A group of scholars in English Literature. Researchers in different periods, authors and those working with different theoretical approaches are all welcome. The aim of this group is to create a space for literary discussion through our blog. Please contact me if you will like to publish a blog post to share your latest research, publication, a call for papers, etc.
CFP: Conferences
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AuthorPosts
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20 July 2020 at 3:35 am EDT #43810
CfP: Edited Collection on Early Modern Dramatic Representations of the East
Deadline 15th April 2021
MEMOs is inviting researchers in the fields of early modern literary and cultural studies to submit abstracts for a new edited collection on the Representation of the East in Commercial Theatres and University Drama in the Early Modern Period, to be edited by MEMOs researchers Dr. Murat Öğütcü (Munzur University) and Aisha Hussain (University of Salford). Despite the popularity of plays about the East, the representation of the East in early modern commercial theatres and university drama have been either overlooked, marginalised as footnotes, or generalised into taken-for-granted stereotypes. Yet, there is a need to focus on the multi-layered, often conflicting and changing perception of the East and how dramatic works made use of their respective theatrical space to represent the concept of the East in drama. Accordingly, this volume aims to re examine the (mis)representation of the East in commercial theatre and university productions in early modern English drama to broaden our understanding of early modern theatrical productions beyond Shakespeare and beyond the European continent. For this purpose, the chapters of this volume will analyse how stage architecture, costumes, and effects of performance affect the conceptualisation of the East on the commercial outdoor and indoor stage and on the performance spaces in university plays. This CFP has been extended by one month to 15th April 2021, for full details see https://memorients.com/news/memos-call-for-papers-edited-collection-on-early-modern-dramatic-representations-of-the-east
CfP: University of Kent’s seventh annual MEMS Summer Festival
Deadline for all Paper and Panel Proposals is Friday 30th April 2021
Online, 18 – 19 June 2021
This two-day event celebrates Medieval and Early Modern history, 400 – 1800, and encourages a wide range of interdisciplinary topics, including but not limited to, politics, religion, economics, art, drama, literature, and domestic culture. MEMS Fest aims to be an informal space in which postgraduate students, early career researchers, and academics can share ideas and foster conversations, whilst building a greater sense of community. Undergraduate students in their final year of study are also welcome at the conference. We invite abstracts of up to 250 words for individual research papers of 20 minutes in length on ANY subject relating to the Medieval and Early Modern periods. We also encourage 700-word abstracts proposing a three-person panel, presenting on a specific subject or theme in Medieval or Early Modern studies. If you have an idea and would like us to advertise for it, please contact us at memsfestival@gmail.com
CfP: Points of Interest: Early Modern Punctuation, On and Off the Page
Deadline 28th May 2021
Online with English Faculty, University of Cambridge, 9th-10th September 2021
As Juliet Fleming has recently pointed out, ‘The question of whether its purpose is grammatical or elocutionary—whether its aim is to show what a sentence means or, alternatively, how it is spoken’, was not settled in England until the end of the eighteenth century. Mysterious punctuation, though, in texts before the eighteenth century—its rubrics, aesthetics, motivations and implications, pedagogies and practicalities—has, nonetheless, a lot to say for itself, and a lot to be said about it.Almost three decades on from Malcolm Parkes’s pivotal Pause and Effect: Punctuation in the West, this conference will offer the opportunity for scholars, teachers, and practitioners of poetry, prose, drama, philosophical and religious writing the chance to think anew about the ways that typographical punctuation marks (and their sometimes conceptual counterparts) organise—and sometimes simplify, sometimes complicate—our reading of early modern texts, and how they can teach us about what to do with them. Please email abstracts of no more than 200 words, along with brief speaker biography, to Esther Osorio Whewell and Harry R. McCarthy at pointsofinterestcam@gmail.com by 28th May 2021. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1KwByv4ZnmUQEB6DtTS54QFu4PI6jdqfJjQ1F894-5Wo/edit
16th ESSE Conference, Mainz 2022
Department of English and Linguistics, Faculty of Philosophy and Philology, Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, and Deutscher Anglistenverband (German Society for the Study of English) Monday 29 August – Friday 2 September 2022
DEADLINES
- Submission of proposals for Parallel Lectures (nomination by national associations): 31 May 2021
- Submission of proposals for Seminars and Round Tables (proposals from prospective convenors): 31 May 2021
- Submission of individual papers for Seminars and the Doctoral Symposium, as well as proposals for Round Tables and Posters: 31 January 2022
- Registration will begin on 1 March 2022
CIJIET 6th Conference on Young Researchers on Theatre Studies
Deadline: May 31st 2021
Seville, Spain, 3rd-5th November 2021
We are pleased to announce that the CFP for the 6th Conference on Young Researchers on Theatre Studies is now available. The conference will take place on 3, 4 and 5 November 2021 in the Universidad de Sevilla and Universidad Pablo de Olavide (Spain). The deadline for proposals is 31 May 2021. The conference will take place in the venues of the two universities in Seville, as long as the sanitary conditions allow for it. Otherwise, it will take place online. Please visit this website to send your proposal:
https://gestioneventos.us.es/62933/detail/vi-congreso-internacional-de-jovenes-investigadores-en-estudios-teatrales-cijiet.htmlYou can find all the information about the conference and the CFP in the file attached.
