Thursday, March 17, 2022

CFP Victorian Necropolitics (Spec Issue of Victoriographies: A Journal of Nineteenth-Century Writing, 1790-1914 ) (4/15/2022)

CFP: Special Issue of Victoriographies: A Journal of Nineteenth-Century Writing, 1790-1914 “Victorian Necropolitics” (Deadline: 4/15/2022)

posted by NAVSA on FEB 24, 2022

source: https://navsa.org/2022/02/24/cfp-special-issue-of-victoriographies-a-journal-of-nineteenth-century-writing-1790-1914-victorian-necropolitics-deadline-4-15-2022/

CFP: Special Issue of Victoriographies: A Journal of Nineteenth-Century Writing, 1790-1914 “Victorian Necropolitics” (Deadline: 4/15/2022)


Proposal Deadline: April 15, 2022

In his essay (2003) and later book Necropolitics, (2019) Achille Mbembe used the term ‘necropolitics’ to account for the cruel relationship between life and death in colonial contexts, as well as the subsequent production of 'death worlds' within postcolonial, geopolitical spaces. Mbembe argues that biopower, in its desire to distinguish between who is disposable and who must be protected, produces a corollary power termed 'necropower.' This sovereign power maximizes the destruction of people and creates 'deathscapes' or 'death worlds,' 'unique forms of social existence in which vast populations are subjected to conditions of life which confer upon them the status of the living dead' (2003). According to Mbembe, colonies, plantations, and slavery are the chief nineteenth-century examples of necropolitics, and current systems of terrorism are its descendents. Mbembe’s concepts can be insightfully deployed to investigate how slavery is instituted and resisted, how British colonization contributes to a state of exception that makes these uses of death possible, and how rebellions, discourses, and histories contain, rebel against, or propagate uses of death. While Mbembe centers his project on slave plantations in the West Indies and the colonial horrors of his native West Africa, his thanatotic, corpse politics are certainly relevant to nineteenth-century Western culture, specifically in the examination of the necropolitical construction of the British Empire onto the inhabitants and landscape of England, for instance, as an example of a re-enacting or reversal of the horrors of the imperial system.

Following Mbembe, we have seen a broader expansion of necropolitical theory to diverse fields, such as ecology, architecture, and queer studies. Jasbir Puar (2014) elaborates a queer necropolitics which calls attention to the ‘differences between queer subjects who are being folded (back) into life and the racialized queernesses that emerge through the naming of populations, often those marked for death.’ With this capaciousness, necropolitics involves multiple modalities of power deployment over the production and management of dead bodies.

This special issue “Victorian Necropolitics” seeks to complicate and expand the postcolonial and posthuman interrogations launched by Mbembe, Rosi Braidotti (2013) and others.

Proposals might address but are not limited to the following topics:

• The aesthetics of violence and fear

• Urban life, surveillance, and regulating mechanisms

• Necro tendencies in architecture, interior, and object design

• Necropower, industrialization, and capitalism

• Queer Necropolitics, Ecologies, and/or Thanatologies

• Necro/dark economies

• Necro ecologies

• The Undead and/or Posthuman

• Imperialism, slavery, and the war machine

• Death and law

• Necropolitics of state racism

• Social death in literature

The suggested topics may be interpreted widely and are intended to encompass a broad range of fields in Victorian studies. Please send a 300-500 word abstract briefly outlining your proposed 7000-8000 word essay with the subject heading “Victorian Necropolitics” and a brief biography to Jolene Zigarovich: jzigarov@gmail.com by 15 April 2022. Notifications of the outcome of submissions will be by early May 2022. If accepted, essays will be due 1 October 2022. The special issue will then be sent to Victoriographies for review and approval. Further details about the journal and a style guide for submissions are available at https://www.euppublishing.com/page/vic/submissions.


CFP Crones, Crime, and the Gothic Conference (4/1/2022; Falmouth U 6/10-11/2022)

Crones, Crime, and the Gothic Conference


source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/03/16/crones-crime-and-the-gothic-conference

deadline for submissions:
April 1, 2022

full name / name of organization:
Falmouth University, 10-11 June, 2022

contact email:
cronescrimegothic@gmail.com



Older women have traditionally been portrayed negatively in folklore, fairy tales, literature and film, for example. Images of witches, evil stepmothers, shrivelled, bitter 'spinsters', and vindictive, bullying women abusing positions of power are rife in Western culture. Yet, perhaps things are changing. A new emphasis on the need to discuss and understand the menopause seems to be at the heart of this. This conference examines historical representations of the 'crone' in relation to crime and Gothic narratives. But it also looks ahead and globally to examine other types of discourses and representations. Bringing older women to the fore of the discussion, this conference aims to go global and really shake up the way that the ‘crone’ is thought about and symbolized.

This conference addresses the key real-world issue of how older, menopausal, and postmenopausal women are spoken about and represented in different cultures and locations. It focuses on crime and Gothic narratives that are the most often, but not always, negatively positioned in relation to older women. As well as highlighting some of the historical issues, this conference gives a voice to diversity, global differences, and other issues such as race, trans-cultures, class, colonization, sexuality identities, femininity, and masculinity.

We welcome abstracts for papers, panels, workshops, and creative practice.

Topics can include (but are not limited to) the following:
  • The Crone
  • Witches
  • Folklore
  • Fairytales
  • Global representations
  • Older women in film and television
  • Criminal women
  • Wise women
  • The older woman and the Gothic
  • Older women and ethnicity
  • Trans-cultures
  • Regional cultures
  • Historical fiction
  • Literature
  • Class
  • Race
  • Gender
  • Sexuality
  • Crones and ecology and/or the climate emergency
  • Grandparents
  • Spinsters
  • The menopause



Abstracts do not have to cover each subject (crones, crime, or the Gothic) but each paper should address at least one of the title subjects and present a clear challenge to conventional and traditional ways of thinking. The aim of the conference is to explore the fears of the past and the contemporary, as well exploring ways to go forward.



