Futures Revolving: Ecohumanisms Out of Sync - NeMLA 2025
56th Annual Northeast MLA Convention
March 6-9, 2025 | Philadelphia, PA
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56th Annual Northeast MLA Convention
March 6-9, 2025 | Philadelphia, PA
‘Half-hour nothings, every fourth one a dud.’ That’s how Steve Pemberton, playing a fictionalised version of himself, describes Inside No. 9 (IN9)to Reece Shearsmith (also playing himself) in ‘Plodding On’, the closing episode of the ninth series of the BBC anthology series.
Call for papers: New York University’s Medieval and Renaissance Center invites proposals for ten-minute papers for its annual conference to be held May 1-2 2025.
Divergence and Interconnectivity: Global Premodernity in Five Objects
Keynote speaker: Lia Markey, Director of the Center for Renaissance Studies, Newberry Library
Rising Asia Journal invites Research Articles on Southeast Asia, East Asia (Japan, China, the Koreas, and Taiwan), and India's North-East Region, on all aspects of these Asian societies, in particular literature, poetry, music, art, society, as well as politics and diplomacy. We are interested in the use of diplomacy in the arts as well.
Articles should be between 5,000 to 10,000 words in length, with footnotes, and Works Cited.
Authors are urged to visit the journal's website at www.rajraf.org to read the submission guidelines.
Articles should be original, and should offer a new and innovative perspective.
Rising Asia Journal invites Research Articles on Film Studies in the geographical areas of Southeast Asia, East Asia (Japan, China, the Koreas, and Taiwan), and India's North-East Region, on all aspects of these Asian societies. Authors may use any thematic or theoretical discourse such as gender, race, colonialism and post-colonialism, and others.
Articles should be between 5,000 to 10,000 words in length, with footnotes, and Works Cited.
Authors are urged to visit the journal's website at www.rajraf.org to read the submission guidelines.
Articles should be original, and should offer a new and innovative perspective.
The E. E. Cummings Society and the Society’s journal, Spring, invite abstracts for 20-minute papers for the 52nd annual Louisville Conference on Literature and Culture since 1900, Feb. 20-22, 2025, at the University of Louisville (https://louisville.edu/artsandsciences/conferences/lclc).
A World Unknown: New Perspectives on Bob Dylan and the Blues (Edited Volume)
Deadline for abstract submission: September 15 2024
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: Harry Potter Academic Conference (HPAC) at Chestnut Hill College
2024 Harry Potter Academic Conference (HPAC) at Chestnut Hill College
Friday and Saturday, October 18–19, 2024
St. Joseph Hall, Chestnut Hill College, 9601 Germantown Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19118
EXTENDED Deadline for conference submission proposals (academics & community members): September 13, 2024
Deadline for conference submission proposals (high school students): September 20, 2024
Early Bird Registration Deadline: October 1, 2024
This panel proposes to examine the works of women writers from Africa and the African diaspora who have extensive oeuvres, which include creative work (often of multiple genres) as well as analytical writing (in forms such as essay, interviews, speeches, and other occasional pieces), to posit the argument that the creative work they produce performs theoretical work in exploring the complexities, contradictions, and dilemmas facing the ever-changing postcolonial environment.
The Erotica, Sexuality, Pornography, & Kink Area (formerly Eros & Pornography) of the National Popular Culture Association (PCA) invites scholars to participate in the PCA’s annual conference. Details of the conference can be found at https://pcaaca.org. You may apply to the conference at https://sites.google.com/view/2025pcaconference/call-for-papers
This panel addresses the emerging diasporic consciousness that accompanied the movement of people and changes in ecologies in the eighteenth century. Extending last year’s two-part roundtable “Eighteenth Century in Motion” to the question of Diaspora, participants are invited to consider questions including but not limited to:
While the ‘diasporic eighteenth century’ offers proliferating instances of movement, what are some ways to simultaneously consider communities and people subjected to increased physical, discursive, and representational confinement?
What are some circumatlantic relations that the diasporic eighteenth century allows us to consider?
For our fourth iteration of the HPN Symposium, we find ourselves interrogating, engaging with, and pushing the boundaries of the concept of “best practices” and how it relates to humanities podcasting. Our initial inquiry was born out of a discussion about the need to counteract worker invisibility and exploitation on university campus podcast teams. But this raised a larger, thornier debate: Are there other agreed-upon principles of podcast-making and audio creation? If so, have they emanated from particular forebears and models, or sprung up out of habitual creation like unwritten, but widely understood, common laws? Are there contexts peculiar to podcasting that deserve their own careful ethical treatment or understanding?
Call for Papers
Expanding Our View of Sherwood: Exploring the Matter of the Greenwood in Comics (A Roundtable) (virtual)
Sponsored by Medieval Comics Project and International Association for Robin Hood Studies (IARHS)
Organized by Michael A. Torregrossa and Carl B. Sell
60th International Congress on Medieval Studies
Western Michigan University (Kalamazoo, Michigan)
Hybrid event: Thursday, 8 May, through Saturday, 10 May, 2025
Please Submit Proposals by 15 September 2024
Session Information
More than The Green Knight: Exploring the Ongoing Tradition of Adapting and Appropriating Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (hybrid)
Call for Papers Sponsored by Association for the Advancement of Scholarship and Teaching of the Medieval in Popular Culture; International Arthurian Society, North American Branch (IAS/NAB); International Pearl-Poet Society
Organized by Michael A. Torregrossa, Joseph M. Sullivan, and Amber Dunai
60th International Congress on Medieval Studies
Western Michigan University (Kalamazoo, Michigan)
Hybrid event: Thursday, 8 May, through Saturday, 10 May, 2025
American Literary History invites submissions for a Spring 2026 special issue focused on the writings of W.E.B. Du Bois. All aspects of Du Bois’s literary, historical, and political thought are welcome, as well as his engagement with other key thinkers and with social and political movements. Papers may focus on questions of Marxism, nationalism, and Pan-Africanism; gender, sexuality, and queerness; print culture and reading networks; political theory and sociology; aesthetics and cultural forms. Deadline: July 1, 2025.
