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CFP: UCL Americas Research Network 2024 Conference – Historical Roots, Modern Realities: Nationalism Across the Americas

CFP: Living Well with Books (University of Bristol)

Living Well With Books Call for Papers Centre for Material Texts, Richmond Building, University of Bristol Wednesday 5 – Friday 7 September 2018   Since the invention of the codex, the lives (and afterlives) of books have been intertwined with the lives of people. This interdisciplinary, transhistorical, and transnational conference organized by the Centre for Material Texts, University of Bristol, aims to explore how books have affected and continue to affect our daily lives and well-being. How we have lived with books in the past, how do we live with them in the present, how we might live with them better in the future, and how might we help others do the same?   As readers, writers, creative practitioners, educators, researchers, curators, consumers and producers, how do books feature in our lives? How do they share our living and working spaces? How might books contribute to health and wellbeing? Do […]

CFP: Special Issue on “Making time in digital societies: Considering the interplay of media, data and temporalities” in New Media & Society

Special Issue on “Making time in digital societies: Considering the interplay of media, data and temporalities” in New Media & Society   Guest Editors: Christine Lohmeier (University of Bremen), Anne Kaun (Södertörn University), & Christian Pentzold (University of Bremen)   Studying media and communication processes through the lens of time and temporality enjoys a long history. Waves of technological innovation such as mechanization and electrification have come with a profound reconfiguration of social time. This holds true for datafication too. Datafication – referring to processes of quantification and the transformation of evermore objects into data, as well as the automation of judgements, evaluations, and decision-making – requires us to rethink, once again, the relationship between media, data, and temporality.   The special issue of New Media & Society will address the continuities and disruptions emerging in the nexus of time and media. It addresses the challenges of acting in the […]

CFP: Sea Change: Wavescapes in the Anthropocene (University of Split)

Sea Change: Wavescapes in the Anthropocene   Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences in Split & Island of Vis, 3-6 December 2018 Keynote addresses: Adeline Johns-Putra (University of Surrey), Rebecca Giggs (Macquarie University) & Joško Božanić (University of Split)   Nothing of him that doth fade, But doth suffer a sea-change, Into something rich and strange. — William Shakespeare     Ariel's song of the sea, from Shakespeare's The Tempest, describes the transformative force of water. A metamorphosis is worked at the depths of full fathom five – death remade into strange richness. Element of ancient cosmologies, water has long served myth and philosophy as a paradoxical mix of power and gentle transfiguration. As Lao Tzu observes, “Nothing is softer or more flexible than water, yet nothing can resist it.” Likewise, Ovid remarks, “Dripping water hollows out stone, not through force but through persistence.” This ceaseless persuasion is why Božanić […]

CFP: Transatlantic Girlhood in Nineteenth-Century Literature Collection

CFP: Transatlantic Girlhood in Nineteenth-Century Literature Collection Although often dubbed “domestic” novelists, nineteenth-century women writers often featured girl protagonists who travelled, and much of the time this travel wasn’t relegated to a local or even national scale.  Rather, like Amy in Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women, fictional girls on both sides of the Atlantic often journeyed abroad, usually with the intent of learning more about themselves, their relationships with others, and even their country.  This collection will interrogate both literal and metaphorical exchanges of culture that happened in nineteenth-century girls’ fiction.  Creative approaches to thinking about transatlantic travel and how it had an impact on girl culture in both Europe and America are invited.  For instance, contributors could explore novels like Anna Sewell’s Black Beauty, Maria Susanna Cummins’s The Lamplighter, and E.D.E.N. Southworth’s The Hidden Hand, all of which earned popularity in both Europe and America.  Likewise, the editors are eager to read submissions centering on girls’ magazines, journals, and […]

CFP: ‘The Uses and Abuses of the American Past’, HOTCUS Annual PG and ECR Conference (University of Nottingham)

