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CFP: Perspectives on Evil and Human Wickedness (4/30/03; e-journal)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 25, 2003 - 6:46pm
Dr. Salwa Ghaly

Call for Papers
Perspectives on Evil and Human Wickedness
Open Issue (July 2003)
ISSN: 1471-5597

Deadline for submissions is April30, 2003. (Note date change.)

_Perspectives on Evil and Human Wickedness_ is an interdisciplinary
ejournal which publishes work from academic, professional, vocational,
and religious contexts relating to classifying, defining, and probing
different aspects of evil. It aims to shed light on the origins,
sources, and manifestations of evil as well as on the diverse angles
from which humans can understand, tackle, surmount, or come to terms
with it.

CFP: AEQ: Media Literacy (11/30/03; journal issue)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 25, 2003 - 6:39pm
Ann Hawkins

CALL FOR PAPERS:

AEQ: Academic Exchange Quarterly
Spring 2004, Volume 8, Issue 1
Expanded issue up to 400+ pages.
Articles on various topics plus the following special section

SPECIAL TOPIC: Media Literacy

Focus:

CFP: AEQ: Media Literacy (11/30/03; journal issue)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 25, 2003 - 6:39pm
Ann Hawkins

CALL FOR PAPERS:

AEQ: Academic Exchange Quarterly
Spring 2004, Volume 8, Issue 1
Expanded issue up to 400+ pages.
Articles on various topics plus the following special section

SPECIAL TOPIC: Media Literacy

Focus:

CFP: American Periodicals (6/30/03; journal)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 25, 2003 - 6:06pm
owner-cfp_at_dept.english.upenn.edu

To: cfp_at_english.upenn.edu
From: Jared Gardner <gardner.236_at_osu.edu>

AMERICAN PERIODICALS: a Journal of History, Criticism, & Bibliography

Call for Submissions

AMERICAN PERIODICALS has moved to the Ohio State University Press,
under the joint editorship of Susan Williams, Steven Fink, and Jared
Gardner. The 2003 issue will continue in an annual format; beginning in
2004 the journal will move to a bi-annual publication schedule. The
editors are seeking essays on history, criticism and bibliography on
all aspects of American periodicals, from the 18th century through the
present day. The deadline for submissions for the 2003 issue is June
30th.

CFP: American Periodicals (6/30/03; journal)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 25, 2003 - 6:06pm
owner-cfp_at_dept.english.upenn.edu

To: cfp_at_english.upenn.edu
From: Jared Gardner <gardner.236_at_osu.edu>

AMERICAN PERIODICALS: a Journal of History, Criticism, & Bibliography

Call for Submissions

AMERICAN PERIODICALS has moved to the Ohio State University Press,
under the joint editorship of Susan Williams, Steven Fink, and Jared
Gardner. The 2003 issue will continue in an annual format; beginning in
2004 the journal will move to a bi-annual publication schedule. The
editors are seeking essays on history, criticism and bibliography on
all aspects of American periodicals, from the 18th century through the
present day. The deadline for submissions for the 2003 issue is June
30th.

CFP: Popular Cultures/Cultures of the Popular: 1870-1945 (UK) (9/1/03; various)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 25, 2003 - 6:04pm
Liam Connell

Popular Cultures/Cultures of the Popular: 1870-1945
 From the mid-nineteenth century to the mid-twentieth century critical
judgements about popular culture remained extremely diverse; theorists both
celebrated the emergence and preservation of popular cultural forms and
lamented the rise of new market-driven cultural commodities. Perhaps
because of such diversity, there are areas in which a thorough assessment
of the relationships within and between these positions remains to be
done. Popular culture was itself extremely diverse and developments in
critical studies have helped to produce a more detailed picture of the
forms that popular culture took at that time. Recent work in nineteenth

CFP: Popular Cultures/Cultures of the Popular: 1870-1945 (UK) (9/1/03; various)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 25, 2003 - 6:04pm
Liam Connell

Popular Cultures/Cultures of the Popular: 1870-1945
 From the mid-nineteenth century to the mid-twentieth century critical
judgements about popular culture remained extremely diverse; theorists both
celebrated the emergence and preservation of popular cultural forms and
lamented the rise of new market-driven cultural commodities. Perhaps
because of such diversity, there are areas in which a thorough assessment
of the relationships within and between these positions remains to be
done. Popular culture was itself extremely diverse and developments in
critical studies have helped to produce a more detailed picture of the
forms that popular culture took at that time. Recent work in nineteenth

CFP: Popular Cultures/Cultures of the Popular: 1870-1945 (UK) (9/1/03; various)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 25, 2003 - 6:04pm
Liam Connell

Popular Cultures/Cultures of the Popular: 1870-1945
 From the mid-nineteenth century to the mid-twentieth century critical
judgements about popular culture remained extremely diverse; theorists both
celebrated the emergence and preservation of popular cultural forms and
lamented the rise of new market-driven cultural commodities. Perhaps
because of such diversity, there are areas in which a thorough assessment
of the relationships within and between these positions remains to be
done. Popular culture was itself extremely diverse and developments in
critical studies have helped to produce a more detailed picture of the
forms that popular culture took at that time. Recent work in nineteenth

CFP: Graduate Student Professionalization (5/15/03; website)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 25, 2003 - 6:04pm
Anita Nicholson

CFP: Graduate Student Professionalization (Website)

The On-Line Journal portion of Graduate-Student.com, the e-resource
for humanities graduate students, would like to issue a call for
papers for its end of year issue: 'What Happens Now', focalizing on an
end of year re-cap for first-year and graduating doctoral students.
Pedagogical articles on readerships, constructing the TA syllabus,
selecting the dissertation\thesis committee and writing the book
review are welcome.

