Godzilla at 70: The Giant Monster’s Legacy in Global Popular Culture
Call for Papers: "Godzilla at 70: The Giant Monster’s Legacy in Global Popular Culture"
a service provided by www.english.upenn.edu |
FAQ changelog |
Call for Papers: "Godzilla at 70: The Giant Monster’s Legacy in Global Popular Culture"
Call for papers: Chapter proposals for edited collection #TrueCrime: Digital Culture, Ethics and True Crime Audiences
Proposals due by Thursday 1st February 2024.
Call for Book Chapters on Discourse, Meaning, and Understanding
Discourse is a term that yields several meanings to academics in the human and social sciences. It is often used to describe a formal and/or informal way of text and talk, which seeks to empower some social groups and subordinate others in the social world. This definition might sound hasty at first sight in as much as discourse per se came to signify multiple forms of knowledge, systems of thought, and perhaps most important of all, the beliefs and attitudes people hold about life, death, (co)existence and the like.
Two Day ICSSR sponsored International Seminar on Myth, History and Culture organized by DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH, VASANT KANYA MAHAVIDYALAYA, ADMITTED TO THE PREVILEGES OF BANARAS HINDU UNIVERSITY, VARANASI-221010
Dates :22-23 January 2024
Sub themes:
Myths and Reality Myth and History
Mythopoeia: Myth Making and Retelling
Indian Myths, Legends and Fables
Myths and Symbols in Art and Philosophy
Psychological and Social Dimensions of Myths Myth and Film Studies
Folklores, Orality and Culture
Orient and Occident Myths: Similarities and Differences
Myth, Religion and Rituals
IMPORTANT DATES
The International David Foster Wallace Society will sponsor two panels at the 35th annual conference of the American Literature Association in Chicago on May 23-26, 2024.
We are seeking submissions related to any aspect of Wallace’s fiction or nonfiction.
Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words including name, institutional affiliation (if any), and contact information, no later than January 15, 2024 to info@dfwsociety.org . Please attach your abstract as a Word document, and indicate if you will need AV equipment. Note that scholars are limited to one presentation at this conference.
Faculty of Foreign Languages is pleased to announce that its 13th International Conference on Language and Literary Studies will be held on 24 and 25 May 2024. The topic for this edition of our annual conference is
LANGUAGE, LITERATURE, AND DIALOGUE
GITAM School of Humanities and Social Sciences (GSHS) Bengaluru is pleased to announce the organization of its first international conference, "Modernities Redefined: Perspectives from South Asia," to be held on February 22nd & 23rd, 2024, at GITAM, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India.
The relation between ethics and literature became a topic of intense academic debate at the end of the twentieth century—at a time, that is, when that relation was no longer self-evident after the challenges of postcolonial, feminist, and deconstructive critique. Humanist proponents of literature’s role as an empathy engine (Nussbaum, Rorty) entered into conversation with theorists who took inspiration from the work of Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Levinas to valorize literature as a site of singular otherness—as an occasion of ethical encounter rather than moral instruction (Attridge, Eaglestone, Miller).
Call for Nominations:
2024 SSAG Award for Best Scholarly Monograph on the American Gothic
The recently-launched Society for the Study of the American Gothic (SSAG) invites nominations for its inaugural Award for Best Scholarly Monograph. This award is open to all scholarly monographs published in the past two years that focus on some aspect of the American Gothic. The winner of the award will be announced at the Society for the Study of the American Gothic business meeting, at the American Literature Association conference in May 2024 (exact date TBA).
The Girlhood Studies Collective, in collaboration with the Department of Childhood Studies and the Gender Studies Program at Rutgers University-Camden, invite proposals for “The Mundanity of Girlhood,” a virtual symposium to be held April 4-6, 2024.
This panel invites researchers to consider how African American writers deploy humor within what critics have termed the “post-soul,” “post-Black,” “Black post-Blackness,” and “New Black Aesthetic” movements. Derek C. Maus, in Post-Soul Satire (2014), notes that the propensity for Black satirists to turn their critiques inward at the Black community rather than outwardly toward white institutions marks a key shift from ‘soul’ to ‘post-soul’ aesthetics.
Dossier CFP: Media and ‘Middling’ Cities
Mediapolis: A Journal of Cities and Culture
Editors: Lavinia Brydon (University of Kent), Bibi Burger (University of Cape Town), Janina Schupp (University of Oxford) and Sanele KaNtshingana (University of Cape Town)
International Conference
on
Climate Change and Cultural Representations: Australian and Indian Perspectives
to be organised by
Centre for Australian Studies,
The University of Burdwan
in association with
Australian Consulate-General, Kolkata
on
10-11January 2024
at
The Dept of English and Culture Studies, The University of Burdwan, Golapbag, Burdwan
Call for Papers/Presentations: Jack Williamson Lectureship at Eastern New Mexico University (ENMU)
Theme: Speculative Fiction and Society
Call for Papers: Journal of Environmental Media 6.2
Special Issue: ‘Care-ful convening: towards low carbon and inclusive knowledge sharing’
View the full call here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-environmental-media#call-for-papers
Felicity A. Nussbaum suggests that we need to formulate new critical framings about the widened eighteenth century as well as a long one. In what ways can we widen the breadth, scale, and scope of eighteenth-century studies from a global and planetary perspective? How might we come up with ways to think about the interconnectivity among ideas, cultures, and texts that “move” beyond the boundaries of the metrapole and the margin, near and distant?
