CFP: Iain (M.) Banks (2/28/06; collection)
Working title: Bridging fantasies: Critical responses to the writing of Iain
(M.) Banks
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Working title: Bridging fantasies: Critical responses to the writing of Iain
(M.) Banks
Dear all,
It is with great pleasure that I forward to you the following Call for
Papers for the 2006 Summer issue of Marginalia.
Very best wishes,
Mary Flannery
The Medieval Reading Group at the University of Cambridge
http://www.marginalia.co.uk
_______
'Illumination'
Dear all,
It is with great pleasure that I forward to you the following Call for
Papers for the 2006 Summer issue of Marginalia.
Very best wishes,
Mary Flannery
The Medieval Reading Group at the University of Cambridge
http://www.marginalia.co.uk
_______
'Illumination'
Dear all,
It is with great pleasure that I forward to you the following Call for
Papers for the 2006 Summer issue of Marginalia.
Very best wishes,
Mary Flannery
The Medieval Reading Group at the University of Cambridge
http://www.marginalia.co.uk
_______
'Illumination'
Working title: Bridging fantasies: Critical responses to the writing of Iain
(M.) Banks
Dear all,
It is with great pleasure that I forward to you the following Call for
Papers for the 2006 Summer issue of Marginalia.
Very best wishes,
Mary Flannery
The Medieval Reading Group at the University of Cambridge
http://www.marginalia.co.uk
_______
'Illumination'
Dear all,
It is with great pleasure that I forward to you the following Call for
Papers for the 2006 Summer issue of Marginalia.
Very best wishes,
Mary Flannery
The Medieval Reading Group at the University of Cambridge
http://www.marginalia.co.uk
_______
'Illumination'
CFP: Working Conditions: Reform & Religion in 19th Century American
Women's Writing
How did anti-Calvinist religious movements (with a new belief in progress
and human perfectability) condition reformist American literature by women
during the period 1840-1895? Of particular interest are works that exposed
and criticized industrial working conditions, such as Rebecca Harding
Davis's Life in the Iron Mills, but papers on any reformist women's
writing works from this period are welcome.
Please submit a 300-word abstract by December 15th to:
CFP: Working Conditions: Reform & Religion in 19th Century American
Women's Writing
How did anti-Calvinist religious movements (with a new belief in progress
and human perfectability) condition reformist American literature by women
during the period 1840-1895? Of particular interest are works that exposed
and criticized industrial working conditions, such as Rebecca Harding
Davis's Life in the Iron Mills, but papers on any reformist women's
writing works from this period are welcome.
Please submit a 300-word abstract by December 15th to:
Panel Proposal for:
=93Permeability and Selfhood=94=20
McGill University, Montreal=20
12th Annual Graduate Conference on Language and Literature=20
=20
Painting about Poetry, Singing about Sculpture:=20
Permeability and Rivalry in the Early Modern Arts
=93If you assert that painting is dumb poetry, then the painter may call =
poetry blind painting=85
Music is not to be regarded as other than the sister of painting=85
The poet remains far behind the painter with respect to the =
representation of corporeal things, and with respect to invisible =
things, he remains behind the musician.=94
(Leonardo, On Painting)
=20
Panel Proposal for:
=93Permeability and Selfhood=94=20
McGill University, Montreal=20
12th Annual Graduate Conference on Language and Literature=20
=20
Painting about Poetry, Singing about Sculpture:=20
Permeability and Rivalry in the Early Modern Arts
=93If you assert that painting is dumb poetry, then the painter may call =
poetry blind painting=85
Music is not to be regarded as other than the sister of painting=85
The poet remains far behind the painter with respect to the =
representation of corporeal things, and with respect to invisible =
things, he remains behind the musician.=94
(Leonardo, On Painting)
=20
CFP: Working Conditions: Reform & Religion in 19th Century American
Women's Writing
How did anti-Calvinist religious movements (with a new belief in progress
and human perfectability) condition reformist American literature by women
during the period 1840-1895? Of particular interest are works that exposed
and criticized industrial working conditions, such as Rebecca Harding
Davis's Life in the Iron Mills, but papers on any reformist women's
writing works from this period are welcome.
Please submit a 300-word abstract by December 15th to:
Modern Drama section
South Atlantic Modern Language Association (SAMLA)
November 10-12, 2006
Charlotte, NC
=20
The Drama of the Pulitzer: Winners and Losers
=20
This session will explore aspects of the competition for the Pulitzer
Prize in Drama: What does it mean for a play to win the prize? What do
the nominations (and the controversies they sometimes generate) suggest
about the nature of the American theater? We encourage a full range of
approaches to and perspectives on the topic.
