CFP: (Dis)Integration (12/31/03; journal issue)
Topic: (Dis)Integration
Portals: A Journal in Comparative Literature is a
graduate student run journal coordinated by the
Comparative Literature Student Association at San
Francisco State University.
a service provided by www.english.upenn.edu |
FAQ changelog |
Topic: (Dis)Integration
Portals: A Journal in Comparative Literature is a
graduate student run journal coordinated by the
Comparative Literature Student Association at San
Francisco State University.
CFP: Languages and changing contexts: Sociolinguistic perspectives
(05/31/2004 journal issue)
Alternation, a peer-reviewed Sapse-accredited journal for the study of
Southern African literature and languages, invites submissions for a
special issue on Sociolinguistics.
The special issue will focus on:
Languages and changing contexts: Sociolinguistic perspectives
CALL FOR PAPERS
Translit: UCLA Journal of Comparative Literature
TransLit is a new, refereed journal produced by graduate students in
the Department of Comparative Literature at the University of
California at Los Angeles. A meeting place for a wide range of
disciplines and theoretical approaches, the journal publishes
scholarly articles that treat textual, visual, musical or other
media, and which relate broadly to the field of Comparative
Literature. Bringing together a range of critical studies, Translit
serves as a forum for challenging disciplinary boundaries, fostering
innovative connections, and examining the relevance of comparative
literary studies in the contemporary world.
Queer TV
An Edited Collection
Queer TV
An Edited Collection
BAD SUBJECTS
SPECIAL ISSUE: PROTEST CULTURES
CALL FOR PAPERS
BAD SUBJECTS
SPECIAL ISSUE: PROTEST CULTURES
CALL FOR PAPERS
UPDATE
***Call for Papers***
Issue 3.2: Multiple Literatures in America: Hybrid, Homogeneous, or
Hegemonic?
The third open issue of Xchanges, an electronic journal focusing on
interdisciplinary exchange between all areas of the humanities, will
appear in March 2004. Xchanges is a component of the Y/X Project of the
American Studies Program at Wayne State University and is made possible
by the Rushton Endowment. Xchanges solicits work from scholars on the
graduate level and is also eager to include exceptional papers by
upper-level undergraduate students. The editor of the journal is
Julianne Newmark and the technical editor and webmaster is Joy Burnett.
UPDATE
***Call for Papers***
Issue 3.2: Multiple Literatures in America: Hybrid, Homogeneous, or
Hegemonic?
The third open issue of Xchanges, an electronic journal focusing on
interdisciplinary exchange between all areas of the humanities, will
appear in March 2004. Xchanges is a component of the Y/X Project of the
American Studies Program at Wayne State University and is made possible
by the Rushton Endowment. Xchanges solicits work from scholars on the
graduate level and is also eager to include exceptional papers by
upper-level undergraduate students. The editor of the journal is
Julianne Newmark and the technical editor and webmaster is Joy Burnett.
UPDATE
***Call for Papers***
Issue 3.2: Multiple Literatures in America: Hybrid, Homogeneous, or
Hegemonic?
The third open issue of Xchanges, an electronic journal focusing on
interdisciplinary exchange between all areas of the humanities, will
appear in March 2004. Xchanges is a component of the Y/X Project of the
American Studies Program at Wayne State University and is made possible
by the Rushton Endowment. Xchanges solicits work from scholars on the
graduate level and is also eager to include exceptional papers by
upper-level undergraduate students. The editor of the journal is
Julianne Newmark and the technical editor and webmaster is Joy Burnett.
UPDATE
***Call for Papers***
Issue 3.2: Multiple Literatures in America: Hybrid, Homogeneous, or
Hegemonic?
The third open issue of Xchanges, an electronic journal focusing on
interdisciplinary exchange between all areas of the humanities, will
appear in March 2004. Xchanges is a component of the Y/X Project of the
American Studies Program at Wayne State University and is made possible
by the Rushton Endowment. Xchanges solicits work from scholars on the
graduate level and is also eager to include exceptional papers by
upper-level undergraduate students. The editor of the journal is
Julianne Newmark and the technical editor and webmaster is Joy Burnett.
Call for submissions to a new refereed electronic journal, Fast Capitalism,
which addresses the impact of information and communication technologies on
self, society and culture in the 21st century. Bridging the social sciences
and humanities, the journal welcomes disciplinary and interdisciplinary
work. We anticipate posting our first number in summer or fall 2004.