We’d like to invite you to join the Association of Young Researchers on Theatre Studies (AJIET, Asociación de Jóvenes Investigadores en Estudios Teatrales, in Spanish), the organisation in charge of the conference (please be aware that is an Spanish-speaking association). Please visit this website for more information: https://asociacionajiet.wordpress.com/
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25 April 2021 at 3:16 am EDT #44540
Dressing a Picture: Reimagining the Court Portrait 1500-1800
6 – 7 May 2021
CRASSH, University of Cambridge
As Ulinka Rublack asserts in Dressing Up, her seminal book on dress in early modern Europe, society was extremely dress-literate and nowhere more so than in the courtly environments that generated and fuelled fashion. Within these sartorially-minded elite communities, one was constantly on display. Capturing dressed sitters in paint for prosperity, portraiture was a unique vehicle for the inherent dialectic in clothing between subject and observer, and presentation and perception. As such, this conference will examine three themes surrounding early modern portraiture: the artist, the depicted material culture and the setting for its iconographic display, that is the court. The conference aims to examine these connections via the prism of the period’s intricate social stratification and complex gender power dynamics. The conference will present papers dealing with material between 1500 and 1800. http://courtportrait.crassh.cam.ac.uk/
Investigating American Collections on Paper
35th International Association of Paper Historians (IPH) Congress
June 7-11, 2021
See http://www.paperhistory.org/ for details and registration.
The Congress will open with a keynote address from the eminent paper historian John Bidwell, Astor Curator and Head of the Department of Printed Books and Bindings at The Morgan Library & Museum in New York, and will feature talks given by 35 other outstanding international scholars. Presenters will discuss international paper history, artists’ papers, book papers, watermark databases, new methodologies in paper studies, and toolkits for paper and watermark identification. The 2021 IPH Congress brings together an unprecedented assembly of experts and is designed for interactive discussion. In addition to the pre-recorded presentations with live question and answer sessions, live workshops will allow participants to gain greater familiarity with watermark imaging tools and international watermark databases, guided by their creators.
Medieval & Early Modern Studies Festival
Deadline: Friday 30 April 2021
MEMS, University of Kent, 18 – 19 June 2021
The two-day MEMS Summer Festival celebrates Medieval and Early Modern history, 400 – 1800, and encourages a wide range of interdisciplinary topics, including but not limited to, politics, religion, economics, art, drama, literature, and domestic culture. MEMS Fest aims to be an informal space in which postgraduate students, early career researchers, and academics can share ideas and foster conversations, whilst building a greater sense of community. The conference invites abstracts of up to 250 words for individual research papers of 20 minutes in length on ANY subject relating to the Medieval and Early Modern periods. It also encourages 700-word abstracts proposing a three-person panel, presenting on a specific subject or theme in Medieval or Early Modern studies. https://memsfestival.wordpress.com/call-for-papers/CfP: University of Kent’s seventh annual MEMS Summer Festival
Deadline for all Paper and Panel Proposals is Friday 30th April 2021
Online, 18 – 19 June 2021
This two-day event celebrates Medieval and Early Modern history, 400 – 1800, and encourages a wide range of interdisciplinary topics, including but not limited to, politics, religion, economics, art, drama, literature, and domestic culture. MEMS Fest aims to be an informal space in which postgraduate students, early career researchers, and academics can share ideas and foster conversations, whilst building a greater sense of community. Undergraduate students in their final year of study are also welcome at the conference. We invite abstracts of up to 250 words for individual research papers of 20 minutes in length on ANY subject relating to the Medieval and Early Modern periods. We also encourage 700-word abstracts proposing a three-person panel, presenting on a specific subject or theme in Medieval or Early Modern studies. If you have an idea and would like us to advertise for it, please contact us at memsfestival@gmail.com
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14 May 2021 at 2:47 am EDT #45071
Please find attached the Call for Papers for the I International Conference Literary Translation: A World that Makes Women (In)visible, which will be held online in September 2021. This event will be a place for debate on the intersection between literary translation and gender.
Confirmed Speakers are Lawrence Schimel (Literary Translator and Writer), Associate Prof. Raffaella Tonin (Università di Bologna) and Prof. África Vidal (University of Salamanca).
There will be no registration fee for speakers or attendees and proposals should be sent by May 17 to the following email address: traduccionygenero@uma.es.
The conference website is: http://eventos.uma.es/go/<wbr />traduccionygenero.
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21 May 2021 at 1:54 am EDT #45288
“Queer Temporalities in Literature,
Cinema and Video Games”
December 2-4, 202This International Conference sees the study of time as being central to the understanding of identity configurations. Studying time as a producer and reproducer of identities can be approached as the unearthing of past events, the imagining of other futures, or as the exploration of time as a formal factor that shapes cultural texts. While conceptions of time as something stable, singular, and unequivocal favor discourses about equally unequivocal identities, approaches to time as being defined by multiple rhythms, interruptions and uncertainties allow for other cultural/social practices to come to life in time or through specific representations of time.
We invite scholars from a variety of backgrounds (Cinema, Cultural, Game, and Literary Studies) to think about time and its impact on processes of queer world-making through its relation with memory, futurities, discontinuities, and expanded approaches to everydayness.
This conference is being organized by members of the Research Project PGC2018-095393-BI00 Temporalidades Queer en la Cultura Anglófona Contemporánea (Literatura, Cine y Videojuegos) [Queer Temporalities in Contemporary Anglophone Cultures (Literature, Cinema, and Video Games)] funded by the Spanish National Research Agency (Agencia Estatal de Investigación). The academic host for the conference is the Department of English Studies at the University of Murcia, Spain. Proposals should be around 350 words long. Submissions should be sent to queertemp@gmail.com.
