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CALL FOR CONTRIBUTORS: Women’s Innovations in Theatre, Dance, and Performance

updated: 
Friday, January 20, 2023 - 9:31am
Women's Innovations in Theatre, Dance, and Performance Series
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, February 1, 2023

CALL FOR CONTRIBUTORS: Women’s Innovations in Theatre, Dance, and Performance  

We are writing about a call for contributors to an exciting new series at Bloomsbury. Women’s Innovations in Theatre, Dance, and Performance aims to capture the innovations women have made to the performing arts in their historical, geographical, and disciplinary diversity. This series seeks to broaden, celebrate, and recover historical awareness of these performance-based artmakers and their contributions; as such, it will showcase innovative, intersectional feminist historiographical approaches along with a history of women’s innovation in the field.

CFC: CURRENTS VOL. 9 "SOLIDARITY - CONFLICT"

updated: 
Friday, January 20, 2023 - 9:48am
Academic Association for Doctoral Students of English, Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, March 15, 2023

CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS 

CURRENTS NO. 9

SOLIDARITY - CONFLICT

  

We are pleased to announce the call for papers for the ninth issue of CURRENTS: A Journal of Young English Philology Thought and Review. CURRENTS is an open access, peer-reviewed, yearly interdisciplinary journal, based in Toruń (Nicolaus Copernicus University), addressed to young researchers in the field of English studies.

New CFP on Literary Communities, (9.2; Deadline March 15, 2023)

updated: 
Friday, January 20, 2023 - 9:31am
Sanglap: Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, March 15, 2023

In a 2019 piece in The Guardian, Indian writer-activist Arundhati Roy says of the space, created by the literary: “It’s a fragile place in some ways, but an indestructible one. When it’s broken, we rebuild it. Because we need shelter. I very much like the idea of literature that is needed.” This idea of literature as a fragile shelter that needs constant rebuilding throws open the question of the literary communities. What is the nature of this community of readers and writers constructed by the act of literature? How can literature have a purchase on public culture, if at all? With the onset of social media, can we see literature in the 21st century as a communitarian exercise anymore?