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CFP: The AnaChronisT: All Topics (4/5/04; yearbook)

updated: 
Sunday, February 8, 2004 - 12:50am
The AnaChronisT

The AnaChronisT,

a peer-reviewed yearbook published by the Department
of English Studies, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest,
Hungary,

invites research papers, interviews, and book reviews on
literatures in English for its next issue, to be published in
December 2004. All topics acceptable. Papers are to be
submitted by Monday, 5 April 2004.

The AnaChronisT welcomes submissions by graduate and
doctoral students as well as academics. The requirements
of application are as follows:

- the text in Word or RTF document format sent to the
following e-mail address: anachronist_at_freemail.hu (your
paper should not exceed 10,000 words, including
footnotes);

CFP: Job Search in Academe (2/28/04; collection)

updated: 
Sunday, February 8, 2004 - 12:50am
Dawn Formo

Academic Job Search--Snags, Successes, and Materials

=20

We are looking for email conversations about recent personal

experiences on the job market for the second edition of Job Search=20

in Academe. The revised edition will be updated to include advice,=20

scenarios, successes, and snags from Master's level and PhD=20

candidates about academic and corporate job searches. The authors=20

will build contributions in collaboration with contributors. You can=20

be anonymous or named and titled. You may contribute a good quote or=20

a case study. Your only time commitment is your email correspondence=20

with us, but your contributions make the book.

=20

UPDATE: Re-imagining Identity (3/15/04; journal issue)

updated: 
Sunday, February 8, 2004 - 12:50am
Mester Literary Journal

MESTER LITERARY JOURNAL
CALL FOR PAPERS

Please notice extended deadline: March 15th, 2004

Mester, the yearly graduate student academic journal of the Department of
Spanish and Portuguese at UCLA, seeks articles for its Special Issue to b=
e
published in June 2004, which will be devoted to:

Transformations: Re-imagining Identity

The centennial celebrations of Alejo Carpentier and Pablo Neruda, whose
works contributed to new representations of Latin American identity, serv=
e
to highlight how this concept has been re-imagined over the years. In thi=
s
Special Issue we seek to explore the topic of identity from a wide range =
of
scholarly points of view.

UPDATE: Victorian Studies Bulletin (2/12/04; journal issue)

updated: 
Sunday, February 8, 2004 - 12:50am
Rachel Bright

UPDATE: My computer had a slight meltdown over the weekend and unfortunately
all of my saved email has been irretrievably lost. If you sent information
for submission to the March VSB prior to February 1, please resend your
information (deadline Feb. 12). I'm including the original CFP below.

Thank you!
Rachel Bright
Co-editor, VSB
rbright_at_temple.edu

*****************************************************
Please forward this message as necessary:

The Victorian Studies Bulletin is beginning to collect information and copy
for the March 2004 issue on the following subjects:

UPDATE: Victorian Studies Bulletin (2/12/04; journal issue)

updated: 
Sunday, February 8, 2004 - 12:50am
Rachel Bright

UPDATE: My computer had a slight meltdown over the weekend and unfortunately
all of my saved email has been irretrievably lost. If you sent information
for submission to the March VSB prior to February 1, please resend your
information (deadline Feb. 12). I'm including the original CFP below.

Thank you!
Rachel Bright
Co-editor, VSB
rbright_at_temple.edu

*****************************************************
Please forward this message as necessary:

The Victorian Studies Bulletin is beginning to collect information and copy
for the March 2004 issue on the following subjects:

UPDATE: Re-imagining Identity (3/15/04; journal issue)

updated: 
Sunday, February 8, 2004 - 12:50am
Mester Literary Journal

MESTER LITERARY JOURNAL
CALL FOR PAPERS

Please notice extended deadline: March 15th, 2004

Mester, the yearly graduate student academic journal of the Department of
Spanish and Portuguese at UCLA, seeks articles for its Special Issue to b=
e
published in June 2004, which will be devoted to:

Transformations: Re-imagining Identity

The centennial celebrations of Alejo Carpentier and Pablo Neruda, whose
works contributed to new representations of Latin American identity, serv=
e
to highlight how this concept has been re-imagined over the years. In thi=
s
Special Issue we seek to explore the topic of identity from a wide range =
of
scholarly points of view.

UPDATE: Reading Rocky Horror (no deadline noted; edited collection)

updated: 
Sunday, February 8, 2004 - 12:50am
Jeffrey Weinstock

Although the announced deadline for submissions for the _Reading Rocky
Horror: The Rocky Horror Picture Show and Popular Culture_ edited collection
project has passed, I will still consider additional submissions.

