Conference: Doing American Studies outside the US - now
Doing American Studies Outside the US—Now
University of Sydney, Australia
Dates: July 16–18, 2026
About the Conference
|
a service provided by www.english.upenn.edu |
FAQ changelog |
Doing American Studies Outside the US—Now
University of Sydney, Australia
Dates: July 16–18, 2026
About the Conference
Call for Papers
University of Delaware’s 5th CMCS Conference in Material Culture
April 2-3, 2027
“What’s the Matter with Description? Form, Practice, and Material Culture”
Keynote Speaker
SUSAN STEWART
(Princeton University)
2/15/26 - 4/30/26: Subs are open forIssue #9: Collaborations!We are seeking both poetry and art.There are no theme / subject restrictions.
This MLA special sessions panel invites papers on literary and cultural approaches to Los Angeles infrastructure, aimed at interrogating the political aesthetic of social, natural, and built environments. Please send a 250 word abstract and short bio.
2027 MLA Convention: January 7-10 in Los Angeles (accepted presenters must be MLA members by April 1)
We invite papers on the literature of the Arctic. Especially welcome are proposals on texts and authors that connect the Arctic to contemporary issues of extractivism, securitization, and imperialism. Please send a 250-word abstract and short bio.
2027 MLA Convention
Los Angeles, CA | January 7-10, 2027
5th IRW Theme: “Rhetorical Flows: Building Transnational Solidarities & Cultures of Resistance.”
Submission Deadline (250-word abstracts in English or Spanish): March 21, 2026
Submit here: https://tinyurl.com/IRW-Submissions
The Planning Committee for the 5th Biennial International Rhetoric Workshop invites international PhD students, emerging scholars, and established researchers to come together and consider the myriad ways that our contemporary and established traditions of rhetorical theory, pedagogy, and criticism inform global flows of meaning-making.
CALL FOR PAPERS
MODERN LANGUAGE ASSOCIATION CONVENTION
Los Angeles
JANUARY 7-10, 2027
The Ernest Hemingway Society will sponsor a panel at the upcoming MLA Conference:
Hemingway and Disability
Call for Chapters
Evident Tongues, Evident Bodies: Language, Sense, and Proof in the Early Modern World
Editors: Dr Mary Katherine Newman and Dr Rana Banna
What counted as evidence in the early modern world?
How did language itself – spoken, written, translated, or performed – shape conceptions of proof?
And how did sensory experience lend authority, or uncertainty, to what language claimed as true?
Journal of Anime and Manga Studies (JAMS) - Volume 7
Volume to be published in December of 2026
The Journal of Anime and Manga Studies (JAMS) is excited to announce the call for papers for our seventh volume, to be published December 2026.
The Journal of Anime and Manga Studies is a peer reviewed, open-access journal published by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. JAMS is dedicated to publishing scholarly works exploring anime, manga, and a broad range of related topics, such as methodologies, cosplay, fandoms, adaptations, and more. As an open-access journal, JAMS aims to reach a broad-ranging audience of scholars (both within and beyond the academy) and interested general readers.
Walls, barriers, barricades, borders are lines (real and imaginary) reified to divide, define, and contain, but there are also borderlands and border crossings which necessarily blur and defy arbitrary lines and lead to rethinking notions of belonging and belongings.
Call for Papers: Nature Remembers: War, Trauma, and Environmental Postmemory in Contemporary Anglophone Literature and Culture
War leaves lasting marks not only on people and communities, but also on the natural world that witnesses, and endures, its violence. Long after the fighting has stopped, landscapes shaped by destruction remain living archives, bearing the aftereffects of conflict: damaged forests, polluted rivers and seas, and disrupted ecosystems that continue to hold its traces. These "trauma ecologies" pass on the legacy of war from one generation to the next, forming what we call "environmental postmemory."
We are excited to share with you all on behalf of the Conference Planning Committee for the University of Connecticut First-Year Writing Program that we are holding our 21st Annual Conference on the Teaching of Writing on Thursday, April 23, and Friday, April 24, 2026, on our campus in Storrs, CT. Our theme for the upcoming conference is: “Wicked Reading for Wicked Problems." As those who have collaborated with us in the past, we are once again inviting you to help us explore ways of approaching these 'wicked problems', such as those that evade consensus, offer multiple solutions, or may even resist resolution at all.
