Sunday, December 12, 2021

CFP The Mouse’s Monsters at PCA (12/23/2021; PCA Virtual 4/13-16/2021)

The Mouse’s Monsters at PCA: Further Examples of Monsters and the Monstrous in the Worlds of Disney

Sponsored Session Proposed for the 2022 Virtual Conference of the Popular Culture Association

Sponsored by the Monsters & the Monstrous Area and the Disney Studies Areas of the Northeast Popular Culture/American Culture Association for PCA’s Disney Studies Special Topic Area.

Virtual event: 13-16 April 2022.

Proposals due by 21 January 2022 (UPDATED).

 

At its 2021 Virtual Conference, the Monsters & the Monstrous Area and the Disney Studies Areas of the Northeast Popular Culture/American Culture Association (a.k.a. NEPCA) organized three successful sessions on the theme of monsters and the monstrous in the fictional worlds of the Walt Disney Company.

We’d like to continue to build on those investigations this coming spring at the national meeting of the Popular Culture Association (a.k.a. PCA) and to also help support the PCA’s new Disney Studies Special Topic Area.

For this session, we’re most interested in proposals related to representations of monsters and the monstrous in the traditional Disney brand and in Pixar, but papers related to more recent properties and acquisitions (for example ABC, ABC Family/Freeform, Hulu, Lucasfilm, Marvel, the Muppets, Saban Entertainment, and Twentieth Century Fox) can be also be valid approaches. All submissions will also be considered for inclusion in a collection of essays based on the topic.

 

Potential topics might include the following:

  • Adaptations of classic monster stories.
  • Aliens.
  • Animals as monsters.
  • Attractions.
  • Bad dreams.
  • Communities of monsters.
  • Constructs.
  • Cryptids.
  • Curses.
  • Dinosaurs.
  • Disguises.
  • Disney as monstrous.
  • Disney Villains.
  • Gargoyles.
  • Ghosts.
  • Halloween.
  • Halloween-themed productions.
  • Haunted houses (and mansions)
  • Horror-themed productions.
  • Human “monsters”.
  • Imaginary creatures.
  • Legendary creatures.
  • Magical creatures.
  • Magic-users.
  • Othered individuals.
  • Reanimated dead.
  • Shape-shifters.
  • Technology and monsters.
  • Undead/zombies.
  • Underworld and other realms of the dead.
  • Vampires.
  • Weather-related monsters.
  • Witchcraft/witches and wizards.

 

If you are interested in joining this session, please submit your information into PCA’s online system at https://pcaaca.org/conference/submitting-paper-proposal-pca-conference. You’ll need to create a profile and upload a biographical statement AND join the PCA for the coming year before the system will allow you to reach the proposal screen. Be sure to select “Disney Studies” as the area for your paper. Proposals should be about 250 words.

Please also send a copy of your proposal to the session organizers, so we can keep track of them: Michael A. Torregrossa (NEPCA’s Monsters & the Monstrous Area Chair) at popular.preternaturaliana@gmail.com and Priscilla Hobbs (NEPCA’s Disney Studies Area Chair) at p.hobbs-penn@snhu.edu.

Further details on PCA’s Disney Studies Special Topic Area can be found at https://pcaaca.org/area/disney-studies-special-topic-2022.

NEPCA’s Monsters & the Monstrous Area maintains a blog at https://popularpreternaturaliana.blogspot.com/.

 

 

 

Thursday, December 2, 2021

CFP Premodern Otherness (Spec Issue of Otherness: Essays and Studies) (2/1/2022)

Special Issue: Premodern Otherness (Otherness: Essays and Studies 9.1)


deadline for submissions: February 1, 2022


full name / name of organization: Centre for Studies in Otherness


contact email: engms@cc.au.dk


Source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2021/11/24/special-issue-premodern-otherness-otherness-essays-and-studies-91



The peer-reviewed, open-access e-journal Otherness: Essays and Studies is now accepting submissions for its special issue: Premodern Otherness: Encounters with and Expressions of the Other in Classical Antiquity, Medieval, and Early Modern Periods, Autumn 2022.



Otherness: Essays and Studies publishes research articles from and across different scholarly disciplines that critically examine the concepts of Otherness and alterity. We particularly appreciate dynamic cross-disciplinary study.



This special issue will focus on representations and ideas of Otherness in classical antiquity, medieval, and early modern periods. Confrontations with and distinctive conceptualizations of Otherness were also present in the premodern era. The papers in this issue will focus on the different ways in which Otherness was expressed in thought, representations, and processes during this period. This can include but is not limited to, philosophical or literary works, material culture, historiography, treatises, etc.



Thinking about Otherness is not limited to contemporary identity politics nor Orientalism in the modern era. Socrates based his anamnesis principle, the idea that we have known everything in a previous life but have simply forgotten it, on his questioning how to deal with the Other and the unknown. However, the relevance of this theory and other premodern thoughts and texts on Otherness is often overlooked. When we discuss Otherness today, we mention modern thinkers such as Levinas or Derrida and might then discount the role Socrates and other premodern philosophers have had. The ideas of ancient thinkers have long remained relevant throughout the Middle Ages too and left their traces in the cultural production of that period and beyond. Think, for example, of the interactions in the Old English poem Beowulf between the monster Grendel and his surroundings, or encounters with the Faƫrie in Arthurian romances. The way in which these unnatural or unfamiliar phenomena are treated can generate fruitful discussions when it comes to Otherness and how it has been conceptualized through time. How can we now study and interpret these traces and what exactly are they? How are the encounters with Otherness or the Other visualised, presented, and described in premodern artwork or treatises? What can we learn from looking at representations of Otherness in the past and use those in our own dealings with Otherness now?



For this special issue of Otherness: Essays and Studies, we invite papers that explore representations and conceptualisations of the Other in the premodern period. These representations can be historiographical, literary, architectural, artistic, or interdisciplinary. We seek practice-led research outcomes, cross-disciplinary theoretical considerations, conceptualizations and theory formations and critical and analytical readings of source material.



Welcome topics include but are not limited to:

  • Representation and Reception of Otherness in Classical and Medieval Philosophy
  • Translation of Otherness in Premodern Literature
  • Theoretical Frameworks for Premodern Alterity
  • Framing the Other in Premodern Historiographical Texts
  • Representations of the Other in Premodern Material Culture
  • Spatial Practices in the Premodern Periods and the Other
  • Encounters with Monstrosities in Premodern Art
  • The Treatment of Women in Premodern Texts
  • Marginalisation of Race in Premodern Treatises




Articles should be between 5,000 – 8,000 words. All electronic submissions should be sent via email with Word document attachment formatted to Chicago Manual of Style standards to the guest editor Bregje Hoed at Otherness.research@gmail.com



Further information: http://www.Otherness.dk/journal/



The deadline for submissions is 1 February 2022.

 Last updated December 1, 2021