Call for Papers: Choreographic Practices Volume 15 Issue 2, November 2024
View the full call here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/choreographic-practices#call-for-papers
This is an open call for Volume 15.2 of Choreographic Practices to be published in the northern autumn of 2024. We welcome submissions from around the world in which the author(s) focus on the nature and/or experience of choreographic practices, and in which these practices are clearer located in relationship with other similar or overlapping practices.
CALL FOR PAPERS
The Semiotics of Animation. From TraditionalForms to Contemporary Innovations
Special issue of Punctum. International Journal of Semiotics 10:1 (2024)
GUEST EDITORS: Maria Ilia Katsaridou & Loukia Kostopoulou
The study of animation as a semiotic system has gained significant scholarly attention
in recent years. From traditional hand-drawn animation to contemporary computergenerated
imagery (CGI) and experimental forms, animation has become a dynamic
field that offers valuable insights into how meaning is constructed and communicated.
Animation as a medium of communication relies on the manipulation of movement
Over the last number of years, Indian classical dance traditions have seen major shifts in terms of practice, pedagogy, and performance, both ‘at home’ in India and in diaspora contexts. These changes have been intensified most recently by two primary and co-related phenomena; the global adoption of specific algorithmic social media and streaming platforms, and lockdown restrictions imposed in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. What happens to the embodied physical presence on virtual platforms? How has the format of the art form been modified to fit in digital spaces? What do these transformations mean for the future of the dance forms? How are socio-political issues embedded and addressed in such spaces?
Penn State’s Center for American Literary Studies presents
AI and the Labor(s) of Writing
Friday, December 8, 2023, Noon—1:00 p.m. EST via Zoom
Register here
https://psu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_rlY0Iq8HS_S_eSJxupaJrQ
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email
Displaced Cultures: Uncovering Suppressed Narratives
Fantastical Constellations After Magical Realism research group (formerly known as Post-Magical Realist Worlds research group) of the Canadian Comparative Literature Association (CCLA) invites submissions to our session in the coming CCLA 2024 conference at the Canadian Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences.
The editors of this important volume are putting together a collection of essays on Dark (2017-2020) for publication which is currently entitled Dark Reflections. Created by Baran bo Odar and Jantje Friese, Netflix's groundbreaking German original series, Dark, premiered in 2017, and spanned three thought-provoking seasons. Set in the small town of Winden, the series revolves around the mysterious disappearance of a child and the subsequent unraveling of family secrets spanning several generations. As the story unfolds, intricate time loops and paradoxes emerge, propelling the characters into a tangled web of interconnected destinies.
The College of Arts and Humanities at Bethune-Cookman University welcomes proposals for the annual Zora Neale Hurston Conference to be held virtually on February 15-16, 2024. Hip Hop Hurston recognizes the 50th anniversary of Hip-Hop as well as Hurston’s celebration of African American vernacular and culture as a precursor to this movement.
You are invited to submit abstracts for individual or panel presentations on Hip-Hop, Zora Neale Hurston, or any of her multidisciplinary interests. Presentations can be scholarly, pedagogical, and/or creative and should not exceed 15 minutes. We are also interested in student panels.
Call for Book Chapter Proposals
Title of the Book: From World Literature to National Literature: Re-telling and Adaptation of Myths in Turkish Literature
Editor: Dr. Volkan KILIÇ
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Overview:
VPFA Study Day: ‘Silenced Voices and Erased Agencies in Victorian Life and Victorian Popular Fiction’
Online | 8&9 June 2024
Accepting Late Submissions: December 15, 2023
The Collecting and Collectibles Area of the Popular Culture Association invites papers on
“The Future Imaginary in Collecting” for the 2024 National PCA/ACA Conference to be held on March 27-30 in Chicago USA
We would especially like to encourage submissions that contribute new directions and calls to the existing scholarship on “Collecting” and particularly address how collections/collectibles imagine the future.
Possible topics for presentations include but are not limited to:
Call for Essays: Ray Bradbury: A Companion
EXTENDED DEADLINE: December 31, 2023
Even eleven years after his death, Ray Bradbury remains one of the most celebrated and significant twentieth century cultural figures. He worked in a variety of modes, genres, media, and places. His is a lasting legacy of science, fantasy, wonder, and an optimism for the future.
As part of Peter Lang’s “Companion” series, the proposed volume is a collection of essays on Ray Bradbury, his life, works and cultural impact.
The series: https://www.peterlang.com/series/gffc
This is a call for papers for an interdisciplinary conference hosted by O.P. Jindal Global University, Delhi-NCR, India [Deadline Extended]
Title of the Conference: Living in the Era of Neo-Orientalism: Complicating Muslim Identities in a Post-9/11 World
Conference dates: 3rd and 4th of February, 2024
Mode of the conference: Online
National Popular Culture Association Conference Chicago March 27-30 2024! Accepting late subissions until December 15th!