Journal Symposium: Equity and Material Conditions in Access-Intensive College English Programs
Teaching English in the Two-Year College and College EnglishSymposium“Equity and Material Conditions in Access-Intensive College English Programs”I feel like what we do and who we are is overlooked.
—Jason C. Evans, 2023 TYCA Conference Chair's Address
The perception that the work occurring in two-year colleges and reports of it in TETYC are relevant only to those spaces means that the new knowledge the journal offers can be overlooked, even when it clearly contributes to a larger disciplinary conversation.
—Holly Hassel, Mark Reynolds, Jeff Sommers and Howard Tinberg, “Editorial Perspectives on Teaching English in the Two-Year College,” p. 332
Tomb Raider at 30: The Legacy of Lara Croft (Emerald Publishers)
In the world of Tomb Raider adventure awaits around every corner, waiting for the extraordinary to be uncovered. This has been the story of Lara Croft for nearly 30 years. Recent announcements regarding the upcoming live-action series by Amazon Prime (Maas & Otterson, 2024) and an officially redesigned character hinting at a new game release (Dinsdale, 2024) have thrust Tomb Raider back into the forefront of mainstream public consciousness. Since its inception in 1996, fans of the game series and the iconic Lara Croft have embarked on a journey together, solidifying her status as one of the most iconic game characters ever created.
Superheroes and Disability on Screen: Intersectional Perspectives on Super-Bodies and Super-Identities as Politicized Spaces
The editors of the volume are calling for chapter abstracts for a volume focused on the representation of disability in superhero film and media, with a particular focus on intersectional discourses of race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, power, and beyond. The volume will provide perspectives on the growing field of superheroes and disability by placing a specific focus on screen representations. As such, the collections will engage with critical debates over super-identities and super-bodies as politicized spaces in the 21st centuries.
Crossed Borders, Changed Lives: Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Twenty-First Century Young Adult Immigrant & Refugee Literature
Crossed Borders, Changed Lives: Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Twenty-First Century Young Adult Immigrant & Refugee Literature seeks scholarly and artistic articles for publication in a collection that focuses on depictions of images of immigrants and refugees in American Young Adult (YA) novels published, preferably after 2001 (9/11).
Topics (not exclusive):
Loving to Unlearn: bell hooks, Critical Pedagogy and Affective Education
A Special Issue of Coils of the Serpent: Journal for the Study of Contemporary Power
Guest Editors: Victoria Allen, Harald Pittel and Garret Scally
Where can love (or any other emotion or affect) be found in educational theory and practice? Should feelings be schooled or unlearned?
Research in Education Curriculum and Pedagogy: Global Perspectives (forthcoming issue C4P)
Research in Education Curriculum and Pedagogy: Global Perspectives (RECAP) [ISSN: 2977-1633] is a peer-reviewed, open access international journal to encourage scholarly dialogues and build a bridge between theory and practice. This journal serves as a forum for all relevant issues from a global perspective with a multidisciplinary approach and a portal for dissemination of outcomes. We invite submissions of original work from research, studies and insights from practice. The journal considers a broad range of topics related to education systems, policies and practices, changes and challenges to educational purpose and meaning.
**Extended Deadline** PAMLA 2024 Panel: Fantasy and the Fantastic
**Extended DEadline - June 16**
Fantasy and the supernatural, broadly defined, shape many popular narratives and universes—from Lord of the Rings to Game of Thrones, from World of Warcraft to The Witcher, from classical and medieval tales of monsters and dragons to the worlds of N.K. Jemisin, Terry Pratchett, Neil Gaiman, Nnedi Okorafor, and Ursula K. Le Guin. As a genre, fantasy engages with questions of rhetoric, identity, and power in multiple ways, across media, subgenres, and cultural traditions; the enchantment of fantastic and supernatural narratives casts a persistent and global spell.
Death and the Irish Diaspora
Death and the Irish Diaspora
Special Issue of Éire-Ireland
Special-Issue Editors:
Chris Cusack, Radboud University
Sophie Cooper, Queen's University Belfast
Éire-Ireland: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Irish Studies welcomes submissions for a Spring/Summer 2026 special issue on death and the Irish diaspora.
Snake Sisters in Literature and Film
Although a monster with a head of swarming snakes, Medusa has been firmly embraced as a snake sister by more women. In her 1975 essay “The Laugh of the Medusa,” Hélène Cixous pioneeringly urges women to re-visit their mythological snake sister - Medusa - who has long been (mis)construed as ugly and sinful. Cixous writes, "You only have to look at the Medusa straight on to see her. And she’s not deadly. She’s beautiful and she’s laughing” (885). In current feminist terms, Medusa is often read sympathetically: “The ugliness she first experienced as an unjust punishment” is transformed into her greatest strength she “learned to use as a weapon” (Zimmerman 3).
