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April 11-12, 2025
Brown University | Providence, Rhode Island
Keynote Speaker: Dr. Marie W. Larose
Assistant Professor, Dept. of French & Italian, Dartmouth College
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CALL FOR PAPERS
UP NEXT | AU SUIVANT
April 11-12, 2025
Brown University | Providence, Rhode Island
Keynote Speaker: Dr. Marie W. Larose
Assistant Professor, Dept. of French & Italian, Dartmouth College
Call for Papers
The Department of English at Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, India, invites submissions for the upcoming issue on Literature and the Posthuman of its journal, Research and Criticism.
Punk Scholars Network USA and Canada 3rd Annual Conference
Call for Papers
March 2 & 3, 2025
The Punk Rock Museum – Las Vegas, Nevada
Theme: Punk on Display
Following the success of our second in-person conference in August 2024, we are excited to announce our third in-person conference sponsored by PSN Canada and PSN USA. This year, the conference will be held on March 2 and 3 at The Punk Rock Museum in Las Vegas, Nevada.
The Conference for Young Adult Literature Louisiana (CYALL) is accepting proposals for papers, slide presentations, lightning talks, and 20x20 sessions. The conference is a forum to discuss, demonstrate, and champion learning strategies in teaching young adult literature. College faculty, graduate students, librarians, authors, K-12 educators, and scholars are invited to submit proposals for papers and presentations on all aspects of YA literature and media.
The deadline for submitting a proposal is February 15, 2025
The conference will be held on April 11, 2025 and will be onsite.
The 32nd Annual NINE Spring Training Conference (March 5-8, 2025) invites original unpublished papers that study all aspects of baseball, with particular emphasis on history, literature, and social policy implications. Abstracts only, not to exceed 300 words, should be submitted by November 11, 2024, to co-directors Willie Steele (wdsteele@lipscomb.edu) and David Pegram (david.pegram@paradisevalley.edu) for the abstract committee’s consideration. Following the submission deadline, authors will be notified as quickly as possible whether their papers have been accepted.
Communities and the discourses they foster play a crucial role in shaping how games are both designed and experienced. Salen and Zimmerman (2004) describe how games are cultural artefacts engaged with dynamic exchanges of meaning with their surrounding cultural contexts. These open cultural contexts influence can transform both games and their environments. Consalvo (2007) expands this understanding by discussing how videogame paratexts, such as guides and fan-created content, serve as vital pedagogical tools that shape how players approach and engage with games.
Family Fictions
Generations and Genealogies in European Culture
15- 17. 05. 2025, KU Leuven
Keynotes:
Prof. Stefan Willer (Humboldt University)
Prof. David Amigoni (Keele University)
Dr. Jennie Bristow (Canterbury Christ Church University)
There is no denying that contemporary audiences have an insatiable appetite for killers: myth, legend, and reality. The soaring success, and continued demand, for fictions and nonfictions that document the dealings of serial killers and murders provide ample evidence for this. We are fascinated by their narratives and by their psychologies, and it is perhaps this need or want to understand the killer’s thinking that, in part, makes them so attractive to read and view. However, delineation between fiction and nonfiction continues to be a greyscale area. There are no longer certainties in crime fiction, nor in true crime writing, when it comes to the factual and the fictive.
The Reception of the Book of Job in Medieval and Early Modern Literature
The open-access journal “Terminus” invites submissions for a special issue on the reception of the Book of Job in medieval and early modern literature. We welcome contributions from scholars in literature, theology, history, and related disciplines.
Important Information
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Panel at ASLE (Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment) 2025: Collective Atmospheres
July 8-11, 2025
University of Maryland, College Park
Columbia University’s French Graduate Student Association (FGSA) invites graduate students from all disciplines to submit abstracts for our upcoming conference on the theme of (Re)conciliation? The conference will take place January 30-31, 2025, at Columbia’s Maison Française in New York City, with a keynote address from French-Moroccan author and scholar Kaoutar Harchi.
The Folklore Area of the Popular Culture Association is considering proposals for sessions organized around a theme, special panels, and/or individual papers related to Folklore Studies for the 2025 Popular Culture Association Conference by November 30, 2024. The conference will be held in New Orleans, Louisiana (April 16-19).
Sessions are typically scheduled in 1½ hour slots, with four papers per standard session. Presentations should not exceed 15 minutes. As always, proposals addressing any topic related to folklore or folklore studies are welcome, including but not limited to the following:
CALL FOR ARTICLES: The New Ray Bradbury Review, Issue 9
For the next issue of The New Ray Bradbury Review (NRBR), we invite articles which shine new light on any aspect of the works and life of Ray Bradbury.
