2026 North Carolina A & T State University Truth and Transformation Conference
Conference Dates: June 1–2, 2026
Location: North Carolina A&T State University
Proposal Submission Deadline: April 23, 2026
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Conference Dates: June 1–2, 2026
Location: North Carolina A&T State University
Proposal Submission Deadline: April 23, 2026
The Charles Olson Society will sponsor panels at the Re-Viewing Black Mountain College Conference, to take place in Asheville, North Carolina, October 2-4. 2026 marks the Centenary of poet Robert Creeley’s birth, and the Charles Olson Society will welcome abstracts pertaining to any aspect of Creeley’s life and work. Creeley was a central poet in the development of Black Mountain Poetry, and along with his life-long friend and companion in verse, Charles Olson, Creeley greatly influenced the development of American poetics after World War II. As he said, “I write to realize the world as one has come to live in it, thus to give testament. I write to move in words, a human delight. I write when no other act is possible.”
The American Literature II: Literature after 1870 Permanent Section of the Midwest Modern Language Association (MMLA) is seeking proposals for this year’s in-person convention in Chicago, Illinois. This year’s theme for the conference is “After the Archive”; accordingly, the Permanent Section encourages presentations that focus on the notion of the archive.
Who Is This For? The Access Illusion of XR
Immersive Impact Review — Issue 2 Call for Submissions
Open Date: 4/1/26
Closing Date: 5/15/26
The Immersive Impact Review invites submissions for its second issue around the theme of “Who Is This For? The Access Illusion of XR.” The Review is an open-access publication dedicated to advancing knowledge at the intersection of immersive technologies and social good. It is published by the Immersive Experience Alliance with funding from Agog.
One of the fundamental limitations of English literature before 1800 is that in order to study this literature it must have survived to us in some form: it must have been preserved, intentionally or accidentally, in whole or in part, and usually in some form of archive. This call seeks papers that reflect on or account for the impact of this archival presence in premodern studies. How has or does the need for our texts to have been archived impact the field, whether broadly or through its effect on the understanding of a particular text, author, or genre? How does reading “after the archive” in this subfield differ from similar readings in other subfields, or from readings that do not consider the significance of the archive?
IMAGINATION, MEDIATION, & MANIFESTATION
Inaugural Graphic Medicine Europe Conference X Cross Comix
9-12 September 2026
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam & De Doelen Rotterdam
Invitation to Publish
in ACTA IASSYENSIA COMPARATIONIS no. 37 (2026)
Thematic issue:CITIES IN LITERATURE / LA VILLE DANS LA LITTÉRATURE/ ORAŞUL ÎN LITERATURĂ
The deadline for the submission of articles and book reviews (in Romanian, English, French, German, Spanish or Italian) is September 01, 2026.
The final decision of the AIC Editorial Board will be passed on before December 15, 2026.
Corrections (if required) and comments by the authors expected between December 15, 2026 and January 15, 2027.
CALL FOR FINAL CHAPTERS TO COMPLETE COLLECTION
We are now looking for chapters specifically on the work of Madeleine Miller, Pat Barker, and Jennifer Saint. Please see the full CFP below. Please send all abstracts (no more than 500 words) and short biographies to the editors by Friday 8th May 2026. The editors are: Isabelle Berrow (isabelle.berrow1@yorksj.ac.uk) Zoe Enstone (Z.Enstone@yorksj.ac.uk) and Anne-Marie Evans (A.Evans@yorksj.ac.uk)
Lyric / Narrative: Crossings, Tensions, Reconfigurations
Sixth Biennial Conference of the International Network for the Study of Lyric (INSL) University of Liège, Interdisciplinary Center for Applied Poetics (UR Traverses), June 1-3, 2027 Languages: French, English German
Workshop and Special Issue of Atlantic Studies: Global Currents
Title: “Seeds of Empire, Roots of Change: Botany and the Atlantic World.”
Location: Saint Louis University Campus, Madrid, Spain (March 11–12, 2027)
Organizers: Atlantic Studies: Global Currents, The Center for Iberian Historical Studies, and Saint Louis University, Madrid.
RAILIMAGE Conference, 1-3 April 2027, Turku, Finland
Call for Papers
Imagining Railways from 1900 to the Present: Places, People, Infrastructures, Texts
The project ‘Twentieth-Century Railway Imaginations: Building the Mobility and Infrastructural Humanities’ (RAILIMAGE) invites scholars from all backgrounds to submit paper proposals for its 2027 conference. We also warmly encourage early-career researchers to apply.