Please send 250 word abstracts + a short bio in a Word document to: cronescrimegothic@gmail.com



Submission deadline: 1 April 2022



Last updated March 16, 2022

CFP Hammering the Stakes Once Again: Close Readings on Hammer Horror Films (5/15/2022)

Hammering the Stakes Once Again: Close Readings on Hammer Horror Films


source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/02/05/hammering-the-stakes-once-again-close-readings-on-hammer-horror-films

deadline for submissions:
May 15, 2022

full name / name of organization:
Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns

contact email:
hammerhorrorproject@yahoo.com



Hammering the Stakes Once Again: Close Readings on Hammer Horror Films




Editors:

Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns

Matthew Edwards



Essays are sought for an academic book that aims to examine the popular cycle of horror films produced by the British Hammer Film Productions Ltd., best known as Hammer. While the studio began exploring horror with The Mystery of the Mary Celeste (1935), starring Bela Lugosi, Hammer’s goal never was to become the House of Horrors but rather to produce and distribute any genre in vogue. In the 1950s, and after almost disappearing as a production unit, Hammer ventured into science fiction territory with two Terence Fisher’s films: Four Sided Triangle (1953) and Spaceways (1953). Later, the Quatermass franchise blended science fiction tropes with horror narratives through a series of films dealing with social and cultural anxieties regarding forms of alien Otherness. Yet the real success would later come with their Gothic horror films, with Terence Fisher elegantly directing The Curse of Frankenstein (1957) and Dracula (1958). The myth has begun.

This myth, in turn, has fetishized Hammer, to the point that the rich and complex history of the studio has overridden the most important aspect: the films. Indeed, the films made by Hammer are almost secondary, just background in the tapestry that Hammer’s history is. As such, there is an alarming lack of scholarship on the films. David Pirie’s A New Heritage of Horror: The English Gothic Cinema, dated 1973 (with Hammer still producing horror), and Peter Hutchings’ excellent Hammer and Beyond: The British Horror Film, dated 1993, are examples of only a handful of books addressing the films. Later scholarship tends to focus on the history, the names behind the camera, and the downfall of the House of Horrors. Further, only films like The Curse of Frankenstein or Dracula received some scholarly attention scattered in journals, while other interesting efforts are practically invisible.

Like we did with other neglected areas of horror with the giallo cycle (University of Mississippi Press, forthcoming 2022) and horror comics (Routledge, forthcoming, 2022), we ask for chapters analyzing, via close readings, the films from any era and from different theoretical perspectives including:


-Postcolonialist readings of The Abominable Snowman (Val Guest, 1957), The Stranglers of Bombay (1959), The Reptile (1966)

-The family under siege in The Snorkel (Guy Green, 1958), The Vampire Lovers (1970), Demons of the Mind (1972)

-Adaptation studies in Frankenstein, Dracula, The Hound of the Baskervilles (1959), The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll (1960), The Phantom of the Opera (1962)

-British masculinities in The Mummy (1959), The Mummy's Shroud (1967)

-Fairy tales’ studies in Never Take Sweets from a Stranger (1960), The Curse of the Werewolf (1961)

-Animality in Shadow of the Cat (1961)

-Trauma in The Full Treatment (1960), Nightmare (1964), Hysteria (1965), Fear in the Night (1972)

-Horror and adventure in Captain Clegg (1962), Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter (1974)

-Noir and horror in Maniac (1963), Paranoiac (1963)

-The female monstrous in The Gorgon (1964), The Reptile (1966), The Vampire Lovers (1970), Countess Dracula (1971), Hands of the Ripper (1971)

-Ageing in Die, Die, my Darling! (1965), The Nanny (1965), The Anniversary (1968)

-The proletariat in Revolt of the Zombies (1965)

-Queerness in Frankenstein Created Woman (1967), Dr Jekyll & Sister Hyde (1971)

-Moral panics in The Devil Rides Out (1968), Dracula A.D. 1972 (1972), To the Devil, A Daughter (1976)

-The posthuman in Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell (1974)

-The spectral turn in The Woman in Black (2012)

-Postmodernity in The Lodge (2019)

-Serialized horror in TV Hammer House of Mystery and Suspense (1984)

-Urbanity in The Resident (2011)



The list is far from exhaustive and all disciplinary approaches are welcome. It must be noted, however, we sought for chapters focusing on the films rather than in tracing the history of the studio and its misfortunes.

Please submit 300-500 word abstracts with working title and short bio in the same doc to hammerhorrorproject@yahoo.com by May 15, 2022. Abstracts must be delivered as a Word attachment. A renowned academic publisher has showed interest in the project.

This will be one of the first books centred exclusively on close readings on an under-studied area and, as such, this collection will have an appeal to scholars and students in horror film studies, visual rhetoric, philosophy, sociology, media studies, pop culture, and Hammer fandom.

Please, share this CFP with all you believe might be interested. Thanks.



Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns (PhD in Arts, PhD Candidate in History) works as Professor at the Universidad de Buenos Aires (UBA) - Facultad de Filosofía y Letras (Argentina)-. He teaches courses on international horror film. He is director of the research group on horror cinema “Grite” and has authored a book about Spanish horror TV series Historias para no Dormir (Universidad de Cádiz, 2020) and has edited books on Frankenstein bicentennial (Universidad de Buenos Aires), one on director James Wan (McFarland, 2021), the Italian giallo film (University of Mississippi Press, 2022) and horror comics (Routledge, 2022). Currently editing a book on Wes Craven for Lexington.

http://artes.filo.uba.ar/pagnoni-berns-gabriel




Last updated February 6, 2022

CFP Geographies of Terror: The Fantastic and Quotidian (5/15/2022; PAMLA Los Angeles 11/11-13/2022)

Geographies of Terror: The Fantastic and Quotidian


source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/02/17/geographies-of-terror-the-fantastic-and-quotidian

deadline for submissions:
May 15, 2022

full name / name of organization:
PAMLA

contact email:
alagji@pitzer.edu



Geographies of Terror: The Fantastic and Quotidian


Proposals invited for a special session panel at PAMLA's 2022 Conference, UCLA Luskin Conference Center and Hotel in Los Angeles, California

November 11 - 13, 2022



Panel Organizer: Amanda Lagji alagji@pitzer.edu



In connection with PAMLA’s conference theme on the geographies of the fantastic and quotidian, this panel invites papers that explore the fantastic and quotidian geographies of terror in literature. Papers are encouraged to embrace an expansive notion of geographies, including the spatial and the affective, in their examination of terrorism and literature.