HOTCUS Annual Postgraduate & Early Career Conference: ‘The Uses and Abuses of the American Past’ Saturday, 20 October 2018, The University of Nottingham Keynote Speaker: Professor Michael Cullinane, University of Roehampton Recent political debates across the United States have witnessed different groups claim and contest aspects of the American past to advance their causes. From the changing role of America in the world to tumultuous conversations about civil war monuments, the Standing Rock demonstrations, arguments over school history curricula, and debates about contemporary racial politics influenced by the immigrant history of the United States, the meaning of American history has been invoked on behalf of a myriad of causes. In a mid-term election year, amidst apparently deepening divides of politics, identity and culture, the significance of the American past is only likely to become more contested. As we reflect on the fiftieth anniversary of the turbulent year of 1968, it […]

CFP: Divided Selves and Societies in Irish and American Literature and Culture (Queens University Belfast)

Common Ground Conference 2018 Divided Selves and Societies in Irish and American Literature and Culture 26 – 27 October 2018  commongroundsymposium.wordpress.com / @commongroundqub Following the 20th anniversary of the Good Friday/Belfast Agreement, the topics of borders and division are once again at the forefront of the global political consciousness. The central protections of the agreement that brought ‘The Troubles’ to an end are now threatened by both the collapse of the power-sharing government in Northern Ireland and by Brexit negotiations, during which concerns relating to the current NI/RoI border and future EU/UK border have posed many obstacles. Borders and division are also a principal concern of the current administration in the United States of America, particularly with respect to the proposed ‘border wall’ with Mexico and the ‘travel ban’ from several Muslim-majority countries. Moreover, Ireland and America share a common interest in the Irish border: it was Senator George Mitchell, […]

CFP: Book History Research Network Study Day: The Book in the Digital Age (Loughborough University)

Book History Research Network Study Day: The Book in the Digital Age Loughborough University (UK) 24 October 2018   Digital technologies are changing the ways we produce, disseminate, and consume texts. Texts may take traditionally tangible forms, but they may also now take coded forms, physically accessible only through desktop and mobile media. Our perceptions of extant textual artefacts also change in light of increasing digitisation. New digital tools for textual scholarship are regularly released; book historians now enjoy access to vast digital archives of textual material. Indeed, digital technologies allow us to engage with extant textual artefacts in new ways, while at the same time offering new avenues for text production and reception.   This study day, held at Loughborough University, will explore the new prospects afforded to book history scholarship by increasingly digital circumstances. It will do so through two types of presentations: 20-minute paper presentations and 15-minute presentations […]

British Association of Nineteenth-Century Americanists Panels at BAAS Annual Conference (University of Sussex)

University of Sussex Brighton, United Kingdom

CALL FOR PAPERS: BRITISH ASSOCIATION OF NINETEENTH-CENTURY AMERICANISTS PANELS AT THE BAAS CONFERENCE, UNIVERSITY OF SUSSEX 2019 The British Association of Nineteenth-Century Americanists invites submissions to three panels to be submitted to the British Association for American Studies Conference, taking place at the University of Sussex, April 25-27, 2019. More information about the BAAS Conference can be found here: https://hes32-ctp.trendmicro.com:443/wis/clicktime/v1/query?url=https%3a%2f%2fbaas2019.org&umid=016d9e0b-a105-487d-b682-597d2d539645&auth=768f192bba830b801fed4f40fb360f4d1374fa7c-52377cb15bc80a57e1060df589f0c07061ccc65d More information on BrANCA and its activities can be found here: https://hes32-ctp.trendmicro.com:443/wis/clicktime/v1/query?url=http%3a%2f%2fwww.branca.org.uk&umid=016d9e0b-a105-487d-b682-597d2d539645&auth=768f192bba830b801fed4f40fb360f4d1374fa7c-192f481ce12a7f0134bd94404c8afcadee66837f 1. OPEN PANEL ON 19th CENTURY AMERICANIST TOPICS Each year BrANCA hosts a special panel at BAAS showcasing progressive, interdisciplinary work on the United States in the long nineteenth century. This year BrANCA invites paper proposals on any relevant topic to be included within a sponsored panel at the BAAS Conference the University of Sussex, April 25-27, 2019. We invite proposals for papers from all researchers working in the field. We are particularly interested in global, hemispheric and […]