=20
By March 1, 2006, send 500-word abstracts or full papers to:
=20
Rob McDonald
Department of English and Fine Arts
Virginia Military Institute
PLEASE NOTE NEW CLOSING DATE OF FEB 28, 2006
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
For an upcoming 2006-07 volume, The Journal of Bisexuality is planning
an issue on
BISEXUALITY AND FAMILY:
THEORIES AND PRACTICES IN ELECTIVE/EXPANDED
KINSHIP, AFFINITY, AND PARENTING
PLEASE NOTE NEW CLOSING DATE OF FEB 28, 2006
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
For an upcoming 2006-07 volume, The Journal of Bisexuality is planning
an issue on
BISEXUALITY AND FAMILY:
THEORIES AND PRACTICES IN ELECTIVE/EXPANDED
KINSHIP, AFFINITY, AND PARENTING
Modern Drama section
South Atlantic Modern Language Association (SAMLA)
November 10-12, 2006
Charlotte, NC
=20
The Drama of the Pulitzer: Winners and Losers
=20
This session will explore aspects of the competition for the Pulitzer
Prize in Drama: What does it mean for a play to win the prize? What do
the nominations (and the controversies they sometimes generate) suggest
about the nature of the American theater? We encourage a full range of
approaches to and perspectives on the topic.
=20
By March 1, 2006, send 500-word abstracts or full papers to:
=20
Rob McDonald
Department of English and Fine Arts
Virginia Military Institute
PLEASE NOTE NEW CLOSING DATE OF FEB 28, 2006
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
For an upcoming 2006-07 volume, The Journal of Bisexuality is planning
an issue on
BISEXUALITY AND FAMILY:
THEORIES AND PRACTICES IN ELECTIVE/EXPANDED
KINSHIP, AFFINITY, AND PARENTING
PLEASE NOTE NEW CLOSING DATE OF FEB 28, 2006
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
For an upcoming 2006-07 volume, The Journal of Bisexuality is planning
an issue on
BISEXUALITY AND FAMILY:
THEORIES AND PRACTICES IN ELECTIVE/EXPANDED
KINSHIP, AFFINITY, AND PARENTING
Call for Papers: New Directions in Children's Literature
Children's Literature Discussion Circle
South Atlantic Modern Language Association Conference
November 10th - 12th, 2006
Charlotte, NC
Possible topics include, but are not limited to, the following:
Call for Papers: New Directions in Children's Literature
Children's Literature Discussion Circle
South Atlantic Modern Language Association Conference
November 10th - 12th, 2006
Charlotte, NC
Possible topics include, but are not limited to, the following:
Call for Papers: New Directions in Children's Literature
Children's Literature Discussion Circle
South Atlantic Modern Language Association Conference
November 10th - 12th, 2006
Charlotte, NC
Possible topics include, but are not limited to, the following:
CRITICAL ESSAYS ON MEENA ALEXANDER - DEADLINE EXTENDED
Edited Collection
Abstracts of 15-20 minute papers due by March 1, 2006 to Karen Stein, WMS
Program, 315 Roosevelt Hall, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI 02881
or wmsdir_at_etal.uri.edu
Margaret Atwood: Texts and Contexts
We welcome submissions on any aspect of Atwood's work, especially her more
recent works, such as Oryx and Crake, The Penelopiad or The Blind
Assassin. Also welcome are papers about other contemporary Canadian women
writers, especially in connection with Atwood.
CRITICAL ESSAYS ON MEENA ALEXANDER - DEADLINE EXTENDED
Edited Collection
Proposals are invited for the Eudora Welty Society session at the 2006 SCMLA
Convention, 10/26/06-10/28/06 in Fort Worth. Open topic: 20-minute papers on
any aspect of Welty's work, life, or critical reception; all approaches
welcome. Email 500 word abstracts to David McWhirter at
d-mcwhirter_at_tamu.edu, or mail to 166 Sand Hill Cove Road, Narragansett, RI
02882. Deadline March 15, 2006.
CFP: Burney Society (5/31/06; 10/26/06)
Call for Papers
The Burney Society's 2006 Annual Meeting
"1814"
The Burney Society will be holding its annual meeting in Tucson, AZ on
October 26-27 , 2006. Our plenary speaker will be Margaret Anne Doody,
the John and Barbara Glynn Family Professor of Literature at the
University of Notre Dame. Professor Doody is the author of Frances
Burney: The Life in the Works and The True Story of the Novel, the
editor
of Burney's Evelina, and the co-editor of Burney's Cecilia and The
Wanderer.
This year's conference theme is "1814" -- a year that saw the exile of
Napoleon to Elba, the burning of the White House, and the end of the War
CRITICAL ESSAYS ON MEENA ALEXANDER - DEADLINE EXTENDED
Edited Collection
8th Annual Graduate Student Conference on Hispanic and Lusophone
Literatures, Cultures, and Linguistics
University of California at Santa Barbara, Department of Spanish and
Portuguese
May 12-13, 2006.
Rethinking Identity: Perspectives on Identity in Hispanic and Lusophone
Cultures.
8th Annual Graduate Student Conference on Hispanic and Lusophone
Literatures, Cultures, and Linguistics
University of California at Santa Barbara, Department of Spanish and
Portuguese
May 12-13, 2006.
Rethinking Identity: Perspectives on Identity in Hispanic and Lusophone
Cultures.
8th Annual Graduate Student Conference on Hispanic and Lusophone
Literatures, Cultures, and Linguistics
University of California at Santa Barbara, Department of Spanish and
Portuguese
May 12-13, 2006.
Rethinking Identity: Perspectives on Identity in Hispanic and Lusophone
Cultures.