"Phantoms in Rites, Myths, and Discourse"

deadline for submissions: 
September 1, 2024
full name / name of organization: 
"Textures" (LCE, Lumière Lyon 2 University)

The academic journal, Textures, plans to publish a special issue in hauntology. This project aims at collecting articles in literature and/or history that reflect the multicultural and multilingual approach of the Foreign Literatures and Civilisations (LCE) Research Laboratory at Lumière Lyon 2 University.

https://publications-prairial.fr/textures/

 

For the special issue, “Phantoms in Rites, Myths, and Discourse”, we invite scholars to write articles reflecting various disciplines belonging to human sciences and various geographical and cultural areas to study the figure of the ghost under its variegated forms, appearances, and representations (whether they are anthropological, artistic, political, linguistic, or else), from ghosts that we ourselves fashion to ghosts who fashion who we are. Indeed, ghosts take shape in the realm of fiction and in people’s minds while shaping and strengthening beliefs, as well as social, political, and artistic practices.

 

Proposals will reflect ghost practices performed from the mid-18th century – which roughly corresponds to the advent of the Gothic novel in the West, from Horace Walpole to Mary Shelley – until today. Although the temporal frontiers that were chosen reflect a timeframe based on a Western reading of social, political, and literary history, this special issue, by welcoming non-European viewpoints, also aims at decentring and deconstructing, enriching, and contrasting a Western conception of ghosting that is deeply linked to the way Westerners conceive humans’ relationship with death.

 

The following topics can be tackled (although the list is non-exhaustive):

1. Anthropology, sociology, theology, history of thought and representations:

  • Revival of beliefs and modernity
  • Connections – and coexistence - between the living and the dead in the construction of societies
  • Folklores, legacy, and popular culture
  • The spirit or ghost as a figure that tells the truth at times when nothing makes sense
  • Questioning the frontiers of the real, rationality, and sanity in an intercultural approach
  • Spectrality and phenomenology

2. Literature, art history, iconography, and visual arts:

  • Ghost stories and ghosts in literature
  • Ghosts on screen (in movies and documentaries)
  • Representations of ghosts and spectres in paintings
  • Photos and ghosts

3. History, political sciences, and memory studies:

  • Creating ghosts as a discursive strategy to narrate a nation
  • The character of the ghost citizen
  • Memory as a structuring element or the bearer of divisions
  • Creating overwhelming threats for political purposes
  • The disappeared as both presence and absence, as affective and political substitutes

4. Language studies, discourse analysis, textual linguistics, and translation studies:

  • Intertextuality and textual memory
  • In/visible translators
  • Translated texts, between present and absent texts
  • Voices, narrators, and viewpoints in the narrative
  • Traces and clues of past discourses in today’s language

 

We invite scholars to send an abstract in French, English, or Spanish, along with a short biography by September 1, 2024 to Marine Berthiot (mcberthiot.recherche@proton.me), Valentine Piéplu (valentine.pieplu@sorbonne-nouvelle.fr), and Marie Schaeverbeke (marie.schaeverbeke@univ-lyon2.fr).

The articles will be published in the peer-reviewed journal, Textures (the academic journal of the LCE research laboratory at Lumière Lyon 2 University). The deadline to submit your full article is January 15, 2025. Writers’ guidelines are accessible on the website: https://publications-prairial.fr/textures/index.php?id=327

 

For more information, please visit the LCE research laboratory website: https://lce.univ-lyon2.fr/activites/colloques-et-journees-detude/aac-cfp-convocatoria-fantomes-rites-mythes-et-discours