Deadline extended
Concorde: Literary, Linguistic and Sustainability Studies International Conference
Date: 22-23 April, 2026
Venue: Department of English, Netrokona University, Netrokona, Bangladesh
Confirmed Keynote Speakers:
Professor Dr Anirudra Thapa, Central Department of English, Tribhuvan University, Nepal
Professor Dr Shamsad Mortuza, Department of English, University of Dhaka, Bangladesh
Professor Dr Shaila Sultana, Institute of Modern Languages, University of Dhaka, Bangladesh
ACCSFF ‘26
Call for Papers
The 2026 Academic Conference on Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy will be held Saturday and Sunday, May 30-31, 2026, in Toronto, Ontario, at York University, Canada.
This year's author GoH keynote speaker is the Nebula Award winning Premee Mohamed.
We invite proposals for papers in any area of Canadian science fiction and fantasy, including:
-studies of individual works and authors;
-comparative studies;
-studies that place works in their literary and/or
cultural contexts.
Faculty Development Programme (Online)
Translation Studies in the Digital Age: Theory and Praxis
Department of Humanities, School of Liberal Studies
KIIT Deemed to be University (India)
March 9–13, 2026
JAMS@AX26
Want to present your work at the one-and-only Anime Expo? The Journal of Anime and Manga Studies(JAMS) and Anime Expo have once-again teamed up to give you the JAMS@AX26 academic symposium, July 2-5, 2026 at the Los Angeles Convention Center. This symposium presents an incredible opportunity to connect fans of all ages directly to scholars researching and writing about the medium we all love.
The JAMS@AX26 welcomes all papers taking a scholarly perspective on anime, manga, cosplay, and their fandoms.
Current Keywords in Digital Literary Culture: “Slop” and “Nostalgia”
May 14th, 2026
Virtual Mini-Conference
DLC+ is excited to announce the second installment of its Current Keywords in Digital Literary Culture series, mini-conferences devoted to studying the most pressing and emerging concepts actively shaping digital literary culture.
Concept Note
South Asia in Transition: A Literary Cartography
The Faerie Queene confronts its characters and readers alike with perceptual, cognitive, and physical struggles, and the reader’s passage through Spenser’s monumental work is as arduous and seemingly unending as the journeys and quests of its knights. The parallels between the characters’ trials and the readers’ embodied experience of the poem become more pronounced when The Faerie Queene is read out loud in its entirety. In 2019, the English department at Tampere University organised its first marathon reading of Spenser’s epic romance. The 2026 iteration will be the sixth marathon reading overall, and the second to be attached to an international symposium.
Literary Representations of Co-Existence
Conference location: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Split, Croatia
Keynote speakers: Mark Bould (University of the West of England Bristol) in-person
Dinesh Wadiwel (University of Sydney) online
Conference dates: Sept 3-5, 2026
Conference fee: 75 Euros for the fully employed, 50 Euros for students and those not fully employed
Send abstracts of 200 words, and a short biography, to bwillems@ffst.hr by May 1, 2026
One response to the official archives’ violent erasure(s) of multiethnic subjects (and the associated literatures) in the US has been scholarly investment in digital archiving. Still, the digital archives (and/or the metadata culled from them) can–and often do–reify whiteness as normative and the marginalization of other Americans. MELUS invites papers that consider how digital archiving (re)shapes and/or supports lay communities that inform the literature of the marginalized. We are particularly interested in papers that address how practices of liberatory archiving resist objectification of multiethnic subjects and/or authors. Submit titled proposals (250 words), a brief CV, and AV needs.
Ruralities, Artistic Ecologies and Sustainable Futures
Revista de Estudios Globales y Arte Contemporáneo (REG|AC), Vol. 12 (2026)
UNIVERSITAT DE BARCELONA (UB)
Guest editors: Anna Maria Guasch, Julia Ramírez-Blanco and Olga Sureda
Seeking folks for our CFP below. Please email Dana Ahern (dtahern@usf.edu) and SJ Dillon (sjdillo@emory.edu).