Deadline: June 10, 2021
In view of the current pandemic, this conference will be held fully online.
See the CFP attached for more information. For any inquiries, please do not hesitate to get in touch with us at queertemp@gmail.com.
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21 May 2021 at 1:58 am EDT #45292
The call for presentations for our Popularizing STEM: Science and Technology in 21st-Century US Popular Culture international conference is now open. The event will take place in mixed format on the days 15-19 November 2021.
We are particularly interested in presentations that seek to engage with questions of intersectional discrimination in STEM representations in popular culture, spanning from cultural products aimed at dissemination and debate on STEM to texts such as films, TV series, comics and graphic novels, genre fiction, video games, new media narratives. You can submit your abstract at popmec.stem@gmail.com by August 1, 2021.
You can find more information, description and practical details on the conference page: https://www.popmec.com/stem-cfp/.
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22 May 2021 at 1:16 pm EDT #45335
Please find attached the Call for Papers for the “(De)Writing the Borderline: Human and Non-Human Liminal Identities” conference that is being organised at the University of Vigo, with the University of Santiago de Compostela and the University of A Coruña.
The conference will take place on 13th and 14th January 2022 in an on-site/online hybrid format. The submission deadline for abstracts is 30th September 2021 and further information is available at diasporas.uvigo.es
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25 May 2021 at 3:48 am EDT #45464
Call For Papers: Ghost Scenes / Scènes de spectres
25-26 November 2021
Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier 3
Institut de Recherche sur la Renaissance, l’âge Classique et les Lumières (IRCL – UMR 5186) Montpellier, France
Keynote Speaker:François Lecercle, Sorbonne University
Organised by Pierre Kapitaniak (Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier 3), Thierry Verdier (Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier 3) and Andrew Hiscock (Bangor University, GB).
This international conference addresses the nature and functions of ghost scenes in the performing arts in France, Britain and elsewhere in Europe from the 16th to the 18th centuries. Spectral appearances may be considered from aesthetic, dramatic and/or scenic, metatheatrical, metaphorical, socio-cultural, political, philosophical, and other perspectives – and here the list is by no means exhausted.
Abstracts of no more than 250 words should be submitted by 15 July 2021, together with a one-page curriculum vitae to pierre.kapitaniak@univ-montp3.fr. Papers will be accepted in English and French.
For more information, please see the pdf attached.
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30 May 2021 at 4:25 am EDT #45746
Please find attached the Call for Papers for the 9th SELICUP Conference, whose deadline for proposals has been extended to 13 June. This event, hosted by P J Safárik University’s Department of British and American Studies (Kosice, Slovakia), is a joint collaboration with SKASE (Slovak Association for the Study of English), the University of the Balearic Islands’ British and Comparative Cultural Studies Research Group and the ‘21st-Century Anglophone Literatures: Narrative and Performative Spaces’ Research Network.
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5 June 2021 at 4:35 am EDT #45913
Deadline for submissions: 15th June 2021
German Shakespeare Association, Shakespeare-Tage, 12–14 November 2021 in Weimar, Germany.
Should travel be restricted or deemed unsafe by participants we endeavour to host the seminar as an online or hybrid event. This year’s Shakespeare Seminar seeks to discuss the countless ways in which Shakespeare, his works, early modern culture as well as later performances of Shakespeare’s works are political or have been politicised. To what extent can his plays be seen to endorse certain power politics? Are politics in Shakespeare ultimately a question of genre? What impact did the transition from Elizabethan to Stuart rule have on ‘Shakespeare’s politics’? As critical input for the discussion, we invite papers of no more than 15 minutes that present concrete case studies, concise examples and strong views on the topic. Please send your proposals (abstracts of 300 words) by 15 June 2021 to the seminar convenors Dr. Lukas Lammers, Free University Berlin: l.lammers@fu-berlin.de and Dr. Kirsten Sandrock, University of Göttingen: ksandrock@phil.uni-goettingen.de
CfP: “The Rules of the Game in the Early Modern Period”
Deadline for submissions: 30th June 2021
Maison de la recherche, Sorbonne Université, Paris, 18-19 November 2021
Taking the notion of rule(s) as a starting point, this conference will offer an analysis of playfulness and of the spirit of games in the early modern period. Its goal is to understand the place of games in the cultures of the time, possibly even to challenge Huizinga’s postulate that games constitute the very foundation of culture. The conference will focus mostly on the British Isles, while welcoming comparisons with other European countries. The period under scrutiny is necessarily broad (1600-1800) in order to allow for an analysis of the variety of practices and expressions of games and play, but also to test whether the period, often defined through arbitrary temporal limits, does in fact have an internal, organic unity. This conference will focus on texts and ludic practices, game manuals and cultural representations, which might range from literature (from Shakespeare to the romantic period) to the visual arts or to material culture. Theory and practice will both be discussed and contextualised historically. No type of games will be excluded: children’s games, gambling, punning and word games, board games, social games, and even physical activities and sports. The materiality of games will also be examined, as will the practical approaches to games. Please send a 150-word proposal for a 30-minute paper and a short bio to Line Cottegnies (line.cottegnies@sorbonne-universite.fr) and Alexis Tadié (alexis.tadie@sorbonne-universite.fr) by 30 June 2021.
