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CfP: DIGITAL⇌CULTURE 2019 (University of Nottingham)

Latest Past Events

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: 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: 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 […]