all recent posts

Sally Rooney: Her Novels

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
Northeast Modern Language Assocation (NeMLA)
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

This NeMLA session critically discusses the novels of Sally Rooney. We will ask: is Rooney's oeuvre a critique, a snapshot, a suggestion, or a warning about a way forward for fiction, the novel form, feminism, and contemporary culture?

View full CFP here: https://cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/21883

 

Modality:

In Person Only: The session will be held fully in person at the hotel. No remote presentations will be included.

 

Questions/Comments:

Contact Kimberlyjcoates@gmail.com

Feeling the Nation: Emotion, Identity, and Memory in Literature and Media

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:41am
NeMLA 2026
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

What does it mean to experience national belonging through emotion? This session brings together papers that consider the layered connections among feeling, identity, and cultural memory as they unfold across literature and media. In periods marked by rupture or transformation, emotion often anchors or unsettles the stories through which nations come to know themselves. Heritage dramas steeped in nostalgia, literary depictions of estrangement, and audiovisual forms of cultural longing all point to this dynamic. National identity, in these works, emerges not as a fixed concept but as a lived and felt experience.

Creative Explorations of the Post-Industrial City: (Re)generations of the Rust Belt

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:40am
Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA) Conference 2026
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

This year’s conference theme and location offer timely opportunities for creative engagement with the post-industrial city and (re)generations of the so-called “Rust Belt.” This session will enable participants to read/present and discuss original creative short-form work crafting and exploring narratives, concepts, identities, images, locations, perspectives, and/or experiences of the Rust Belt, a term coined in the 1980s to describe the decline of industries (particularly large-scale blue-collar production and manufacturing) and resultant economic decline and decay.

The Minotaur: From Antiquity to Today

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:40am
North East Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

The Minotaur and the Labyrinth from multidisciplinary perspectives, specifically on how the symbol of the Minotaur and the Labyrinth has been used from antiquity to now. How has the Minotaur been used, or abused, throughout time? How has the mythology surrounding it been used to generate or regenerate cultural structures? Referencing Jeffrey Jerome Cohen’s Monster Culture, what does the Minotaur reveal about the cultures he exists within?

Poetics of Embedded Narratives and Images in the Literature and Arts of the English-speaking World: Moving Borders

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:40am
University of Pau (France)
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 15, 2025

Poetics of Embedded Narratives and Images in the Literature and Arts of the English-speaking World: Moving Borders

Université de Pau et des Pays de l’Adour (July 2-3, 2026)

 

Organisers: Françoise Buisson, Fabienne Gaspari and Arnaud Schmitt 

(ALTER, UR 7504)

 

Europe from Its Margins: Toward Alternative Visions of the West

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:39am
NeMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, September 26, 2025

Since its tangential emergence in Said’s Orientalism in 1978, the term Occidentalism accrued multiple significations. Most notably, the term is argued to stage a counter- or reverse-discourse of Orientalism, operating on analogous dichotomic and oppositional paradigms. Most notable, in this context, is Ian Buruma and Avishai Margalit’s Occidentalism: The West in the Eyes of Its Enemies, which labels Occidentalism as “dehumanizing picture of the West painted by its enemies” (5). This panel queries if we can conceive East-West relations differently, apart from the Orientalist logic that inheres in studies of Occidentalism.

Special Issue: Apocalypse and the Biopolitics of Time

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:37am
Käte Hamburger Centre for Apocalyptic and Post-Apocalyptic Studies (CAPAS) at Heidelberg University
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, September 20, 2025

Link: https://heiup.uni-heidelberg.de/journals/apocalyptica/cfpsi

 

Apocalyptica is an international, interdisciplinary, open-access, double-blind peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Käte Hamburger Centre for Apocalyptic and Post-Apocalyptic Studies (CAPAS) at Heidelberg University.

Deconstructing Knowledge Derived from the Gendered Lens of AI

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:37am
SAMLA 2025 (Special Session)
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, July 10, 2025

Generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) is already recasting numerous aspects of human life. By all accounts, AI has an intense and manifold impact on society, incorporating both positive and negative traits. This session aims to explore how the gendered lens of AI is creating disruptions both for the academic field and the society at large. This panel invites educators, scholars, and researchers to critically investigate the consequences of gendered biases projected through AI stratification. Papers which explore the conference theme (Knowledge) and connect to knowledge production through the gendered lens of AI are especially welcome.

Edited collection: Entanglements: Place-Based Literatures for Ecological Liberation

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:35am
Dr. Gayathri Goel (Boston College) & Dr. Jennifer Horwitz (RISD)
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 15, 2025

Please submit a 300-word abstract for an edited collection, tentatively titled, Entanglements: Place-Based Literatures for Ecological Liberation

Please read the CFP below for details about the collection. We are expanding our search to include diverse geographies including South America, African countries, the Caribbean, the Middle East, Pacific Islands, and South East Asian countries. In addition to a “place” framework, we welcome diverse theoretical approaches and lenses including ones that apply Marxism, feminism, postcolonialism, New Materialism, indigeneity, critical race, nonhumanism, among others.

 

Pilgrimage, Liberation, and Flux: The (Re)Generated Reader

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:33am
Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA)
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

In her 1981 study of surrealist poetry, The Metapoetics of the Passage, Mary Ann Caws considers the capacity of poetic language to simultaneously arrest itself and enable forward movement: "The word is situated, as Jacques Garelli reminds us, between two deaths, so that each cluster of sounds located within this regenerating rhythm is able to resume its impetus, thus refreshed, as if it were starting again." It is the practice of architextural reading, Caws argues, that reveals the sustained surface tension at work in written texts, a tension often concealed beneath plot, message, the presence of characters, or particularly potent visual images.

Pedagogies of Archetypes: A Roundtable on Teaching the Inner Curriculum

updated: 
Tuesday, June 17, 2025 - 9:30am
Mussarat Shahid/ NeMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Category: Pedagogy & Professional 

Session Type: Roundtable

Modality: F2F/ In-person, only

As educators navigate increasingly complex and emotionally demanding teaching landscapes, the question of ‘who we are when we teach’ becomes as important as what or how we teach’ This roundtable invites participants into a collaborative exploration of pedagogies of archetypes: the idea that teaching is guided not only by rational methods and explicit beliefs, but also by symbolic, emotional, and archetypal energies.

Pages