Please direct submissions to Ben Agger, Department of Sociology and
Anthropology, Box 19599, University of Texas at Arlington 76019 or to
agger_at_uta.edu <mailto:agger_at_uta.edu> .
Many thanks.
Best,
Ben agger
Call for submissions to a new refereed electronic journal, Fast Capitalism,
which addresses the impact of information and communication technologies on
self, society and culture in the 21st century. Bridging the social sciences
and humanities, the journal welcomes disciplinary and interdisciplinary
work. We anticipate posting our first number in summer or fall 2004.
Please direct submissions to Ben Agger, Department of Sociology and
Anthropology, Box 19599, University of Texas at Arlington 76019 or to
agger_at_uta.edu <mailto:agger_at_uta.edu> .
Many thanks.
Best,
Ben agger
[Please disseminate]
"Admitting Impediments: The Politics of Marriage in the New Century"
Special issue of journal Discourse
seeking innovative scholarship by graduate students
http://criticalsense.berkeley.edu
deadline: 15 January 2004
Critical Sense brings a high level of theoretical sophistication to
interdisciplinary and cross-cultural dialogue. It publishes innovative and
serious scholarship by graduate students and helps nurture a new generation of
scholars doing cutting-edge work in the humanities and social sciences.
—Lydia H. Liu, Professor of Comparative Literature & Helmut F. Stern Professor
of Chinese Studies, University of Michigan
seeking innovative scholarship by graduate students
http://criticalsense.berkeley.edu
deadline: 15 January 2004
Critical Sense brings a high level of theoretical sophistication to
interdisciplinary and cross-cultural dialogue. It publishes innovative and
serious scholarship by graduate students and helps nurture a new generation of
scholars doing cutting-edge work in the humanities and social sciences.
—Lydia H. Liu, Professor of Comparative Literature & Helmut F. Stern Professor
of Chinese Studies, University of Michigan
FEMINISMO/S is a referred journal published twice a year by the Centre of
Women=92s Studies of the University of Alicante. We are now seeking for
our fourth issue (December 2004) essays on the feminist and/or gendered
historical reinterpretation and literary or theoretical representation of
memory, autobiographical experience, diaries, etc. in 20th-century
literature in English written by women as well as in non-fictional
writings. We are also keen to consider reviews on recently published books
on the above mentioned topics. Inquiries and completed manuscripts (3
copies) should be submitted to Silvia Caporale (caporale_at_ua.es) at one of
the addresses below by June 2004.
Call for Papers: The Emotional Household in Europe, 1400-1800
As part of an on-going Australian Research Council grant (2003-2007)
in History at The University of Western Australia, which explores
'Fragmented Families and Household Dynamics in Europe, 1400-1800',
the project team, Philippa Maddern, Pamela Sharpe, Susan Broomhall
and Stephanie Tarbin, is inviting papers to form part of an edited
collection of essays specifically examining affective relationships
within the household environment in Continental Europe from 1400 to
1800.
Call for Papers: The Emotional Household in Europe, 1400-1800
As part of an on-going Australian Research Council grant (2003-2007)
in History at The University of Western Australia, which explores
'Fragmented Families and Household Dynamics in Europe, 1400-1800',
the project team, Philippa Maddern, Pamela Sharpe, Susan Broomhall
and Stephanie Tarbin, is inviting papers to form part of an edited
collection of essays specifically examining affective relationships
within the household environment in Continental Europe from 1400 to
1800.
Call for Papers: The Emotional Household in Europe, 1400-1800
As part of an on-going Australian Research Council grant (2003-2007)
in History at The University of Western Australia, which explores
'Fragmented Families and Household Dynamics in Europe, 1400-1800',
the project team, Philippa Maddern, Pamela Sharpe, Susan Broomhall
and Stephanie Tarbin, is inviting papers to form part of an edited
collection of essays specifically examining affective relationships
within the household environment in Continental Europe from 1400 to
1800.
Call for Papers: The Emotional Household in Europe, 1400-1800
As part of an on-going Australian Research Council grant (2003-2007)
in History at The University of Western Australia, which explores
'Fragmented Families and Household Dynamics in Europe, 1400-1800',
the project team, Philippa Maddern, Pamela Sharpe, Susan Broomhall
and Stephanie Tarbin, is inviting papers to form part of an edited
collection of essays specifically examining affective relationships
within the household environment in Continental Europe from 1400 to
1800.
