CFP: Werner Herzog’s Life as a Film Director: A Multidisciplinary Collection Proposals due October 1, 2025
CFP: Werner Herzog’s Life as a Film Director: A Multidisciplinary Collection
Proposals due October 1, 2025
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CFP: Werner Herzog’s Life as a Film Director: A Multidisciplinary Collection
Proposals due October 1, 2025
OVERVIEW:
This CFP is now live on the Journal of Postcolonial Writing website.
Blue Humanities and the Indian Ocean: South Asian Literary and Cultural Representations
“SRK 2.0: The Comeback”
Editors: Rudrani Gangopadhyay, Niyati Bhat, Souraj Dutta
We are pleased to announce the launch of Commentarium: Journal 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.
Call for Book Chapters
African Literature and the Resilience of Love: Indigenous Intimacies as Resistance in Historical and Global Contexts
Editor: Azzeddine Tajjiou
Submission Email: africanliteratureandlovebook@gmail.com
Harper Eternal: New Inquiries on Frances E.W. Harper
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
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:
Edited by Jih-Fei Cheng, Cati Connell, and Gowri Vijayakumar
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.
“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 [….]
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
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
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:
Abstract submissions due September 15, 2025 to the ICMS Confex site:
https://icms.confex.com/icms/2026/prelim.cgi
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.
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.
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.
CALL FOR CHAPTERS
Considering Empathy: Critical Approaches across Disciplines
Co-edited by Diana Ashe and Beverley McGuire (UNCW)
Project Description
We invite contributions for an edited collection addressing the current debate over the role and meaning of empathy in contemporary life. While empathy was once studied primarily by psychologists and ethicists, societal shifts and thought leaders have brought empathy to the foreground of fields like politics, technology, public health, rhetoric, environmental studies, business, international studies, sociology, literary and language studies, education, and more.
You Are What You (Don't) Read: Vegetarian and Vegan Characters in Literature
Dear colleagues,We are delighted to invite proposals for the Ninth International Conference on Literary Juvenilia, to be held at Valparaiso University from April 16–18, 2026. This year’s theme, Youth Writers and Their Worlds, calls on scholars to explore the various ways young people have imagined, questioned, and shaped their worlds through writing.We welcome papers that engage with youth-authored texts—published or private, written or visual—and encourage approaches that foreground the material, cultural, and imaginative contexts of juvenile literary and cultural production. Topics may include, but are not limited to:
Poetry Off the Page: International Advances in Poetry Performance Research is an open access peer-reviewed digital collection featuring new work in poetry performance research from around the globe. It attends to diverse aspects, geographies, and constituents of contemporary poetry performance cultures and the flows between them, and showcases a range of approaches to spoken poetry.
Call for Papers
Medievalisms in Time and Space
The International Society for the Study of Medievalism Annual Conference
Fully Online
November 14th and 15th, 2025
Hosted by Anita Obermeier at the University of New Mexico
We welcome submissions considering aspects of Medievalisms in Time (any temporalities or relationships between them) and Space (inner spaces, Outer Space and outer spaces, contested spaces, geographies real and imagined, trans-temporalities); Trans-medievalisms of all kinds (such as transgender medievalisms, transformative medievalisms, transgressive medievalisms).
EXTENDED DEADLINE: September 15, 2025
November 6-7, 2025
Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu, as part of the FORTHEM Alliance, invites scholars, researchers, and practitioners to submit proposals for the upcoming Cultural Heritage Lab International Conference, dedicated to exploring cultural heritage within, across, and beyond the European Union’s borders. This year’s theme investigates the dynamics of intercultural, interethnic, and social interactions—especially in regions where boundaries (geographical, political, linguistic, or symbolic) are fluid and contested.
The editorial staff of Penumbra is excited to announce our journal’s first annual chap book competition for poets seeking to publish a collection of original works while enjoying some friendly literary rivalry. Contest winners will receive a cash prize and have their collection of poems published in a unique and beautifully crafted chap book manufactured by Penumbra Press. We are therefore soliciting submissions from poets of all backgrounds and levels of experience. Even if you’ve never published a poem before, we are eager for the opportunity to consider your work!
The CEMORY project team at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków (Centre for Comparative Studies of Civilisations) invites Participants to join the "Forgotten Voices. Holocaust Memories Through the Perspective of Minorities" International Conference. The "Forgotten voices. Holocaust Memories Through the Perspective of Minorities" International Conference is organised under the auspices of the “Central European Memory of the Holocaust in a Multicultural and Multidimensional Perspective” [CEMORY] project funded by the Citizens, Equality, Rights and Values Programme (CERV). "Forgotten Voices" Conference, vol.