The reach of terror and counter-terror networks alike is fantastic, and vast; we might contrast the global, deterritorialized networks not just of terror, but also counter-terror surveillance and security apparatuses with fiction’s depiction of the quotidian, everyday experiences of grief, paranoia, anxiety, and fear. Fiction’s exploration of these affective geographies, however, might also mobilize the “fantastic” mode, from irrealist scenes in Karan Mahajan’s The Association of Small Bombs to Viken Berberian’s strange novel The Cyclist.

This panel aims to address the following questions: how do ‘terror texts’ balance the quotidian and the fantastic in their exploration of post-9/11 security logics? To what end might ‘terror texts’ mobilize elements of the fantastic or strange to comment on domestic or global terror? The geographies of terror interact with post-Cold War geopolitics, as well as the persistence of imperial formations in the present; how might these “fantastic” histories impinge on the quotidian narration of terror in contemporary fiction? Is fiction especially good (or especially bad) at mediating the relationship between the fantastic spectacle of terror and the quotidian experiences of aftermath? Do these distinctions even hold under analysis?

Papers might address questions of genre and representation, as well as depictions of terror “sites” and the affective geographies of terror. The panel aims to be inclusive of all national/comparative literatures and time periods in its efforts to chart a long and expansive history of terror, the fantastic, and the quotidian.

Please submit proposals (max. 300 words) and a brief biography (max. 100 words) for 15 minute papers to PAMLA’s online submission system https://pamla.ballastacademic.com/ (login or create an account first) by May 15, 2022.

More details on the conference can be found here: https://www.pamla.org/pamla2022/



Last updated February 21, 2022

CFP Flights of the Imagination: Dragons in Mythology and Folklore (4/8/2022)

Flights of the Imagination: Dragons in Mythology and Folklore


source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/02/18/flights-of-the-imagination-dragons-in-mythology-and-folklore

deadline for submissions:
April 8, 2022

full name / name of organization:
St. Thomas University

contact email:
rachel.carazo@snhu.edu



Dracones in Mundo: Dragons in Literature, Film, and Pop Culture: A Series of Edited Volumes.


This CFP focuses on folklore and mythology regarding dragons. I am looking for 4 or 5 essays to round out the volume.

Deadline for proposals: April 8, 2022
Deadline for first drafts: June 17, 2022

How to submit your proposal
Please send abstracts and a short biographical note to Rachel L. Carazo at rachel.carazo@snhu.edu



Last updated February 21, 2022

CFP Victorian Resurrections International Conference (5/15/2022; Vienna 9/22-24/2022)

Neat idea. Too bad there is no remote option.


Victorian Resurrections International Conference


source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/02/25/victorian-resurrections-international-conference

deadline for submissions:
May 15, 2022

full name / name of organization:
University of Vienna

contact email:
sylvia.mieszkowski@univie.ac.at



Victorian Resurrections



International Conference, 22nd – 24th September 2022 (University of Vienna)

Deadline for proposals (300 words): 15th May 2022

Confirmed keynote speakers:

Ann Heilmann (University of Cardiff)
Patricia Duncker (University of Manchester)

Call for Papers

Death and resurrection as well as the fears, fantasies and fads that surround them, pervade Victorian literature and culture in a myriad of ways. From literary representations of the dead coming back to life, to cultural practices of mourning and memorialising the dead, the Victorian era betrays a striking concern with how to cope with one's mortality. Working-class literature such as penny dreadfuls fictionalised concerns about the illegal trade in corpses led by resurrection men, or body-snatchers, who exhumed corpses to sell them to medical men, most specifically, to anatomists. Gothic texts throughout the 19th century often featured reanimated corpses or the living dead. The rise of spiritualism and the popularity of mediums and séances in the second half of the century complemented upper- and upper-middle-class practices of mourning, while the working-class was confronted with the (financial) impossibility to memorialise their lost ones in what was thought 'the proper way'. Queen Victoria herself mourned Prince Albert for over four decades, famously making her servants lay out his clothes in the morning and bring hot water for his shaving, as if he were about to come back.

Twentieth- and twenty-first-century literary, cultural, and material practices are guided by a wide range of agendas – revisionist, political, nostalgic, commercial, aesthetically experimental – in their manifold recurrences to the Victorian Age. At the same time, the manifold recurrences of the Victorian age in twentieth- and twenty-first-century literary, cultural, and material practices have preserved an interest in the idea of resurrection(s) and its implications. As a cultural phenomenon neo-Victorianism, for instance, could be described as one giant resurrectionist enterprise geared towards a reimagining of the Victorian Age through a wide range of different media and genres. Driven by a desire to fill historiographical gaps, retell the lives of iconic figures or uncover the stories of side-lined, obscure or marginalized individuals, neo-Victorian appropriations are what Kate Mitchell calls "memory texts". As such, they simultaneously reflect and shape our perceptions of the Victorian Age by creating specific versions of that past; by selecting which stories are being (re)told and whose voices are being recovered or made heard. These acts of remembrance often serve our need to constitute or reaffirm our social and cultural identities through the idea of a shared past and a common set of values. Neo-Victorian recoveries and (re)assessments of the 19th century are hardly ever 'innocent'. Instead, they are ideologically charged and reflect the concerns of our present, how we position ourselves with regard to the past, and how our meaning-making activates texts selectively. Neo-Victorian texts and practices participate in the project of producing and consolidating but also revising our cultural memory of the 19th century, contributing to the rich spectrum of Victorian after-lives and after-images in our society.

