses alternative modes of writing nineteenth-century literary history, spanning the evolution of the literary field from a narrow patronage system in the 1810s and 1820s to a broad and expanding commercial literary market around 1900. The framing of the volume cuts across traditional period distinctions, from the early Republic to turn-of-the-twentieth-century naturalism, as well as canonized literary movements.

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