WHAT MIRACLE: NEW REVELATIONS ON THE PROSE POEM
CFP: WHAT MIRACLE: NEW REVELATIONS ON THE PROSE POEM
October 15 and 16, 2026, in Rome, Italy
In his preface to Spleen de Paris, Charles Baudelaire wonders, “Which one of us, in his moments of ambition, has not dreamed of the miracle of a poetic prose, musical, without rhythm and without rhyme, supple enough and rugged enough to adapt itself to the lyrical impulses of the soul, the undulations of reverie, the jibes of conscience?” (tr. Louise Varèse). Through his expression of this collective dream of formal hybridity, Baudelaire not only gave voice to the desires of his contemporaries in the French avant-garde, but he also helped establish “le petit poème en prose” as an enduring mode of literary experimentation that links his moment to ours. By investigating the provenance of the prose poem as a formal and aesthetic departure from metrical verse and its disciplinary strictures, we wish to highlight the entangled lineages of poetic innovation. Moreover, by examining it alongside an array of related phenomena that preceded the prose poem or have extended from it—such as the haibun, the qasīdat al-nathr, and the lyric essay, to name a few—we seek to unite disparate traditions, from medieval Japan to contemporary global letters to nineteenth-century France and beyond. Our conference, which will be hosted at the Notre Dame campus in Rome, in the heart of the Eternal City, will bring together esteemed practitioners of the prose poem, leading theorists, emerging scholars and doctoral students, and even skeptics of prose poetry as a medium of lyric expression. Now is the perfect moment to embrace cross-cultural dialogue and reinforce global scholarly networks as we consider together this relatively little-studied modality, especially given the explosion in scholarship surrounding matters of hybridity as well as broader critical and creative interest in devising new means of pushing against the boundaries of form and genre.
We invite proposals, composed in or translated into English, from scholars at all stages of their careers concerning prose poetry—from any period or linguistic tradition—focused around the following thematic areas:
Rhythm, Genre, Mode
Forms of Intermediality
Documentary Poetics
Transatlantic Exchanges
Across Continents of Time
Hybrid Variations
Contemporary Departures
Oppositional Perspectives on the Prose Poem
Lyric Theory and Its Discontents
Abstract proposals of 200-300 words and a short biographical note should be submitted to the scientific committee via email whatmiracle2026@gmail.com by March 15, 2026.
Organizing Committee:
Clíona Ní Ríordáin
Brandon Menke
Wonbin Bae