It Takes a Village: Kinship Systems in the Gothic
To welcome the Gothic to NeMLA 2024 (March 7-10), this panel asks scholars to present work that introduces unlikely kinship systems in the Gothic and claims these relationships as unique to this genre.
CFP:
From bands of thieves who live and die by honor codes to townspeople neglecting one of their own, the Gothic genre is full of non-normative kin. This panel seeks to collectively reimagine the role of kinship systems in Gothic literature and broaden common assumptions about who or what groupings may qualify as family. How do hierarchies form, and how might responsibility be reorganized? Which of these relationships are coerced through power, law, and money, and which of these relationships are formed through genuine human bonding? The Gothic asks its readers to reconsider the power of familial structures by disrupting the roles of traditional kinship systems. Whether a deal with the devil formed a connection or questions of parentage emerged from being born of a laboratory, understanding the roles of these arrangements is vital to acknowledging more fully the contributions of the Gothic to revolutions in how to read the family. “It Takes a Village: Kinship Systems in the Gothic” asks scholars to present work that introduces unlikely kinship systems in the Gothic and claims these relationships as unique to this genre.
Please see CFP here:
https://cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/20553
Please email me with any questions.