Call for Chapters in Edited Book
Dr. Prabhu Aloke N (O P Jindal Global University)
Dr. Lisa Thomas (Jesus and Mary College, Delhi University)
Untangling Bioethical Dilemmas: Narrative Ethics and Bodily Rights
In the recent past, the study of ethics has diversified into emerging branches with interdisciplinary areas of studies. While such studies require specialization in different disciplines, they also demand application of theoretical and empirical knowledge. In a quest to broaden the understanding of ethics to its sub- field of bioethics, this book proposal seeks to collate works that center on narrative ethics within the discourse of bioethics.
CALL FOR PAPERS
Mutations and Permutations of Care
Graduate Student Conference
Hybrid modality
Hosted By: Graduate students of French and Francophone World Studies
Department of French & Italian, The University of Iowa
Conference Dates: Friday, April 4 through Saturday, April 5, 2025
Location: University of Iowa campus (Iowa City, Iowa) and on Zoom
Abstracts Due: Sunday, December 15, 2024
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE LITERATURE AND AESTHETICS
Special Issue | Call For Papers
(De)Bordering Aesthetics: 19th-Century German Philosophy and the Migratory Turn
Guest Editor: Gabriele Schimmenti (Roma Tre University, Italy)
**Call for Papers*
*Literary vs. Legal Language*
The Bibliographical Society of America (BSA) is currently inviting proposals for events that will take place between February 2025 and May 2025. The deadline for applications is November 1.
The BSA can offer financial and logistical support for a variety of events, including lectures, panel presentations, hands-on workshops, conference sessions, or other online or in-person events. Examples of past and upcoming events can be found here. Please reach out to the Events Committee if you have questions about event formats, financial support, or topics.
AICED-26
THE 26th ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT,
UNIVERSITY OF BUCHAREST
LITERATURE AND CULTURAL STUDIES SECTION
29-31 May 2025
CALL FOR PAPERS
Writing in a World on Fire:
Perspectives on War and Climate Change
University of Bucharest, Faculty of Foreign Languages and Literatures
7-13 Pitar Moș St., Bucharest, Romania
Call for Papers
ReFocus: The Films of Fred Zinnemann
“Something that concerns me very much is human dignity…or the lack of it.” – F.Z.
New Feminisms, Politics, and Pop Culture: An Intertextual Anthology This edited collection is interested in the intersections of feminism, American politics, and popular culture. Right now, as feminism in general is forced to shift back to a focus on reproductive rights, the fourth wave is being splintered into those prioritizing this issue and those still focused on empowerment, intersectionality, and other issues original to the fourth wave. As more and more strains of feminism emerge, how might we understand their origins and place them in conversation with each other? Is feminism finally intersectional? If not, how do we get there?
Land of the Free, Home of the Brave?: American Children’s Literature in an Era of Heightened Censorship
In a country advocating, loudly, the rights of the individual, what about child readers? Are they granted an expansive vision of their world? What rights do children have where books are concerned?
“In olden days a glimpse of stocking / Was looked on as something shocking. / Now, heaven knows, Anything goes.” This epigraph begins Chris Jenks’ 2003 work Transgression, exemplifying the sense in which acts of transgression can have real, tangible, palpable effects on society. Jenks defines “transgression” as violating, infringing upon, or going beyond the limits set by a boundary or convention (2). Transgressive fiction, then, is the genre of literature that depicts various acts of boundary-crossing in order to analyze and criticize them for the purpose of reflecting upon the ideological constructions that its characters react against or wholly reject.
April 25-26, 2025
57th Comparative Literature Symposium
Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas
Call for Papers
“50 Years after the Fall of Saigon: Colonialism, Interventionism, and Critical Refugee Studies”
Keynote Speakers:
CFP: Heritage Tourism and Race in Early America
Panel for the Society of Early Americanists’ Biennial Conference
University of Notre Dame
June 5-8, 2025
Call for Papers: Art & the Public Sphere
Special Issue: ‘Afterlives of Public Art’
Edited by: Cathryn Klasto, Maddie Leach & Mick Wilson
(University of Gothenburg, Sweden )
View the full call here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/art-the-public-sphere#call-for-papers
READING NOTHING ACROSS LITERATURES: A HANDBOOK
“No friend is He who to his friend and comrade who comes imploring food, will offer nothing.” (Rig Veda CXVII)
“Did you rise to the crisis? Not a word, you and your birds, your gods – nothing.” (Oedipus the King)
“Nothing will come of Nothing. Speak again.” (King Lear 1.1)
Call for Papers: Short Fiction Theory and Practice
Special Issue: ‘Uniquely Canadian Cultural Narratives’
Guest edited by Zsuzsanna Lénárt-Muszka, University of Debrecen, Hungary
View the full call here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/short-fiction-in-theory-practice
“Some people think the future means the end of history. Well, we haven't run out of history quite yet.”
- Captain Kirk, Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991)
Building from a successful summer conference, this edited collection is about science fiction media in the 1990s. We are looking for high quality papers that examine science fiction properties and fiction during that decade. As several papers from the conference have already been selected, we are now calling for additional chapters for the collection generally related to the following topics:
Call for Papers
for
Essays in Honour of Professor Krishna Sen – a Festschrift