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Russia in American Literature (British Library)

HOTCUS Article Prize

HOTCUS welcomes applications for its inaugural 2017 Article Prize, which will recognize the outstanding research published by HOTCUS members. The prize of £100.00 will be awarded to the best article on a twentieth-century US history topic published in a peer-reviewed scholarly journal during the 2016 calendar year. Submissions may be made by authors or editors, and authors may be at any career stage, but they must be members of HOTCUS. To enter, authors or editors should email a PDF of their article to the HOTCUS Committee Secretary, Nick Witham (n.witham@ucl.ac.uk). The deadline for entries is 28 February 2017. More information available here: http://hotcus.org.uk/awards/article-prize/

CFP: Ecology, Economy, and Cultures of Resistance: Oikoi of the North American World (University of Edinburgh)

Ecology, Economy, and Cultures of Resistance: Oikoi of the North American World A two-day symposium at the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, University of Edinburgh. 29-30 June 2017 Ecology and economy are inextricable. From the ‘oeconomy of nature’ theorised by Thomas Burnet, and later Carl Linnaeus, to the recent turn in the social sciences that reconsiders the Anthropocene as the Capitalocene, the interwoven global history of these two fields of thought makes their conceptual separation impracticable. This two-day symposium considers the roles of cultural production and critique under these conditions of inextricability. It takes as its locus the North American world. We use the term North American world to denote the world-view as conceived by or through North American social conditions, governance, cultures, politics, and institutions, but which is global in its influences and effects. Scholars working in Anglophone universities, primarily in the United States, have dominated discussions […]

KCL American Studies Research Seminar: ‘The Antislavery Usable Past’ (KCL)

American Studies Research Seminar | The Antislavery Usable Past: Protest Memory and the Movement Against Contemporary Slavery When: 28 February 2017, 18:00 – 19:30 Where: K6.63 King's Building, Strand, King’s College London, WC2R 2LS How: All welcome; no need to book. Bio: Zoe Trodd is a Professor in the Department of American and Canadian Studies at the University of Nottingham, co-director of the Centre for Research in Race and Rights, and director of the Research Priority Area in Rights and Justice. She received her PhD from Harvard University and has taught at Harvard and Columbia University. She researches social justice movements, especially antislavery, and her books include American Protest Literature (2006), To Plead Our Own Cause (2008), Modern Slavery (2009), The Tribunal (2012), Civil War America (2012), and Picturing Frederick Douglass (2015). She has addressed the European Parliament about its antislavery policy, and works with antislavery NGOs on their campaigns, especially their use of slaves' […]

CFP: The Course of Empires: American-Italian Cultural Relations, 1770-1980 (Smithsonian American Art Museum)

Call for Conference Papers The Course of Empires:  American-Italian Cultural Relations, 1770-1980 Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C. This international conference will examine the persistent fascination of American and Italian artists with the cultural achievements of ancient Rome and the Renaissance.  In creating national identities, both countries turned to history for similar reasons:  to find inspiration for enlightened political practices; to locate models of artistic, political, and economic preeminence; and to seek ways to ward off imperial decadence and decline.  Yet alongside this tendency toward emulation, some American and Italian artists looked askance at the myths of antique and Renaissance glories, demonstrating a skepticism toward the notion of imperial greatness. They utilized imagery of the Roman Colosseum, for example, as a multivalent symbol to articulate the rise, grandeur, terrors, and fall of empire. This conference seeks to update and broaden our understanding of American-Italian cultural relations from the Revolutionary Era […]

CFP: President Trump’s First 100 Days (University of Reading)

The Reading Interdisciplinary Research Network for the Study of Political History and Politics in the Americas launch conference University of Reading 2 May, 2017 PRESIDENT TRUMP’S FIRST 100 DAYS Keynote Address: Professor Andrew Rudalevige, Bowdoin College The newly established Interdisciplinary Research Network for the Study of Political History and Politics in the Americas at the University of Reading is pleased to invite proposals for panels and papers for a one day conference on President Donald J. Trump’s first 100 days. We welcome papers (fully developed or in the early stages) on all aspects of the new administration but also historical perspectives and comparative analyses of the Office of the Presidency during its first 100 days. Please send a brief CV and a summary of the proposed paper or panel (no more than three speakers per panel and 300 words per abstract, please) by March 1, 2017 to the conference organisers: […]

Call for Papers/Call for Art: ‘The Summer of Love’: A One-Day Countercultural Event in Celebration of the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Summer of 1967 (Queen’s University Belfast)

Call for Papers/Call for Art “The Summer of Love”: A One-Day Countercultural Event in Celebration of the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Summer of 1967 Queen’s University Belfast, 28 July 2017 The Summer of Love was not simply an American phenomenon but an occurrence with international and intercultural influence and significant social and political effects, transforming the ways in which the counterculture, intergenerational relationships, class, gender, and race are understood. Thousands of young people ventured to the Bay Area, particularly the Haight-Ashbury district. The media’s overage of the influx of students, hippies, and others considered part of the “counterculture” drew national and international attention. This event will consist of a strong arts and entertainment component. The interdisciplinary focus of the newly formed School of Arts, English and Languages at Queen’s will be stressed as collaborative research projects in writing, poetry, film, and a number of other disciplines will highlight cooperative learning […]