Apologies for crossposting.
Call for Papers: Journal of Digital Media & Policy (JDMP)
#JDMPJournal
Special Issue: ‘Video streaming policy and genre on demand’
Guest Editors: Jessica Balanzategui, Andrew Lynch and Alexa Scarlata
View the full call here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-digital-media-policy#call-for-papers
Shakespeare’s works continue to inhabit what Stephen Greenblatt calls a “circulating energy system,” an ever-renewing sphere in which texts, performances, and interpretations travel across borders and epochs, sustaining the playwright’s presence in world culture. Tiffany Stern’s seminal research further reminds us that Shakespeare should be understood not as a fixed authorial entity but as an ongoing “process”—a dynamic constellation of scripts, fragmentary documents, performance traces, and editorial interventions that resist the notion of a stable text.
Memory, Myth, and Meaning: Cather in Dialogue with America 250
Willa Cather Spring Conference | Thursday, June 4 - Saturday, June 6, 2026
This year marks the centennial of My Mortal Enemy, one of Cather’s least affirmative works and one not produced in the Cather Scholarly Edition (translation: much important work remains to be done!) We invite papers on new approaches to My Mortal Enemy, including but not limited to the following considerations of style, form, provenance, and themes:
2026 Wenshan x TSA International Conference Call for Papers
Hosted by: NCCU Department of English, Taiwan Shakespeare Association
Date: November 29, 2026
Venue: National Chengchi University
Shakespeare Across Centuries:
Reception, Resonance, and Reinvention
Shakespeare’s works continue to inhabit what Stephen Greenblatt calls a “circulating
The Incredible Nineteenth Century: Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Fairy Tale will host its fourth annual conference via Zoom May 1-2. This conference is completely free. We will be accepting proposals for presentations through April 4th.
Call for Proposals
MLA 2027 (Los Angeles)
Special Session
We are proposing a special session for the 2027 MLA Convention in Los Angeles on "Edited Collections: Tips and Tricks to Successful Publishing." This special session will be a roundtable featuring six presenters with the following format:
CALL FOR PAPERS
Papers are invited for the 18th and 19th issues of the peer-reviewed journal of bi-annual frequency: TRIVIUM A Multi disciplinary Journal of Humanities of Chandernagore College. The scope of the journal includes humanities and social sciences, commerce and management without mathematical application.
Guidelines for Submission
MLA 2027 – Early American and Sexuality Studies Forum
“The Body Before Sex”
This collaborative panel by the Early American LLC and Sexuality Studies TC of the Modern Language Association aims to bring forward trans, environmental, and affect methodologies to consider the historically and culturally specific ways the body and sex intersect and depart. We are particularly interested in papers that stretch and transgress temporal and spatial domains, offering critical juxtapositions that reexamine the materialities and temporalities that make visible the body before it becomes associated with, and attached to, sex.
Global Music History and Northern Europe in the 18th and 19th Centuries
University of Copenhagen, 15–16 May 2026
Deadline for proposals: 15 Feb. 2026
We invite proposals for papers exploring global music histories connected to Northern Europe in the long 18th and 19thcenturies.
This session will be devoted to academic novels and academic administration. Panelists will consider what these novels (as well as television and films centered in academia) have to say about how higher education institutions are run, and what we might learn about how—and how not—to run them. Equally interested in literary studies (genre, form, representation) and Critical University Studies (history, politics, current events).
Stories and histories of power, 24-25 Septembre 2026.
Confirmed Keynote speaker : Peter Boxall
Based on the premise that any account is the result of a re-ordered selection in facts which is the mark of the power of the author and/or the institution or cultural group they stand for., this conference will examine factual and fictional narratives of power in the English-speaking world.
CFP for MLA 2027 (7-10 January, 2027), Los Angeles: Guaranteed ACIS Panel
Emancipations in Irish Literature and Culture
While Los Angeles has regularly been called the “City of Angels,” historian Kelly Lytle Hernández has argued that a more appropriate epithet would be the “City of Inmates,” as Los Angeles has historically been a site for innovations in imprisonment, surveilling, policing, and oppressing various communities for their race, ethnicity, class status, sexuality, and other out-group identifications. Literature and cinema have long been fertile sites for examining the ramifications of police- and prison-centric ideologies within American society and culture, particularly for a city that defined itself by cinema.
