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displaying 796 - 810 of 884

CFP: [Renaissance] Narrating Cities - Special Issue of The Journal of Narrative Theory

updated: 
Thursday, October 2, 2008 - 12:49pm
Adam Hansen

CFP â€" Special Issue of The Journal of Narrative Theory: “Narrating Cities”

The Journal of Narrative Theory seeks submissions for a forthcoming
special issue: “Narrating Cities”.

Since 2007, for the first time in history, the majority of the world’s
population has lived in cities.
Have narratives, and readings of them, prepared us for this?

CFP: [Collections] Narrating Cities - Special Issue of The Journal of Narrative Theory

updated: 
Thursday, October 2, 2008 - 12:27pm
Adam Hansen

CFP â€" Special Issue of The Journal of Narrative Theory: “Narrating Cities”

The Journal of Narrative Theory seeks submissions for a forthcoming
special issue: “Narrating Cities”.

Since 2007, for the first time in history, the majority of the world’s
population has lived in cities.
Have narratives, and readings of them, prepared us for this?

CFP: [Gender Studies] Women's Studies Conference on Leadership

updated: 
Thursday, October 2, 2008 - 9:54am
Marta McClintock-Comeaux

Call for Papers:
4th Annual Audrey-Beth Fitch Women's Studies Conference

“Leadership: Women Take Charge”
Thursday, March 26th, 2009

The Women's Studies Program at California University of PA is holding its
fourth annual conference on March 26th, 2009. This year’s theme
is “Leadership: Women Take Charge.

CFP: [Gender Studies] ACLA 2009: The Invention of Human Rights in the Nineteenth-Century Novel ( due 11/1/08; 3/26-9/08)

updated: 
Thursday, October 2, 2008 - 3:11am
Keridiana Chez

Transnational Humanity: The Invention of Human Rights through the
Nineteenth-Century Novel

This ACLA seminar will explore the transatlantic invention of human rights,
and the construction of the multivalent discourse of “humanity,” through
the nineteenth-century novel. Novels have participated in directing and
redirecting the discourse of the “human”â€"the human as closed system, as
biopolitical species-being unit, as rational individualâ€"by charting
interiorities that are deemed to constitute a “human.”

CFP: [Postcolonial] ACLA 2009: The Invention of Human Rights in the Nineteenth-Century Novel ( due 11/1/08; 3/26-9/08)

updated: 
Thursday, October 2, 2008 - 3:10am
Keridiana Chez

Transnational Humanity: The Invention of Human Rights through the
Nineteenth-Century Novel

This ACLA seminar will explore the transatlantic invention of human rights,
and the construction of the multivalent discourse of “humanity,” through
the nineteenth-century novel. Novels have participated in directing and
redirecting the discourse of the “human”â€"the human as closed system, as
biopolitical species-being unit, as rational individualâ€"by charting
interiorities that are deemed to constitute a “human.”

CFP: [Ethnic] ACLA 2009: The Invention of Human Rights in the Nineteenth-Century Novel ( due 11/1/08; 3/26-9/08)

updated: 
Thursday, October 2, 2008 - 3:09am
Keridiana Chez

Transnational Humanity: The Invention of Human Rights through the
Nineteenth-Century Novel

This ACLA seminar will explore the transatlantic invention of human rights,
and the construction of the multivalent discourse of “humanity,” through
the nineteenth-century novel. Novels have participated in directing and
redirecting the discourse of the “human”â€"the human as closed system, as
biopolitical species-being unit, as rational individualâ€"by charting
interiorities that are deemed to constitute a “human.”

CFP: [Victorian] ACLA 2009: The Invention of Human Rights in the Nineteenth-Century Novel ( due 11/1/08; 3/26-9/08)

updated: 
Thursday, October 2, 2008 - 3:08am
Keridiana Chez

Transnational Humanity: The Invention of Human Rights through the
Nineteenth-Century Novel

This ACLA seminar will explore the transatlantic invention of human rights,
and the construction of the multivalent discourse of “humanity,” through
the nineteenth-century novel. Novels have participated in directing and
redirecting the discourse of the “human”â€"the human as closed system, as
biopolitical species-being unit, as rational individualâ€"by charting
interiorities that are deemed to constitute a “human.”

CFP: [American] ACLA 2009: The Invention of Human Rights in the Nineteenth-Century Novel ( due 11/1/08; 3/26-9/08)

updated: 
Thursday, October 2, 2008 - 3:08am
Keridiana Chez

Transnational Humanity: The Invention of Human Rights through the
Nineteenth-Century Novel

This ACLA seminar will explore the transatlantic invention of human rights,
and the construction of the multivalent discourse of “humanity,” through
the nineteenth-century novel. Novels have participated in directing and
redirecting the discourse of the “human”â€"the human as closed system, as
biopolitical species-being unit, as rational individualâ€"by charting
interiorities that are deemed to constitute a “human.”

CFP: [Film] ACLA 2009: Recycling the Local: New Cinemas as Global Voices

updated: 
Thursday, October 2, 2008 - 2:25am
Hugo Rios

Whether committed to “clear the ruins” of a traumatic and guilty past or
simply in an outburst of youthful energy determined to do away with “le
cinéma du papa,” new waves embody a paradox: they want to break away from
an exhausted filmic language which has colonized the “old” national
cinema and give voice to an aesthetically and politically new, local
language which would, nevertheless, reintegrate them within a global
community. From European New Waves, the new cinemas of post-1989 Eastern
and Central Europe and the movements in Asia and Latin America, film has
been used as a visual, self-reflexive mechanism by means of which

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