CFP in-person conference | Frontiers and Un/Belongings in US American Culture
International Conference | Frontiers and Un/Belongings in US American Culture
Universidad de Valladolid, Spain | November 24–26, 2025
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International Conference | Frontiers and Un/Belongings in US American Culture
Universidad de Valladolid, Spain | November 24–26, 2025
Medieval Times in Early Modern Texts
Tuesday, April 8, 2025
The Institute of History of the Slovak Academy of Sciences and the international research group Scientiae are pleased to invite you to participate in the conference:
Medieval Times in Early Modern Texts
that will take place on 3–5 December 2025 in Bratislava, Slovakia.
THE CULTURE OF ATTRACTIONS: PAST AND PRESENT
International Scholarly Conference
10–12 September 2025
Faculty of Humanities, Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń,
Collegium Maius, Fosa Staromiejska 3, Toruń, Poland
We cordially invite scholars specializing in various disciplines such as cultural studies, cultural
anthropology, theatre and performance studies, film and media studies, and related disciplines, to
participate in an international, transdisciplinary research conference. This conference, organized by the
Research Group on Performance Studies and Drama Translation at Nicolaus Copernicus University
National Seminar
on
"Art, Architecture, and Culture of Odisha: Bridging Traditions and Global Narratives"
18th and 19th September, 2025
Organised By
POST GRADUATE DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH,
S.C.S. AUTONOMOUS COLLEGE, PURI, ODISHA, INDIA
In Living Color:
Exploring the Complexities of Colorism in the Twenty-First Century
Under Contract with Bloomsbury Publishing
Edited by
Amir A. Gilmore, Washington State University
Vikki Carpenter, Heritage University
The problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the color line, the question as to how far differences of race-which show themselves chiefly in the color of the skin and the texture of the hair
The Department of Popular Culture and the School of Cultural and Critical Studies at Bowling Green State University in Bowling Green, Ohio, are proud to announce the Soap Operas in Popular Culture Conference.
We are seeking presentations by graduate students, academics, television industry professionals, longtime viewers and fans interested in the study of Soap Operas as an iconic Popular Culture format.
Possible topics might include but are not limited to:
This year’s Latinx Literature and Culture session welcomes paper proposals centering on any aspect of Latinx literary studies, cultural studies, and film or media studies. Topics could include but are not limited to: the U.S./Mexico Borderlands, migrancy and the diaspora, Chicanx/Latinx Feminisms, Queer Latinidades, Translation Studies, Central American and Caribbean studies, Chicanx/Latinx Poetics, and anything else that may broadly fit under the umbrella of Latinx/Chicanx studies. We welcome proposals that maneuver through disciplinary boundaries and thoughtfully engage with a variety of artifacts (theatre, performance, popular culture, children’s literature, memoirs, and autobiographies).
Call for Chapters
Springer Nature Contracted Volume
Series Title: Shifting Borders, Emerging Voices: Narratives of Change in Global South Asia
Edited by Moussa Pourya Asl and Manju Jaidka
CFP
Edited Collection of Critical Essays
“Fearful Performances: Stardom, Skill, and Style of Acting in the Horror Film”
CFP: Virtual Crime and Detection
122nd PAMLA ConferenceThursday, November 20 - Sunday, November 23, 2025San Francisco, California | InterContinental Hotel San Francisco
Call for Abstracts!
Camping and Philosophy: Big Ideas in the Great Outdoors
Edited by Joshua Heter and David O’Hara
Living in Languages
traversing borders, disciplines, and mediums.
Call for Submissions: Living in Languages Journal
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
From John Shirley’s chatty incipits to the petitionary envois of courtly poetry, medieval lyrics often come down to us attached to specific situations. By situation we mean both the immediate rhetorical occasion that a poem addresses and the broader social circumstances that give rise to it. Responding to the recent renewal of scholarly interest in Middle English lyric (e.g. Ingrid Nelson’s Lyric Tactics [Penn] and What Kind of Thing Is Middle English Lyric?, ed. Nicholas Watson and Cristina Cervone [Penn]), this panel will explore the critical affordances of the situation, as opposed to broader frameworks such as context or history, in the study of vernacular lyric.
CFP: NCS 2026
This roundtable seeks to host a discussion of Chaucer’s position in the study of Anglophone literature beyond the North Atlantic and Australia. We will hear about the institutional and vocational challenges faced by Chaucerians in what Braj Kachru called “the expanding circle,” i.e. countries in which English serves as a major second language. How is Chaucer scholarship beginning to take hold, or even spreading, in new ways and in new contexts? What opportunities do these contexts present for the teaching and study of Chaucer and Middle English? What role do translations of Chaucer play in teaching and scholarship? Participants will open with brief prepared remarks in order to allow ample time for conversation and discussion.
A symposium on Darkness
Call for Book Chapters: “Matrilineal Family Saga Beyond Western Modernity”
We are excited to invite researchers, writers, and practitioners to contribute a chapter to an upcoming book entitled Matrilineal Family Saga Beyond Western Modernity. This interdisciplinary collection aims to explore diverse perspectives on matrilineal family structures across cultures, examining how they challenge and expand beyond the frameworks of secular Western modernity.