The site would also like to announce its Winter 2002-2003 issue,
Culture in Academia, featuring articles on The MLA Interview, Queer
Theory and the Dissertation and Gendered Conflicts in Pedagogy.

CFP: Graduate Student Professionalization (5/15/03; website)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 25, 2003 - 6:04pm
Anita Nicholson

CFP: Graduate Student Professionalization (Website)

The On-Line Journal portion of Graduate-Student.com, the e-resource
for humanities graduate students, would like to issue a call for
papers for its end of year issue: 'What Happens Now', focalizing on an
end of year re-cap for first-year and graduating doctoral students.
Pedagogical articles on readerships, constructing the TA syllabus,
selecting the dissertation\thesis committee and writing the book
review are welcome.

The site would also like to announce its Winter 2002-2003 issue,
Culture in Academia, featuring articles on The MLA Interview, Queer
Theory and the Dissertation and Gendered Conflicts in Pedagogy.

CFP: Reappreciating &quot;The Last Temptation of Christ&quot; (1/31/04; collection)

updated: 
Friday, February 21, 2003 - 8:29pm
Middleton, Darren J.N.

2005 is the fiftieth annivesary of the publication (in Greek) of Nikos
Kazantzakis's novel, "The Last Temptation of Christ." Since this time, and
especially after Martin Scorsese's filmic adapatation of the novel in
1988, assessments of this work have ranged from "praiseworthy" to
"blasphemous," according to religious persuasion.

Proposals are invited for a chapter contributions to an essay collection
reappreciating "The Last Temptation of Christ" fifty years on. The
anthology, to be published in 2005, will be divided into two sections, one
part devoted to the novel and one part devoted to the film.

CFP: Reappreciating &quot;The Last Temptation of Christ&quot; (1/31/04; collection)

updated: 
Friday, February 21, 2003 - 8:29pm
Middleton, Darren J.N.

2005 is the fiftieth annivesary of the publication (in Greek) of Nikos
Kazantzakis's novel, "The Last Temptation of Christ." Since this time, and
especially after Martin Scorsese's filmic adapatation of the novel in
1988, assessments of this work have ranged from "praiseworthy" to
"blasphemous," according to religious persuasion.

Proposals are invited for a chapter contributions to an essay collection
reappreciating "The Last Temptation of Christ" fifty years on. The
anthology, to be published in 2005, will be divided into two sections, one
part devoted to the novel and one part devoted to the film.

UPDATE: Little Girls (8/31/03; journal issue)

updated: 
Friday, February 21, 2003 - 8:29pm
Anne Martine Parent

Update:
Please take note of the new deadline (August 31 instead of June 30).

Anne Martine Parent
Editorial Secretary, Tessera

Appel =E0 contributions/Call for papers

TESSERA

Les petites filles

CFP: Staging the City (summer '03; essay collection)

updated: 
Sunday, February 16, 2003 - 10:33pm
Robert Brazeau

Staging the City

I am seeking submissions for an essay collection titled Staging the City.
I have proposed the collection to a university press, and they have
expressed a strong interest in it.

CFP: Performance and Spectatorship in Film and Literature (5/1/03; journal issue)

updated: 
Sunday, February 16, 2003 - 10:04pm
Cheyla Samuelson

TINTA
Research Journal of Hispanic and Lusophone Studies
University of California, Santa Barbara

CALL FOR PAPERS

“Performance and Spectatorship in Film and Literature”

The graduate student research journal of the Department of Spanish and
Portuguese at UC Santa Barbara is soliciting papers for its forthcoming 2003
publication. The issue will focus on performance and spectatorship in Hispanic
and Lusophone film and literature. Interdisciplinary studies and approaches are
especially welcome.

CFP: Performance and Spectatorship in Film and Literature (5/1/03; journal issue)

updated: 
Sunday, February 16, 2003 - 10:04pm
Cheyla Samuelson

TINTA
Research Journal of Hispanic and Lusophone Studies
University of California, Santa Barbara

CALL FOR PAPERS

“Performance and Spectatorship in Film and Literature”

The graduate student research journal of the Department of Spanish and
Portuguese at UC Santa Barbara is soliciting papers for its forthcoming 2003
publication. The issue will focus on performance and spectatorship in Hispanic
and Lusophone film and literature. Interdisciplinary studies and approaches are
especially welcome.

CFP: Performance and Spectatorship in Film and Literature (5/1/03; journal issue)

updated: 
Sunday, February 16, 2003 - 10:04pm
Cheyla Samuelson

TINTA
Research Journal of Hispanic and Lusophone Studies
University of California, Santa Barbara

CALL FOR PAPERS

“Performance and Spectatorship in Film and Literature”

The graduate student research journal of the Department of Spanish and
Portuguese at UC Santa Barbara is soliciting papers for its forthcoming 2003
publication. The issue will focus on performance and spectatorship in Hispanic
and Lusophone film and literature. Interdisciplinary studies and approaches are
especially welcome.

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