The initial cfp netted a fine group of essays, but one too narrowly focused
on issues of spectatorship or gender. I will still consider essays on those
topics, but am most interested in submissions that tackle the film, its
cult, and its influence from other perspectives.

If you are interested in developing an essay, please contact me at
<Jeffrey.Weinstock_at_cmich.edu> or (989) 774-3101.

UPDATE: Reading Rocky Horror (no deadline noted; edited collection)

updated: 
Sunday, February 8, 2004 - 12:50am
Jeffrey Weinstock

Although the announced deadline for submissions for the _Reading Rocky
Horror: The Rocky Horror Picture Show and Popular Culture_ edited collection
project has passed, I will still consider additional submissions.

The initial cfp netted a fine group of essays, but one too narrowly focused
on issues of spectatorship or gender. I will still consider essays on those
topics, but am most interested in submissions that tackle the film, its
cult, and its influence from other perspectives.

If you are interested in developing an essay, please contact me at
<Jeffrey.Weinstock_at_cmich.edu> or (989) 774-3101.

UPDATE: Reading Rocky Horror (no deadline noted; edited collection)

updated: 
Sunday, February 8, 2004 - 12:50am
Jeffrey Weinstock

Although the announced deadline for submissions for the _Reading Rocky
Horror: The Rocky Horror Picture Show and Popular Culture_ edited collection
project has passed, I will still consider additional submissions.

The initial cfp netted a fine group of essays, but one too narrowly focused
on issues of spectatorship or gender. I will still consider essays on those
topics, but am most interested in submissions that tackle the film, its
cult, and its influence from other perspectives.

If you are interested in developing an essay, please contact me at
<Jeffrey.Weinstock_at_cmich.edu> or (989) 774-3101.

UPDATE: Composing and Revising the Professional/Technical Writing Program (3/1/04; collection)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 3, 2004 - 4:09am
David Franke

Composing and Revising the Professional/Technical Writing Program

New deadline: March 1, 2004

As Professional and Technical Writing grows at the undergraduate level from
a narrow pre-professional track to a discipline, complete with its own
undergraduate degree and certificate programs, faculty administrators often
seek grounded and detailed descriptions of how to picture, develop, promote
and sustain their programs. A strong need exists for a volume of reflective
discussion aimed at explaining the context and specifics of running a PWT
program, one grounded in specific institutional contexts and yet "portable"
to other sites and situations.

CFP: Music and Sexualities (2/29/04; journal issue)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 3, 2004 - 4:09am
Rose Theresa

The Newsletter for the Gay and Lesbian Study Group of the
American Musicological Society seeks submissions for
publication in its Spring Newsletter. We invite work on
gender and sexuality, transgender/transsexual, bisexual,
lesbian and/or gay studies that intersects with music
history, culture, theory and/or performance. Along with
essays and reviews (of books, recordings and
performances), we also welcome news items, announcements
of conferences, concerts and workshops, special
bibliographies, syllabi, suggestions, and letters. The
deadline for submissions is February 29. Electronic
submissions should be sent as message text in plain text
format (ASCII).
No attachments will be accepted.

CFP: Undergraduate Literary e-Journal (undergrad) (3/27/04; e-journal)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 3, 2004 - 4:09am
Lydia Kualapai

 *PLEASE DISTRIBUTE WIDELY*=20
=20
Schreiner University is now accepting submissions for the Second Issue =
of ILLUMINATIONS: AN UNDERGRADUATE LITERARY E-JOURNAL. =20
=20
Illuminations, a peer-reviewed international literary e-journal, offers =
undergraduate students an opportunity to publish works both critical and =
creative. Submissions will be refereed by a panel of three undergraduate =
students. =20
=20
Submission Deadline: March 27, 2004
=20
Submission Categories: =20
=B7 Scholarly Critical Articles
=B7 Creative Non-Fiction=20
=B7 Book and Movie Reviews=20
=B7 Short Fiction=20
=B7 Poetry =20
=20

CFP: Undergraduate Literary e-Journal (undergrad) (3/27/04; e-journal)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 3, 2004 - 4:09am
Lydia Kualapai

 *PLEASE DISTRIBUTE WIDELY*=20
=20
Schreiner University is now accepting submissions for the Second Issue =
of ILLUMINATIONS: AN UNDERGRADUATE LITERARY E-JOURNAL. =20
=20
Illuminations, a peer-reviewed international literary e-journal, offers =
undergraduate students an opportunity to publish works both critical and =
creative. Submissions will be refereed by a panel of three undergraduate =
students. =20
=20
Submission Deadline: March 27, 2004
=20
Submission Categories: =20
=B7 Scholarly Critical Articles
=B7 Creative Non-Fiction=20
=B7 Book and Movie Reviews=20
=B7 Short Fiction=20
=B7 Poetry =20
=20