CfP: The British Milton Seminar autumn meeting
Deadline: 31st July 2021
On Zoom, 16 October 2021, 12-2pm and 3-5pm
We currently intend that each session will have two papers (of approx. 25-30 minutes each), for which proposals are invited. Please send proposals to Professor Hugh Adlington (h.c.adlington@bham.ac.uk) and Professor Sarah Knight (sk218@leicester.ac.uk) by no later than 31 July 2021.
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21 June 2021 at 3:44 am EDT #46722
Please find attached the CFP for our 7th International Conference. We invite you to submit your proposals on individual papers, roundtable or workshop. The deadline has been extended until July 3rd, 2021.
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15 July 2021 at 2:38 am EDT #47684
“Transcultural Perspectives in Language, Literature and Culture in the 21st century”
International Conference at Le Mans Universityin association with the University of LatviaMay 19-20, 2022
Abstract submissions deadline: 15 November, 2021
Please find the details in the doc attached.
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2 September 2021 at 5:35 am EDT #48909
The registration for the International Conference on Literary Translation and Gender is now open. The conference will be held online between 23 and 24 September and will have África Vidal, Ioanna Nicolaidou, Lawrence Schimmel and Raffaella Tonin as plenary speakers.
Registration as an attendee is free of charge and can be made from September 1 onwards through the conference’s website: https://eventos.uma.es/go/<wbr />traduccionygenero.Please find the programme attached.Attachments:
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2 September 2021 at 5:41 am EDT #48911
Please find attached the Call for Papers for the “(De)Writing the Borderline: Human and Non-Human Liminal Identities” conference that is being organised at the University of Vigo, with the University of Santiago de Compostela and the University of A Coruña. The conference will take place on 13th and 14th January 2022 in an on-site/online hybrid format. The submission deadline for abstracts is 30th September 2021 and further information is available at diasporas.uvigo.es
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2 September 2021 at 5:42 am EDT #48914
Feminism in Contemporary US Popular Culture /roundtables
Registration is open (and free!) for our Roundtables on Feminism in Contemporary US Popular Culture. I attach the program and you can find further information on the speakers, as well as the registration form, here: http://www.popmec.com/fem
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10 September 2021 at 3:17 am EDT #49056
The Centre for Fantasy and the Fantastic is pleased to announce a call for papers for Glasgow International Fantasy Conversations (GIFCon) 2022 with the theme of ‘Fantasy Across Media’.Much of fantasy studies has focused on the genre’s presence in literature, with histories and theoretical frameworks often either implicitly or explicitly centring the written word. In some cases, academic, critic, and fan responses to the genre outside of literature even go so far as to erase or question the possibility of the genre’s existence in other media, perhaps most famously embodied in J.R.R. Tolkien’s insistence in ‘On Fairy-stories’ that some media, such as drama, are fundamentally incompatible with fantasy. These types of responses fail to account for the medium-specific benefits and challenges that different media pose for depictions of the impossible, serving to establish hierarchies between media, exclude non-literary media from analyses of the genre, and potentially limit a full understanding of the genre’s history.Fantasy and the fantastic have had long, rich histories outside of literature, playing a central role in the development of theatre, film, and comic books, and celebrating a more recent boom on the small screen. Furthermore, from the innumerable reimaginings of the Arthurian tradition, to The Wizard of Oz, to manga and anime, to contemporary multimedia franchises and cinematic universes, fantasy texts have been integral to the history of transmedia storytelling, allowing their rich storyworlds to expand across multiple media. By examining fantasy with a focus on media, we find a genre shaped in distinct ways by the many different media and creative industries that produce it, with specific creative processes and varying cultural media traditions opening onto distinct forms of fantasy that may not be properly accounted for in fantasy studies’ traditional focus on Anglophone literature.GIFCon 2022 is a three-day virtual conference <wbr />that seeks to examine the myriad narrative possibilities afforded by fantasy across media. We welcome proposals for papers relating to this theme from researchers and practitioners working in the field of fantasy and the fantastic across all media, whether within the academy or beyond it. We are particularly interested in submissions from postgraduate and early career researchers, and researchers whose work focuses on non-Anglocentric fantasy. <wbr />We will also offer creative workshops for those interested in exploring how the creative processes of different media shape fantastic storytelling on a practical level. We ask for 300-word abstracts for 20-minute papers. See our Suggested Topics list below for further inspiration. Please submit a 300-word abstract and a 100-word bionote via this form by December 3rd 2021 at midnight GMT. If you have any questions regarding our event or our CfP, please contact us at GIFCon@glasgow.ac.uk. Please also read through our Code of Conduct. We look forward to your submissions!
