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"1922 and After: A Centenary of Modernism and World Literature"

updated: 
Thursday, July 9, 2020 - 4:24pm
Journal of Modern Literature (Indiana University Press)
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, October 15, 2020

Call for Papers for "1922 and After: A Centenary of Modernism and World Literature", Journal of Modern Literature (Indiana University Press)

 

Drawing upon anthropological, psychological, and philosophical knowledge as well as personal experiences, the high modernists wrote their now-famous classics, including The Waste Land, Ulysses, Jacob's Room, among many others, in the expanded context of a post-War generation facing the larger world via the influences upon them and the influences they and their works would create. These interrelationships among European, British, and American modernism (so-called international modernism), and the emergence of World Literature, provide the framework for the issue. 

 

NeMLA 52 Cultural Studies and Media Studies Panel -- Innovative Media: Representations of Race and Culture Across Asia

updated: 
Friday, October 2, 2020 - 10:23am
Northeast Modern Language
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, October 11, 2020

This CFP is for the panel on “Innovative Media: Representations of Race and Culture Across Asia” at the 52nd NeMLA Annual Convention (the convention will go virtual this year), March 11-14, 2021. http://www.buffalo.edu/nemla/convention.html

This session welcomes papers addressing any aspect of global cultural studies—including (but not limited to) literary and digital representations of cultural, artistic, racial, and linguistic diversity.

EXTENDED DEADLINE (July 30, 2020): Scandal and Transgression in Twentieth-Century Transatlantic Vanguardisms

updated: 
Thursday, July 9, 2020 - 4:25pm
SAMLA 92: Virtual/Hybrid Format
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, July 30, 2020

This panel explores forms of dissent adopted by twentieth-century transatlantic avant-gardes as a means of challenging traditional genres and social codes. Since the inception of European experimentalism during the first decades of the twentieth century, a series of art movements engaged in radical production that questioned the established state of affairs. From the Cubist adoption of multiple viewpoints, through the Futurist celebration of technology and speed, the Expressionist distortion of form, to the Dadaist sense of provocation and the irrational juxtaposition of images in Surrealism, avant-garde art and literature has set precedents on an international level of exchanges.

Mediating Democracy: Contemporary Politics in Film and Media

updated: 
Thursday, July 9, 2020 - 4:25pm
SFSU Cinema Studies Graduate Student Association
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, September 1, 2020

SFSU School of Cinema 22nd Annual Cinema Studies Graduate Conference:

Mediating Democracy: Contemporary Politics in Film and Media 

February 11-12, 2021 

Keynote Speaker: Ellen C. Scott (Associate Professor, UCLA School of Theater, Film, and Television)

 

Digital Communities and Cloud Spaces: Arts for a Networked World

updated: 
Thursday, July 9, 2020 - 4:37pm
Dr. Saurav Sengupta/Damdama College, Guwahati
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, September 17, 2020

 

     Call for Book Chapters for Edited Volume

Digital Communities and Cloud Spaces: Arts for a Networked World”

 

Call for Chapters: In/Exclusions. Social Responsibility of Institutions

updated: 
Thursday, July 9, 2020 - 7:29am
Tischner European University
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, July 31, 2020

ALL FOR CHAPTERS FOR AN EDITED BOOK

In/Exclusions. Social Responsibility of Institutions

Deadline for full manuscript submission: 31 July 2020

 

Full manuscript submission email: publikacje@wse.krakow.pl

The publication is meant to explore the concept of social responsibility of institutions running through two our conferences (Towards Social Responsibility of Institutions: Education, Public Health and Design, 2019, and In/Visible. Designs of Social Experience, 2020).

In/Visible: Designs of Social Experience

updated: 
Thursday, July 9, 2020 - 7:32am
Tischner European University
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, July 31, 2020

The regimes of Whiteness, heteronormativity, androcentrism, able-bodiedness or Eurocentrism have for a long time constituted the frameworks of ‘proper’, ‘successful’ or expected social conduct, organising in a normative way social communication, relations and spaces. The regimes have been shaping social life, state policies and institutions, or fields of science and arts. Social practices are imbued with preconceptions concerning race, sexuality, gender, health or ethnicity which have become so commonsensical that it takes a lot of critical effort to go beyond the normative context.