Topics for papers may touch on but are not limited to:

• the Gothic (the undead, re-awakened mummies etc.)
• resurrection men and body-snatching practices
• Victorian cultural practices surrounding death (spiritualism, séances, mediums)
• Victorian memorial cultures
• neo-Victorian literature's resurrective practices
• the Empire, ancient cultures & translatio imperii (Egypt; Assyria; Greece; Rome)
• 20th/21st century costume drama
• 20th/21st century re-imaginings of Queen Victoria and other iconic Victorian figures
• critical revivals (e.g. the fin-de-siècle Scottish Revival)
• the re-discovery and/or re-evaluation of forgotten Victorian texts
• the re-discovery and/or re-evaluation of forgotten or marginalized Victorian figures
• resurrection of forgotten Victorian traditions and/or social movements
• dark tourism (or thanatourism) in connection with the Victorian era
• (neo-)Victorian literature and biofiction
• Religion/spirituality in (neo-)Victorian literature and biofiction
• neo-Victorianism and cultural memory
• Victorian life writing / writing Victorian lives
• Victorian and neo-Victorian resurrective practices and fame/obscurity
• Victorian afterlives and reputations

Those interested in contributing should send 300-word abstracts for 20-minute papers in English by 15th May 2022 to Sandra Mayer (Sandra.Mayer@oeaw.ac.at) and Sylvia Mieszkowski (sylvia.mieszkowski@univie.ac.at), and include a short bio-bibliographical note (approx. 100 words).

Conference warming: 22nd September 2022

Conference dinner: 23rd September 2022

Conference fees:
• full fee: € 60
• reduced fee (PhD students): € 30

For practical and organisational information about Victorian Resurrections please check from mid-May 2022 onwards: http://anglistik.univie.ac.at/victorian-resurrections/



Last updated February 28, 2022

CFP Haunted Hibernia: Conjuring the Contemporary Irish Gothic (5/1/2022; Ireland 10/28-29/2022)

Haunted Hibernia: Conjuring the Contemporary Irish Gothic


source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/02/20/haunted-hibernia-conjuring-the-contemporary-irish-gothic

deadline for submissions:
May 1, 2022

full name / name of organization:
Carlow College

contact email:
hauntedhibernia@gmail.com



Date of conference: 28th-29th October 2022.




In the period following the collapse of the Celtic Tiger in 2008, Irish society and culture began to take on a distinctly Gothic hue. In popular discourse, the landscapes of recessionary Ireland were figured as uncanny, gothicized spaces, haunted by ‘ghost estates’ and ‘zombie banks’, and preyed upon by vampiric ‘vulture funds’. At the same time, deeply disturbing aspects of Ireland’s history were further exposed in a plethora of government commissions documenting the shocking scale and extent of the abuses committed by the church and state, including: the 2009 Report of the Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse (the ‘Ryan Report’), the 2013 Magdalen Commission Report (the ‘Quirke Report’), and (the more problematic) 2021 Report of the Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation. These profoundly disturbing revelations regarding the country’s past have resonated, in a deeply troubling manner, with more recent societal crises, such as the ongoing issue of homelessness and child poverty, the inhumane treatment of individuals in direct provision, the fight for reproductive autonomy, and the rise of domestic violence in the wake of the ongoing Covid pandemic. Given the psychologically discomfiting and socially unsettling effect of these overlapping contexts and anxieties, it is unsurprising that the Gothic has proved an especially apposite prism for the artistic representation of Ireland’s post-Celtic-Tiger dispensation.

This conference seeks to explore the myriad ways that the Gothic has been deployed to interrogate the social, economic, and political transformations that have occurred in Ireland since the end of the Celtic Tiger, and to exhume the associated historical trauma engendered by these changes. It will also examine how the contemporary scene has generated and precipitated new variations and hybridizations of Gothic literature and media. We welcome papers that engage with the Gothic in a wide variety of forms and media, including fiction, poetry, drama, film, tv, visual art, music, digital media and storytelling, and the broader field of popular culture.



The conference will also host plenary speaker, Dr. Sorcha Ní Fhlainn, Senior Lecturer and founding member of the Manchester Centre for Gothic Studies at Manchester Metropolitan University.



Potential topics include but are not limited to:

  • The Gothic and gender/sexuality: The Gothic as a lens through which we engage with the politicised female body and ownership/possession of the female body in 21st century Ireland.
  • The use of the Gothic as a mode of progressive social and political protest.
  • The Gothic as a vehicle to signify and disclose economic/financial crisis in Post-Celtic Tiger Ireland.
  • Gothic tropes and motifs (the monstrous, the spectral, the uncanny, the haunted house) in contemporary Irish artistic culture.
  • Contemporary artistic engagement with an older Irish Gothic tradition
  • The aesthetic evolution/re-invention of the Gothic in contemporary Irish art and literature
  • Eco Gothic and Eco horror in and Irish context
  • The Gothic in Contemporary Irish Children’s Literature
  • The Covid pandemic and the Gothic.
  • Narratives of Gothic imprisonment/entrapment in contemporary Ireland, both literal and structural.
  • The Gothic as a response to Ireland’s ongoing mental health crisis.
  • Representations of home and homelessness in contemporary Irish Gothic.
  • Constructions of domesticity and the domestic space in contemporary Irish Gothic.
  • Specters of imperialism in contemporary Ireland.


Proposals (300 words) and a brief biography should be sent to hauntedhibernia@gmail.com by 1st May 2022.