Subject: Call for Papers, Special Topics: War Literature and Trauma at CEA 2025
Call for Papers, War Literature and Trauma at CEA 2025
March 27-29, 2025 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Sonesta Philadelphia Rittenhouse Square
1800 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103
The College English Association, a gathering of scholar-teachers in English studies, welcomes proposals for presentations on War Literature and Trauma for our 54th annual conference. Submit your proposal at www.cea-web.org
Call for Papers, Irish, Scottish, and Welsh Literature at CEA 2025
March 27-29, 2025 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Sonesta Philadelphia Rittenhouse Square
1800 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103
“To discover the mode of life or of art whereby my spirit could express itself in unfettered freedom.”
James Joyce, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
Ampersand: An American Studies Journal at Boston University invites scholarly and creative contributions for our next issue, Disruption as Resistance: Labor, Noise, and Refusal. This issue seeks to inflect scholarly trends with practical and personal concerns of graduate workers, contingent instructors, and faculty emerging from, amid, or looking ahead to labor organizing, disruptive actions, and noise-as-resistance.
We are pleased to announce a call for papers for Genealogies of Joy: The Pleasure of Latinx Literature. This edited collection aims to explore the diverse representations of joy within Latinx literary traditions, emphasizing how joy manifests as a form of resistance, resilience, and cultural affirmation from the earliest writings to contemporary moments. How do readers and scholars experience the jouissance of literary recovery, new methodologies, texts, and pedagogies?
Population and production are two terms used to characterize the nineteenth century in Great Britain. For example, the population in England more than doubled by the end of the century due to improving hygiene (i.e., hygeia), increasing birth rate, declining mortality rate (e.g., medical advances), and prosperity. Public health led to a greater commonwealth. The rise of the Industrial Revolution through factories, transportation (e.g., railway), and the synchronization of time stoked the great migration from agrarian to industrial centers. Would the population outstrip production? How could production evolve to keep up with the rising population?
Trans Studies in the long Nineteenth Century Americas
Co-editors:
Jesse Alemán (University of New Mexico)
Ren Heintz (California State University, Los Angeles)
Bernadine Marie Hernández (University of New Mexico)
"Redefining Expansion and Exploration: Black Diasporic Literatures, Cultures, and Pedagogies"
Call for Abstracts for the 83rd Annual College Language Association Convention
Accepting Submissions at www.clascholars.org until October 1st!
APRIL 23 - 26, 2025
Hosted by Washington State University
Vancouver, Washington
Hilton Vancouver Washington
David. Bowie. Is.
A call for papers for an edited collection of scholarly articles
Samuel Gladden and James Rovira, editors
2024
Call for Papers, Professional/Technical Writing at CEA 2025
March 27-29, 2025 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Sonesta Philadelphia Rittenhouse Square
1800 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103
The College English Association, a gathering of scholar-teachers in English studies, welcomes proposals for presentations on Professional/Technical Writing for our 54th annual conference. Submit your proposal at www.cea-web.org
Call for Papers, Composition & Rhetoric: Practice at CEA 2025
March 27-29, 2025 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Sonesta Philadelphia Rittenhouse Square
1800 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103
The College English Association, a gathering of scholar-teachers in English studies, welcomes proposals for presentations on Composition & Rhetoric: Practice for our 54th annual conference. Submit your proposal at www.cea-web.org
Singles have been and continue to be regarded as anomalies and threats to the social order in the United States and elsewhere (Moran). Within the humanities, the growing interdisciplinary field of Singles Studies builds on scholarship in queer theory and gender and women’s studies to highlight the evolution of relationships that fall outside the structure of traditional marriage and the nuclear family to include singlehood and other types of intimate relationships that do not revolve around these conventional models. As more people opt toward relationship models and orientations that do not involve marriage, it is important that scholarship in the humanities reflect this revolutionary thinking.
47th Annual Comparative Drama Conference
Conference Dates: July 9-11, 2025
Location: London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art - London, England
Deadline for Abstract Submission: January 15, 2025
Disability Studies in Dramatic Texts and Performance
10th Annual Post45 Graduate Symposium
University of Michigan
March 14-15, 2025
Submission deadline: October 21, 2024
Call for Papers:
The departments of American Culture, Communication and Media, Digital Studies, and English Language and Literature at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor are thrilled to host the 1oth annual Post45 Graduate Symposium on March 14-15, 2025.
Call for Nominations: IJIA Book Award 2025
Deadline for submission: 30 December 2024
View the full call here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/88490/1/IJIA_Book_Award_2025.pdf
The Hulu adaptation of The Handmaid’s Tale has enjoyed unprecedented academic and popular international success, with the first season winning eight out of thirteen Primetime Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Drama Series and Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series for Elizabeth Moss. Therefore, there will be a variety of papers presented, from the fields of literature, language, film studies, and fashion, by postgraduate students and academics at various stages in their career. The Symposium is supported by research funding by Northumbria University and represents two research groups, ‘Gendered Subjects’ and ‘Modern and Contemporary Writings’. It is also endorsed by The Margaret Atwood Society.