Straight to the Front Row: Investigating Contemporary Western Gay Male Cinema (University of Northampton)

University of Northampton Park Campus, Boughton Green Rd, Northampton, United Kingdom

CFP: Straight to the Front Row: Investigating Contemporary Western Gay Male Cinema Conference to be held at the University of Northampton (UK) 16/02/2019 – 17/02/2019 From Weekend (dir. Andrew Haigh, 2011) to Call me By Your Name (dir. Luca Guadagnino, 2017), from God’s Own Country (dir. Francis Lee, 2017) to Moonlight (dir. Barry Jenkins, 2016) and Love, Simon (dir. Greg Berlanti, 2018), contemporary Western gay male cinema has endured a shift in both representational strategies and a boom in popularity within both mainstream and independent spheres, since 2010. ‘Western gay male cinema’, more specifically, refers to cinema that features a gay male protagonist, has narrative themes that relate to gay male identities and films that are primarily produced for gay male audiences. Prior to 2010, there have been Western gay male films that have been significant in either their representations or their popularity (ranging from the films that centred on gay men in New Queer Cinema to films such as Brokeback […]

2019 HOTCUS Winter Symposium (University of Lincoln)

University of Lincoln

2019 HOTCUS Winter Symposium: “Nuclear States": Science, Technology, and American Society in the Atomic Age University of Lincoln  February 16th 2019 Plenary Speaker: Dr Audra Wolfe University of Pennsylvania In August 2017 President Donald Trump tweeted that if North Korea continued its path of missile development than it would be “met with fire and fury the likes of which the world has never seen”. This aggressive rhetoric, coupled with Trump’s subsequent withdrawal from the Iranian nuclear agreement, acted as a stark reminder for citizens of the United States and the world beyond of the continuing apocalyptic potential of nuclear technologies. Americans have lived with the shadows cast by the bomb on American politics, society and culture, alongside more affirmative visions of ‘free energy,’ ‘plowshares’, medical applications, and scientific advance for seventy years. As Trump’s fiery rhetoric revives Cold War concerns about nuclear doom, the time is ripe for historians to […]

The 64th BAAS Annual Conference (University of Sussex)

University of Sussex Brighton, United Kingdom

The 64th BAAS Annual Conference, University of Sussex 25-27 April 2019, University of Sussex Keynote Speakers: Barbara Savage (University of Pennsylvania/University of Oxford), Robyn Weigman (Duke University), Jonathan Bell (UCL) Conference Themes Proposals are welcomed on any subject in American Studies, and submissions are particularly welcome that address our two broad themes: LGBTQ+ History. Inspired by the 50th anniversary of the 1969 Stonewall Riots and the heritage of the Brighton area, the conference welcomes submissions relating to the American sexuality, civil rights and sexual dissidence. Activism and Radical Thought. Inspired equally by the East Sussex career of Thomas Paine, we also encourage papers exploring the history and culture of radical thought and activism from all sides of the political spectrum. Submission Guidelines Given the size and scope of the conference, we will give preference to fully formed panel proposals, but will also accept individual paper proposals where possible. All individual […]

CfP: Indigeneity, Nationhood, and Migrations of the Book, SHARP 2019 (University of Massachusetts)

CFP - Indigeneity, Nationhood, and Migrations of the Book We are pleased to invite submissions for the 27th annual conference of the Society for the History of Authorship, Reading, and Publishing (SHARP), to be held in Amherst, Massachusetts—primarily at the University of Massachusetts—from Monday, 15 July, to Thursday, 18 July 2019, with optional book-historical excursions on 19 July. (Details on pre- and post-conference activities will follow.) The conference theme is “Indigeneity, Nationhood, and Migrations of the Book.” Areas of inquiry may include, but are certainly not limited to, the following: • The indigenous book: concepts, definitions, evolution • Making marks to new media: varieties of communicative practice • Cross-cultural encounters, diglossia, heteroglossia, and cultural hybridity • The uses of print by colonizers and colonized • Decolonizing book history, libraries, and archives • The formation and material expression of national literatures • Meanings and manifestations of the vernacular: national languages, lexica, […]