Call for Papers
SHONDALAND
Southwest Popular / American Culture Association (SWPACA)
2026 SWPACA Summer Salon
June 25-27, 2026
Virtual Conference
Submissions open on March 30, 2026
Proposal submission deadline: April 27, 2026
African writers such as Chris Abani, Teju Cole, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, NoViolet Bulawayo, Biyanvanga Wainaina, Dinaw Mengestu and many others are committed to reimagining the concept of “home” and “what it means to be African?” in the era of mass globalization and “new” diasporic belonging.
CALL FOR PAPERS
Eco-Bordering and Green Nationalism: Spatial Transformations in the South Asian Diaspora
Guest Editors:
Dr. Mansi Bose, Assistant Professor, Chandigarh University, India
&
Dr. Pratyusha Pramanik, Assistant Professor, Chandigarh University, India
Rationale
The inaugural Edinburgh Bibliographical Seminar and Workshop (EBSW) seeks proposals on the theme of ‘Catalogues and Registers as Evidence in the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology’. The event will occur at the University of Edinburgh from 20 July to 24 July, 2026, the week after the joint meeting of the History of Science Society and the European Society for the History of Science.
This call seeks proposals for 18-minute talks to be presented at the annual meeting of the Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association (PAMLA) in Seattle, Nov. 12-15, 2026.
Call for Papers: Autumn 2026: Biophilia: The Shape of the Future
Coreopsis
A Multidisciplinary Journal of the Mythic Arts
This journal accepts papers from many disciplines and is welcoming of all faiths and philosophies. We publish about 5 papers per issue that have been peer-reviewed according to academic standards. Final submissions should be 3000 to 10,000 words.
If you have a finished paper ready for submission, send it directly to coreopsisjournalofmyththeatre@gmail.com
The Spanish and Portuguese (Latin American) session is open to all papers exploring some aspects of Latin American Spanish and Portuguese literature and cultures. It is a dynamic forum for scholarly exchange, collaboration, and engagement with these interconnected regions' rich cultural heritage and diverse perspectives.
We are particularly interested in papers that touch on:
• Contemporary Literature and Culture
• Cultural Studies
• History and Culture
• Literature, Arts, and other Media
• Visual and Performing Arts
• The conference theme, "Our Ruling Classes"
Call for Papers
Biography, Autobiography, Memoir, and Personal Narrative
Southwest Popular / American Culture Association (SWPACA)
2026 SWPACA Summer Salon
June 25-27, 2026
Virtual Conference
Submissions open on March 30, 2026
Proposal submission deadline: April 27, 2026
Wildcat–the 2023 biographical film about Flannery O’Connor–is notable for its unconventional style. Rather than narrating the author’s life in a linear, straightforward fashion, the film fuses scenes from O’Connor’s fiction with events in the author’s life and the musings of her imagination. As a result, the film feels fragmented and somewhat difficult to categorize–both in terms of genre and the ultimate connection between the facts of O’Connor’s life and the purpose of her fiction. Instead, the viewer feels the influence of the author’s inner conflicts in relation to a variety of issues: Her Catholic upbringing, bodily difference and disability, and humanity’s capacity for redemption.
The 21st century has been defined by large-scale global change driven by migration, exile, border reconfigurations, political upheaval, and shifting power dynamics – all of which have profoundly shaped debates surrounding human rights, identity, culture, and belonging. Furthermore, as digital platforms collapse geographic distance and intensify new forms of surveillance, nationalism, and exclusion, diasporic subjects must navigate complex landscapes of memory, language, race, gender, and political belonging.
Time, Memory and Forgetting in the Western
Two-Day Symposium | 10–11 September 2026 | University of Essex, UK
Deadline for submissions: 30th April 2026
To submit: 250 word outlines for all submission types via email to richard.parker@uc.cl
“There will come a time when you believe everything is finished; that will be the beginning.”— Louis L’Amour, Lonely on the Mountain.
In A Midsummer Night’s Dream, the players come with their own requests (“Write me a prologue”, Botttom asks), in a hilarious example of group-working. In Hamlet, as the Prince of Denmark gets ready to take action, one of his first decisions is to appoint himself as co-writer of The Murder of Gonzago: “You could, for a need, study a speech of some dozen or sixteen lines which I would set down and insert in’t, could you not?” (2.2.5.528-30). Both examples show the nuts and bolts of early modern stage practice, in which co-writing was commonplace.
