all recent posts

II Jornadas Intermediales

updated: 
Monday, August 4, 2025 - 11:39am
Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Filosofía y Letras
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, August 31, 2025

6 de noviembre 2025. Formato online

 

II Jornadas Intermediales Intercátedras

Organizadas por las Cátedras de Literatura en las Artes Audiovisuales y Performáticas y de Pensamiento Audiovisual

 

Versión en inglés abajo

 

'Theory Today' workshop w/ Alberto Toscano

updated: 
Monday, August 4, 2025 - 11:38am
USC
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, September 26, 2025

‘Theory Today’ working group [USC] is organizing an Online theory workshop on the theme of contemporary fascism with one of the most insightful thinkers on the topic―Alberto Toscano. The workshop will take place on October 17, 2025 via Zoom, and will have the following schedule:

………………………………………………

October 17, 2025

Session 1 | Toscano: Contours of Contemporary Fascism [10 am to 1 pm PST]

-          Workshop session focused on reading and discussing primary texts, including Marx, Badiou, Negri, et al.

'Theory Today' workshop w/ Todd McGowan

updated: 
Monday, August 4, 2025 - 11:38am
USC
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, November 15, 2025

Theory Today [USC] is organizing a two-day theory workshop with one of the preeminent and prolific theorists of our time, Prof. Todd McGowan.  The workshop will take place on March 12-13, 2026, at the University of Southern California (Los Angeles), and will have the following schedule:

………………………………………………

Day 1 : March 12, 2026

Session 1 | McGowan: Foundations of Thinking [10 am to 1 pm]

-          Workshop session focused on reading and discussing primary texts, including Hegel, Kant, Marx, and Lacan.

What They Know: African American Cultural Productions as Resistance

updated: 
Monday, August 4, 2025 - 11:38am
LaRonda Sanders-Senu/ SAMLA 97
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, August 20, 2025

As Toni Morrison notes in Playing in the Dark, the construction of Africanist ideologies that misread and/or misrepresent Black identities is as American as apple pie. The white gaze has historically and contemporaneously controlled what is known and unknown about African Americans, just as the ingestion of Africanist ideologies has shaped how many people of the African diaspora see themselves. However, the cultural productions of African American people have frequently not only asserted the heterogeneity of African American communities, contesting Africanist collectivization, but have also affirmed ways of knowing beyond the cultural and systemic erasure of Black personhood and agency.

[Taller] Electric Marronage Call for Submissions

updated: 
Friday, August 1, 2025 - 12:52pm
[Taller] Electric Marronage | DSL
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 15, 2025

Established in 2018 and revealed in 2020, TALLER ELECTRIC MARRONAGE (EM) began when a group of Black/Latina, queer, writers, and artists decided to plot points across their escape matrix. Inspired by the petit marronage of our ancestors, we steal away on the electric platform, share our journeys and offer what we find along the way. EM now invites submissions pertaining to the key theme: “In the time of war.”

Edited collection - To Be Loved by Death: Afterlives of Anne Rice's Vampire Chronicles

updated: 
Friday, August 1, 2025 - 10:42am
Deanna Koretsky
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, October 15, 2025

With the recent and highly acclaimed AMC adaptation of Interview with the Vampire and AMC’s broader acquisition of Anne Rice’s literary corpus, The Vampire Chronicles have found renewed cultural relevance. As Season 3 enters production, we invite reexaminations of the legacy and transformation of Rice’s vampiric work across media, genres, and generations.

DEADLINE EXTENDED: Academia in Crisis: How Feminist Rhetorical Scholars Respond

updated: 
Thursday, July 31, 2025 - 4:02pm
Summer 2026 Special Issue of Peitho
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 15, 2025

Academia in Crisis: How Feminist Rhetorical Scholars Respond

Summer 2026 Special Issue of Peitho 

 

Editors: Patty Wilde, Erin Costello Wecker, and Justine Trinh

 

“What hurts? And how do we go on living while it hurts?”