CfP: Time after Time: On Cruising the Past, a special issue of GLQ
Call for Papers
“Time after Time: On Cruising the Past,” a special issue of GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies
Co-Editors: Adrián Emmanuel Hernández-Acosta (Yale University) and Kris Trujillo (University of Chicago)
The Historicities of Securities and Peace
Zentrumstage 2024
The Historicities of Security and Peace
Philipps University Marburg (Germany)
October 9-11, 2024
Deadline for paper submission is June 16, 2024
Conference Topic
Girlhood and Menstruation, Special Issue of Peitho
Call for Proposals for a Special Issue of Peitho, Summer 2025:
Girlhood and Menstruation
Intercultural Conversations: Collaboration, Exchange and Transformation in Literary and Cultural Practices
This volume of essays would like to celebrate the role played by writers and other artists in initiating the kind of intercultural conversations necessary to transcend the political, geographical and cultural borders erected in the name of nationalism. The collection is based on a conference held on the theme in April 2024. I have a contract with a publisher and am looking for a final few essays to complete the collection.
Fantasy and Science Fiction area of Northeast Popular Culture Association (NEPCA) CFP
The Fantasy and Science Fiction area of Northeast Popular Culture Association (NEPCA) seeks papers for presentation at our annual conference this fall which will run as a hybrid conference from Thursday, October 3 – Saturday, October 5. Virtual sessions will take place on Thursday evening and Friday morning via Zoom, and in-person sessions will take place on Friday evening and Saturday morning at Nichols College, Dudley, Massachusetts.
Technology and Film Labour: Crafting the Look of the Film
The Centre for Creative Technologies, University of Galway
May 22nd and 23rd 2025
Technology and Film Labour: Crafting the Look of the Film
Investigating the impacts of technological change on below the line film labour.
Recent technological developments such as the widespread adoption of virtual production processes and the use of generative AI have had a transformative effect on film production workflows and below the line film craft. The relationships between production departments as well as the roles and functions of cinematography, production design, sound design costume, location and visual effects have all been affected by technological change.
A Nightmare on Elm Street @ 40
One, two, Freddy’s coming for you…
A Nightmare on Elm Street @ 40
Hosted by The University of Nottingham in association with Fear2000
8-9 November 2024
Confirmed Keynote Speakers
Dr Bruna Foletto Lucas (Kingston University)
Dr Steve Jones (Northumbria University)
Special Guests
Mark Swift and Damian Shannon (screenwriters of Freddy vs Jason)
Nightmares from the Past, Visions of the Future: Alternative Futurism & Comics
"Framing the Unreal: Exploring Graphic/Visual Science Fiction and Fantasy"
ICLA Research Committee on Comics Studies and Graphic Narrative 20th Anniversary Conference
Ca' Foscari University of Venice, Italy - November 11-15, 2024
https://www.comics-studies.com/events/sff2024
Call for Papers
Panel #9: "Nightmares from the Past, Visions of the Future: Alternative Futurism & Comics"
Aphra Behn on the Move
Date and Location: 19-20 June 2025, Paris, France
Keynote Speakers: Claire BOWDITCH, Loughborough University, UK, Elaine HOBBY, Loughborough University, UK, Leah ORR, University of Louisiana, USA
With a new edition of Aphra Behn’s works on the go, and as Canterbury prepares to erect a statue in her honour, the moment seems ideal to re-examine Behn’s place and her work in criticism and in the collective imagination. Challenging the image of Behn as loyal to a conservative Tory imagination, this conference aims to emphasize movement, mobility, decentering, and innovation in her oeuvre.
The Aesthetics of Disaster
The Aesthetics of Disaster
Special Editor: Lucia Morawska (Richmond, The American International University in London)
"The Polish Journal of Aesthetics" Volume 77 (2/2026)
Submission deadline: 30 September 2025
CFP: Natural Language Processing for Digital Humanities NLP4DH @ EMNLP 2024
The 4th International Conference on Natural Language Processing for Digital Humanities will co-locate with EMNLP in Miami, USA!