Last updated February 21, 2022

CFP Global Hawthorne (3/21/2022; MLA San Francisco 1/5-8/2023)

MLA 2023: Global Hawthorne


Source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/02/26/mla-2023-global-hawthorne

deadline for submissions:
March 21, 2022

full name / name of organization:
Nathaniel Hawthorne Society

contact email:
nsweet@csus.edu



The Hawthorne Society invites proposals for our allied-society panel at the 2023 meeting of the MLA, which will take place in San Francisco, CA, Jan 5-8, 2023. Please send your abstract of 250-300 words to nsweet@csus.edu by Mar. 21, 2022.

Global Hawthorne: Readership, Reception, Adaptation

Scholars and readers around the world continue to engage Hawthorne’s work, and talented writers continue to adapt, re-write, and respond to Hawthorne. For MLA 2023, we invite papers that discuss any aspect of Hawthorne’s global afterlife. Papers might consider contemporary works from outside the U.S. (in any media or mode), translations of Hawthorne’s works, international reception and scholarship, current global readership, or the future of Hawthorne abroad. Scholars specializing in other periods and fields are encouraged to submit proposals.



Last updated February 28, 2022

CFP Gothic Panel (3/31/2022; SCMLA Memphis/Remote 10/13-15/2022)

Gothic Panel


Source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/02/26/gothic-panel

deadline for submissions:
March 31, 2022

full name / name of organization:
South Central Modern Language Association (SCMLA)

contact email:
julieanngarza@gmail.com



The Gothic Panel with SCMLA's 79th Annual Hybrid Conference held in Memphis, Tennessee from October 13-15, 2022 is accepting proposals/abstracts for the Fall 2022 Conference. The virtual conference offers options for both In Person and Virtual presentations.

Location: Sheraton Downtown Memphis in Memphis, Tennessee

Days: October 13-15, 2022

URL: https://www.southcentralmla.org/conference/

Contact: Professor Julie Garza-Horne, Gothic Panel Secretary, julieanngarza@gmail.com




Last updated February 28, 2022

CFP Special Issue on "Monsters" or "monstrosity" in artworks intended for children (4/30/2022)

This appears to be for a Special Issue of Language, Culture, Environment.



"Monsters" or "monstrosity" in artworks intended for children

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/03/02/monsters-or-monstrosity-in-artworks-intended-for-children

deadline for submissions:
April 30, 2022

full name / name of organization:
KIMEP University

contact email:
lcekimep@gmail.com



The journal is seeking submissions of between 6000 and 8000 words on the topic of "monsters" or "monstrosity" in artworks intended for children. The works can be from literature, but also from film, internet, or other media, in any national tradition or historical period. Submissions may include inquiries into how the monstrous or the figure of the monster functions metaphorically, or otherwise serves to interpret or mediate the adult world to children. The deadline for submissions is 30th April 2022.



Last updated March 8, 2022

CFP DEADLINE EXTENDED - 03/18 - EDITED COLLECTION: The Palgrave Handbook to the Ghost Story (3/18/2022)

DEADLINE EXTENDED - 03/18 - EDITED COLLECTION: The Palgrave Handbook to the Ghost Story


Source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/01/28/deadline-extended-0318-edited-collection-the-palgrave-handbook-to-the-ghost-story

deadline for submissions:
March 18, 2022

full name / name of organization:
Joan Passey, Jen Baker, Henry Bartholomew

contact email:
joan.passey@bristol.ac.uk



The Palgrave Handbook to the Ghost Story


This handbook seeks to open new conversations about the ghost-story form. It is open to all media, genre, and disciplines - fiction, nonfiction, theatre, cinema, video games, podcasts, graphic novels, musicals, and so forth - as well as spaces and time periods (antiquity to the present).

Chapters will provide a new angle, intervention, or perspective on various aspects of the ghost-story tradition. These can be thematic, author-based, chronologically centred, or narrative-based.

We anticipate chapters to be c. 4000 words. We hope to organise chapters under the following potential sections, though anticipate overlap. We have provided some suggestions for topics, but these are not prescriptive nor exhaustive – we welcome your ideas.



Section 1: Folklore and Legends


  • Including creepypasta, urban legends, global folktales, antiquarians, mythologies, folkhorror.



Section 2: Haunted Environments


  • Cities, coasts, moors, gardens, the non-human, animals, insects, seascapes, colonial space.



Section 3: Ghostly Bodies and Objects


  • Paintings, ruins, jewellery, dolls, bodies, psychometry, illness, malady, diagnosis, pathology, injury, corporeal ghosts, seances.



Section 4: Ghostly Experiences


  • Psychical investigation, haunted houses, haunted funfairs, children as audience, audience in theatre, video gamers playing ghostly games.



Section 5: Anxious Inheritance and Legacy


  • Influence, legacy, adaptation, inheritance, bloodlines, family inheritance (ie, Dacre Stoker, Joe Hill), steampunk, rewriting medieval ghosts, ghosts of antiquity, the canon.



Section 6: Spectral Theories and Epistemologies


  • Theories within and without the text, religions, theologies, queer, Marxist, gender, science and technology, mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology, economics, psychology, hysteria, paranoia, madness, ecocritism, methodologies and frameworks.



Section 7: Paranormal Paraphernalia


  • Archives, letters/interviews, found footage, paratext, prefaces, epigrams and epigraphs, magazines, pamphlets, posters, illustrations.



Abstracts should be 150-300 words, 3-5 keywords, and be accompanied by a biographical note of 100 word (max) [this can include a link to a research profile]. These should be sent to

Jen Baker j.baker.5@warwick.ac.uk, Joan Passey at joan.passey@bristol.ac.uk and Henry Bartholomew henry.bartholomew@plymouth.ac.uk by 18th March 2022. We welcome questions and inquiries. Please send either in the body of the email or as one PDF or .doc attachment.