–mimi khúc

 

Lonesome Dove at 40: McMurtry, Mythmaking, and the Reimagining of the American Southwest

updated: 
Thursday, July 31, 2025 - 2:26pm
Abel F. Fenwick (University of Arkansas)
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 8, 2025

Lonesome Dove at 40: McMurtry, Mythmaking, and the Reimagining of the American Southwest

A Larry McMurtry Symposium

November 14–15, 2025 Southern Methodist University | Dallas, Texas Co-Sponsored by SMU English’s Narrative Now Initative and the Clements Center for Southwest Studies

Organizers:

Dr. Christopher González
English, SMU
[ctgonzalez@smu.edu]

Dr. Ariel Ron
History, SMU
[aron@mail.smu.edu]

Abel Fenwick
English, U of Arkansas
[fenwick@uark.edu]

 

Imagining Extinction: Afterness, Fossils and Fiction

updated: 
Thursday, July 31, 2025 - 4:37am
Asijit Datta
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 15, 2025

Writing about extinction is an aporetic coming together of our current geological reality and imagination that borders on speculation. It is an act that opens up the ecological, the ontological, and simultaneously interrogates the disappearance of humans from the planetary scene. The space of imagination imagining its own annihilation is a precarious zone for the writer, one that also discharges a kind of nervousness for the reader. The crisis facing us now is how to disentangle extinction as a kind of placelessness, as empty space beyond time. How do we, as a species on the edge of the Sixth Mass Extinction, make sense of Rosi Braidotti’s statement, “‘We’ are in this together, but We are not one and the same”?

The Power of Fabulation: Myth-Making, Storytelling and Speculation as Resistance

updated: 
Tuesday, July 29, 2025 - 9:53am
Benoît Loiseau (NYU)
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Rooted in the ancient tradition of fabula, the concept of fabulation (or fonction fabulatrice) was perhaps most explicitly introduced to the modern philosophical lexicon by Henri Bergson, who described it as a “special faculty of voluntary hallucination.” It was later revisited by Gilles Deleuze, both with and without Félix Guattari, as a “speech act, an act of speech” that transgresses the boundary between the personal and the political, producing “collective utterances.”

Dalit and Adivasi Ecologies

updated: 
Tuesday, July 29, 2025 - 7:26am
Dr. Sanjeev Kumar Vishwakarma (Editor)
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, August 31, 2025

Dalit and Adivasi Ecologies:

Representations in Literature and Culture

 

Accepting Submissions for Special Issue of JMMLA: "Health in/of the Humanities"

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 3:03pm
Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 15, 2025

The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association invites submissions for a Fall 2025 issue on the theme of “Health in/of the Humanities.”

“We are healthy only to the extent that our ideas are humane.” So reads an inscription on the tomb of the fictional author Kilgore Trout in Kurt Vonnegut’s 1973 novel Breakfast of Champions. While darkly serio-comic, the novel’s exploration of how “ideas or the lack of them can cause disease” raises genuine questions about the relationship between the humanities and health that inform the theme of the fall 2025 issue of the peer-reviewed Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association.

CFP: Edited Collection on Contingent Teaching from WAC Clearinghouse

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:39pm
Precarious Pedagogy, editors Alex Evans & Bethany Hellwig
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, September 12, 2025

Dear colleagues,

 

We are excited to invite chapter proposals for a forthcoming edited collection tentatively titled Precarious Pedagogies: Teaching Praxis of the New Majority. As the title suggests, this collection will center the voices of writing instructors working off the tenure track in a variety of precarious positions, though we also invite submissions from writing program administrators and tenured/tenure-track faculty who can speak to the programmatic and institutional impacts of contingent instruction. The collection is under contract with the WAC Clearinghouse for inclusion in the Precarity and Contingency book series, due out in 2027.

