Reinventing the Western Literary Canon
Reinventing the Western Literary Canon
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Reinventing the Western Literary Canon
This proposed panel for ASA 2025 seeks scholarly papers that explore David Lynch’s work through the lens of American Empire. In keeping with the conference theme (“Late-Stage American Empire”), this panel will explore Lynch’s work in political, historical, and geographic terms, building upon and departing from the psychological framework so frequently evoked in Lynch criticism and scholarship. What can be gained from investigating Lynch’s work as a reflection and interrogation of American empire? How might his depictions of the Harkonnens in Dune, for instance, represent the global avarice of post-war America?
Call for Nominations: The Penny Pether Law & Language Scholarship Award 2024
A passionate advocate for interdisciplinary scholarship in law, literature, and language, Penelope J. Pether (1957-2013) was Professor of Law at Villanova University School of Law and former Professor of Law and Director of Legal Rhetoric at the American University Washington College of Law. Her own scholarship focused not only on law, literature, and language, but also on constitutional and comparative constitutional law; legal theory, including constitutional theory; common law legal institutions, judging practices, and professional subject formation.
This is a Call for Papers for a special issue of the online open-access double-blind peer-reviewed journal [Inter]sections,titled Laughing in the Face of Evil: Humorous Perspectives on Perpetrators in Contemporary American Literature and Popular Culture. We invite papers that ask what humor can contribute to our understanding of perpetrators by examining a selection of works from contemporary American literature and popular culture. Does humor help demythologize certain perpetrators whose international fame turned them into quasi-mythical figures? Can the ownership of humorous content about a traumatic situation or process endured by a specific marginalized community be transferred to other communities?
Call For PapersWe are pleased to invite experts, students, and researchers interested in blockchain and crypto assets to the First International deBlock Conference, which will take place in Tehran in May 2025.
2025 Meeting of the Society for Comparative Literature and the Arts
September 25-27, 2025
Embassy Suites Austin Central
Austin, TX
“Justice”
Keynote Speaker: TBA
We hereby invite proposals of original articles related to the general theme of Cultural Intertexts, an academic journal of Literature and Cultural Studies, ISSN 2393-0624, E-ISSN 2393-1078.
The editors will consider for publication papers which tackle strategies of representation and of (inter)textual construction emerging from the dialogic relation between:
- literature and the historical and cultural context of text production;
- distribution and consumption;
- literature and other arts (music, film, visual arts, etc.) or sciences (linguistics, psycholinguistics, psychology, history, sociology and political sciences, internet and new technologies, etc.);
CALL FOR PAPERS
Maps in American Literature, 15th-21st c.
International symposium
April 1-3, 2026
ENS de Lyon, France
Organized by Aurore Clavier (Université Paris Cité), Monica Manolescu (University of Strasbourg, USIAS), Julien Nègre (ENS de Lyon, IUF) and Pauline Pilote (Université Bretagne Sud).
Keynote speaker: Martin Brückner, Professor at the University of Delaware and Director of the Winterthur Program in American Material Culture (WPAMC).
Call for Book Chapters under Textxet: Studies in Comparative Literature (Scopus Indexed Book Series)
Title of the Book: In Musico-literary Contexts: Signs, Sounds, and Stories
Publisher: Brill
Deadline for Abstract Submission: 15/03/2025
Notification of Acceptance: 30/03/2025
Submission of Full Paper: 30/11/2025
Submission of Revised Papers: 20/12/2025
Editor: Barnashree Khasnobis
Contact Email: barnashree.kh@gmail.com
(What’s the story) Reunion glory?
Assessing Oasis’s legacy as Morning Glory turns 30.
Université Rennes 2 (France), 27 November 2025
Organisation committee: Aurore Caignet, Guillaume Clément, David Haigron
It is estimated that nearly 14 million people tried to get tickets for this year’s Oasis’s UK tour following the announcement of their reunion in 2024. This staggering figure echoes the band’s one-off concert at Knebworth in 1996, when 4% of the British population had applied for tickets. Such statistics confirm Oasis’s special status within British popular culture and the band’s ability to allow people to come together.
Open Panel #171: "Desperate Media"
When all else fails, we are left with desperation: extravagant recklessness, scrappy desire, a call to create new worlds through inventive forms, even as temperatures rise.
Epistolography, knowledge, and the Ancient World
Conference, University of Bucharest, October 3-4, 2025 (hybrid)
CFP deadline: February 28, 2025
The editors invite proposals for book chapters for a planned edited collection on teaching Parable of the Sower.
Each year the Hemingway Society accepts applications for its Lewis-Reynolds-Smith Founders Fellowship grant, and typically makes two awards of $1,000 each to support the development of a Hemingway-related project.