The proceedings will be published in the ACL anthology. The event will take place on November 15-16 2024.
https://www.nlp4dh.com/nlp4dh-2024
Submission deadline: September 1, 2024
The focus of NLP4DH is on applying natural language processing techniques to digital humanities research. The topics can be anything of digital humanities interest with a natural language processing or generation aspect. A list of suitable NLP4DH topics include but are not limited to:
Utopian Hawthorne
New Perspectives on Hawthorne and Utopia
Nathaniel Hawthorne Review, Spring, 2025
Editors: Monika Elbert and Andrew Loman
In The Scarlet Letter, Hawthorne writes, “The founders of a new colony, whatever Utopia of human virtue and happiness they might originally project, have invariably found it among their earliest practical necessities to allot a portion of the virgin soil as a cemetery, and another portion as the site of a prison” (CE 1:47). This famous sentence deploys a number of key terms – the colony, virtue, happiness, projection, necessity, virginity, the cemetery, the prison – all of them interlinked with the sentence’s key term, Utopia.
CfP (Edited Book Volume): Österreichische Kunst, Kultur und Literatur des 20./21. Jahrhunderts [BKCI indexed]
Österreichische Kunst, Kultur und Literatur des 20./21. Jahrhunderts
Wir laden herzlich zur Einreichung von Beiträgen für unseren geplanten Sammelband über Österreichische Kunst, Kultur und Literatur des 20./21. Jahrhunderts ein. Dieser Band strebt an, eine umfassende Analyse und Diskussion über bedeutende kulturelle Entwicklungen und künstlerische Strömungen Österreichs im 20. und 21. Jahrhundert zu präsentieren. Wir begrüßen Beiträge aus den Bereichen Kulturwissenschaft, Kunsthistorik, Germanistik sowie aus angrenzenden Disziplinen und freuen uns auf Ihre vielfältigen Einsendungen und danken Ihnen im Voraus für Ihr Interesse und Ihre Mitarbeit.
Seen/Unseen: American Mythos of Madness and Consequences of Stigma
Even today in the age of political correctness and amidst cancel culture censures, people with mental disorders are one of the few social groups still to be consistently misrepresented, ostracized, and demeaned. The social consequences of stigmatization should be studied through autobiographical narrative acts to reveal what it means to live with mental illness in America. By utilizing everyday language and literary tropes, mental illness life narratives humanize portrayals of mental disorder; by doing so, they appeal to the sympathies of broader audiences than medical narratives, such as case studies or examples in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.
Modernisms seminar at PAMLA 2024
The seminar, "Modernisms," is accepting abstract proposals (until June 16) for the 2024 PAMLA conference in Palm Springs, CA in November!
If you have a new project on anything related to modernism that you wish to discuss in a low stakes, generative seminar group, please apply at the link below.
Femspec - Call for Scholarly and Creative Submissions for Issue 24.2
Femspec seeks both scholarly and creative submissions for its upcoming Issue 24.2.
Femspec is an interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed feminist academic journal dedicated to science fiction, fantasy, magical realism, surrealism, myth, folklore, and other supernatural genres. Femspec publishes both academic scholarship and creative writing.
Creative writing submissions could include short fiction, poetry, or experimental forms.
To submit work for consideration, please review Femspec’s submission guidelines at the following link: SUBMISSION GUIDELINES | Femspec
EXTENDED DEADLINE: Sports Area - NEPCA Hybrid Fall Conference 2024
The Northeast Popular Culture Association (NEPCA) Sports Area invites submissions for NEPCA’s annual conference to be held online October 3 – 5, 2024, and in person at Nichols College, MA. Virtual sessions will take place on Thursday evening and Friday morning via Zoom. In-person sessions will take place on Friday evening and Saturday morning with broadcast via Zoom.
EXTENDED DEADLINE: “Bela Lugosi’s Dead” at 45: A Celebration of Goth Music and Subculture Conference
NEW Deadline: Thursday, July 11, 2024 (Pete Murphy's B-Day!)
(Tentative) Conference Date(s): Friday August 16, 2024
Format: Online (via Zoom, PST)
Abstract: 150 words + short biographical statement + time zone
Submit to: bld45conference@gmail.com
Contact for inquiries: Noah Gallego @noahrgallego@gmail.com, cc: Rachel Birke @ rbirk001@g.ucla.edu (Subject Line: BLD45 Conference)
"Undead, undead, undead"
Call for journal article submissions on Elizabeth Bishop or Robert Lowell
Article submissions of between 20 and 35 pages on lives and work of either Elizabeth Bishop or Robert Lowell are being sought for consideration by the peer reviewed Bishop-Lowell Studies journal published by Penn State UP. Please consult the journal page a thttps://www.psupress.org/Journals/jnls_BLS.html for further submission information. You can also contact the editor, Ian Copestake, directly o: copers@gmail.com.
Sustainability: Which Way Now?
Sustainability: Which Way Now?
Bhabani Shankar Nayak
Dr Samuel O Idowu
Dr Amr Khafagy
Background