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20 July 2020 at 3:35 am EDT #34982
Call for papers. Special Issue
Strangers and Trespassers in Contemporary Women’s Crime Fiction (2000-2020). Papers on Language and Literature (Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
Guest editors: Carla Rodríguez González and Esther Álvarez López(Universidad de Oviedo) Crime fiction is a “strange” genre situated at the paradoxical coordinates of best-selling success and academic marginality, whose multifarious manifestations trespass genre and gender boundaries. In spite of the highly masculinized associations of the mystery genre, the work of influential female writers has always been part of this tradition, starting with the pioneering contributions of Agatha Christie, Patricia Wentworth, Dorothy Sayers and Ruth Rendell. These writers and the many who have successfully followed in their literary footsteps have proved that the investigation of crime is also a suitable job for a woman. Trespassing symbolic spaces, and navigating and contending the phallocentrism of investigative work is inherent in this writing, which often requires a form of strangeness on the part of its protagonists. Contemporary authors often place their characters in this unstable position from which they challenge gender roles, while subverting notions about women’s independence and intellectual prowess. This appropriation of strangeness as a strategic analytical device can be traced in the works of, among others, Megan Abbott, Gillian Flynn, Tana French, Elizabeth Hand, Paula Hawkins, Val McDermid, Denise Mina and Gloria White, in novels that could be classified according to countless labels, ranging from domestic, cozy or hard-boiled to forensic noir, to mention but a few.</p>
The stranger is an enduring literary figure that has been associated with binary relationships: “inside/outside, known/unknown, fear/safety, familiar/unfamiliar” (Jackson et al 2017: 9). Strangers are not only coupled with detachment, unbelonging and disturbance, but also with freedom and objectivity, as Georg Simmel’s influential essay contends: they are “bound by no commitments which could prejudice [their] perception, understanding and evaluation of the given” (1950: 402). This ambivalent interstitial figure, rather than reinforcing social, cultural and physical boundaries, problematizes them as permeable and unstable. More recent conceptualizations have focused on the affective value of the stranger in relation to the collective processes involved in the delimitation and construction of acceptability and conviviality. Sara Ahmed argues that emotions create boundaries between people, determining who belongs and who does not through “affective judgements” (2004: 211). Trespassing these boundaries involves encountering otherness, reevaluating the self and the affective scaffolding that sustains all social relations.Strangeness and trespassing are particularly ingrained in women’s crime fiction, as the investigation carried out usually implies unveiling the construction of social emotions, appealing to collective responsibility for the lack of support provided to the victims and reclaiming spaces of representation from an awareness of gender imbalance. As such, this special issue will explore different portrayals of strangeness and trespassing of social boundaries in the fiction produced by women crime writers in the twenty-first century. The main focus will be the examination of alternative approaches to detection from a gender perspective that identifies new rationalities in the crime fiction genre. As such, possible topics to address include, but are not restricted to:
· Trespassing boundaries, creating new spaces
· Strange encounters, amateur sleuths and private eyes
· The figure of the stranger and the trespasser in domestic noir
· Contesting gender in the hard-boiled tradition
· Legal and medical strangers
· Psychological suspense, thrillers and the stranger within
· Trans/nationalism and cosmopolitanism
· Ethics and aesthetics of contemporary women’s crime fiction
· Movement, displacement and negotiations of the city
· Affect and embodiment of urban spaces
· The politics of space: gender, class, ethnicity
· Institutional violence and transversal allegiances
· In/visibility, otherness and uncanny spaces
· Alternative itineraries and urban rhythms
· Trespassing genres: crime, speculative, fantastic, historical fiction.
References:
Ahmed, Sara 2000. Strange Encounters: Embodied Others in Post-Coloniality. London: Routledge.
—— 2004. The Cultural Politics of Emotions. London: Routledge.
Bauman, Zygmunt 1995. “Making and Unmaking of Strangers.” Thesis Eleven 43: 1-16.
Dean, Jodi 1996. Solidarity of Strangers. Feminism after Identity Politics. Los Angeles: U. of California P.
Jackson, Lucy, Catherine Harris and Gill Valentine 2017. “Rethinking Concepts of the Strange and the Stranger.” Social and Cultural Geography 18.1: 1-15.
Kristeva, Julia 1991. Strangers to Ourselves. New York. Columbia UP.
Marotta, Vince 2010. “The Cosmopolitan Stranger.” Questioning Cosmopolitanism. Eds. S. van Hooft and W. Vandekerckhove. Springer.
—— 2017. Theories of the Stranger: Debates on Cosmopolitanism, Identity and Cross-Cultural Encounters. New York: Routledge.
Simmel, Georg 1950. “The Stranger.” The Sociology of Georg Simmel. Ed. and trans. Kurt H. Wilff. Glencoe, Il: The Free Press. 402-408.
Notes for contributors: Contributors should follow the current edition of the MLA Handbook, and manuscripts should be free of all identifying information. Submissions (7,000-8,000 words) must not be under consideration elsewhere. They should be sent by 15 February 2021 to pll@siue.edu, specifying “Submission: Special Issue Strangers Crime Fiction” in the subject line. Attach the essay in the form of a PDF file. Include an abstract of no more than 150 words in the body of the e-mail. Also include a postal mailing address and a phone number. Please direct any queries to the guest editors: Carla Rodríguez González (rodriguezcarla@uniovi.es) and b (eal@uniovi.es).
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22 July 2020 at 3:17 am EDT #35385
CFPs Edited Volume Vulnerable. Representing Vulnerability in Literature and Film_ Edited by Miriam Fernández Santiago and Cristina M. Gámez-Fernández
Deadline for abstract submissions: December 18, 2020
Notification of acceptance: February 1, 2021
Submission of full chapters: November 1, 2021
The term “vulnerability,” consolidated in the 70s and 80s in poverty and development studies to address the impact of hazards and (natural) disasters in specific population segments, was adopted by Judith Butler in the aftermath of 9/11 to signify the undesirable exposure of nations and peoples to war-related acts of violence. In 2004, Butler interrogated the effects that a newly discovered vulnerability had on the exceptionalist basis of US national discourse and its instrumentalization to justify the implementation of repressive policies at home and acts of war abroad. Butler (2009) also questioned whose lives mattered at an international scale, as well as whose vulnerabilities remained invisible and uncontested as nationalist discourses strove to get over US own sense of fragility by increasing the vulnerability of peoples and nations whose lives not only did not matter, but were even a condition to make up for the US-perceived ontological damage.