Mary Jacobs Memorial Essay Prize 2026
The Sylvia Townsend Warner Society is pleased to announce the Mary Jacobs Memorial Essay Prize 2026. The aim of the Prize is to encourage further study of the writings of Sylvia Townsend Warner, in honour of the distinguished work of Dr Mary Jacobs.
Call for Chapters
Edited Volume (Tentative Title): " A Culinary Odyssey: Discovering the Rich Culinary Landscape of South Asia"
Editors: Dr. Chitra Krishnan, Ms. Tias Maity
Abstract:
Call For Proposals AMERICAN NIGHTMARES II: RETURN TO SALEMTHE BIENNIAL SYMPOSIUM OF THE SOCIETY FOR THE STUDY OF THE AMERICAN GOTHIC March 19th – 21st, 2026Salem, Massachusetts Keynote Speaker: Victor LavalleKeynote Speaker: Siân Silyn Roberts Conference co-director: Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock, Central Michigan UniversityConference co-director: Jennifer Schell, University of Alaska FairbanksWith the kind support of the American Literature Association Please join the Society for the Study of the American Gothic for our second biennial symposium!
Call for Panelists: “Topics in Amateur Surveillance: Histories, Technologies, Usages
Lolly Willowes at 100: Sylvia Townsend Warner, Religion, and the Supernatural
IAS Common Ground, University College London, 29-30 May 2026
‘She, Laura Willowes, in England, in the year 1922, had entered into a compact with the Devil. The compact was made, and affirmed, and sealed with the round red seal of her blood’.
It is our conviction that existing models of criticism privilege and sustain prevailing hegemonies—and thus that critical form is in urgent need of intervention and innovation.
— Jenny Cookson and Emma Gomis
Deadline Approaching NORTHEAST POPULAR CULTURE ASSOCIATION, Virtual, October 9 to October 11, 2025 AREA: ROMANCE/POPULAR ROMANCE FICTION Deadline: Tuesday, July 31st by 5pm EST
Contact email: Wendy Wagner wwagner@jwu.edu
The Northeast Popular Culture Association (NEPCA) will host its 2025 annual conference this fall as a virtual conference from Thursday, October 9th, to Saturday, October 11th, 2025.
This panel explores the potential convergences between 1960s psychedelia and medieval material culture, including surreal imagery, animation, bright colors, and the cross-pollination of disparate media attempting to evoke a hallucinogenic or heightened response in the viewer.
Using examples from various national literatures, we would like to investigate the key concepts behind a “faithful translation”: what are the obligations of the translator to the source text, and what is the relationship between the original and the translation? Papers focusing on self-translations done by bilingual authors are also welcome. Please submit your abstract through the official Nemla portal only at https://cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/21947
You don't have to be a member but oyu need to create a free account first.
With the theme of (Re)generation in mind, this roundtable explores 21st-century cultural products created by women in Transatlantic and Latinx contexts. The works of prominent authors and filmmakers of our era (María Fernanda Ampuero, Liliana Colanzi, Mariana Enríquez, Belén Gopegui, Angélica Gorodischer, Rita Indiana, Carmen Maria Machado, Sara Mesa, Guadalupe Nettel, Mónica Ojeda, Anita Rocha da Silveira, Samatha Schweblin, to name a few...) reveal that women are still marginalized and disregarded within their societies. Still, despite the unsettling tone that often characterizes these works, they also offer bridges to more equitable realities made possible by powerful feminist coalitions and unconventional alliances.
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:
Hemingway in Toronto
July 20-25 2026 | Toronto, Canada
The Hemingway Society invites proposals for the 21st International Hemingway Conference, exploring Hemingway’s ties to Toronto and his broader literary legacy.
Toronto was a pivotal stop in Hemingway’s early career—a place where he honed his craft as a journalist, earned his first bylines at The Toronto Star, and briefly settled to welcome his first child in 1923. The 2026 conference offers an opportunity to revisit these formative years and discuss Hemingway’s impact from multiple perspectives.
The 2025 Northeast Popular Culture Association (NEPCA) will host its annual conference this fall as a virtual conference from Thursday, October 9th, to Saturday, October 11th, 2025.
This area probes North American and international intersections between sports, society, and culture. Among the topics welcomed are those probing:
(Neo)Colonial Images and Literature: The Construction of the Other
KEYNOTE SPEAKER: Dr. Aristoteles Barcelos Neto (University of East Anglia)
May 30th, 2026 (Saturday).
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
Abstracts of no more than 300 words should be submitted between July 7th, 2025, and October 15th, 2025.
