Thursday, May 8, 2025

CFP Sponsored Session - Silly Old Bear? Adaptations, Appropriations, and Transformations of Winnie-the-Pooh (7/15/2025; NEPCA online 10/9-11/2025)

Silly Old Bear? Adaptations, Appropriations, and Transformations of Winnie-the-Pooh

Co-sponsored by the Monsters & the Monstrous Area and Disney Studies Area

Call for Papers for 2025 Virtual Conference of the Northeast Popular Culture Association (NEPCA)

Thursday, 9 October, to Saturday, 11 October, 2025

Submissions are open until Tuesday, 15 July by 5 PM EDT


A. A. Milne’s Winnie-the-Pooh has always been a bit of a shapeshifter manifesting under various names and appearances since the start of his now over one-hundred-year career as a transmedia figure. Over the past century, Pooh and his associates from the Hundred Acre Wood have been adapted and appropriated to feature in artwork, cards, clothing, collectibles, comics, cookbooks, fiction, films, games, illustrations, memes, musical theater, original videos, philosophical treatises, plays, poems, radio broadcasts, self-help manuals, stuffed animals, songs, streaming video, television programs, theatrical productions, theme park attractions, and translations as well as critical commentaries and works of scholarship. These stories tell of their adventures across time and space, and each text offers a unique approach to the characters. Notably, Pooh and his band have often undergone radical transformations through various parodies and pastiches, with many more innovative approaches appearing since their move into the public domain beginning in 2022. 


In this session, we seek to catalog and critique some of these various takes on Winnie-the-Pooh and his companions. We ask you to explore how these adaptations, appropriations, and transformations of these familiar figures connect to and/or diverge from the Poohian tradition established by Milne and illustrator E. H. Shepard. We want you to uncover what these works might say about the gang from the Hundred Acre Wood, the creators of these new works, and, ultimately, ourselves as the receivers of these texts. We encourage you to make use of the resource guide provided at https://tinyurl.com/SillyOldBearRG in formulating your approach. 


To submit a proposal, please review the requirements and procedure from NEPCA’s main conference page at https://www.northeastpca.org/conference. Proposals should be approximately 250 words; an academic biographical statement (75 words or less) is also requested. Payment of registration and membership fees will be required to present. More details on exact costs will be forthcoming. 


Direct submissions to the Monsters & the Monstrous Area can be made at https://cfp.sched.com/speaker/sTP9T9X3cW/event. Address any questions or concerns to the area chair at popular.preternaturaliana@gmail.com


Further information on the Monsters & the Monstrous Area can be accessed on our blog Popular Preternaturaliana: Studying the Monstrous in Popular Culture at https://popularpreternaturaliana.blogspot.com/.  

Further information on the Northeast Popular Culture Association (NEPCA) can be accessed from our new website at https://www.northeastpca.org/




Wednesday, May 7, 2025

CFP Sponsored Session - We Live Again! Disney's Gargoyles as an Evolving Transmedia Text (7/15/2025; NEPCA online 10/9-11/2025)

We Live Again! Disney's Gargoyles as an Evolving Transmedia Text

Co-sponsored by the Monsters & the Monstrous Area and Disney Studies Area

Call for Papers for 2025 Virtual Conference of the Northeast Popular Culture Association (NEPCA)

Thursday, 9 October, to Saturday, 11 October, 2025

Submissions are open until Tuesday, 15 July by 5 PM EDT


Conceived by creator Greg Weisman, Disney’s Gargoyles began as a television series in the 1990s and has been expanded over the decades through action figures, books, clothing, collectibles, comics, conventions, fan art, fanfiction, games, puzzles, and recurrent rumors of a live-action reboot. Although now over thirty years old, Gargoyles has remained incredibly popular since its initial debut, yet, while other aspects of Disney Studies are flourishing, scholars have mostly neglected the series. Therefore, we seek in this session to offer some critical attention to Gargoyles and its various adaptations and continuations. 

