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CFP: [Renaissance] Staging Superstitions

updated: 
Wednesday, October 24, 2007 - 9:59pm
Verena Theile

We are soliciting proposals for a collection of critical articles on the
representation of supernatural imaginings, staged superstitions, and
enacted witchcraft and apparitions in the theaters of early modern Europe.

While the focus of this collection of essays lies with dramatic literature,
we seek to analyze literary interactions between fictional and allegedly
non-fictional literatures and to engage cross-disciplinary approaches that
consider literatures in the context of historical, political, legal, and
social analyses.

Some of the literary texts that we hope to explore in the context of
early modern drama include:

CFP: [General] Canadian and Quebec Literatures (Congress 2008)

updated: 
Wednesday, October 24, 2007 - 7:20pm
Deena Rymhs

Call for Papers / Appel à communications

The Association for Canadian and Québec Literatures (ACQL)
Association des littératures canadienne et québécoise (ALCQ)

Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences
University of British Columbia
31 May-2 June 2008

(Le texte français suit)

Writing and Reading Beyond Borders

CFP: [Film] Negotiating the Mediascape - 2 May 2008

updated: 
Wednesday, October 24, 2007 - 11:18am
Dr Andy Birtwistle

Negotiating the Mediascape - Theory and Practice Interchange in
Contemporary Media.

A one-day conference exploring the relationships between theory and
practice in a changing media environment.

Friday 2 May 2008
Department of Media, Canterbury Christ Church University

Recent developments in film, radio, television, the press and the
internet have radically transformed the mediascape. This has brought
about various challenges to established modes of critical enquiry, and
our understanding of the relationship between media theory and practice.
Negotiating the Mediascape seeks to address these changing relationships.

CFP: [Renaissance] The Elizabethan World and its Context

updated: 
Wednesday, October 24, 2007 - 4:35am
william rogers

The Society of Medieval and Renaissance Scholarship Presents
 
First Annual Meeting of the Graduate Students’ Conference of Early
English Studies
Entitled
 
The Elizabethan World and its Contexts.
 
May 2nd, 2008
At University of Texas
Arlington, Texas
Sponsored by the Department of English
University of Texas, Arlington
         We cordially invite you to our First Annual Meeting for graduate
students interested in all aspects of Elizabethan culture, politics, and
literature. Those interested in submitting proposals for papers should
send abstracts of less than 300 words and titles by December 1, 2007 to:
 
William Rogers
Department of English

CFP: [General] Michigan Academy Language and Literature Section

updated: 
Wednesday, October 24, 2007 - 2:36am
Maureen Thum

Language and Literature Section of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts,
and Letters

Call for papers in British, American, Ethnic, Comparative literature,
literature and film; Literature and popular culture; Interdisciplinary
approaches to Literature; Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century Literature
and culture; Shakespeare and the Renaissance. All periods and genres of
literature are welcome.

Send 200 Word Abstracts by email to Maureen Thum, Chair, Lang
mthum_at_umflint.edu

Abstract due date: November 6, 2007

Date of Conference: March 7, 2008
Location: Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, Michigan U.S.A.

CFP: [American] Hemingway's Legacy of Influence (12/21/07; ALA 5/22/08-5/25/08)

updated: 
Wednesday, October 24, 2007 - 2:35am
Suzanne del Gizzo

Ernest Hemingway's commitment to realistic representation gave us works
that are raw, graceful, vigorous, and unexpectedly complex. In the
citation for the 1954 Nobel Prize for Literature, the committee claimed
that Hemingway had "set a standard as easy to imitate as it is difficult
to obtain. After the writer’s death, one critic similarly wrote that
Hemingway was “the inventor of a style that has influenced other writers
more than any other in our time.” This panel will explore that legacy of
influence on Hemingway’s contemporaries and subsequent writers, including
John O’Hara, Norman Mailer, Raymond Carver, Tim O’Brien, Charles

CFP: [20th] Hemingway's Legacy of Influence (12/21/07; ALA 5/22/08-5/25/08)

updated: 
Wednesday, October 24, 2007 - 2:35am
Suzanne del Gizzo

Ernest Hemingway's commitment to realistic representation gave us works
that are raw, graceful, vigorous, and unexpectedly complex. In the
citation for the 1954 Nobel Prize for Literature, the committee claimed
that Hemingway had "set a standard as easy to imitate as it is difficult
to obtain. After the writer’s death, one critic similarly wrote that
Hemingway was “the inventor of a style that has influenced other writers
more than any other in our time.” This panel will explore that legacy of
influence on Hemingway’s contemporaries and subsequent writers, including
John O’Hara, Norman Mailer, Raymond Carver, Tim O’Brien, Charles

CFP: [20th] Interactive Hemingway (12/21/07; ALA 5/22/08-5/25/08)

updated: 
Wednesday, October 24, 2007 - 2:30am
Suzanne del Gizzo

The Hemingway Society invites proposals for a panel at the 2007 American
Literature Association Conference in San Francisco, CA
entitled “Interactive Hemingway”.

This panel aims to explore interactive approaches to teaching and/or
presenting Hemingway’s life, novels, short stories (including The Nick
Adams Stories collection), newspaper dispatches, as well as his work as a
war correspondent using new media and/or technologies. Panelists might
explore teaching Hemingway with film (films made from his writings and/or
documentary pieces generated for teaching), the use and/or creation of
websites, you-tube resources, etc., the use of PowerPoint, audio files,
performance, etc.

CFP: [American] Interactive Hemingway (12/21/07; ALA 5/22/08-5/25/08)

updated: 
Wednesday, October 24, 2007 - 2:30am
Suzanne del Gizzo

The Hemingway Society invites proposals for a panel at the 2007 American
Literature Association Conference in San Francisco, CA
entitled “Interactive Hemingway”.

This panel aims to explore interactive approaches to teaching and/or
presenting Hemingway’s life, novels, short stories (including The Nick
Adams Stories collection), newspaper dispatches, as well as his work as a
war correspondent using new media and/or technologies. Panelists might
explore teaching Hemingway with film (films made from his writings and/or
documentary pieces generated for teaching), the use and/or creation of
websites, you-tube resources, etc., the use of PowerPoint, audio files,
performance, etc.

UPDATE: [Theory] Vitalpoetics: final call for articles

updated: 
Wednesday, October 24, 2007 - 2:10am
Tim Cahill

This is a final call for articles for 'Vitalpoetics: A Journal of Critical Literary Theory' Issue 1, 2008.
Articles are sought (up to 5000 words - negotiable on individual basis) that engage any aspect of
critical literary theory, with an emphasis on close analysis.
Interdisciplinary approaches are encouraged.
All articles must be in English and provide English translations.
'Vitalpoetics' is a new online-journal that will be launched in January, 2008, and will be issued
quarterly.
Please contact via e-mail with any queries and for submission guidlines.