Futuring Poetic Inquiry: A Return and Renewal10th International Symposium for Poetic Inquiry (ISPI)
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
October 8-12, 2026 Proposal Submissions Due May 11, 2026To submit a proposal: Please visit the ISPI website for more information and to submit a proposal: ISPI website
ROUNDTABLE: Writing Communities in and Beyond the Classroom (PAMLA, Seattle, Nov 12-15, 2026)
Deadline for Proposals: May 15
This roundtable revisits writing as a fundamentally social, collaborative, and democratic act at a time when many writers and students experience it as isolated, pressured, and increasingly mediated by technology. Beyond offering emotional and peer support, writing communities in classrooms, online and social spaces, and professional and informal networks shape how writers see themselves, understand their audience, engage in metacognitive practices, and take creative and intellectual risks.
DEADLINE EXTENDED
“There is more savagery, more brutality, in the pages of Wuthering Heights than in any novel of the nineteenth century, and, for good measure, more beauty too, more poetry, and, what is more unusual, a complete lack of sexual emotion…” Daphne du Maurier.
Call for Papers Ecofeminist Drama: Theatre, Performance, and Ecological Futures
Edited by Douglas A. Vakoch and Işıl Şahin Gülter
Under review with the University of Illinois Press
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS
Book project: Sinners Reader: The Blues, Black Horror, and the Jim Crow South Editor, DuEwa M. Frazier (editor of Introduction to Afrofuturism: A Mixtape in Black Literature & Arts)
~Call for FULL Chapters:
Update: The manuscript is nearly finished however some planned chapters have fallen through. Replacement chapter needed in short order. Please review the details below and contact me with any questions and with your proposed chapter: maureen.fadem@gmail.com
The Routledge Companion to Toni Morrison
Editor: Maureen E. Ruprecht (Fadem), CUNY
This is a call for chapters for The Routledge Companion to Toni Morrison, a new companion volume intended for a scholarly audience, as support for newer Morrison scholars approaching their research, as well as graduate students working on Morrison.
This panel seesion for the 2026 RMMLA Conference to be held Ocober 8-10, 2026 in Ogden, Utah, seeks papers that explore all aspects of English literature of the twentieth century to present, namely proposals that look at British or ex-patriot artists and/or works by those authors whose English Commonwealth residency influenced their art since 1900. Interdisciplinary approaches to anlyses of the literature are welcome.
Global Cinema Symposium
Organized by the Harry W. Bass Jr. School of Arts, Humanities, and Technology
Nov. 13-14, 2026
In-person at the University of Texas at Dallas
Keynote Speakers:
Professor Katarzyna Marciniak, Occidental College
Professor Meta Mazaj, University of Pennsylvania
Call for Papers
Textual Bodies: Incarnation, Corporeality, and Affective Materialities through Literature
6th Meeting of Young Researchers of the SELGyC
Faculty of Philology — Complutense University of Madrid
September 16–17, 2026
«Write yourself: your body must be heard»
Hélène Cixous, The Laugh of the Medusa
«The text you write must prove to me that it desires me»
Roland Barthes, The Pleasure of the Text
Abstract
This session invites papers exploring the role of affect and emotion in contemporary world literature. Recent developments in affect theory—particularly the work of Sara Ahmed and Lauren Berlant—have emphasized how emotions circulate across individuals, communities, and cultural contexts. Literary texts offer a powerful site for examining how affect shapes narratives of identity, belonging, and social transformation within global and transnational frameworks.
Dear Friends and Colleagues,
I am seeking short (3,500-word) chapters for The Works of Joan Didion and John Gregory Dunne, which will be an edited volume dedicated to Didion and Dunne’s lives in film.
The American couple were a prolific and popular screenwriting team despite being much better known for their respective novels, memoirs, and journalism. Accordingly, the volume will take into account both their produced and many unproduced screenplays—the latter of which are held in Didion and Dunne’s papers at the New York Public Library.
The everlasting debates surrounding the relationship between literature and film as distinct mediums of artistic expression have long fascinated both philosophy and critical theory. While proponents of cinema argue that cinema is superior to other forms of artistic expression, especially literature, in the sense that it has a unique ability to engage emotions, convey abstract concepts in tangible settings, and challenge, what Gilles Deleuze might call, human “sensory-motor” perception through cinematic techniques, others might disagree by saying that cinema is inferior to literature due to its passive nature and over-reliance on immediate sensory experience rather than intellectual abstraction, which is one of the major characteristics of literature.
