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Migrant Sensoria (special issue, Senses and Society)

updated: 
Friday, January 17, 2025 - 8:29am
Senses and Society
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, March 1, 2025

Migrant Sensoria–special issue of The Senses and Society

What are the sensory experiences of migration? How do migrants negotiate their movement not only between spaces and cultures, but between different configurations of sensory environments, habits, and values? How do traumatic contexts of migration register—or fail to register—in sensory experience, and in sensorially entangled memories? How do different sensory arrangements and pedagogies contribute to the erosion, maintenance, or resurgence of collective memories across individual and trans-generational time? How might sensory experiences and interventions contribute to migrant performance, stories, and media—and to articulating “migrant futures” (Bahng)?

(EXTENDED DEADLINE) - ROMANTIC (UN)CONSCIOUSNESS

updated: 
Friday, January 17, 2025 - 8:28am
British Association for Romantic Studies (BARS)
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, January 20, 2025

CALL FOR PAPERS

British Association for Romantic Studies (BARS) PGR & ECR Conference 
 
ROMANTIC (UN)CONSCIOUSNESS
 
Trinity Hall, University of Cambridge: 4th-5th September 2025

Online: 12th September 2025
 
Keynote Speakers Include:

Dr Rowan Rose Boyson (King's College London)

Call for Submissions: Special Issue of Forum on AI, Labor, and Contingency

updated: 
Friday, January 17, 2025 - 8:28am
NCTE/CCCC
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, March 15, 2025

Forum: Issues about Part-Time and Contingent Faculty is a peer-reviewed journal published by NCTE and CCCC to address working conditions, professional life, activism, and perspectives of non-tenure-track faculty.

This special issue—“AI Labor and Contingency: Issues Surrounding the Use of Artificial Intelligence in Student Work and Considerations for Part-Time and Contingent Faculty”—will be published in the fall of 2025. The submission deadline is March 15.

Film-Philosophy Conference 2025, University of Malta, 23-25 June

updated: 
Friday, January 17, 2025 - 4:46am
Film-Philosophy / University of Malta
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, February 21, 2025

Film-Philosophy Conference 2025

University of Malta | 23-25 June 2025

 

Deadline for submissions: 21 February 2025

 

Sponsored by York University in Toronto and the University of Malta, the 2025 Film-Philosophy Conference will be held 23-25 June at the Valletta Campus of the University of Malta.

 

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

Sandra Laugier (Philosophy, Sorbonne, France)

Panel 69: Gender & Sexuality in Postmillennial South Asian Comics and Graphic Narratives, ECSAS 2025, University of Heidelberg, Germany, October 1-4, 2025

updated: 
Friday, January 17, 2025 - 4:10am
University of Heidelberg, Germany
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, January 30, 2025

Call for Papers

In the postmillennial era, South Asian graphic narratives have emerged as powerful mediums for exploring traditional notions of gender and sexuality. This panel examines the ways in which these contemporary visual storytelling forms address and subvert the cultural constructs surrounding gender and sexual identities in South Asia.

Panel description:

Panel 69 - 

C19 Podcast: Call for Proposals

updated: 
Friday, January 17, 2025 - 4:10am
C19 Podcast
deadline for submissions: 
Saturday, February 15, 2025

The C19 Podcast invites proposals from individuals and collaborators of all ranks for single podcast episodes that offer creative, story-driven analysis of topical events that spark connections to nineteenth-century America. We are especially interested in episodes that help make both the nineteenth-century and the specific disciplinary knowledge of our scholarly community legible and exciting to a wide audience.  As our podcast grows, we seek to expand its potential to engage diverse publics in the civic and cultural life of the past.

The Document in Nineteenth-Century U.S. Literature

updated: 
Friday, January 17, 2025 - 4:09am
ALA, Boston, MA, May 21-24, 2025
deadline for submissions: 
Thursday, January 30, 2025

The emergence of modern documentary poetics is often attributed to twentieth-century writers who were interested in redefining the purpose and limits of artistic expression, a redefinition that occurred in the context of labor exploitation, racial violence, and ethnic cleansing. This panel asks participants to consider the nineteenth-century precursors of modern documentary literature. How and to what ends do documents and literature intersect throughout the long nineteenth century? What constitutes a document and how might this definition enable new ways of interrogating issues of race, gender, class, indigeneity, and ethnicity? What formal features and aesthetic innovations emerge during the nineteenth century?

Book Chapters: Grant Writing Collaborations in Academic Librarianship

updated: 
Friday, January 17, 2025 - 4:09am
ACRL Press
deadline for submissions: 
Friday, February 28, 2025

CfP

 

Grant Writing Collaborations in Academic Librarianship

Editor

Dr. Addison Lucchi

Instructional & Research Librarian | Professor
MidAmerica Nazarene University

About this Edited Collection

Call for book chapters

updated: 
Friday, February 28, 2025 - 6:54am
The Northern Border University, Saudi Arabia & the unviersity of Sfax, Tunisia
deadline for submissions: 
Monday, March 31, 2025

Call for Papers: Edited Volume on “Writing under Duress in Anglophone Arab Literature in the Diaspora: The Articulation of a Coerced Imagination”

 

Editors: Dr. Hamida Riahi, Prof. Mounir Triki, and Dr. Saud Enazi
Publisher: This volume is being prepared for submission to Palgrave Macmillan for consideration.

Overview

Ecocriticism: Old and New Challenges

updated: 
Friday, January 17, 2025 - 4:08am
East-West Cultural Passage Journal
deadline for submissions: 
Sunday, June 1, 2025

 Physical landscapes and human-environment interactions have long been portrayed in literature and the arts. The modern environmentalist movement, which first appeared in the late nineteenth century and which gained traction in the 1960s, has resulted in a wide variety of fictional and nonfiction works addressing the evolving interaction between humans and the natural world. However, it was only in the early 1990s that “ecocriticism” emerged as a self-conscious critical practice, one that has gone through a variety of designations: environmental criticism, literary-environmental studies, literary ecology, literary environmentalism, green cultural studies or, more recently, environmental humanities.