Lyrics as Literature: Scholarly Perspectives on Song Lyric Craft

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:39pm
Melissa Talhelm/Southern Connecticut State University
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, October 1, 2025

The song lyric occupies little space in academia, where it is less studied, less appreciated, and perceived as less-than other kinds of writing. Despite music’s ubiquitous cultural presence, the song lyric—as creative work—suffers from what renown songwriter Jimmy Webb calls a “status problem”: songwriters do not enjoy the same standing as writers of other kinds of traditionally studied literature. The most common way that song lyrics have earned scholarly attention is by conflating the form with the poem. Goldstein’s (1969) The Poetry of Rock is one of the first books to attend to lyrics as poetry.

Narratives of Confinement: Literature, Media, and the Rise of the Prison State

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:39pm
SAMLA / South Atlantic Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 1, 2025

This panel examines the ways contemporary US American literature, film, and television texts engage with mass incarceration and even anticipate recent expansions of the US prison-industrial complex, including the rapid proliferation of ICE detention centers and the resurgence of historical carceral symbols, such as the proposed reopening of Alcatraz. As the US continues to grapple with mass incarceration, militarized policing, and the criminalization of migration, writers and creators have responded with powerful cultural texts that illuminate the racialized, gendered, and profit-driven machineries of confinement. Significantly, these texts often refuse to treat today’s carceral regime as new or exceptional.

Sustaining Public Arts & Humanities Initiatives in Dire Times (Roundtable)

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:39pm
Northeast Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

In 2025 alone, public arts and humanities organizations have faced constant and systemic threats to their funding, their missions, and their ongoing goals to provide communities with access to the arts. The Trump administration's demolition of funding to the National Endowment for the Humanities immediately harmed the ongoing projects of organizations across the country, while imperiling most of the state humanities councils across the country. More recently, the rescindment of National Endowment for the Arts grants affected the publishing missions of nonprofit, independent publishers like Graywolf and Milkweed, while also shredding the community outreach efforts of public arts, literary arts, and literacy programs across the nation.

CFP: Edited Volume on Star Wars and Politics in the Disney Era

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:38pm
Dominic J Nardi
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

This edited volume seeks to collect scholarship on the treatment of political themes and world-building in the Star Wars franchise since Disney acquired Lucasfilm in 2012. Scholars have thoroughly explored political topics in George Lucas’s works, but have paid less attention to how Star Wars projects under Disney have continued, changed, or challenged the franchise’s approach to politics. To advance the scholarship on this subject, we welcome proposals from a variety of disciplines and perspectives, including literary criticism, cultural history, political science, film studies, and fandom studies. 

 

Possible / Suggested Topics:

Material Poetics: Drafting, Duration, Form

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:38pm
Royal Holloway, University of London
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, September 10, 2025

Material Poetics: Drafting, Duration, Form

 

One-day conference at Stewart House, Russell Square.

Event date: November 5, 2025.

The conference is jointly supported by Techne and the Poetics Research Centre, Royal Holloway, University of London.

Keynote speakers: Professor Cole Swensen and Professor Jeanne Heuving 

 

CFP: Call for Papers: Walter Benjamin in Times of Crisis - NEW BENJAMIN STUDIES (Brill | Fink)

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:38pm
NEW BENJAMIN STUDIES (Brill | Fink)
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, January 31, 2026

Dear friends, colleagues, and students, 

We are excited to announce the Call for Papers for the third issue of the NEW BENJAMIN STUDIES yearbook, centred around the theme “Walter Benjamin in Times of Crisis”.

The editorial collective of NBS is pleased to welcome Anna Migliorini (Florence) and Ana María Miranda Mora (Utrecht) as guest editors for the issue. 

Call for Submissions: "THRESHOLDS" A Micro Fiction Anthology

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:38pm
Fresh Words-An International Literary Journal
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, August 25, 2025

Call for Submissions: "THRESHOLDS" A Micro Fiction Anthology

Deadline: August 25, 2025

Website: Fresh Words: An International Literary Magazine - Announcements

Submission Email: specialanthologyfreshwordsmag@gmail.com

 

We are seeking compelling micro fiction (100-200 words) that explores moments of transition, transformation, and the spaces in between for our upcoming anthology "THRESHOLDS."