At that time, Butler used the term “precarity” to denote the helpless exposure of those disposable lives. Since then, the concept of “precarity” has developed critically to explore the socioeconomic conditions endured by peoples living in the so-called Third World countries or emerging economies in the context of globalization. From this broader perspective, their vulnerabilities appeared as the background of a structural oppression (Craps 2013) intersecting withother life conditions marked by uncertainty such as poverty, migration, pollution and violence. Another finding of this approach showed that the “precariat” (Standing 2011) as a global social class also extended to the First World interwoven with other components of vulnerability like race, gender, age, literacy, religious confession, cultural differences, and disability, among many others.
Butler’s initial theorization of vulnerability propounded that representing precarious lives would contribute to minimizing them by making them visible and, therefore, by making them matter. With a similar spirit, Jean-Michelle Ganteau (2015) has also claimed that what he calls “vulnerable texts” or texts that present bodily frailty as the common denominator of humanity, have the capacity to develop and ethics of vulnerability that builds up on an ethics of care and political change. However, the exploitation of vulnerability as a sensational device (Garland-Thompson 1997; Mitchell and Snyder 2000) competing for attention in information-saturated global media often has the effect of blunting the audience’s capacity to empathize with forms of vulnerability so extreme that they can only recognize as either too alien or too fictional. The representation of vulnerability in literary and film forms is also affected by the neoliberal market’s demand for the spectacular, the reification and commoditization of a cathartic effect that ends up desensitizing a readership/audience who finds aesthetic pleasure in their temporary identification with, as well asimmediate detachment from, representations of vulnerability.
We seek contributions that explore the ways in which representing vulnerability problematizes its visibilization in film and literature. Both theoretical and practical approaches as well as different critical stances are welcome. Suggested topics include, but are not limited to, representations of vulnerability that involve, intersect and/or synergize with other concomitant areas, such as:
* Poverty
* Migration (including refugees, diasporas?)
* Ecology (ecological disasters, pollution, speciesism ?)
* Violence (war, crime?)
* Spatial (literary) studies
* Disability
* Technology
* Racial/ethnic difference
* Gender
* Age (children, old age?)
* Literacy
* Cultural difference
* Religious confession
Prospective authors are invited to submit abstract proposals consisting of a tentative title, a 500-word summary, 5 keywords and a 200-word CV including author’s name, institutional affiliation, email address by December 18, 2020. Abstracts will be sent as Word files to graco.hum676@ugr.es under the subject “VULNERABLE SUBMISSION”. Authors will be notified of their paper proposal acceptance by February 1, 2021.
Full chapters (between 5000-7000 words) will be expected by November 1, 2021. Both abstracts and full chapters must conform to the Chicago style (author-date system) and be sent as Word files to graco.hum676@ugr.es.
Selected essays will be compiled in a collective volume that will be published in 2022 by a prestigious international publisher still to determine.
Editors: Miriam Fernández Santiago (University of Granada, mirfer@ugr.es), Cristina M. Gámez-Fernández (University of Córdoba, cristina.gamez@uco.es)
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30 July 2020 at 12:20 pm EDT #36139
Title/topic: European Popular Literatures and Their Sociocultural Implications.
Guest editors: Asunción López-Varela (Universidad Complutense, Madrid, alopezva@ucm.es ), Antonio Ballesteros-González (UNED, aballesteros@flog.uned.es )
Deadlines: Abstracts (300 words) and bioprofiles (50 words) should be sent to guest editors by 30 September 2020. Confirmation will be issued by 30 October 2020. Full papers are expected by 30 January 2021. Peer-review process will take place between February and March 2021. Revisions in April-May 2021. Typesetting and publication is expected for June-July 2021.
Papers must follow Garnier Guidelines at the end of this document.
Languages: papers for this issue can be in English, French and Spanish. Out of around 10 selected papers, only 2 can be in French and 2 in Spanish. The rest in English.
Prospective contributors must be or become members of the European Society of Comparative Literature by December 2020 and continue to be members in 2021 https://escl-selc.eu/become-a-member/
There are no publication costs in the Journal of the European Society of Comparative Literature.Attachments:
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6 February 2021 at 4:09 am EST #42117
- The Science Fiction Research Association (SFRA) (Virtual) Annual Conference 2021 Friday, 18 June – Monday, 21 June 2021. Deadline for submissions: April 1, 2021. More info: http://sfra.org/SFRA-2021-Call-for-Papers
- The 2022 Emily Dickinson International Society Conference: Dickinson and Foreignhood. The conference will be held at the College of Philology, University of Seville, from Tuesday, July 12, to Thursday, July 14, 2022. More info: http://www.emilydickinsoninternationalsociety.org/
- “New Fictional Formats & Age-Old Narratives: Understanding Creative Modes of Popular Culture in the Digital Age”. Deadline for submissions: March 14th. Full information: https://popmec.hypotheses.org/<wbr />3338
- Revista de Estudios Norteamericanos, Vol 25 (2021). The journal can be accessed here: https://revistascientificas.us.es/index.php/ESTUDIOS_NORTEAMERICANOS (OJS) http://editorial.us.es/es/revista-de-estudios-norteamericanos (open access)
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13 February 2021 at 4:54 am EST #42399
This event, hosted by P J Safárik University’s Department of British and American Studies (Kosice, Slovakia), is a joint collaboration with SKASE (Slovak Association for the Study of English), the University of the Balearic Islands’ British and Comparative Cultural Studies Research Group and the ‘21st-Century Anglophone Literatures: Narrative and Performative Spaces’ Research Network.