Last updated March 7, 2022

CFP Southern Gothic Area at PCAS/ACAS 2022 (6/1/2022; New Orleans 10/13-15/2022)

CFP: Southern Gothic Area at PCAS/ACAS 2022


Source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/03/03/cfp-southern-gothic-area-at-pcasacas-2022

deadline for submissions:
June 1, 2022

full name / name of organization:
Popular Culture/ American Culture Association in the South

contact email:
SouthernGothicPCAS@gmail.com



CALL FOR PROPOSALS: THE SOUTHERN GOTHIC AT PCAS/ ACAS 2022


Submission deadline: June 1, 2022; Notification of acceptance by July 1, 2022



Despite the difficulty in defining what exactly the Southern Gothic is, it nevertheless is one of the most prominent ways the South is represented in media and culture. From Flannery O’Connor to The Originals, Truman Capote to True Detective, and William Faulkner to The Walking Dead, whether categorized as a form, a style, or a genre, the Southern Gothic is bound up with regional cultural anxieties regarding shifting discourses of race, class, gender, sexuality, and geographic identity itself. From its most stereotypical depictions to more nuanced, complex interpretations, the Southern Gothic shapes the wider perception of regional identities in ways that invite our contemporary scholarly engagement.

To this end, the Southern Gothic area of the Popular Culture / American Culture Association in the South (PCAS/ ACAS) invites proposals for individual presentations, roundtable discussions, or full panels of 3-4 papers at the 2022 PCAS/ ACAS Annual Conference, to be held October 13 - 15, 2022 in New Orleans, LA.

Topics might include (but are in no way limited to):
  • the Southern Gothic in film, TV, and literature
  • adaptation(s) of Southern Gothic literature
  • the Southern Gothic in new media (games, podcasts, graphic novels, etc.)
  • the emergence of “Southern noir” as a subgenre
  • race, class, gender, and/ or sexuality in the Southern Gothic
  • Southern true crime as a cultural phenomenon
  • documentary and the Southern Gothic
  • Global elements of/ approaches to the Southern Gothic
  • Southern Gothic tourism
  • monsters in the Southern Gothic: vampires, zombies, ghosts, etc.
  • mental health narratives in the Southern Gothic
  • specificity—or generality—in Southern Gothic geographies
  • the Southern Gothic in popular music
  • pedagogical approaches to/ uses of the Southern Gothic
  • the spectre of history in the Southern Gothic
  • sites of intersection between the Southern Gothic and other genres/ modes



PCAS/ ACAS is dedicated to working toward equity, diversity, and inclusion both within our organization and in academia at large. As such, we encourage submissions by underrepresented and marginalized scholars based upon race, gender, sexuality, and employment status (e.g., graduate students and non-tenure track or unaffiliated/independent scholars).



To propose a presentation (of 20 minutes or less) or a roundtable discussion for the Southern Gothic Area, please send the following to Area Chair Stephanie Graves at SouthernGothicPCAS@gmail.com by June 1:
Name of presenter(s), institutional affiliation (if any), & email address for each presenter
Type of submission (individual paper, roundtable, or full panel)
Presentation abstract (250 words or fewer)
Indication if you need access to A/V (not all rooms have A/V available)

Submission deadline is June 1, 2022; notifications of acceptance will be sent by July 1, 2022.



NOTE: In order to be considered for the Southern Gothic Area, please follow the instructions above rather than submitting through the PCAS/ ACAS website.

Everyone is invited to submit one academic paper and can, in addition, participate in a round-table discussion or creative session. Only those proposals intended for the Southern Gothic area should be submitted as outlined above; the PCAS/ ACAS website has an online submission form for the General Call.




Last updated March 8, 2022

CFP Literary Monsters (3/31/2022; SAMLA Jacksonville 11/11-13/2022)

Literary Monsters


Source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/03/15/literary-monsters

deadline for submissions:
March 31, 2022

full name / name of organization:
Speculative Fiction Association

contact email:
tracie.provost@mga.edu



In today's culture, it's almost impossible to avoid "monsters." Straight from mythology and legend, these fantastic creatures traipse across our television screens and the pages of our books. Over centuries and across cultures, the inhuman have represented numerous cultural fears and, in more recent times, desires. They are Other. They are Us. This panel will explore monsters--whether they be mythological, extraterrestrial, or man-made--that populate fiction and film, delving into the cultural, psychological and/or theoretical implications.



Please submit a 250-300 word abstract, a brief bio, and any A/V needs by May 31, 2022 to Tracie Provost, Middle Georgia State University, at tracie.provost@mga.edu.

SAMLA’s 94th annual conference, Change, will be held at the Hyatt Regency Jacksonville Riverfront Hotel in Jacksonville, FL this year from November 11-13. Those accepted must be members of SAMLA to present.



Last updated March 15, 2022

CFP Carmilla’s Sisters – Female Vampires in Literature, Film and Popular Culture (3/31/2022; Bordeaux 10/7-8/2022)

Carmilla’s Sisters – Female Vampires in Literature, Film and Popular Culture


Source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2021/12/20/carmilla%E2%80%99s-sisters-%E2%80%93-female-vampires-in-literature-film-and-popular-culture

deadline for submissions:
March 31, 2022

full name / name of organization:
Université Bordeaux Montaigne

contact email:
nicolas.labarre@u-bordeaux-montaigne.fr



International conference, to be held in Bordeaux, France, on October 7-8, 2022

While the format is not set in stone, we will strongly consider holding online panels.



Nearly thirty years after the publication of Nina Auerbach’s seminal study Our Vampires, Ourselves, we felt the 150th anniversary of J. S. Le Fanu’s Carmilla provided an opportunity to revisit vampire fictions centred on female figures – as yet a largely unchartered territory. Despite a few pages devoted to Carmilla and queer vampires – in The Vampire Book by Gordon J. Melton, 1999, Le miroir obscur. Histoire du cinéma des vampires, by Stéphane du Mesnildot, 2013, or the catalogue of the 2019 exhibition at the Cinémathèque Française –, the centrality of Dracula and male vampires still remains prevalent in critical literature.