*EXTENDED DEADLINE FOR CHAPTER SUBMISSIONS*
Call for Papers (proposals)
CONTRIBUTION TO EDITED VOLUME (Please read the full CfP before sending a proposal)
Mediated Masculinities in European networks: Discourse and performativity in the Information Age
NEW Deadline for abstract submissions: April 10, 2026
Notifications of acceptance: March 10, 2026
Deadline for first draft after notification of acceptance: April 30, 2026
[please note the updated conference date and timeline]
National Video Games: Cultures, Industries, Communities
international conference
4–6 December 2026
University of Warsaw, Poland
Call for Papers
dialog, No. 46, Autumn 2025
dialog, a Peer-reviewed, Bi-annual International Journal of the Department of English and Cultural Studies, Panjab University, Chandigarh, India is open to submissions for its next issue, No. 46, Autumn 2025 (ISSN: 0975 - 4881) (final stages of publication). dialog provides a forum for interdisciplinary research on diverse aspects of culture, society and literature. For its 46th issue, Department of English and Cultural Studies, Panjab University specifically invites:
Deadline Extension: We are happy to announce that we continue to accept submissions until April 10, 2026. You may find further information on our website: www.thescatteredpelican.ca
Call for Book Chapters
From Page to Screen: An Examination of Comic Book to Television Adaptation
Edited by Ryan Twomey and Sebastian Sparrevohn
Throughout the history of political thought and cultural production, multitudes and mobs that stir up disturbance across the nation, whether revolutionary or reactionary, have frequently been portrayed by the images and metaphors of monstrosity. From the many-headed hydra which was adapted into a political discourse in the early modern age and later revisited by historians such as Peter Linebaugh and Marcus Rediker, to contemptuous terms toward the insurrectionists such as swarms or locusts described in Samuel Dolbee’s Locusts of Power, monstrosity and various of dehumanizing terms have long been employed as a signifier through which fears of insurrections are expressed.
this is for an in-personal panel for the Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association (PAMLA) conference (in-person only), which is taking place in Seattle, WA November 12-15, 2025.
The advancement of artificial intelligence has transformed humanities research and education, deepening computation’s influence on scholarly practice and everyday life. From the early era of “humanities computing” in the 1970s to the rise of “computational humanities” over the past decade, this trajectory highlights the enduring—and expanding—role of computation in shaping inquiry across the humanities. These intersections are especially visible in interdisciplinary work. As T. S. Eliot observes, “Immature poets imitate; mature poets steal; bad poets deface what they take, and good poets make it into something better, or at least something different.” The same spirit can illuminate how methods and tools migrate across fields.
Abstract
To be published in the world of contemporary creative writing likely means passing through one exclusive gate or another—even writers once able to make it through are losing access. What are these publishing gates, and who are their keepers? What are they trying to keep in—and out? Perhaps more productively, how might those of us who are passionate about creating a progressive, inclusive, and radical body of literature break down—or go around—or ignore those gates of exclusivity and begin to build new, ungated communities?
Description
Panel Stream: Early American Forms and Formalisms This panel stream interrogates formalism in early American literature following a postcritical turn in the field. One result of literary studies’ recent postcritical turn has been renewed attention to aesthetics, feeling, and form as essential aspects of literary analysis. In early American studies, this reassessment has taken a distinctive shape, particularly in work that foregrounds the formal and aesthetic dimensions of literary culture across the long eighteenth century — from special issues and essay collections (Looby and Weinstein; Cahill and Larkin; Pethers and Koenigs; Pethers and Couch) to monographs (Armstrong and Tennenhouse; Koenigs, Couch, Tawil, Gardner, Garrett).
Call for Papers
Taylor Swift & Swiftie Studies
Southwest Popular / American Culture Association (SWPACA)
2026 SWPACA Summer Salon
June 25-27, 2026
Virtual Conference
Submissions open on March 30, 2026
Proposal submission deadline: April 27, 2026
Prosperity Fashion
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE
9-12 February 2027
Università degli Studi di Firenze
Florence, Italy
Dowload the call for papers here https://riviste.fupress.net/index.php/fh/prosperity-fashion-2027
FellowshipsHoratio Alger Fellowship for the Study of American Popular Culture
The theme of beyond archives is an interesting one for a discipline that relies heavily on existing sometimes still only physical collections. This panel invites papers that explore any aspect of the archive in Old and Middle English literature.