From Carmilla to Drusilla: Vampires Across Popular Culturehttps://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2017/11/08/from-carmilla-to-drusilla-vampires-across-popular-culture
deadline for submissions:
February 15, 2018
full name / name of organization:
Seton Hill University
contact email:
Call For Papers: International Vampire Film and Arts Festival - 7-10 June 2018
The third annual International Vampire Film and Arts
Festival will take place in Sighisoara in Transylvania, Romania, on June
7th-10th, 2018. To celebrate their popular fiction dual degree
collaboration, WRITE TOGETHER--in
which students earn an MA studying at Edinburgh Napier University for
one year, then transition to a low residency program to earn their MFA
from Seton Hill University--faculty from both universities are teaming
up to curate this year’s exciting call for papers.
Keynote Speaker:CHRISTOPHER GOLDEN (bestselling author of
Buffy the Vampire Slayer - The Watcher's Guide, Of Saints and Shadows,
Ararat, Seize the Night, & more)
Sponsoring Faculty: Dr. Michael Arnzen and Nicole Peeler (Seton Hill University)
Mr. David Bishop and Ms. Laura Lam (Edinburgh Napier University)
Conference Theme: From Carmilla to Drusilla: Vampires Across Popular Culture
The IVFAF, in association with Seton Hill University and
Edinburgh Napier University, calls for papers by scholars interested in
presenting their researched essays on vampire literature and film in the
academic symposium that runs alongside the festival in Transylvania.
We will divide this year’s academic symposium into two days of programming:
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One day will be devoted to situating the vampire as a figure of fascination across popular culture.
-
One day will focus on the vampires of Joss Whedon's Buffy the Vampire Slayer universe, including its many spin-offs and tie-ins and source materials.
The significance of the "Buffyverse” (which in 2017
celebrated its 20th Anniversary since first airing on television) will
be emphasized in this second day. While drawing from an original 1992
horror comedy film, the quirky YA television series developed the
characters and the supernatural world of Sunnydale into a long-running
series (and a popular spin-off, Angel), generating a cult following that
continues to this day in comics, novels, and more.
Both sessions invite papers in genre theory & history,
popular fiction, media culture, television theory, adaptation, comic
studies, the transformative arts and other areas of film, literary and
cultural studies in order to explore and expand the significance of both
the vampire, in general, as well as the "Buffyverse," in popular
culture and around the world.
Proposals for single 20-minute papers or pre-constituted
panels (of 3 x 20-minute papers) on the conference theme are now
welcomed from scholars. Possible topics for the first day may include
(but are not limited to) the following:
+The Impact of Popular Culture or Non‐Gothic Genres on Dracula, Varney, Carmilla and Other Classic Vampire Texts
+Vampire Fiction as Subgenre (Comedies, Romances, YA literature, Graphic Novels)
+The Vampire’s Role in Genre Evolution
+The Vampire as Metaphor
+Vampires as Signs of Cultural Change
+The Popular Vampire in the Literary Mainstream
+The Evolution of Sex and Religion in Vampire Literature
+The Influence of Cinema on Literary Vampires (and vice‐versa)
+Vampiric Tropes in Social Networking, Internet Memes and New Media Culture
+Popular Vampire Fiction/Film in the Non‐Western World
+Pedagogical Applications of Popular Vampire Texts
+Gender and the vampire and/or the vampire hunter
+Vampires and the depiction of alternative sexualities
+Other Cultural Studies Applications of the Vampire Icon
And possible topics for the second day may include (but are not limited) to the following:
+ The Impact of historical vampire literature (Dracula, Varney, Carmilla etc.) on the Buffyverse.
+ Cultural themes in Joss Whedon's work.
+ Buffy's influence on contemporary vampire cinema or YA literature.
+ Gender issues and sexuality in Joss Whedon's Buffyverse.
+ Spike, Angel and vampiric masculinity.
+ Fan Culture and the Buffy series.
+ Buffy in Social Networking, Internet Memes and New Media Culture
+ Teaching with Buffy
+ Generation X and Millennial Audience Receptions of Buffy
+Is Buffy feminist?
A particular desire will be to select papers that examine
the vampire in Young Adult literature and teen dramas, which would offer
a wider context for situating Buffy scholarship or otherwise expanding
our scholarly understanding of the appeal of the vampire in youth
culture. We also want to support undergraduate scholarship: any current
UG students interested in attending IVFAF would be eligible for special,
10-15 minute presentation panels to facilitate their participation in
an international conference at the undergraduate level.
Submit abstracts (500 words maximum) via email only to arnzen@setonhill.edu
no later than February 15th, 2018. If submitting a full panel
proposal, include all three proposals along with a summary statement (50
words maximum) of the panel's title and central topic written by the
moderator. Acceptance of a proposal is a commitment to present a
finished written paper in a talk lasting approximately 20 minutes.
Accepted submitters must confirm their commitment to travel, attend and
present their own original work at the conference in Sighisoara,
Romania. Presenters must register by purchasing an Academic Delegate
ticket.
For more information on conference registration and location, visit http://ivfaf.com
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