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British Association for American Studies

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Funding: The Philip Davies Fellowship at the British Library

Bookable-Space African-American Lit-Literary Salon with Andrea Hairston

Andrea Hairston will be reading from Master of Poisons. The evening will include readings, Q&A, and discussion. The event is free. All are welcome to join us in Zoom or watch on Facebook Live.   Funded by a US Embassy Small Grant, Bookable-Space African-American Lit-Literary Salon is a monthly event. Each month, we'll feature a book written by an African American author.  On the first Friday of each month, the author will join us in Zoom to read us engaging stories from their wonderful book, talk about the writing/themes/influences for the book, and answer questions about writing, process, and/or their publishing path. The events are ideal for readers who enjoy and/or are interested in: fiction, contemporary fiction, American studies, American literature, African-American studies, African-American literature, English literature, and well-told stories. Bookable-Space African American Lit Literary Salon promotes and expects a non-judgmental and supportive attitude from participants. If you’re interested in joining, […]

Digital BAAS 2021 – The Digital Conference (Online)

BAAS are excited to announce details for the British Association for American Studies’s 66th Annual Convention — its first to be hosted entirely remotely. For several years BAAS has been building towards an event of this type, in order to transcend the exclusivity and waste of our traditional conference model. The organisers’ plans have been pushed forward by our familiar enemy Covid-19 but are equally motivated by their twin concerns of environmental impact and accessibility/inclusivity. As part of the ‘Green BAAS’ agenda, they are committed to reflecting upon the environmental impact of their activities, and to making positive changes to combat climate catastrophe. The decision to host a virtual conference presents the opportunity not only to minimise international travel, but also to highlight the work of members working in the environmental humanities, and to reflect critically upon the culture of academic conferences. Furthermore, the organisers hope that the reduced costs associated […]

Racialisation and the Media: From Television to Twitter

20-22 April 2021   In the mid-twentieth century two mutually influencing revolutions took place, one technological and one socio-political; the emergence of television and the advent of the civil rights movement both fundamentally altered American society and the wider world. Today, social media and digital technologies are reshaping social relations, while the renewed visibility of white supremacist activism has precipitated a new chapter in the long struggle for racial equality. This conference will put the study of the past in conversation with current debates about media, technology, and race.Please send abstracts and/or questions to raceandmediaconference@gmail.com.   The conference is committed to highlighting the work of individuals from diverse backgrounds and experiences. Preference will be given to panels that reflect this commitment to diversity and inclusion.   Follow @RaceMediaConf on Twitter for updates. Organising committee: Sage Goodwin (sage.goodwin@history.ox.ac.uk); Cindy Ma (cindy.ma@oii.ox.ac.uk).

15th SAAS Conference: “Fear Narratives” and their Role/Use in the United States (University of Deusto, Bilbao)

University of Deusto Unibertsitate Etorb 24, Bilbo, Bizkaia, Spain

“Fear Narratives” and their Role/Use in the United States        Welcome to the 15th International SAAS Conference, which will be held at the University of Deusto in Bilbao next March, 2021. The organisers hope that the conference theme, "Fear Narratives", will be a source of inspiration for all the participants. This year is proving one of the most challenging periods in recent times, but hopefully this conference will contribute to help the organisers navigate their academic work and give them an opportunity to showcase the resilience of the SAAS community. As usual, the conference will comprise a number of plenaries, panel sessions, and workshops, as well as a few social events. You will find all the information you need regarding the conference by visiting the different sections in this webpage. Should any important additional information be included at any point, you will be punctually informed. Looking forward to seeing […]

Bookable-Space African-American Lit-Literary Salon with Edward A. Farmer

Edward will be reading from Pale. The readings will be followed by Q&A and discussion. Join us in Zoom or watch on Facebook Live.   Funded by a US Embassy Small Grant, Bookable-Space African-American Lit-Literary Salon is a monthly event. Each month, we'll feature a book written by an African American author.  On the first Friday of each month, the author will join us in Zoom to read us engaging stories from their wonderful book, talk about the writing/themes/influences for the book, and answer questions about writing, process, and/or their publishing path. The events are ideal for readers who enjoy and/or are interested in: fiction, contemporary fiction, American studies, American literature, African-American studies, African-American literature, English literature, and well-told stories. Bookable-Space African American Lit Literary Salon promotes and expects a non-judgmental and supportive attitude from participants. If you’re interested in joining, would like to learn more, or are an author […]

HELAAS: After Postmodernism: American Studies in the 21st Century (Online)

The Department of English Language and Literature, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens in collaboration with the Hellenic Association of American Studies (HELAAS) invites you to participate in the international conference: AFTER POSTMODERNISM: AMERICAN STUDIES IN THE 21ST CENTURY December 17-19, 2020 There is a shared sense among a large majority of historians, philosophers, critics and artists that we are now living in a new global moment:  our contemporary era may or may not have started with the fall of the Berlin Wall, in 1989; may or may not have established itself in the wake of the 9/11 attacks; but it is painfully clear that, in the new millennium, a new debate on the “postpostmodern” has opened up. If the Jamesonian taxonomy no longer has the same explanatory power, what is the new dominant cultural logic of post-postmodernism?  If, to quote Jameson again, postmodernism was a “radical break or coupure” […]