Proposals should display some knowledge of the history and scope of the series, its adaptation history, and its ongoing evolution. We encourage you to make use of the resource guide provided at https://tinyurl.com/WeLiveAgainRG in formulating your approach. 




To submit a proposal, please review the requirements and procedure from NEPCA’s main conference page at https://www.northeastpca.org/conference. Proposals should be approximately 250 words; an academic biographical statement (75 words or less) is also requested. Payment of registration and membership fees will be required to present. More details on exact costs will be forthcoming. 


Direct submissions to the Monsters & the Monstrous Area can be made at https://cfp.sched.com/speaker/sTP9T9X3cW/event. Address any questions or concerns to the area chair at popular.preternaturaliana@gmail.com


Further information on the Monsters & the Monstrous Area can be accessed on our blog Popular Preternaturaliana: Studying the Monstrous in Popular Culture at https://popularpreternaturaliana.blogspot.com/.  

Further information on the Northeast Popular Culture Association (NEPCA) can be accessed from our new website at https://www.northeastpca.org/




Monday, May 5, 2025

CFP Monster Fest 2025 (8/31/2025; Halifax, Nova Scotia 10/28-31/2025)

This cfp was shared with me as a PDF. 


Call for Papers 

Monster Fest 2025 

Saint Mary’s University  

Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada 

October 28-31, 2025 


The Department of the Study of Religion and the Women and Gender Studies Programs at Saint Mary’s University are holding their first Monster Fest! We invite proposals for 20-minute papers/presentations addressing any aspect of monsters and monstrosity, with a particular focus on religion and monstrosity; gender, sexuality, and monstrosity; monster theory; monstrous bodies, and analyses of contemporary horror. Papers from all disciplines and lenses are welcome.    

Our festival is inspired by and in partnership with the Center for Monster Studies’ Festival at the University of California Santa Cruz. In response to the political climate in the United States, faculty and students intending to present at the Festival of Monsters are foregoing travel and working to create our own festival here in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.  

Monster Fest will include many monstrous events, such as film screenings, an academic conference, a “grotesque” themed art installation, and a monster building workshop. It culminates in a horrific monster (costume) ball.  

Presentation proposals up to 250 words and a biography of 50 words can be submitted through our submission link. As we are responding to events in real time, we understand that our call for papers comes late in the season. We will accept proposals until August 31, 2025. 

Queries about the conference can be directed to the organizing committee: michele.byers@smu.ca; ashley.mackinnon@smu.ca, and / or lindsay.macumber@smu.ca.

 

Saturday, May 3, 2025

CFP PAMLA 2025 Panel: Gothic (5/15/2025; PAMLA San Francisco 11/20-23/2025)

 

PAMLA 2025 Panel: Gothic

deadline for submissions: 
May 15, 2025
full name / name of organization: 
Melanie A. Marotta, College of W&M / Pacific & Ancient Modern Language Association (PAMLA 2025 Conference)

Gothic writers embrace the genre for its inclusive and representational nature. The genre is, in effect, a palimpsest as it prominently features both the past and memory. The creators in the genre continue to create plots that center on women, queer, transgender, and racialized characters and create stories that address societal inequalities. The environment (the Ecogothic) also continues to be a prominent character in the genre.

This in-person panel welcomes submissions about all aspects of the gothic as seen in a variety of media forms (literature, film, television, gaming, etc.). Feel free to submit an abstract about the gothic and the conference theme (the non-binding conference theme is “Palimpsests”) or about the gothic without reference to the conference theme.

Please contact me if you have any questions.

The PAMLA 2025 conference is in person in San Francisco, CA, on November 20-23, 2025.

