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Linda Salem started the topic CFP Children's Literature Society at American Literature Association 2015 in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 2 months agoCALL FOR PAPERS
Children’s Literature Society
American Literature Association
26th Annual Conference
May 21-24, 2015
The Westin Copley Place
10 Huntington Avenue
Boston MA 02116-5798The Politics and Morality of Children’s Literature: From Left to Right
Authors use children’s literature to communicate their political and moral viewp…[Read more]
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David Del Principe replied to the topic CFP SF/F Area at the 2013 Mid-Atlantic P/ACA Confernce in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 3 months agoA new critical field merging the Ecocritical and the Gothic
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Shayani Bhattacharya started the topic CFP NeMLA: Writings about the Evolution of the Metropolis in the 20th Century in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 5 months agoPanel: The (Ir)real City: Writing About the Changing Metropolis in the 20th Century
(Session ID: 15391)
Submission Link: https://nemla.org/convention/2015/cfp.html#cfp15391
Deadline: September 30, 2014
Panel Chair: Shayani Bhattacharya (for questions: shayanib@buffalo.edu)
Conference Dates: April 30-May 03, 2015 (Toronto, Ontario)
For…[Read more]
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Leigha McReynolds started the topic Call for Papers: Mid-Atlantic Popular & American Culture Association Conference in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 8 months agoCall for Papers MAPACA 2014
SCIENCE FICTION & FANTASY AREAThe Mid-Atlantic Popular and American Culture Association (MAPACA) invites academics, graduate and undergraduate students, independent scholars, and artists to submit papers for the annual conference, to be held in Baltimore, November 6-8, 2014. Those interested in presenting at the…[Read more]
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Annabelle Dolidon replied to the topic French science-fiction in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 8 months agoI will. Grace is in our group, of course, and she brings good students to our discussion. I will pass on your greetings :).
A
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Gloria Lee McMillan replied to the topic French science-fiction in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 8 months ago“At Portland State University,…”
OMG, Grace Dillon, one of the essayists in our collection Orbiting Ray Bradbury’s Mars, teaches at your school.
You get old enough (let’s just say a couple years beyond 60) and you start to *know everybody*! Tell Grace I said “Hi” and “Milli gwetch”–that “thanks” in Anishinaabe. -Glo
==================Bio o…[Read more]
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Joshua Begley replied to the topic Science Fiction Readers Demographics in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 8 months agoI don’t know as much about Latin American fantastic literature as I’d like, so I’m very interested in what you had to say, Silvia. In general, it always strikes me as odd how conservative academics can be. And in a broader sense, the whole concept of “legitimate” is troublesome because of the power issues underlying who decides what is and is not,…[Read more]
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Joshua Begley replied to the topic French science-fiction in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 8 months agoI wish the United States were better at carrying translated editions of works. This sounds like a fascinating anthology. I would love to read it!
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Silvia G. Kurlat-Ares replied to the topic Science Fiction Readers Demographics in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 9 months agoI will agree with Josh. However, for Latin America, there is an additional twist. The raise of the fantastic since the mid 1940s until it became the paramount literary “authentic” (for lack of better, quick words) literary form, displaced any other literary form from the center of the cultural field. Debates between realist and fantastic…[Read more]
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Annabelle Dolidon started the topic French science-fiction in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 9 months agoVery interesting conversation indeed. My current work is on French science fiction, virtually unknown in the US. I am writing an article on short stories by Sylvie Denis, author, editor, translator, very well known in the French SF community. Unfortunately, no translation available, like for most contemporary production. I hope to start working on…[Read more]
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Gloria Lee McMillan replied to the topic Science Fiction Readers Demographics in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 9 months agoHOW TO JUSTIFY SF AS SCIENTIFIC AND WORTH INCLUDING IN CLASS: Tips from a veteran of the struggle
I work with the University of Arizona’s Lunar and Planetary Laboratory education outreach committee. That may not sound like fun automatically, but we are planning a workshop around hard science SF, which is less written today than it was in A…[Read more]
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Joshua Begley replied to the topic Science Fiction Readers Demographics in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 9 months agoOh dear, it looks like I accidentally posted twice. Sorry!
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Joshua Begley replied to the topic Science Fiction Readers Demographics in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 9 months agoThere are some amazing conversations going on here. Going back to the initial question, why do so many academics fail to recognize SF as a legitimate literature, part of that stems from the rise of the novel and the idea that social realism is–to paraphrase the literary critic F. R. Levis–the only subject worth writing about. This is tied into…[Read more]
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Joshua Begley replied to the topic Science Fiction Readers Demographics in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 9 months agoThere are some amazing conversations going on here. Going back to the initial question, why do so many academics fail to recognize SF as a legitimate literature, part of that stems from the rise of the novel and the idea that social realism is–to paraphrase the literary critic F. R. Levis–the only subject worth writing about. This is tied into…[Read more]
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Gloria Lee McMillan replied to the topic Science Fiction Readers Demographics in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 9 months agoAnna,
One way to explain the genre of SF is to use some of the grea writers’ words. Although Ray Bradbury only was a part-time SF writer, he made a case for the opening of minds and the stimulating of creativity that going beyond the mundane here and now can achieve.
This one-hour video from Point Loma Nazarene University is excellent and I use…[Read more]
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Anna Hart replied to the topic Science Fiction Readers Demographics in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 9 months agoCalifornia Baptist University (CBU) in Riverside, CA does not teach a sf lit class, but it does teach a creative writing sff class. It is hugely popular as most of the creative writing students are interested in sf. CBU may not be reading sff, but we are teaching students how to write it. I personally shied away from sf for a long time. I did not…[Read more]
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Gloria Lee McMillan replied to the topic Science Fiction Readers Demographics in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 9 months agoSpeaking of “Uncle Isaac” Asimov, I used to be one of his many pen pals. He was a kind and generous man.
Glo
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Gloria Lee McMillan replied to the topic Science Fiction Readers Demographics in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 9 months agoI think the SF from Central and Eastern Europe is a bit more varied than one or two anthologies exposure will credit.
The countries other than Russia have a variety of writers. In the older generation Josef Nesvadba is one of the later generation of Czech writers after Karel Čapek, the creator of the word “robot” in his 1922 play R.U.R. (…[Read more]
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Tarshia Stanley replied to the topic Science Fiction Readers Demographics in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 9 months agoSpelman College in Atlanta GA, has had a science fiction course on the books since the 1990’s. Just this semester I developed a new course called Butler’s Daughters: Imagining Leadership in Black Speculative Fiction. I team taught this course with speculative fiction writer Tananarive Due.
I only recently began to incorporate my love of…[Read more]
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Cindy Smith replied to the topic Science Fiction Readers Demographics in the forum
Science Fiction and Utopian and Fantastic Literature on MLA Commons 11 years, 9 months agoIn Georgia the only college or university that I know teaches science fiction literature as a class is Georgia Tech. As far as I know, it isn’t taught at Georgia State University or the University of Georgia. If it’s taught anywhere else, I don’t know about it. I’d like to take an online course in science fiction. In fact, I’d like to get a P…[Read more]
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