Please include a short biography (100 words) and institutional affiliation with your submission.
Approved abstracts will be informed by December 2025.
This panel will trace the connections between production, reproduction, and world-making in twentieth and twenty-first century literary, cinematic, legal, and medical texts. Scholars of biopolitics, nationalism, and reproduction such as Tanika Sarkar, Banu Subramaniam, and Kalindi Vora have noted that reproduction is fundamentally a postcolonial problem in that it sheds light on the anxieties entrenched in imperial and postcolonial nationalisms. That said, when seen from the perspectives of capital, labor, and affect, we know that reproduction happens in quiet and banal fashions—reproduction of feelings, of habits, of desires, of work, of cultures, and of ideas.
CALL FOR PAPERS: Man-Hating in Cinema, Literature, Media, and Society Editors Gilad Padva, scholar in cinema, culture, men's studies, and queer theory Yair Koren Maimon, Chair of the Department of Literature, GordonAcademic College When a legitimate and crucial criticism of patriarchy is transformedinto a bigoted, ruthless misandry/man-hating? When resistance toandrocentric systems that focus on men's interests stimulatesgynocentric attitudes that disrespect, misrepresent, and diminish men'shuman dignity? How does resistance to the objectification of women'sbodies involve mocking and grotesque representations of men's bodiesand, particularly, their genitalia?
The Text, an International Peer Reviewed Online Journal of Language, Literature and Critical Theory (ISSN: 2581-9526)invites original, unpublished research papers for January 2026 issue.
Indexed in:
1. ERIH PLUS (European Reference Index for the Humanities and Social Sciences)
2. IAMCR (International Association for Media and Communication Research)
3. Citefactor (Directory Indexing of International Research Journals)
4. DRJI (The Directory of Research Journal Indexing)
5. ResearchBib (Research Bible)
Adaptation is the leading international, peer-reviewed journal of adaptation studies. The journal actively contributes to the development and visibility of adaptation studies as a field of academic enquiry and seeks to advance methodological approaches to the process.
Special Issue Editor: Reto Winckler (City University of Hong Kong)
Scope
This roundtable will explore the development and impact of a yearly Joan of Arc themed Carnival parade and affiliated activities on understandings of Joan of Arc and carnival, itself. The roundtable has alread been approved for inclusion at the International Congress of Medieval Studies in Kalamazoo, Michigan from May 14-16 2026.
Joan of Arc has long been a muse to musicians, inspiring operas (Verdi, Tchaikovsky) musicals (Goodtime Charley) sung mystery plays (Claudel & Honneger), ballads (Leonard Cohen, Arcade Fire) and pop culture parodies such as the rap battle between Miley Cyrus and the Maid. Her story has also been powerfully related en muet in early silent films. This panel investigates the “sound effects” of Joan’s story, considering the roles of music, speech, silence, voices, and voiceover.
Questions may be directed to panel organizers Tara Smithson (tsmithson@saintmarys.edu) and Scott Manning (smanning@gmail.com).
Key cities in Joan of Arc’s history often emphasize associations with the Maid as important parts of their cultural identities and contributors to their economies. Catholic and secular organizations alike propose tours for those who wish to “live” some dimension of Joan’s history by visiting the sites where she was born, fought, and died.
The conference is co-organized by Sofia University "St. Kliment Ohridski", Samarkand State University "Sharof Rashidov" and Bukhara State University.
The main goal of the international forum is to give a new impetus to the development of science and education through a new reading of the scientific heritage of ancient philosophical treatises from the perspective of modern discussions and dialogue between the East and the West.
Main thematic areas:
1. Historical context and cultural influences - Eastern and Western perceptions
2. Contemporary problems and future prospects. East-West interdisciplinary approaches.
3. Classification of sciences - synergy of scientific knowledge
Nineteenth-Century Medievalisms (61st International Congress on Medieval Studies, May 14-16, 2026 in Kalamazoo)For this session, we seek proposals that acknowledge the broader concept of medievalism(s), which not only invokes the cultural and global dimensions of the Middle Ages but also includes traditional historical and philological critical approaches as well as creative, interpretive approaches.
Multiethnic literature of the United States has a history of rethinking, reimagining, and redefining race and racism through the study of non-white and ethnic Euro-American literature, narratives, and experiences. Throughout the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, ethnic American writers have written on what seemed to have been bleak, harsh, dystopian presents, and even apocalyptic futures. Writers who write of their personal, communal, or cultural lived experiences that are outside the norms of the dominant society know and understand that a harsh past and present can still bring about renewal and a bright future. And they have used their voices to represent a broad array of experiences in the U.S.