See the document attached for more details.
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19 February 2021 at 4:21 am EST #42502
- CFP for New Voices in English Studies: ASYRAS VII Conference, which will take place online via Google Meet on 17-18 June, 2021. The Conference is intended as a forum where early-career specialists in English Studies can present the results of their research. More information here: http://asyras.org/7th/asyras-conference/
- CfP for the Fourth Postgraduate and Early Career Scholars’ Conference. This conference was going to be held at the Universidad de Valladolid last year, but had to be cancelled due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Early career scholars are invited to send proposals for this new version of the conference. For more information, see the documents attached.
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Nora Rodriguez-Loro.
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27 February 2021 at 5:12 am EST #42784
The International Conference “Literary Connections: a Multidisciplinary Approach to Literariness” will take place between 30 November- 04 December, 2021. For further information see the document attached and check their website: http://www.literaryconnectionsconference.es
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This reply was modified 4 years, 11 months ago by
Nora Rodriguez-Loro.
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This reply was modified 4 years, 4 months ago by
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14 March 2021 at 5:16 am EDT #43453
- “Rewriting War and Peace in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries: Contemporary British and American Literature”, hosted by the Department of English & German Studies (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona). This is an online event to be held from Wednesday 08 to Thursday 09 September 2021. Keynote speakers: Professor Jay Winter (Yale University, “Silences of the Great War: All the things we cannot hear”); Professor Kate McLoughlin (Oxford University, “Mesopotamia: Writing the Wars in Iraq?) and the novelist Rachel Seiffert (“Why do we write about war?”). Presentation proposals should be sent to rewritingwar2020@gmail.com by Monday 03 May 2021. For the Call for Papers and further information on the conference, please see the pdf attached.
- “Pandemic as Polemic”, a seminar organized by the Centre for Australian and Transnational Studies at the University of Barcelona, to be held online in November 2021. Please see the pdf attached for more information.
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14 March 2021 at 5:28 am EDT #43459
Connections: A Journal of Language, Media and Culture invites high-quality research submissions for their 2021 publication. Connections is committed to elevating and supporting graduate-level and early-career research from interdisciplinary subject areas. Our second issue will center on the theme of building bridges: maintaining connections found at the heart of cultural, multimedia, textual, or language-based interactions in times of crisis. Building bridges in times of crisis may look like community-building, resilience, protest, growth, or care work.
The journal welcomes original research manuscripts and creative works in a variety of languages from graduate students and early-career scholars throughout the world, including scholars working with non-normative or counter-hegemonic forms of research (i.e. research creation).Connections‘ scope includes, but is not limited to, the following domains:
- Applied and Mixed Methods Linguistics
- Translation (both Literary and Other)
- Transnational and Comparative Literature
- Media and Culture
- Digital Humanities
- Art and Creation
The journal is seeking submissions that showcase innovative research that falls within our scope; however, we are open to accepting submissions that may reside outside of this CFP description.
Please note that Connections is inclusive to non-English submissions and our editorial team will employ every effort to locate appropriate reviewers. However, abstract and keywords must be provided in English for search purposes. All manuscripts should comply with the submission guidelines and be submitted electronically through the Connections: A Journal of Language, Media and Culture submission website, connectionsjournal.ca. Please submit before April 25, 2021. If you have any questions, please direct them to cnctjrnl@ualberta.ca.
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19 March 2021 at 4:28 am EDT #43610
CfP: Women and Agency: Transnational Perspectives, c.1450-1790
Deadline for submission: 28th March 2021
Virtual Symposium, University of Oxford, 24-25 June 2021
This two-day interdisciplinary symposium invites scholars to examine early modernwomen’s agency from a transnational perspective. Conversations about women’s agency continue to ripple across the world, from new, passionate campaigns in Mexico and Poland that have fought to address feminicide and sexual violence, to the Women’s Marches, which have annually inspired global response. Now, we turn with fresh urgency to early modern women’s participation in intellectual and literary cultures that bridged regional, national, and transnational divides. Please submit an abstract (no longer than 250 words for an individual paper or 500 words for a three-person panel) and a short CV to womenandagency@gmail.com by the 28th March 2021.
CfP: Edmund Spenser and Animal Life
Deadline for submissions: 31st March 2021
University of Sussex, Centre for Early Modern and Medieval Studies, 18th June 2021
Horses, lions, apes, butterflies, sheep, and aqueous creatures of many forms populate Spenser’s landscapes and poetic worlds – from the romance geography of The Faerie Queene to the pastoral realm of The Shepheardes Calender and beyond. Despite its panoply of non-human life, though, Spenser’s oeuvre has so far been neglected by animal studies. Led by scholars such as Erica Fudge, Laurie Shannon, Bruce Boehrer, and Karen Raber, this is a critical and philosophical approach that has lately gained much traction in early modern scholarship. Spenserians have brought posthuman approaches more broadly into dialogue with the poet’s works, namely in the special edition ofSpenser Studies entitled Spenser and ‘The Human’ (2015, ed. Ayesha Ramachandran and Melissa E. Sanchez). And some important representative writings exist, Joseph Loewenstein’s 2007 essay ‘Gryll’s Hoggish Mind’, being key. But are we right to think that Spenser has ‘virtually no affective’, but instead a ‘highly theoretical’, engagement with fauna?[1] What might that theoretical engagement look and sound like? What are the affect and the effect of the animal in Spenser’s work? How do we position animal life in Spenser’s thought and his creativity? Please send 200 word proposals, with a 50 word bio, to Dr Rachel Stenner at the University of Sussex (rachel.stenner@sussex.ac.uk) and Dr Abigail Shinn at Goldsmiths (a.shinn@goldsmiths.ac.uk) by Wednesday 31st March 2021.