CFP: Science Fiction in Culture and the Canon (4/15/04; e-journal issue)

updated: 
Saturday, January 31, 2004 - 1:21am
Kirsten C. Uszkalo

CFP: The Undiscovered Country: Science fiction in culture and the canon

There have been several milestones met and passed since Edgar Rice Burroughs, the Grandfather of science fiction, introduced us to extra terrestrial life on Mars. Through science fiction we have engaged our minds and souls in the modern manifestation of philosophy and often crossed the line into technical prophecy.

CFP: Science Fiction in Culture and the Canon (4/15/04; e-journal issue)

updated: 
Saturday, January 31, 2004 - 1:21am
Kirsten C. Uszkalo

CFP: The Undiscovered Country: Science fiction in culture and the canon

There have been several milestones met and passed since Edgar Rice Burroughs, the Grandfather of science fiction, introduced us to extra terrestrial life on Mars. Through science fiction we have engaged our minds and souls in the modern manifestation of philosophy and often crossed the line into technical prophecy.

CFP: Seeing and Knowing (2/15/04; journal issue)

updated: 
Saturday, January 31, 2004 - 1:21am
Nicole Frey

CFP: Variations: InSights (issue 12, 2004)

=93Thinking is more interesting than knowing but less fascinating than=20=

seeing.=94
J.W. Goethe

=93And the eyes of the two of them were opened, and they knew that they=20=

were naked=94 (Genesis 3.7). Seeing and knowing have always been very=20
closely related. Throughout the history of philosophy =96 from Plato to=20=

Descartes and Sloterdijk =96 the eye has occupied a prominent position =
in=20
philosophical discussions, especially as far as epistemological=20
questions are concerned. A look into both scientific and everyday=20
language reveals that a number of visual metaphors serve the purpose of=20=

CFP: Postcolonial Revisions of Early Modern Histories (3/1/04; collection)

updated: 
Thursday, January 29, 2004 - 4:03am
Mona Narain

CALL FOR PAPERS: POSTCOLONIAL REVISIONS OF EARLY MODERN HISTORIES. (Deadline
3/1/04; Book Collection)
Unpublished essays that engage the Postcolonial treatment of Early Modern
texts and contexts from the perspective of contemporary novelists are
invited for a collection entitled Postcolonial Revisions of Early Modern
Histories. The book furthers a dialogue not only between Postcolonial and
Early Modern Studies from the relatively neglected vantage point of the
Postcolonial fiction writer, but also seeks to revise Postcolonial Studies
by extending its attention to regions and literatures that are only
beginning to be included in its corpus. As such then, contributions that

CFP: Postcolonial Revisions of Early Modern Histories (3/1/04; collection)

updated: 
Thursday, January 29, 2004 - 4:03am
Mona Narain

CALL FOR PAPERS: POSTCOLONIAL REVISIONS OF EARLY MODERN HISTORIES. (Deadline
3/1/04; Book Collection)
Unpublished essays that engage the Postcolonial treatment of Early Modern
texts and contexts from the perspective of contemporary novelists are
invited for a collection entitled Postcolonial Revisions of Early Modern
Histories. The book furthers a dialogue not only between Postcolonial and
Early Modern Studies from the relatively neglected vantage point of the
Postcolonial fiction writer, but also seeks to revise Postcolonial Studies
by extending its attention to regions and literatures that are only
beginning to be included in its corpus. As such then, contributions that

CFP: Postcolonial Revisions of Early Modern Histories (3/1/04; collection)

updated: 
Thursday, January 29, 2004 - 4:03am
Mona Narain

CALL FOR PAPERS: POSTCOLONIAL REVISIONS OF EARLY MODERN HISTORIES. (Deadline
3/1/04; Book Collection)
Unpublished essays that engage the Postcolonial treatment of Early Modern
texts and contexts from the perspective of contemporary novelists are
invited for a collection entitled Postcolonial Revisions of Early Modern
Histories. The book furthers a dialogue not only between Postcolonial and
Early Modern Studies from the relatively neglected vantage point of the
Postcolonial fiction writer, but also seeks to revise Postcolonial Studies
by extending its attention to regions and literatures that are only
beginning to be included in its corpus. As such then, contributions that

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