Main Theme: Thresholds

Latinx Visions 2.0

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:36pm
Latinx Visions 2.0
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 1, 2025

Latinx Visions 2.0

ONE PLANET—MANY WORLDS

CALL FOR PAPERS

ONLINE CONFERENCE

November 3-7, 2025

 

Co-Organizers: Matthew David Goodwin, Cathryn Merla-Watson, Taryne Jade Taylor

 

State of the Nation Film and TV in Britain: Representations of the Social, Political, and Cultural Landscape.

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:36pm
Jon Baldwin London Metropolitan University
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 29, 2025

State of the Nation Film and TV in Britain: Representations of the Social, Political, and Cultural Landscape.

How might we illustrate, explore, and begin to define the ‘state of the nation’ film and television text? This edited collection, in collaboration with Intellect, invites consideration of these questions. We are particularly keen for considerations of contemporary nominees such as Adolescence (2025) and Mr Bates vs The Post Office (2024).

CFP: Emprical Crossings: Art, Science, and Society

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:36pm
GlobalSouth Publishing House
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Call for Papers: Empirical Crossings: Art, Science, and Society
First Issue – No Article Processing Charges (APC)

We are pleased to announce the launch of Empirical Crossings: Art, Science, and Society, an interdisciplinary journal dedicated to fostering scholarly engagement across diverse fields of knowledge. The first issue is scheduled for release next month, and we invite contributions from scholars worldwide. Early-stage researchers and doctoral students are highly welcome. Outstanding master's students' work will also be warmly welcomed to submit.     

Disney: A Companion

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:35pm
Lorna Piatti-farnell and Simon Bacon
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, January 1, 2026

The editors invite abstracts for a forthcoming edited volume entitled Disney: A Companion, which will offer a comprehensive critical exploration of The Walt Disney Company’s cultural, historical, aesthetic, political, and industrial significance. The Companion is intended for the Peter Lang Genre Fiction and Film Companion series (https://www.peterlang.com/series/gffc), and aims to bring together a wide range of interdisciplinary perspectives that interrogate Disney’s enduring legacy and its evolving role in global media and culture.

 

Roots of Change: The Power and Promise of Black Men in Education (An Anthology)

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:35pm
Dr. Emily Williams and Dr. Kendrick Johnson
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, October 15, 2025

Call for SubmissionsRoots of Change: The Power and Promise of Black Men in EducationEditors: Emily Allen Williams, Ph.D. & Kendrick Johnson, Ph.D.

 

About the Anthology

In education, we often hear that teachers are the heartbeat of our schools. But within that heartbeat, there is a specific, often overlooked rhythm—the voices of Black men who shape the minds of future generations.

Roots of Change: The Power and Promise of Black Men in Education is an anthology that seeks to amplify the diverse and powerful voices of Black male educators who have long been silenced in educational spaces.

Call for articles: GOTHIC MATERNITIES

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:35pm
West University of Timisoara/ B.A.S. Journal
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, October 1, 2025

A great number of Gothic fiction productions explicitly address themes such as gender roles and reproduction from diverse perspectives, which at times hold opposing viewpoints on certain aspects of these topics. The ability to gestate is often considered one of the key indicators of sexual difference. However, the subject of gestation and child-upbringing is not usually addressed in Gothic fiction, aside from iconic examples such as Rosemary’s Baby (1968). As Russ (2007: 25) has stated, these processes are often not described in many texts. Frequently, the women in these stories are either young and childless or middle-aged, with their children already grown and secure (ibid.).

