“That’s for the future to say”: Eudora Welty in the 21st Century
“That’s for the future to say”: Eudora Welty in the 21st Century
Eudora Welty Society International Conference
Millsaps College, Jackson, Mississippi, April 9-13, 2025
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“That’s for the future to say”: Eudora Welty in the 21st Century
Eudora Welty Society International Conference
Millsaps College, Jackson, Mississippi, April 9-13, 2025
Call for Papers
The Good Life beyond Optimism and Pessimism:
Philosophy –– Ideology –– Affective Materialities
International Conference
University of Augsburg, 9-11 October 2025
Confirmed keynote speakers:
Joshua Foa Dienstag (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
Katrin Röder (TU Dortmund)
In 2008, the International Federation of Film Archives (FIAF) released its 70th anniversary manifesto reaffirming film’s status as the “optimal archival storage” of the moving image. “Don’t throw film away!” they urged, for unlike its digital successors, film elements tangibly embody traces of their own material history alongside a bygone cultural heritage. “No matter what technologies may emerge,” they write, existing film elements “connect us to the certainties of the past.”
#IFM2025 Resonances Conference
June 10-13, 2025, via Zoom
The 7th Interactive Film and Media Annual Conference invites you to engage with the theme "Resonances," exploring how media fosters deep, meaningful connections in our daily lives. This year’s conference delves into how personal and communal experiences shape our interactions and understanding of the world. We encourage submissions that critically engage with the theme and its subtopics, including:
Response: How do we form thoughtful responses to crises in an unstable world?
The London Arts-Based Research Centre
Women who Create: the Feminine and the Arts
A Transdisciplinary Conference
March 28-30, 2025
Where:
March 28-29: In person participation at Cambridge University & online
March 30: Fully online
Call for Papers
Cost: 185 GBP (in person)
100 GBP (Online)
Abstract: Deadline January 10, 2025
The London Arts-Based Research Centre
Modernism Remodelled 2025
A Transdisciplinary Conference
March 8-10, 2025
Where:
March 8-9: In person participation at Cambridge University & online
March 10: Fully online
Call for Papers
Cost: 185 GBP (in person)
100 GBP (Online)
Abstract: Deadline December 15, 2024
Abstract form on: https://forms.gle/9TWGPbStYzTTqEvD9
**Participants interested in attending the conference without presenting a paper are also welcome.
Crossroads of Literary Creation:
Fact, Fiction, and Everything In-between
A Transdisciplinary Conference
Online, February 5-6, 2025
Fees: 100 GBP
15% discount for LABRC members
Call for Papers:
“Fiction is the truth inside the lie” – Stephen King
“There is no doubt fiction makes a better job of the truth.” – Doris Lessing
The Function of Humour
A Transdisciplinary Conference
Conference Date: January 28-30, 2025
Format: Online Virtual Conference
Fees: £100 for non-members (excluding Eventbrite fees)
15% discount for LABRC Members
Proposal deadline: 5 December 2024
“Humor is mankind’s greatest blessing.” – Mark Twain
(Also, it’s a pretty good excuse to host an academic conference where people can laugh while learning!)
Astrology in Focus:
Navigating Art, Psyche, and Knowledge
A Transdisciplinary Conference
January 12-14, 2025
Call for Papers:
Proposal Submission Deadline: December 5, 2024
Proposal Form: https://forms.gle/cJAzkPYfKhJJNbWK7
Format: Online
Plenary Speakers: TBC
Fee: 100 GBP
“Astrology represents the sum of all the psychological knowledge of antiquity”, Carl Jung
In On Revolution, Hannah Arendt celebrated what she called “the revolutionary spirit”: a set of political principles that combines a commitment to invent new institutions with a concern for those institutions’ durability. Arendt believed that all genuine revolutions in the modern world had been inspired by the revolutionary spirit, though “the failure of thought and remembrance” had, time and again, led to its disappearance. Indeed, a focus on the act of collective foundation—and a grave worry about the disappearance of the conditions under which such founding can take place—can be found across Arendt’s oeuvre, from Origins of Totalitarianism to her writings on American politics in the 1970s.
Call for paper for a Special issue of Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies
Educators in Popular Culture: Educational Settings as Sites of Intersectional Struggle
Special Issue Editors: Jennifer Esposito and Tanja Burkhard
Popular culture is an educative space and, as such, we learn about ourselves and others
through our engagement with popular culture forms (Edwards & Esposito, 2020).
Expressions of popular culture that highlight educational settings, specifically schools and
Antonym Magazine invites contributions of English translations from any language for its quarterly print magazine and its online version in the following categories.
The magazine also invites critical essays that engage with various aspects of translations and interviews with translators.
In case you have queries please mail for clarifications.
Contributions are invited on a rolling basis. For the February issue, contributions should reach the magazine by the 30th of November 2024. Please mail contributions to submissionmag@antonymcollection.com
The Jonathan Bayliss Society invites proposals for a roundtable on American experimental fiction. Beginning at least as early as Moby-Dick, American experimental fiction flourishes in the work of Stein, Burroughs, Pynchon, Gass, and Bayliss, and continues today with such writers as Giannina Braschi, Karen Russell, Colson Whitehead, Lance Olsen, and Mark Danielewski. Such writers disrupt conventions of genre, style, syntax, diction, propriety, narrative form, page layout, and much more. We are interested in papers devoted to particular works or authors as well as more wide-ranging or theoretical approaches to the topic.