Yet, contrary to a received notion, female vampires abound in literature, film, television series, comics, as an unsettling presence that undermines the majestic supremacy of the vampire count, thus perhaps testifying to the latter’s “obsolescence” (to borrow Robin Wood’s formula).

With its multiple film adaptations, Le Fanu’s text still challenges readers in many ways, contemporary readers being sensitive to LGBTQI+ issues and to the aftermath of the #MeToo wave. The historical Countess Báthory also haunts literary and filmic memories, and calls for still other questions, as a power figure that already inspired Bram Stoker himself in Dracula’s Guest, the first chapter of Dracula, later suppressed by the author.

The vampire-woman is omnipresent in art cinema (Les lèvres rouges, Harry Kümel, 1971; Leonor, Juan Luis Bunuel, 1975), blockbusters (the Underworld franchise), European classics (Hammer films, Roger Vadim), Hollywood classics (Near Dark, Kathryn Bigelow, 1987). In a recent study on gender in vampire films, Claude-Georges Guilbert – commenting on the prevalence of women writers in vampire literature – claimed that the female vampire embodies the « future » of the genre. Will participants in this conference prove him right?

The organizing committee will welcome all propositions about female vampires in literature, cinema, comics, with particular attention to those addressing the following issues:

¤ The female vampire figure, between exploitation and empowerment. From Carmilla onwards, female vampires have fulfilled apparently conflicting functions. They are often young, eroticised vampires, and they announce all manner of transgression. In the same movement, they are often at the centre of narratives, they initiate action and are autonomous and admired characters, worshiped by devoted fans – one can think of Vampirella in Warren comics or Lady Dimitrescu in the Resident Evil Village video game. How do authors and publics negotiate this tension? Does this amount to reading the texts against the grain or is this reading actually inscribed in the cultural objects themselves?

¤ Isolated figure or serial type. Dracurella and the several other daughters of Dracula suggest that many female can be seen in terms of variants of a dominant male type – as an instance of the minimal differentiation that defines the culture industries. Do serial types actually predominate over isolated figures? Is there a way to measure this? Can the female vampire exist independently from this logic of derivation?

¤ The female vampire and gender stability. Even more so than her male counterpart, the female vampire is characterised by sexual ambiguity. Oversexualised, often hyperfeminised, she is nevertheless also a creature who seduces, penetrates, rarely without violence. The lesbian romance of Carmilla – but also the ambiguous fascination exerted by the historical figure of Countess Élisabeth Báthory – once more offers a prototype of this subversion of gendered roles. How does this uncertainty manifest itself in the texts or in their reception? Is the female vampire necessarily queer?

¤ Global figure v. local figures. Along the 20th century, the English-speaking cultural industries have largely colonised the visual imaginations of fantasy and horror. How does the female vampire feature in this tension between a globalised culture and local variations with their specific traditions? What are the histories and media specificities? Should we view the female vampire as a figure of the glocal?

¤ The Carmilla hypothesis. Sheridan Le Fanu’s novella haunts every question addressed in this call for papers. We will then welcome propositions examining the specific place of Carmilla in the emergence of the figure of the female vampire, through the circulation of the original text but also through the elaboration of an “adaptation network” (Kate Newell). Could we map out the apparitions of the female vampire in popular culture? How would Carmilla feature in that space?

¤ The figural approach: imagining the female vampire. Female vampires and related figures (harpies, sirens, sphinges, animal-women) : genesis and transformations of such figures in the pictorial tradition since the XIXth century (Munch, Khnopff, Mossa, Philip Burne-Jones), circulation of forms. Variants and typologies in literature from John Keats (Lamia) and Rudyard Kipling (“A Fool There Was”) to Tanith Lee (Sabella or the Blood Stone, 1980), Anne Rice (Pandora, 1998) and Octavia E. Butler (Fledgling, 2005) – through Paul Féval (La Vampire, 1856).



Communication proposals (about 200 words, along with a brief biographical note) should be sent to Jean-François Baillon (Jean-Francois.Baillon@u-bordeaux-montaigne.fr) and Nicolas Labarre (nicolas.labarre@u-bordeaux-montaigne.fr) by March 31, 2022.



Scientific committee:

Mélanie Boissonneau (Paris 3 Sorbonne Nouvelle) – Marjolaine Boutet (Université de Picardie Jules Verne) – David Roche (Université Paul Valéry Montpellier 3) –– Yann Calvet (Université de Caen) – Matt Jones (De Montfort University, UK) –– Hélène Frazik (Université de Caen) – Jean-François Baillon (Université Bordeaux Montaigne) – Nicolas Labarre (Université Bordeaux Montaigne) - Dr Matt Melia (Kingston University London, UK)



Last updated March 15, 2022

Tuesday, March 15, 2022

CFP Dark Academia: Definitions, Theories, and Prospects (4/1/2022)

Dark Academia: Definitions, Theories, and Prospects



We seek essays and papers for an edited collection that engages the concept of dark academia. At the center of the dark academic sensibility lies a paradox: though dark academia enjoys the cosmetic trappings of the pursuit of higher knowledge, it is at its core a celebration of the university as a place of occultation and performativity. The dark academic’s taste for mystery, history, and a distinctly Anglophone, Romantico-modernist canon—coupled with an equally distinct early-twentieth-century sartorial and lifestyle model—runs inevitably into exclusivity, elitism, and reactionary nostalgia. Indeed, the case can be made that these very elements are in fact constitutive of dark academia, as such.

Across social media, dark academia is frequently invoked as a community-building common interest for self-proclaimed oddballs or introverts who love learning—a characterization that would seem to put it in direct tension with its actual content. What can we make of this tension? Is dark academia inherently, irredeemably reactionary? In its original, social media incarnation—running as it often does to showing off outfits of the day, retro accessories, beautiful architecture, and carefully curated playlists—does it become, simply, a consumerist phenomenon? Or can we use it to think radically? If radical, does it become something other than dark academia? Whither light, gray, and chromatic modes?