Speculative Fiction forum (guaranteed session)
MLA Call for Papers #29768
Description & Requirements:
Inviting proposals examining AI’s historical and futuristic representations in speculative fiction. How have speculative narratives anticipated, shaped, and reflected current developments in AI or imagined AIs that diverge from present realities? 250-word abstract, short cv
Submit proposals to: Rachel Haywood, Iowa State University (rhaywood@iastate.edu)
Description
We live in a world where interfaces play an increasingly central role. Interfaces are our means of engaging with both technical and social realities; gradually, they become not only conditions of access to the world of technology but also intrinsic structures of our experience. The interfaces designed by major corporations, game developers, and social application creators set standards of perception and self-awareness, disciplining us and determining the measure of control. This makes it all the more crucial to continue experimenting with interfaces, developing a new semiotic, symbolic, and bodily grammar—a challenge embraced by digital artists, gamers, science fiction writers, and neuromancers of media reality.
The Brain and the Body: the Love Affair of the Cognitive and the Corporeal
in Literature
GWU English Graduate Student Association Symposium
March 2025
Keynote Address by Dr. Evelyn Tribble
MLA Toronto (January 8-11, 2026). Both John Ruskin and William Morris decried the evil effects of industrial blight on the environment, citing the impossibility of authentic art in the context of poverty and pollution. We seek papers that treat all aspects of this topic as reflected in literature, art, and social theory: broadened definitions of art, late-Victorian and modernist responses to urban industrialism, art for the masses, eco-socialism, utopian otherworlds, and the rise of urban design. Contributions on Canadian-related and contemporary material are also welcome. Please send abstracts and a brief c. v.
For MLA in Toronto (January 8-11, 2026), we welcome contributions on Morris, his associates, and their influence in relation to material culture: the Arts and Crafts movement, the portrayal of objects and environments in literature, and the meanings ascribed to “things.” In addition to seeking new approaches to the work of Morris and his circle in the book arts, stained glass, textiles, architecture, and landscape design, we seek reevaluations of materiality and concrete symbolism within Pre-Raphaelite writings more broadly as reflective of beliefs about identity, permanence, and change. Contributions on Morrisian and Arts and Crafts-related Canadian material culture are especially welcome. Please send abstracts and a brief c. v.
The Historical Institute of the University of Wrocław, Poland (HI UWr), Depot History Centre, the International Federation for Public History, and the Commission for Public History of the Committee of Historical Sciences of the Polish Academy of Sciences invite students, PhD candidates and practitioners to participate in the eighth Public History Summer School to be held in hybrid format (on-site and on-line), 9-13 June 2025.
Family Fictions
Generations and Genealogies in European Culture
15- 17. 05. 2025, KU Leuven
Keynotes:
Prof. Stefan Willer (Humboldt University)
Prof. David Amigoni (Keele University)
Dr. Jennie Bristow (Canterbury Christ Church University)
The edited volume aims to explore the portrayal of contemporary women’s issues as depicted in Indian regional literature. The focus of the volume is to explore how cultural, social, economic, and political issues affecting women are reflected and represented across various Indian languages and regions. This book seeks to bridge the gap between literary studies and gender discourse, emphasizing how literature acts as a mirror to societal transformations and the challenges women face today. The volume will cover diverse genres, including fiction, poetry, drama, and autobiographies, while also addressing regional variations in themes and representations.
The thematic objectives of this edited volume are as follows:
Cultural Texts and Contexts in the English-Speaking World (IX)
2025 Theme: “History Claims Everybody”
Online Conference – March 28th, 2025
Hosted by the English Department of the Faculty of Letters, University of Oradea
Conference Scope
The IATIS - International Association for Translation and Intercultural Studies invites papers on “Sustainable Translation in the Age of Knowledge Extraction, Generation, and (Re)Creation” for its 8th International Conference to be held at Sultan Qaboos University, Muscat, Sultanate of Oman on December 10-13, 2025.
We would especially like to encourage submissions that contribute new directions and calls to the existing scholarship on “Translation, Speculative Justice and Sustainability in the Global South.”
2025 WOCIA Call for Workshop Proposals
Submission Deadline:Friday, February 19, 2025 at 11:59pm
Call for Papers Home: The Space We Claim March 14-16, 2025
University of Ottawa, English Graduate Student Association 2025 Conference
“Perhaps home is not a place but simply an irrevocable condition” - James Baldwin, Giovanni’s Room.
FILM REVIEWS FOR THE QUINT
The Wallace Stevens Society - International Conference: “Transnational Conversations, Partial Perspectives” (Singapore, June 2025)
Call for papers for a proposed Special Session of the 2026 MLA Annual Convention in Toronto, January 8-11
"Unpopular Shaw"
Irish dramatist Bernard Shaw was never far from controversy. This session will examine aspects of Shaw and his works that either were deeply unpopular in his own day or run contrary to majoritarian thinking today.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
abortion and contraception
censorship
education and child rearing
eugenics
dictatorship
the medical profession
marriage and divorce
prostitution
race and nationality
religion
politics and government
actors and acting
How have operas, musical plays, and individual songs reflected historical narratives, events, and individuals? We invite 250-word abstracts regarding works that dramatize, in words and music, a past that remains alive and compelling.
Submissions are welcome in an unlimited range of cultural contexts , media, and time periods (of history or composition), e.g. Philip Glass's Akhnaten, Shaina Taub's Suffs, etc.
Thie session will take place at the Modern Language Association convention in Toronto, January 9-12, 2026. Lyrica Society for Word-Music Relations is an affialiated organization of the MLA.