Special Issue: Reconceptualizing Sustainability Literacies
Action on behalf of life transforms…as we work to heal the earth, the earth heals us.
~ Robin Wall Kimmerer
Call for Papers
Taylor Swift & Swiftie Studies
Southwest Popular / American Culture Association (SWPACA)
46th Annual Conference, February 19-22, 2025
Marriott Albuquerque
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Proposal submission deadline: October 31, 2024
Young Researchers’ Conference on Humanities and Social Sciences-2024
Conference Date: 09.12.2024—13.12.2024
Location: Department of Humanities and Social sciences, IIEST, Shibpur
Abstract Submission Deadline: 12.11.2024
Notification of Acceptance: 19.11.2024
Submission of Full Paper: 01.12.2024
Last Date for Registration: 26.11.2024
Email Id for submission of Abstract: yrc2024.iiests@gmail.com
Food fests, feasts, and gatherings address the role of food in events, gatherings, celebrations, and ceremonies. Exploring how people incorporate ideas about food into festival culture, including history, heritage, tradition, creativity, and social and political factors.
In addition, it examines festivals in which food is not the main focus, yet contributes significantly to the atmosphere, memory, and tradition. It also looks at people's fascination with taste. In addition to examining these notions, we will also examine trends in the consumption and production of food.
Call for Submissions! The Lamp is seeking submissions for its 2025 issue (Volume 15)!
The Lamp is an international literary journal dedicated to showcasing the creative writing of graduate and professional students. If you write poetry, short fiction, scripts, creative nonfiction, or any other form of textual art, please submit your work to The Lamp at thelampeditor@gmail.com. The deadline is Sunday, 12 January 2025. Please follow our submission guidelines below.
Submission Guidelines:
Hostile Environments and Hospitable Praxes
Literary and Cultural Responses to Racial and Migratory Politics
University of Kent
23 – 24 June 2025
‘Laws try to rationalise the border regime which fundamentally ignores the humanity of those who move. Knowing this, let’s take as our root and starting position the reality that no human is illegal.’ —Leah Cowan, Border Nation: A Story of Migration
This is a call for book chapters for Orientalism after 9/11 to be published by a major publisher
Call for Papers: Special Issue of Amerikastudien/American Studies. A Quarterly
“The Cultural Politics of 1776: Rethinking an American Moment”
Guest Editors: Alexandra Hartmann (Paderborn University)
and Antonia Purk (University of Erfurt)
Deadline for abstracts: November 20, 2024
Deadline for full papers: March 31, 2025
Publication: 2026
Call for Papers for the special issue of Environment, Space, Place (University of Minnesota Press)
Indigenous ecologies and literary responses: Knowledge and rethinking sustainable development
Special issue editor: Goutam Karmakar, Durban University of Technology, South Africa
Mythology in Contemporary Culture
at the
Annual Conference of the
Popular Culture Association
New Orleans Marriott April 1-19, 2024
Call for Papers
Call for Submissions: The RAACES Review, Volume 3, Issue 1 (2025).
For our third publication (2025), our focus is international solidarity and we invite academic and creative pieces about racial empowerment, racism, racialization, Indigeneity, and anticolonial practice in any field. We welcome submissions from students (undergraduate and graduate) -- especially international students; staff; faculty of all levels; and community members. We are particularly interested in:
Call for papers: Visual Culture, Popular Culure Association 2025
An inherently interdisciplinary field, visual culture studies investigates images, media, and art in the contexts of sharing, producing, consuming, saving, and communicating. What defines visual culture, perhaps, is its resistance to definition. WJT MItchell’s (2002) landmark essay summed it up coherently when we proposed 8 “counter-theses,” two of which read as follows:
“Visual culture encourages reflection on the differences between art and non-art, visual and verbal signs, and rations between different sensory and semiotic modes.
“To be neurodivergent is to reclaim the pathologizing aspects of a long-term cognitive diagnosis and to reclaim one’s neuro-status as a possible position from which to claim resources, representation and recognition” (Stenning and Bertisldottir Rosqvist 1535).
Imagining the Impossible: International Journal for the Fantastic in Contemporary MediaCFP for Volume 4, Issue 1 (2025)Theme: Old
This international, peer-reviewed journal is dedicated to the interdisciplinary study of the fantastic in today’s entertainment media, including film, literature, television, games, comic books, animated films, theme parks, and online forums. The journal is double blind peer-reviewed and has 1-2 issues per year.
Volume 4, Issue 1: Old (Fall 2025)
*This is a hybrid interdisciplinary conference funded by the Humanities Research Centre at the University of Warwick, accompanied by potential publication opportunities.*
In A Dying Colonialism (1959), Frantz Fanon, one of the most significant thinkers on decolonisation, writes firmly:
‘There is not occupation of territory, on the one hand, and independence of persons on the other. It is the country as a whole, its history, its daily pulsation that are contested, disfigured, in the hope of a final destruction’ (p. 65).
Webs of Wonder
37th Annual English Graduate Conference
February 28, 2025
Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies (NCGS) is published three times a year—spring, fall and a specially-themed summer issue—and accepts both scholarly articles and book reviews year-round. We welcome articles of 5,000-8,000 words on gender studies and British literature, art, and culture during the long nineteenth century. Submissions should conform to the most recent MLA Handbook and must include a brief biographical note which will be posted if accepted for publication. Submissions must not have been previously published, in whole or in part, either in print or online.