What might dark academia—and its current popularity—tell us about the contemporary moment of noisy, perhaps diversionary, cultural warfare over the university and education more generally: “wokeness,” the “fearless pursuit of truth,” the sophistic invocation of “reason” in defense of the unreasonable, and the insistence on keeping schools open in the face of a pandemic? Can it direct us back to considerations of class, resistance, hegemony, epistemology, and art as a critical practice?

We are particularly interested in definitions, conceptualizations, delimitations, and troublings of the idea of dark academia as both an aesthetico-political project and a narrative genre. We are interested, too, in cultural and media critique and in writing on all forms of art and literature, including both art and literature associated with dark academic aesthetic taste and art and literature that narrativizes or thematizes the dark academic. Send a 250–350-word proposal and a short biographical statement to both editors, Cody Jones (codyjones@nyu.edu) and Nell Pach (npach@uchicago.edu) by 1 April 2022. Accepted proposals will be notified by 1 May, and drafts will be due by 1 September. Feel free to reach out with questions or proposal ideas. For more information, visit https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5850bf4e6b8f5b777d5f380c/t/61e46d520cf0055f7366d32b/1642360146980/Dark+Academia+Cfp.pdf.

Wednesday, March 9, 2022

CFP Monsters & Monstrous Bodies in American Culture and Society (3/13/2022; NEASA 6/10-11/2022)


Upcoming sponsored session. Sorry for the short notice.



CALL FOR PAPERS

MONSTERS & MONSTROUS BODIES IN AMERICAN CULTURE AND SOCIETY




SPONSORED BY THE MONSTERS & THE MONSTROUS AREA OF THE NORTHEAST POPULAR CULTURE/AMERICAN CULTURE ASSOCIATION


PROPOSALS BY 13 MARCH 2022


We seek paper proposals of 250 words or less to complete a panel on the theme of “Monsters & Monstrous Bodies in American Culture and Society.” Presentations might focus on the representations of monsters and the monstrous in American dramatic or literary texts, visual media, or works of popular culture (such as comics, films, games, or television programing) or on the ways that monsters and the monstrous are created and/or perceived in American society.


This session has been proposed for the 2022 meeting of The New England American Studies Association (NEASA) to convene at Berkshire Community College in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, from 10-11 June 2022.



Please send your proposals, contact information, and a brief academic biography to the session organizers at Popular.Preternaturaliana@gmail.com. We will share them with the conference committee for approval.


***Please Note: Vaccination and masks will be required of all presenters and attendees.***

Questions about the conference and the submission process can be sent to the NEASA Conference Committee at NEASAcouncil@gmail.com.


NEASA will be awarding prizes for the year’s best presentation by a graduate student or non-tenure track scholar (Mary Kelley Prize) and by an undergraduate presenter (Lisa McFarlane Prize). The Lois P. Rudnick prize for the best academic book in American Studies written by a New England scholar or about New England in 2020-21 will also be awarded. (Details and deadlines at https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/9793082/new-england-american-studies-association-neasa-awards.)



Further details on The New England American Studies Association can be found at https://newenglandasa.wordpress.com/.


The Monsters & the Monstrous Area maintains a blog at https://popularpreternaturaliana.blogspot.com/ with more information about its objectives as well as resources for furthering the study of monsters.
 

Tuesday, March 1, 2022

CFP Fifth quasi-Biennial Dr. Henry Armitage Memorial Scholarship Symposium of New Weird Fiction and Lovecraft-Related Research (6/3/22; Providence, RI 8/19-21/22)

The Armitage Symposium 

Source: http://necronomicon-providence.com/the-armitage-symposium/


The Fifth quasi-Biennial

Dr. Henry Armitage Memorial Scholarship Symposium

of New Weird Fiction and Lovecraft-Related Research


NecronomiCon Providence convention in Providence, RI

19-21 August, 2022


Location: Omni Hotel, Providence

Symposium Chair: Prof. Dennis P. Quinn, Cal Poly Pomona, CA and Editor of Lovecraftian Proceedings (Hippocampus Press)
Symposium Co-Chair: Elena Tchougounova-Paulson

The 2022 CALL FOR PRESENTATION PROPOSALS can be downloaded here: Armitage-Symposium-CFA-2022-2.pdf

 
 

About the Symposium:

The Lovecraft Arts and Sciences Council (the organizer of NecronomiCon Providence) hosts the Armitage Symposium to showcase academic works that explore all aspects weird fiction and art, from pop-culture to literature, including the writings and life of globally renowned weird fiction writer, H.P. Lovecraft. Topics of value include the influence of history, architecture, science, and popular culture on the weird fiction genre, as well as the impact that weird and Lovecraftian fiction has had on culture.

In past years, the Armitage Symposium has aimed to foster explorations of Lovecraft’s elaborate cosmic mythology, and how this mythology was influenced by, and has come to influence, numerous other authors and artists before and since. Additionally, we promote all works that foster a greater, critical, and nuanced understanding weird fiction and art (and related science fiction, fantasy, horror, etc.).

Selected talks will be presented together as part of the Armitage Symposium, a mini-conference within the overall convention framework of NecronomiCon Providence, August 18-21, 2022. Presenters will deliver fifteen to twenty-minute oral presentations summarizing their thesis, and are invited to submit a brief manuscript for possible inclusion in a proceedings publication.

For more information on the Armitage Symposium, or the overall convention and the themes to be explored, please visit our website: necronomicon-providence.com – where we will post updates and details as they develop over the final weeks leading to the convention. In addition to these talks, NecronomiCon Providence will feature numerous traditional panels and presentations given by many of the top names in the global weird renaissance.

The 2022 CALL FOR PRESENTATION PROPOSALS can be downloaded here: Armitage-Symposium-CFA-2022-2.pdf