/10
/13

displaying 1 - 7 of 7

CCAM Fall 2023 Machine as Medium Symposium: Matter and Spirit

updated: 
Wednesday, October 18, 2023 - 1:23pm
Center for Collaborative Arts and Media (CCAM) at Yale University
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, October 13, 2023

Call for Papers

In 1950, the pioneering mathematician and computer scientist Alan Turing asked the world: “Can machines think?”

Published in his article in Mind when he was 38 years old, Turing’s question emerged from a life of relentless imagination. By then, Turing had applied his brilliance to help the allies win World War II and revolutionized computing—creating the foundation for much later developments in AI technologies and machine learning. His intrepidness included living as a gay man in a society that would criminalize and cause him irreparable harm for it.

DEADLINE EXTENDED: Let the Games Begin: Sports and Pastimes in the Medieval and Renaissance Worlds

updated: 
Monday, December 4, 2023 - 3:42pm
OSU Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, December 31, 2023

On February 16-17, 2024, the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies will host its biennial celebration of Popular Culture and the Deep Past (PCDP) at the Ohio State University, with ‘Let the Games Begin!: Sports and Pastimes in the Medieval and Renaissance Worlds.’ As in past years, this event will feature a scholarly conference (with papers, round tables, and keynote lecturesby prominent scholars who will discuss a range of entertainments in their cultural and social contexts) nested within a Renaissance-faire-like carnival (featuring exhibits, gaming, contests, live demonstrations, and activities of all kinds).

Science and Storytelling: An Interdisciplinary Symposium [SASS]

updated: 
Wednesday, October 18, 2023 - 1:22pm
Katherine Rogers-Carpenter / Department of Writing, Rhetoric, and Digital Studies, University of Kentucky
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, November 20, 2023

Sponsored by the Department of Writing, Rhetoric, and Digital Studies

University of Kentucky

Topic: Using storytelling to make science more accessible to lay audiences.

 

Migrating Minds: Journal of Cultural Cosmopolitanism -- Call for papers for Spring 2025 issue

updated: 
Wednesday, October 18, 2023 - 1:22pm
Migrating Minds: Journal of Cultural Cosmopolitanism
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, September 30, 2024

CALL FOR PAPERS

Migrating Minds: Journal of Cultural Cosmopolitanism (ISSN 2993-1053) [https://migratingminds.georgetown.edu] is a new peer-reviewed, open-access scholarly journal devoted to interdisciplinary research on cultural cosmopolitanism from a comparative perspective.

It provides a unique, international forum for innovative critical approaches to cosmopolitanism emerging from literatures, cultures, media, and the arts in dialogue with other areas of the humanities and social sciences, across temporal, spatial, and linguistic boundaries.

Girls’ and Young Women’s Textual Cultures Across History: Imitation, Adaptation, Transformation

updated: 
Wednesday, October 18, 2023 - 1:21pm
Lois Burke, Jennifer Duggan & Edel Lamb
deadline for submissions: 
Wednesday, January 31, 2024

 

The editors would like to invite chapters of 7,000 words for an edited collection, Girls’ and Young Women’s Textual Cultures Across History: Imitation, Adaptation, Transformation, to be submitted to Routledge’s Children’s Literature and Culture Book Series. We aim to publish the collection in 2025.

Humorous Perspectives on Perpetrators in Contemporary American Literature and Popular Culture

updated: 
Wednesday, October 18, 2023 - 1:21pm
American Studies Program, University of Bucharest
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, November 12, 2023

This is a Call for Papers for an online workshop titled Laughing in the Face of Evil: Humorous Perspectives on Perpetrators in Contemporary American Literature and Popular Culture. The workshop asks what humor can contribute to our understanding of perpetrators by examining a selection of works from contemporary American literature and popular culture. Does humor help demythologize certain perpetrators whose international fame turned them into quasi-mythical figures? Can the ownership of humorous content about a traumatic situation or process endured by a specific marginalized community be transferred to other communities?

[CFP] SPACES OF PRECARITY: Migration, Spatiality and the Refugee Graphic Narrative

updated: 
Tuesday, October 24, 2023 - 5:07am
International Research Centre for Cultural Studies, The Education University of Hong Kong
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, December 15, 2023

Call for papers - Special Issue

 of Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics

Spaces of Precarity:

Migration, Spatiality and the Refugee Graphic Narrative

 

Edited by

Markus Arnold (University of Cape Town) & Bidisha Banerjee (Education University of Hong Kong)