UCL Americas Research Network Annual Conference: Histories of Inequality (Online)

The UCL Americas Research Network is delighted to present its sixth annual conference: Histories of Inequality, to be held virtually on 1 June 2021. Join an interdisciplinary group of scholars to debate and discuss the historical antecedents of our era’s entrenched injustices and inequities. We are also excited to announce that Professor Gareth Davies (UCL) will deliver a keynote lecture on the racial politics of US disaster relief. The conference organizers welcome submissions that detail any facet of the history of inequality, broadly conceived, in the United States, Canada, Latin America, and the Caribbean. Papers of an interdisciplinary nature are especially welcome, and we invite current postgraduate students and early career researchers alike to apply. We particularly encourage participants to consider the structural injustices that defined and continue to define the overlapping crises of 2020/21, including glaring health disparities, systemic racial inequality, growing economic stratification, and environmental degradation. Topics might include (but […]

Bookable-Space African-American Lit-Literary Salon with Dawnie Walton

We'll be joined by Dawnie Walton. Dawnie will be reading from Opal & Nev. The reading will be followed by Q&A and chat.   Funded by a US Embassy Small Grant, Bookable-Space African-American Lit-Literary Salon is a monthly event. Each month, we'll feature a book written by an African American author.  On the first Friday of each month, the author will join us in Zoom to read us engaging stories from their wonderful book, talk about the writing/themes/influences for the book, and answer questions about writing, process, and/or their publishing path. The events are ideal for readers who enjoy and/or are interested in: fiction, contemporary fiction, American studies, American literature, African-American studies, African-American literature, English literature, and well-told stories. Bookable-Space African American Lit Literary Salon promotes and expects a non-judgmental and supportive attitude from participants. If you’re interested in joining, would like to learn more, or are an author interested […]

The 55th Annual Conference of the Japanese Association for American Studies (Keio University, Tokyo)

Keio University 2 Chome-15-45 Mita, Minato City, Tokyo, Japan

The 55th JAAS Annual Meeting will be held on June 5th and 6th, 2021 at Keio University, Tokyo. The JAAS Annual Meeting Program Coordinating Committee invites JAAS members to send paper proposals for the “Independent Paper Sessions” to be held on June 5th, 2020. If you are interested in giving a paper, please send by email a proposal that includes (1) your name, (2) your affiliation, (3) the title of your paper, (4) a summary of your paper (approximately 800 words) and (5) five keywords to the JAAS Annual Meeting Office (program@jaas.gr.jp) by November 20th, 2020 (Japanese Standard Time, JST). The 55th Conference may be held online, if the of COVID-19 pandemic is not sufficiently resolved. Please check JAAS official website for the latest information. Only JAAS members can submit a paper proposal. Proposals from non-members will be reviewed if their membership application is received by November 20th, 2019 and […]

HOTCUS Annual Conference 2021 (Online)

The 2021 HOTCUS Annual Conference will be held online during the week 7-11 June 2021. The plenary speaker will be Connie Chiang of Bowdoin College. The call for papers is now open and can be found here

CfP: ‘Presidents and Place’ edited collection – ed. Dr Thomas Cobb

‘Presidents and Place’ - Edited collection - Dr Thomas Cobb and Dr Olga Ackroyd From the frontier of Manifest Destiny ideology to the contest between industrialism and agrarianism implicit in the Civil War, ideals of place have both driven the United States’s economic development and accentuated its political divides. Appreciation of the United States today still often derives from how place differs for its citizens; from the strife of the ‘Rustbelt’ to the glamour of the ‘Sunbelt’, the US is remarked on, perhaps more than other Western country, for its cultural and climatological heterogeneity. The history of US presidents’ upbringings and home state affiliations, however, presents a comparative uniformity. Seven out of the fifteen presidents who preceded Lincoln were born in Virginia, a hegemony which outlasted the frontier ideology purveyed by presidents Andrew Jackson and James Polk. In the decades between Appomattox and the New Deal, it was Ohio’s turn […]

American Studies Association of Turkey Conference: Movement and Mobility in America (Online)

American Studies Association of Turkey (ASAT) 40th International American Studies Conference   Movement and Mobility in America Online Conference June 28-29, 2021   Movement and mobility lie at the core of American society. Whether through immigration, internal migration, social mobility, or domestic and global expansionism, the United States has always been defined as a nation of frontiers and pioneers, a country that is constantly (re)defining itself, where self-(re)invention is part of the American dream. Movement and mobility in the American context can also be physical, sociological, psychological, or political, as in the case of mobilizing for racial justice, such as with the Black Lives Matter movement that is sweeping the nation.   The Trump Administration has prompted a reevaluation of movement and mobility across the political spectrum. While some argue that this has stimulated a visible resurgence in activism and a revival of social movements in the United States, others […]