Epistemologies of Disability
Call For Papers
4th IDSC International Conference
Aligarh Muslim University
21.02.2024 to 23.02.2024
Epistemologies of Disability
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Call For Papers
4th IDSC International Conference
Aligarh Muslim University
21.02.2024 to 23.02.2024
Epistemologies of Disability
Renaissance Hybridity
Graduate Early Modern Student Society
Seventh Annual Symposium
Friday, April 26, 2024
UW–Madison Memorial Library Special Collections & Hybrid over Zoom
Keynote Speaker: Lindsey Row-Heyveld, Associate Professor of English at Luther College
Call for Papers
Submission Deadline: Wednesday, January 31, 2024
Rethinking Marginality: Inclusion and Ableism
Pharos University in Alexandria, Egypt – in collaboration with Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, and the University of New Mexico, USA–cordially invites you to participate in its international conference titled “Rethinking Marginality: Inclusion and Ableism,” to be held onsite from 1 – 2 March 2024.
Affective Modernismos
Cluster CFP-Modernism/modernity Print Plus
Editors: Juan G. Ramos (College of the Holy Cross) and Andrew Reynolds (West Texas A&M University)
Postcolonial studies as a way of reclaiming history from the perspective of the colonised continues to uncover the myriad fraught legacies of colonialism. The emergence of newer interdisciplinary areas of inquiry, such as climate change, has further revealed tangled legacies of colonialism that continue to persist. The burgeoning field of postcolonial print culture studies, in turn, has been bringing to the fore a fascinating terrain of production, circulation and consumption of print in colonial contexts that is particularly enriching our knowledge of anticolonial resistance in various ways. This conference aims to bring together academic work in some of the newer sub-fields of postcolonial inquiry with attention to continuities.
Call For Papers
Deadline: November 30, 2023
Scope of the paper topics accepted under this area:
Disasters and Apocalypses offers a forum for these questions and critical approaches surrounding the culture of disasters, catastrophes, accidents, and apocalypses in global art, literature, media, film, and popular culture. Disasters and Apocalypses will address broader disciplinary topics and innovative intersections of humanities, musicology, social science, literature, film, visual art, psychology, game studies, material culture, media studies, ecology, and information technology.
The College of Arts and Humanities at Bethune-Cookman University welcomes proposals for the annual Zora Neale Hurston Conference to be held virtually on February 15-16, 2024. Hip Hop Hurston recognizes the 50th anniversary of Hip-Hop as well as Hurston’s celebration of African American vernacular and culture as a precursor to this movement.
You are invited to submit abstracts for individual or panel presentations on Hip-Hop, Zora Neale Hurston, or any of her multidisciplinary interests. Presentations can be scholarly, pedagogical, and/or creative and should not exceed 15 minutes. We are also interested in student panels.
GLOBAL ANTHROPO-SCENE:
RETHINKING SUSTAINABILITY AND CULTURAL PRESERVATIONS
30-31 January 2024
A Two-Day International Conference
Department of English
Jadavpur University
Sex in Translation - International Conference, London, 4-5 July 2024
2024 Situations International Conference
Call for Papers
Korean Cultural Centre, UK
1~3 February 2024
Minor Diasporas in Asia and Beyond
Call for Abstracts!
Back to the Future and Philosophy: This is Heavy!
Edited by Joshua Heter and Richard Greene
Jonathan Bayliss Society
Tangents and Divigations
Jonathan Bayliss Society
The Jonathan Bayliss Society is sponsoring two roundtable panels for the 35th Annual Conference of the American Literature Association, to be held May 23-26, 2024, at The Palmer House Hilton, 17 East Monroe, Chicago, IL. For additional information about the conference see https://americanliteratureassociation.org/ala-conferences/ala-annual-conference.
Please send abstracts of no more than 250 words to Gary Grieve-Carlson at grieveca@lvc.edu or info@jonathanbayliss.org by January 29, 2024.
Rhetoric After Identification
Edited by David R. Gruber (University of Nevada, Las Vegas) & Jason Kalin (DePaul University)
Rhetorical identification seeks a common ground of existence in which divided individuals can mediate their differences. Perhaps, for this reason, either explicitly or implicitly, identification has become a commonplace of rhetorical theory and criticism. As Diane Davis (2010) writes, “Identification is not simply rhetoric’s most fundamental aim; it’s also and therefore rhetorical theory’s most fundamental problem” (p. 33). Any rhetoric, it seems, must pass through rhetorical identification.
The 71st Annual South Central Renaissance Conference will take place in Savannah, Georgia, 4-6 April 2024. This year, the SCRC will collaborate with the annual New College Conference on Medieval and Renaissance Studies for this event, co-sponsored by Georgia Southern University.
The conference will have three key lectures:
William B. Hunter Lecture by Kathryn A. Edwards, University of South Carolina
Louis L. Martz Lecture by Daniel Bornstein, Washington University in St. Louis
Conference Keynote Lecture by Jemma Field, Yale Center for British Art