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displaying 31 - 45 of 173

Diderot: Space and Movement

updated: 
Wednesday, October 28, 2020 - 1:12pm
ITINERA Rivista di filosofia e di teoria delle arti
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, July 15, 2021

Newton and modern science, especially Mathematics and Physics, have completely changed the concepts of space and movement. Unlike other thinkers of that century, among whom Immanuel Kant stands for his remarkable thought, the new concepts of space and movement don’t seem to have influenced Diderot’s thinking effectively.

Rejoinder Call for Submissions -- Climate in Crisis

updated: 
Wednesday, October 28, 2020 - 1:12pm
Institute for Research on Women, Rutgers University
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, January 6, 2021

“Climate change,” as former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson so astutely notes, “requires a feminist solution.” Global heating is causing rising sea levels, extreme weather events, and the circulation of new pathogens. It impacts economically, socially, and politically marginalized people and communities most severely. Women and children, the majority of the world’s poor, are already disproportionately burdened by its effects. In the Global North, the climate breakdown compounds the environmental racism that many communities of color already experience.

ACLA 2021: Repurposing Enlightenment

updated: 
Wednesday, October 28, 2020 - 1:12pm
ACLA Seminar
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, October 31, 2020

The Enlightenment has long been understood as a break from past practices and traditions, as a period in which reason, science, progress, secularization were invented. Instead, we seek to understand the Enlightenment and the values identified with it not as rejections of the past or sudden revolutions in thought, but as reconsiderations of earlier ways of knowing. These instances of repurposing include both translations of older sources and traditional thought practices into new contexts as well as the proliferation, amplification, and replication of eighteenth-century ideas.

Submit your research article

updated: 
Wednesday, October 28, 2020 - 1:07pm
International Scholars Journal of Arts and Social Science Research
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, November 5, 2020

International Scholars Journal of Arts and Social Science Research (ISJASSR) invites well researched articles for publication in its November edition.

The Journal is currently indexed in online scholarly databases like ICI World of Journals, Google Scholar etc.

ISJASSR is devoted to promoting scholarship in the Arts and Social Sciences by extending the reach of research on any topic within the disciplines. Articles which explore relevance of any of the arts disciplines to modern economies will be published in the November Issue free of charge.

Author Guidelines

Articles should be submitted in MS Word format

Authors must use either APA or MLA referencing style

Grateful Dead Studies Association: PCA Conference

updated: 
Wednesday, October 28, 2020 - 1:07pm
Grateful Dead Studies Association
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, November 16, 2020

CALL FOR PAPERS: GRATEFUL DEAD DIVISION

POPULAR CULTURE ASSOCIATION 2021 NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Boston Marriot Copley Place

June 2-5, 2021

For information on PCA/ACA, please go to http://www.pcaaca.org

 

DEADLINE:  November 16, 2020

The Grateful Dead area invites scholars from all disciplines to join us for our first meeting in Boston 2021!

Academics, professionals, and graduate students are all encouraged to submit proposals for papers, sessions, discussion panels, and special sessions on any aspect of the Grateful Dead and their associated contexts.

Imagining the 1980s: Representations of the Reagan Decade in Popular Culture - update

updated: 
Wednesday, October 28, 2020 - 12:05pm
McFarland Publishers
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Popular culture scholars often refer to a 40-year cycle of nostalgia, and so it is not surprising that there has been a recent wave of movies and television shows set in the 1980s.  The Netflix series Stranger Things, the film IT: Chapter One, the interactive film Black Mirror: Bandersnatch, and the ninth season of American Horror Story, titled “1984,” all provide prominent examples of recent texts that have used the semantic texture of the 1980s as a dramatic setting.  These examples of ’80s horror suggest a contemporary apprehension of an undercurrent of demonic violence that undergirds the glittering fads, suburban affluence, and Reaganite yuppieism associated with the 1980s, even as they suggest parallels between Re

The Oswald Review: An International Journal of Undergraduate Literary Criticism

updated: 
Wednesday, October 28, 2020 - 12:05pm
University of South Carolina Aiken
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, March 1, 2021

The Oswald Review is an international, refereed journal of undergraduate criticism and research in the discipline of English. Published annually, The Oswald Review accepts submissions from undergraduates in this country and abroad (with a professor’s endorsement).

Deadline extended! Emerson Society Undergraduate Student Essay Prize

updated: 
Tuesday, December 15, 2020 - 6:59pm
Ralph Waldo Emerson Society
deadline for submissions: 
Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Deadline extended! The Ralph Waldo Emerson Society invites submissions for the first annual Emerson Society Undergraduate Student Essay Prize. Undergraduate students are welcome to submit 1,000-1,500-word academic essays on any topic relevant to the study of Ralph Waldo Emerson—his life, work, national and transnational reception, importance within and beyond U.S. literature and culture, and/or contemporary relevance. Winning essays will demonstrate originality, clarity, and rigorous engagement with Emerson. Selected essays may be returned to applicants with suggested revisions. The winning essay will be published in The Emerson Society Papers and the writer awarded $100. 

Post Green: Literature, Culture, and Environment

updated: 
Friday, October 23, 2020 - 1:31pm
Dr. Animesh Roy
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, February 15, 2021

CALL FOR PAPERS

Post Green: Literature, Culture, and Environment

Edited by Murali Sivaramakrishnan and Animesh Roy

 

Concept Note:

Feminism in North East India: A Critical Exploration, Volume-II

updated: 
Friday, May 19, 2023 - 1:01am
Assam University:: Diphu Campus (A Central University) Diphu - 782460, Karbi Anglong, Assam, India
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, July 31, 2023

Feminism has become the most controversial, most discussed and most contested subject in India’s current academic field. North East Indian feminism generally depended on Western feminism as well as Indian feminism frameworks. These two frameworks are diversely intricate from North-East India in term of race, class, caste, culture and religion, etc. Moreover, it is important to note that most Indian mainstream feminists are brought up in a specific cultural setting i.e. class, caste, religion etc. from various parts of India. ‘Indian feminist thought’ is a term that they coined through their own discourse.

Reminder: CFP - Edited Book on "Theatre-fiction"

updated: 
Friday, October 23, 2020 - 1:31pm
Dr. Graham Wolfe / National University of Singapore
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, November 1, 2020

CFP: “Theatre-Fiction”

Abstracts: November 1, 2020

Seeking proposals for an edited book of chapters on “theatre-fiction”, i.e. novels and stories about theatre.

Female Narratives of Protest: Literary and Cultural Representations from South Asia

updated: 
Friday, October 23, 2020 - 1:31pm
Nabanita Sengupta
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, February 1, 2021

Contemporary regimes of protest in South Asia are informed and injuncted by its ever shifting geopolitical modalities. With the rise of globalisation, neoliberalism and multiculturalism, South Asian geopolitics comprise a quest for redefinition of biopower and subjectivity formations. As hegemonies of Western  dominance are toppled, South Asian geopolitics are evolving as a complex assemblage of biopolitics, citizenship ethics and human rights concerns. In this evolving engagement with global politics, South Asia is fast emerging as a contending power itself with competent human and capital resources. An important consequence of this is the appearance of newer axes of fault lines in terms of polity, economy, religion, culture, art, and gender.

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