Seminar Religion and Shakespeare’s Afterlives
Online 11th World Shakespeare Congress (Singapore, 18-24 July 2021)
Deadline for submissions: 1 April 2021
The seminar welcomes contributions that explore the ‘turn to religion’ in Shakespeare studies. Papers may consider how Shakespeare’s works have been reinvented in religious terms and used as religious ideological instruments; how Shakespearean explorations of spiritual themes can become pivotal in religious discourses worldwide; whether the religious instrumentalisation of Shakespeare and his work may contribute to the resolution of current religious conflicts; how circulation between secular and religious energies are propelled by Shakespeare’s religious afterlives; how diverse and inconclusive interpretations of Shakespeare’s religious beliefs and practices may have triggered different literary, religious, and political appropriations of the author and/or his work; how theology, divinity, and religious studies make use of Shakespeare. Possible contexts for the religious use of Shakespeare may include religious ceremonies and commemorative acts, politics and diplomacy, educational activities and institutions, fictional and biographical representations of Shakespeare, and the complexities of translating and editing Shakespeare between cultures. Convenors: Marta Cerezo Moreno (UNED, Spain, mcerezo@flog.uned.es), Olivia Coulomb (Aix Marseille University, ocoulomb@hotmail.com) You should submit your enrolment form (before April 1 2021) and registration at the WSC 2021 website (http://www.wsc2021.org/index.html) in order to confirm your registration in our session and the Congress. Financial grants are available to seminar and workshop participants. For more details on financial grants, please see the Congress registration page: http://www.wsc2021.org/registration.html
CfP: The Experience of Loneliness in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
Deadline for submissions: 1 April 2021
Online Conference, University of Birmingham, 29–30 June 2021
Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, public health experts worldwide have been concerned about a loneliness epidemic. This has wider ramifications within the academy too. How might we better support unaffiliated scholars who may feel that they are writing in isolation without the support of a community of colleagues? How might one feel ‘lonely’ even within an institution? And how could our understanding of ‘loneliness’ in early modern prose and poetry deepen our perception of social isolation for scholars and writers today? Building upon important work on the spatial, material and religious dimensions of solitude in late medieval and early modern Europe (Enekel and Göttler, eds, Solitudo (Brill, 2018)) and ongoing research at Queen Mary, University of London (‘Pathologies of Solitude, 18th–21st Century’), this two-day symposium aims to explore the notion of loneliness and isolation in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century writings. Contributions from independent scholars and ‘precarious’ ECRs, in addition to papers which touch upon personal experiences of loneliness in modern academic life, are especially welcomed. Papers must be delivered in English, not exceeding 20 minutes in length. Accommodations will be made for contributors delivering their papers from outside the UK. Please send abstracts (max. 300 words) and a short biography (max. 100 words) to Hannah Yip and Thomas Clifton (earlymodernloneliness@gmail.com) by 1 April 2021.https://earlymodernloneliness.blogspot.com
Crossing Borders, Contesting Boundaries
Deadline: Friday 16 April 2021
MEMSA, University of Durham, 19 – 21 July 2021
Borders and boundaries divided the medieval and early modern world, both its physical space and its more intangible social hierarchies and networks. They helped to construct and reinforce identities, creating a sense of belonging and security; but they also partitioned, segregated, and excluded. Thus, once set, borders and boundaries invited debate, defence, and defiance. MEMSA’s 15th annual postgraduate conference will be running as a digital event, with papers presented as pre-recorded videos. It welcomes abstract submissions from postgraduate students and early career academics addressing the theme of ‘Crossing Borders, Contesting Boundaries’ in its broadest possible sense. https://durhammemsa.wordpress.com/memsa-conferences-and-conference-proceedings/
CfP: Classical Reformations: Beyond Christian Humanism
Deadline 16 April 2021
Online with The Warburg Institute, 3 September 2021
This conference explores how the literature and ideas of the classical world calibrated early modern Christianity—its interpretation, ordinances, moral instruction, politics, theology, cultural expression, and polarizing impulses of confessionalisation. Looking beyond the Christian absorption of pagan material and Erasmian humanism redux, this conference focuses instead on a classical Christianity, even a Greco-Roman monotheism, in the generations after Erasmus. Where recent scholarship has replaced confessionalism at the heart of early modern philology, we aim to replace classicism at the heart of theology and religious politics. The classical tradition was too ubiquitous and authoritative a presence in early modern intellectual life to have left theology untouched. We welcome any proposals that engage with these themes. Proposals may relate to any aspects of this phenomenon across Europe, and case-studies may feature the vernacular or the languages of Latin, Greek, or Hebrew. We warmly welcome papers on scholarly as well as popular literature, Protestant as well as Catholic communities, and those that engage with the religious politics of the Reformation more generally. Abstracts of no more than 250 words, and any queries, should be sent to classicalreformations21@gmail.com by 16 April 2021.
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