CFP Medieval Classics (Re)Illustrated: A Medieval Comics Project Team-up (Hybrid) (9/15/2025; ICMS Kalamazoo/Online 5/14-16/2026)

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:35pm
Michael Torregrossa / Medieval Comics Project
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 15, 2025

Medieval Classics (Re)Illustrated: A Medieval Comics Project Team-up (Hybrid)

 

61st International Congress on Medieval Studies, Western Michigan University (Kalamazoo, MI), Thursday, 14 May, through Saturday, 16 May, 2026

 

Co-sponsored by Medieval Comics Project, International Arthurian Society/North American Branch, International Society for the Study of Medievalism 

 

Co-organized by Michael A. Torregrossa, Bristol Community College, and Siân Echard, University of British Columbia

 

Speculative Fiction, Alternate Epistemologies, and Pedagogy

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:35pm
South Atlantic Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 1, 2025

The affordances of speculative fiction to provide not only specific examples, but also schemas, for alternate ways of knowing and being are well known. Suvin identified the novum as the central feature of science fiction, a feature which made it possible to consider humanity not generally nor as "fixed and supernaturally determined", but rather in terms of "which [human]? in what kind of world?: and why such a [human] in such a kind of world? (10).

IVC 41: (Un)Doing Labor

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:35pm
InVisible Culture: A Journal For Visual Culture
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, October 1, 2025

For the 41st Issue, the graduate-run peer-reviewed journal Invisible Culture, housed within the Visual & Cultural Studies Program at the University of Rochester, the journal is calling for articles on the theme of labor.

Commentarium: Journal of Humanities Studies, Vol. 1 (2026)

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:34pm
Commentarium: Journal of Humanities Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, December 31, 2025

We are pleased to announce the launch of CommentariumJournal of Humanities Studies, published by the University of Madeira's Faculty of Arts and Humanities. This interdisciplinary journal focuses on the Humanities and invites contributions that bridge various academic disciplines. It will be published annually, exclusively online, and will be freely accessible through the Open Journal System platform.

The journal welcomes submissions from both domestic and international scholars and researchers in Portuguese, English, Spanish, French, and Italian, with contributions accepted on a rolling basis. Book reviews may be submitted only in Portuguese or English.

Registration and submission are now open.

 

Harper Eternal: New Inquiries on Frances E.W. Harper

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:34pm
The Frances E.W. Harper Society (currently being established)
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, August 31, 2025

Harper Eternal: New Inquiries on Frances E.W. Harper 

Frances E.W. Harper Unearthed

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:34pm
C19 Conference--"Underground"--Society of Nineteenth Century Americanists
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, August 25, 2025

 

CFP: “Frances E.W. Harper Unearthed”

 

Continuing to honor the legacy of Frances E.W. Harper’s life and foster

community around the establishment of the new Frances E.W. Harper Society,

this panel aims to unearth inquiries on lesser-known aspects of Harper’s

life and work. Considering the theme of the conference, we ask participants

to explore what is still considered “underground” in the bibliography of

Harper, and what new lines of thought are provoked in unearthing such texts

and ideas that haven’t been explored or only limitedly? What secrets are

Non-Western Aesthetics: Rhetoric, Resistance, and Representation

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:34pm
NeMLA (Northeast Modern Language Association)
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, September 26, 2025

We invite submissions for a paper panel themed “Non-Western Aesthetics: Rhetoric, Resistance, and Representation” – an exploration of aesthetics from diverse cultural perspectives, non-Western rhetorical traditions, and globalized literary theory. Our aim is to examine non-Western, non-hegemonic discourses from non-White nations that incorporate indigenous critical approaches and local theories within artistic and literary practices. We are particularly interested in South and Southeast Asian literary and cultural studies.

Broad areas of exploration may include, but are certainly not limited to, the following literary and cultural theoretical perspectives:

Crisis

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:34pm
Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, March 1, 2026

Edited by Jih-Fei Cheng, Cati Connell, and Gowri Vijayakumar

DIGITAL AMERICAS: Global Perspectives on American Narratives Online

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:34pm
International American Studies Association (IASA)
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 15, 2025

The history of literature is also the history of the evolution of the technologies used to produce, distribute, and consume it. The appearance of new technologies and media affecting traditional understandings of reading and of the object “book” is welcomed by some as the sign of literature’s inherent vitality and innovation, and perceived by others as a threat. Kathleen Fitzpatrick argues that the anxieties generated by the emergence of new digital technologies since the postwar era are rooted in the conception of the book as a symbol of a vestigial order of which literary critics and scholars consider themselves masters and protectors.