CFP: America’s southern cultures and identities: language, customs, literature (South Carolina State University)

South Carolina State University’s Department of English and The South Carolina Project on Language and Culture (SCPLC) will host an inter-disciplinary Conference on October  6, 2017. Conference Theme:  America’s southern cultures and identities:  language, customs, literature. The organizing committee is soliciting proposals for 20-minute presentations on topics related to language, culture, dialects, literature, film, communities, and other  areas that highlight research and documentation studies on  South Carolina’s cultures and languages as well as Southern regional cultures, languages and communities.  Please send a 250-300 word abstract by March 1, 2017.  Please send it via email to ssalone@scsu.edu.  Please send the following information with the abstract. Name and affiliation of the presenter. Email address Title of the presentation. Abstract (approximately 250-300 words) AV equipment requests, if any. Possible topic areas: Southern Regional Cultures Southern Regional literatures South Carolina literatures African-American Cultures European ethnic communities of The South Caucasian-American communities of The South Hispanic […]

CFP: The International Ralph Ellison Symposium (Oxford University)

The International Ralph Ellison Symposium September 28-30, 2017 Oxford University The Rothermere American Institute (www.rai.ox.ac.uk) at the University of Oxford and the Ralph Ellison Society (https://ellisonsociety.wordpress.com) are pleased to announce the first International Ralph Ellison Symposium. The symposium will bring together Ellison scholars and readers from the United States, the United Kingdom, and other international locales. The symposium will explore a variety of themes vital to Ellison’s life and work, in particular the relevance that his self-fashioned American and African-American identity has around the world. The likely session topics include: Ellison in translation (Invisible Man is in print in more than twenty different languages, including a Mandarin edition published in 2016). The reception, past and present, of Ellison’s fiction and essays in different countries. The status and future direction of Ellison scholarship. Ellison’s own engagement with the world: for example, his urge (thwarted by tonsillitis) to fight in the Abraham […]

CFP: International Ralph Ellison Symposium (Oxford University)

The International Ralph Ellison Symposium September 28-30, 2017 Oxford University The Rothermere American Institute (www.rai.ox.ac.uk) at the University of Oxford and the Ralph Ellison Society (https://ellisonsociety.wordpress.com) are pleased to announce the first International Ralph Ellison Symposium. The symposium will bring together Ellison scholars and readers from the United States, the United Kingdom, and other international locales. The symposium will explore a variety of themes vital to Ellison’s life and work, in particular the relevance that his self-fashioned American and African-American identity has around the world. The likely session topics include: Ellison in translation (Invisible Man is in print in more than twenty different languages, including a Mandarin edition published in 2016). The reception, past and present, of Ellison’s fiction and essays in different countries. The status and future direction of Ellison scholarship. Ellison’s own engagement with the world: for example, his urge (thwarted by tonsillitis) to fight in the Abraham […]

Job: Lecturer/Senior Lecturer in English (University of Roehampton)

Applications are invited for a full-time, without-term Lecturer/Senior Lectureship in English Literature. We are looking for suitably qualified candidates with research interests and teaching  experience in one or more of the following areas: Romanticism, American literature (particular expertise in African-American writing may be an advantage), ecocriticism or queer theory. If your specialism falls outside these areas but you would like to be considered for a post please apply through the ‘2017 campaign route’. The University of Roehampton is the most research intensive modern university in the UK, with some of the highest regarded academic departments in the country. This is an exciting time for the university, with investment in new curricula, the construction of a new £35m state-of-the-art library and student accommodation, the development of a number of external partnerships across the globe and plans for more doctoral scholarships. We have a strong emphasis on supporting our students to reach […]

Rethinking the Post-war History of Gay Life and Politics in the US (Cambridge American History Seminar)

The Lent term schedule for the Cambridge American History Seminar and American History events, including details of which seminars have pre-circulated papers,  is now available here: http://www.hist.cam.ac.uk/seminars/american-history-seminar  All seminars are held on Mondays at 5:00 PM in the Knox Shaw Room, Sidney Sussex College, unless otherwise indicated. 6 March: George Chauncey, Samuel Knight Professor of History and American Studies, Yale University Rethinking the Post-war History of Gay Life and Politics in the US

UCL American Studies Seminar: ‘Rating the American Presidents from George Washington to Donald Trump: A UK Perspective’ (UCL)

Rating the American Presidents from George Washington to Donald Trump: A UK Perspective Mar 8, 2017 6:00 PM – Venue: UCL Archaeology Lecture Theatre, 31-34 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY Michael Patrick Cullinane (Roehampton), Iwan Morgan (UCL), Simon Rofe (SOAS) - This event unveils the results of a poll of 71 UK scholars specializing in American history and US politics. The survey rated the performance of American presidents from George Washington to Barack Obama in five categories: vision/agenda setting; domestic leadership; foreign policy leadership; moral authority; and the positive historical significance of their legacy. More about this event. Register to attend this free event