Fat has been ever-present in public imagination in various forms. Fat is perceived as a
public enemy and “demonized in medicine and public policy” (Blank 2020). It is “adored by chefs
and nutritional faddists, desired and abhorred when it comes to sex, and continually courted by a
multi-billion-dollar fitness and weight-loss industry” (Blank 2020). Yet, ‘Fat’ as an area of
academic research has remained remarkably underdeveloped in the Humanities and Social
Sciences domain. Only recently, it has emerged as a vibrant interdisciplinary field that interrogates
The International Vladimir Nabokov Society seeks paper proposals for presentations on the following themes for the Modern Language Association’s Annual Convention (January 7-10, 2027, Los Angeles):
Nabokov, Freedom, and Anti-Authoritarianism
The International Vladimir Nabokov Society seeks paper proposals for presentations on the following themes for the Modern Language Association’s Annual Convention (January 7-10, 2027, Los Angeles):
Nabokov in the ‘70s / Nabokov’s Afterlife
Call for ChaptersInvoking History: Power, Bodies, BDSM
Edited Volume (proposed for Routledge)
About the Volume
Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts (FAMU) Prague, Czech Republic
August 20–21, 2026
Call for Papers Deadline for proposals: April 1, 2026
Conference Directors: Petra Dominková (FAMU, Prague, Czech Republic), Thomas Ballhausen (Inter-University Organization Arts & Knowledges + Mozarteum University Salzburg, Austria)
Multiple Marginalities: Intersectional Resistance(s) in Canadian Comics/Graphic Novels
A special issue of Studies in Canadian Literature
Venues:
INHA – Institut National d’Histoire de l’Art
Académie du Climat
Université Paris 8 | Vincennes – Saint-Denis
Proposals should be sent to: extractivisms2@gmail.com before 30/03/2026
Organising Committee: LAE Network (Literatures, Arts, Extractivisms):
Christian Alonso, University of Lleida
David Castañer, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
Fortunata Calabro, University of Barcelona
Christian Galdón, École Polytechnique, Paris 8
Alessia Gervasone, University of Barcelona
Benoît Turquety, Université Paris 8
Book Chapters on African and Australian Women, 500-1500.
We invite additional submissions for Lands of the Lost, an edited collection that explores extinct animal parks real, imagined, unrealized, or yet to be. Our goal is to bring together multi-disciplinary perspectives to examine parks across time and space, across fact and fiction. We seek to understand how these projects, which reconstitute and enclose long-extinct life forms, intersect with histories of science, capitalism, imperialism, environmental change, and more.
Irish Studies: Legacies and Futures
Special Issue 3/2026
Studia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai Philologia
Guest editors
Brian Ó Conchubhair (University of Notre Dame) boconch1@nd.edu
The Margaret Atwood Society invites paper proposals for an online panel on testimony and resistance in Margaret Atwood’s work. In keeping with the MLA 2027 presidential theme, this panel welcomes papers that examine how Atwood’s narratives represent coercion and constraint while also tracing the risk and agency at stake in claiming liberatory space. Possible topics include but are not limited to:
• Testimony, witnessing, and the politics of voice
• Surveillance, secrecy, confession, and the archive
• Gendered power, reproductive politics, and bodily autonomy
• Critical reception and adaptation
The Margaret Atwood Society invites paper proposals for an online panel focusing on how Atwood’s writing engages religious and spiritual practices and the supernatural. We welcome proposals that consider how Atwood’s works mobilize the sacred, the ritual, the metaphysical, and/or the ghostly as vehicles for meaning-making, ethical reflection, and narrative strategy. Possible topics include but are not limited to:
· Religion as ideology
· Spirituality and folk belief outside institutional frameworks
· Myth, ritual, and cosmology
· Scriptural and prophetic discursive modes
· Haunting, spectrality, and divided subjectivity