Toward a Theory of Black Affective Knowledge

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:34pm
SAMLA
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, August 20, 2025

“There is a project that I’ve had in the back of my mind for several years. Not a solo project, but one that D and I envisioned as collective and that we thought to call “The Dictionary of Untranslatable Blackness.” Our imagined Dictionary was inspired by a read one: the dictionary of Untranslatables: A Philosophical Lexicon, by Barbara Cassin [….]

Representing the unseen: India at the margins and media

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:34pm
Sister Nivedita University
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, August 15, 2025

Journalism and Mass Communication Department of Sister Nivedita University, based out of Kolkata, has put up this inter-disciplinary theme to invite research papers/articles from faculties, researchers, professionals, technocrats, and industry experts from the fields of Mass Communication, Political Science, Sociology, Psychology, English and Cultural Studies to discuss the role of media in representing the marginal voice in the contemporary society, its changing narratives and its effects on human lives. General outlines have been given above, with papers invited on topics and realms on the broader understanding of the theme and beyond the mentioned topics.

TRACKS

Entering the Zoraverse: People, Places, and Spaces

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 2:33pm
ZORA! Festival Academics Committee
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, September 5, 2025

Academic Conference - Call for Submissions - Deadline Sept. 5, 2025

Entering the Zoraverse: People, Places, and Spaces
37th Annual Zora Neale Hurston Festival™ of the Arts and Humanities (ZORA!™ Festival)
Historic Eatonville, Florida
January 29-30, 2026

ICMS ‘Indigenous turn’ Sessions on the ‘Glo(cal) Middle Ages’ and ‘Settler Medievalism’

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 1:01pm
Brenna Duperron (University of Northern British Columbia)
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 15, 2025

Brenna Duperron and Sarah LaVoy-Brunette are continuing to build the 'Indigenous turn' with some exciting panels for the 61st International Congress on Medieval Studies (May 14-16, 2026), which include:

  • “The Glo(cal) Middle Ages on Turtle Island” (hybrid panel);
  • and “Settler Medievalism: Ideology and Practice” (hybrid panel).

 

Abstract submissions due September 15, 2025 to the ICMS Confex site:

https://icms.confex.com/icms/2026/prelim.cgi

 

Anne Tyler: Celebrating Sixty Years of Her Fiction

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 1:00pm
South Atlantic Modern Language Association
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, August 31, 2025

Abstract

Anne Tyler has won the Pulitzer Prize (Breathing Lessons, 1988), the Kafka Prize (Morgan’s Passing, 1980), the National Book Critics Award (The Accidental Tourist, 1985), and been shortlisted for the Booker Prize (A Spool of Blue Thread) and while the subject of scholarship and dissertations, analysis of her work has been infrequent since the 1990s. This panel welcomes papers on any of her twenty-five novels that discuss Tyler's contribution as a modernist or postmodernist observer of the American family.

Sex in the Long Nineteenth Century 2026 Conference

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 1:00pm
Romance, Revolution and Reform Journal
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 22, 2025

Romance, Revolution and Reform Journal will host our 2026 conference on the theme of 'Sex in the Long Nineteenth Century.' The conference will take place in-person at the University of Stirling on 15th January, with keynote speaker Dr. Michael Shaw.

Edited collection: The Politics of Pregnancy in Medieval Literature

updated: 
Monday, July 28, 2025 - 12:58pm
Editors: AE Whitacre and Julie Chamberlin
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, August 31, 2025

This collection uncovers how medieval literature challenges dominant narratives of pregnancy through depictions of marginalized reproductive experiences. In the Middle Ages as today, pregnancy was both a private, embodied experience and a public metaphor shaped by law, morality, and politics. In a moment when U.S. courts cite medieval legal treatises to restrict reproductive rights, reexamining medieval narratives of pregnancy has never been more urgent. The chapters in this book explore marginalized reproductive experiences—such as caesarean section, nursing, generational trauma, and trans pregnancy—revealing how medieval texts offer alternative ways of thinking about gender politics, reproductive agency, and embodiment.

Pages