Named for the street in Camden, New Jersey, on which Whitman lived at the end
of his life, The Mickle Street Review (http://www.micklestreet.rutgers.edu/)
is an electronic journal published by the Rutgers University-Camden English
Department in cooperation with the Walt Whitman Program in American Studies at
Rutgers-Camden and the Walt Whitman House and Visitor Center.
Named for the street in Camden, New Jersey, on which Whitman lived at the end
of his life, The Mickle Street Review (http://www.micklestreet.rutgers.edu/)
is an electronic journal published by the Rutgers University-Camden English
Department in cooperation with the Walt Whitman Program in American Studies at
Rutgers-Camden and the Walt Whitman House and Visitor Center.
Named for the street in Camden, New Jersey, on which Whitman lived at the end
of his life, The Mickle Street Review (http://www.micklestreet.rutgers.edu/)
is an electronic journal published by the Rutgers University-Camden English
Department in cooperation with the Walt Whitman Program in American Studies at
Rutgers-Camden and the Walt Whitman House and Visitor Center.
The electronic peer-reviewed English Studies Forum seeks innovative
creative and critical writing. The editors of ESF want to feature engaging
critical essays, as well as truly creative and experimental
work—fiction, poetry, and nonfiction—that takes formal risks.
The editors are currently soliciting manuscripts for a forum on "Play."
This forum will explore the diverse meanings of play in our lives.
Manuscripts might examine (or enact) textual play, as well as
manifestations of games, sport, leisure, and/or laughter as part of
culture.
The electronic peer-reviewed English Studies Forum seeks innovative
creative and critical writing. The editors of ESF want to feature engaging
critical essays, as well as truly creative and experimental
work—fiction, poetry, and nonfiction—that takes formal risks.
The editors are currently soliciting manuscripts for a forum on "Play."
This forum will explore the diverse meanings of play in our lives.
Manuscripts might examine (or enact) textual play, as well as
manifestations of games, sport, leisure, and/or laughter as part of
culture.
The electronic peer-reviewed English Studies Forum seeks innovative creative and critical writing. The editors of ESF want to feature engaging critical essays, as well as truly creative and experimental work—fiction, poetry, and nonfiction—that takes formal risks.
The editors are currently soliciting manuscripts for a forum on "The Individual in War." This forum invites submissions that deal with the literature of war and its relation to the experience of individuals (rather than, say, "great men" or "troops"). Manuscripts might deal with literature, history, film, or other subjects in the humanities, where the primary focus is on how single individuals relate to war in practice or in retrospect.
The electronic peer-reviewed English Studies Forum seeks innovative creative and critical writing. The editors of ESF want to feature engaging critical essays, as well as truly creative and experimental work—fiction, poetry, and nonfiction—that takes formal risks.
The editors are currently soliciting manuscripts for a forum on "The Individual in War." This forum invites submissions that deal with the literature of war and its relation to the experience of individuals (rather than, say, "great men" or "troops"). Manuscripts might deal with literature, history, film, or other subjects in the humanities, where the primary focus is on how single individuals relate to war in practice or in retrospect.
Call for Papers
Green Letters 6
Deadline: July 23rd 2004
Focus: ‘Film – television –music’
Green Letters, the journal of ASLE-UK (the Association for the Study of
Literature and the Environment), is devoted to exploring interdisciplinary
interfaces between humans and the natural and built environment.
Articles are invited for our Autumn 2004 edition on ecocriticism and film,
television or music.
Topics may include, but are not limited to:
* A close reading of a particular text or work
* An examination of environmental representations in the work of a
particular director, screenwriter or musician
Call for Papers
Green Letters 6
Deadline: July 23rd 2004
Focus: ‘Film – television –music’
Green Letters, the journal of ASLE-UK (the Association for the Study of
Literature and the Environment), is devoted to exploring interdisciplinary
interfaces between humans and the natural and built environment.
Articles are invited for our Autumn 2004 edition on ecocriticism and film,
television or music.
Topics may include, but are not limited to:
* A close reading of a particular text or work
* An examination of environmental representations in the work of a
particular director, screenwriter or musician