Focus and Themes
This roundtable serves as a direct continuation of "Navigating Graduate School," from last year's PAMLA conference in Palm Springs. One of the most mystifying parts of graduate school that can seem intimidating to a prospective student is what happens after your qualifying exams. You're done with coursework. You've gone through your qualifying exams. You are now considered 'All-But-Dissertation,' or ABD. What happens? While graduate handbooks will helpfully detail requirements for dissertations, prospectus meetings, etc., the experience of navigating the terrain between qualifying exams and the job market can feel abstract.
This panel examines the works and influence of American science fiction author Philip K. Dick. We are interested in proposals about the novels and short stories written by PKD, the many film and television adaptations of those works, the influence of his works and ideas on media of various kinds, and, more generally, the influence of Philiip K. Dick on other science fiction authors. This panel welcomes proposals both related to the conference theme, "Palimpsests: Memory and Oblivion," and those not related.
Submit abstract here: https://pamla.ballastacademic.com/Home/S/19694
Abstracts are invited for the Romanticism section of the 122nd annual conference of the Pacific and Ancient Modern Language Association (PAMLA), scheduled for 20-23 November 2025 in San Francisco, California, USA, at the InterContinental Hotel.
The Romanticism session seeks papers that examine any aspect of Romanticism, whether English, German, French, or in other languages (although we ask that papers and proposals be primarily in English). We welcome but do not require paper proposals attuned to some facet of the conference theme, "Palimpsests: Memory and Oblivion.”
Topics of particular interest include, but are not limited to:
“Things That Go Bump in the Night: An International Literary Conference on All Things Scary”
Deadline for Submissions: August 31, 2025
Organized by Anais Shelley, Undergraduate at Troy University
October 16th-18th, 2025 – To be hosted online
Welcoming submissions for a free scholarly conference on scary literature to be hosted online from October 16th-18th, 2025 by Troy University undergraduate student, Anais Shelley.
Research may draw inspiration from (but is not limited to) these prompts:
Supernatural themes
Domestic horror
FEMSPEC announces an open call for theoretical and creative speculative texts, as well as film and television reviews.
Here are texts that we have available:
STRANGELOVE COUNTRY by Harlan Wilson
THE BLACK UTOPIANS by Aaron Robertson
THE FEMALE HYPNOTIST: STORIES from the VICTORIAN & EDWARDIAN ERAS, ed. Donald K. Hartman
KINSHIP IN THE FICTION OF N.K. JEMISON, edited by Berit Astrom & Jenny Bonnevier
DISCOVERING CLASSIC FANTASY FICTION, edited by Darrel Schweitzer
CRAWDADDY, film by Kassandra Voss
We will consider other 2024-2025 publications and releases and will consider longer, comparative reviews of important fantasy, sci-fi, and horror films released since 2020; please inquire.
We invite proposals for short articles to complete a cluster on “Accessibility in Feminist Modernist Studies.” The papers in this cluster will consider how feminist methods and considerations of structural access help us understand and re-examine the concept of “modernist difficulty.”
Editors Lisa Hopkins and Katherine Walker seek contributions from scholars at any stage of their careers to contribute to an edited collection titled The Arden Handbook to Shakespeare’s Worlds (for more on The Arden Shakespeare handbooks, see this link).
Call for Papers
Journal of Research in Contemporary World Literature
(Indexed in Scopus, ISC, and SJR | Published by the University of Tehran)
Scope: Cutting-Edge Research in World Literature (Post-1945)
Publication Date: autumn-winter 2025-2026
Submission Deadline: September 30, 2025
The Journal of Research in Contemporary World Literature invites scholarly contributions for its forthcoming autumn-winter 2025-2026 issue, devoted to pioneering research on global literary production after 1945. As of autumn 2025, the journal now accepts submissions in both Persian and English, reflecting its commitment to multilingual and cross-cultural engagement.
National Identities (T&F)
Special Issue Editors:
Debajyoti Biswas, Department of English, Bodoland University.
Email: deb61594@gmail.com
Parvin Sultana, Department of Political Science, Pramathesh Barua College (Affiliated to Gauhati University)
Email: parvin.jnu@gmail.com
Xenophobia and Violence in Asia
The 122nd annual conference of the Pacific Ancient & Modern Languages Association (PAMLA) will be held in San Francisco at the InterContinental Hotel San Francisco, from Thursday, November 20, to Sunday, November 23, 2025.
Hitchcock's America
Call for Papers
(Re)Animating the Middle Ages: Adapting the Medieval in Animated Media
Mid-Atlantic Popular Culture Association's 2025 Virtual Symposium
Sunday, 20 July 2025
The Association for the Advancement of Scholarship and Teaching of the Medieval in Popular Culture invites proposals for another panel on the theme of "(Re)Animating the Middle Ages: Adapting the Medieval in Animated Media" for the Mid-Atlantic Popular Culture Association's 2025 Virtual Symposium, which will run on Sunday, 20 July 2025.