Please see the PAMLA site for more information about the conference and the theme: https://www.pamla.org/conference/2025-conference-theme/

Please submit your abstract via the PAMLA submission portal: https://pamla.ballastacademic.com/Home/CFP

*AI Statement: Authors should refrain my using generative AI in the writing of both abstracts and presentations.*


Last updated April 30, 2025

CFP Horror Studies Special Issue: Women and Horror (8/1/2025)

 

Horror Studies Special Issue: Women and Horror

deadline for submissions: 
August 1, 2025
full name / name of organization: 
contact email: 

This special issue of Horror Studies aims to address female empowerment (cis- and transgender women) in literary and cinematic horror from 2010 to the present. The issue will showcase horror media (literature, films, television, and gaming) created by women. An intersectional approach should be applied to analyses, stressing categories of race, gender, sexuality, class and/or age in submissions. While we are interested in submissions focused on various forms of horror media, we are eager to receive submissions that foreground literary texts.

The recent proliferation of horror media created by (and often for) women suggests that horror is being enacted as a space of transformative justice. In effect, the reconfiguration of the monstrous-feminine, a concept developed by scholar Barbara Creed, and new understandings of the abject, alongside a notable repositioning of the viewer’s/voyeur’s gaze, signify a shift in both the production and consumption of horror literature and film and a decentering of white heteronormative patriarchal constructions of women.

In Teen Film (2011), Catherine Driscoll considers the character categorization with regard to adolescent female characters in horror cinema. Poignantly, Driscoll identifies that in many male created horror cinema contributions the leads are often adolescent young women. She furthers her critique of adolescent-led horror by asserting that “Teen horror is particularly useful for thinking about how recognition, familiarity and identification work in teen film because horror must operate on the border between what we know and what we don’t or, in fact, what can never be known” (83). Highlighting that children’s and Young Adult literary contributions incorporate “motifs, characters, themes, and tropes” originating in adult-directed works, Jessica R. McCort’s introduction to her collection, Reading in the Dark: Horror in Children’s Literature and Culture (2018), centers on the emotional reactions to be felt by young readers, namely fear and enjoyment.

In theoretical examinations often the body takes center stage. In Searching for Sycorax: Black Women’s Hauntings of Contemporary Horror, Kinitra D. Brooks takes on the theme of consumption and race in both literary and cinematic media. Robin R. Means Coleman and Mark H. Harris in The Black Guy Dies First (2023) identify character tropes about Black women frequently found in horror including those originating from American enslavement (for example, the Seductress is connected to the Jezebel). Cayden Mark Gardner and Willow Catelyn Maclay (Corpses, Fools, Monsters: The History and Future of Transness in Cinema; 2024) enact the May Test for trans cinema as much of what has been released about the gender non-conforming body causes anguish for transgender viewers. Recent scholarship concerned with embodiment, such as Erin Harrington’s Women, Monstrosity and Horror Film: Gynaehorror (2016) and Sunny Hawkins’ Deleuze and the Gynesis of Horror: From Monstrous Births to the Birth of the Monster (2022), employs diverse theories of corporeality to explore cinematic representations of the reproductive body. Indeed, Barbara Creed herself, revisiting the topic in her follow-up study, Return of the Monstrous-Feminine: Feminist New Wave Cinema (2022), has argued that in recent feminist cinema, the monstrous-feminine is “in revolt against male violence and corrosive patriarchal values including misogyny, racism, homophobia, and anthropocentrism” (2).

Drawing on this profusion of exciting scholarship, the special issue will center women who create horror across various media formats, with a particular emphasis on literature, in order to explore how the genre is being deconstructed and reconfigured to challenge ingrained ideas about gender, sex, race, desire, and the body.

In the realm of literature, impactful horror fiction by and about cis- and transgender women has included The Devourers (Indra Das, 2015), Her Bodies and Other Parties (Carmen Maria Machado, 2017), Our Share of Night (Mariana Enríquez, 2019), Tender is the Flesh (Agustina Bazterrica, 2020), Mexican Gothic (Silvia Moreno-Garcia, 2020), Five Little Indians (Michelle Good, 2020), Tell Me I’m Worthless (Alison Rumfitt, 2021), Manhunt (Gretchen Felker-Martin, 2022), The Reformatory (Tananarive Due, 2023), She is a Haunting (Trang Thanh Tran, 2023), Our Wives Under The Sea (Julia Armfield, 2023), Bad Cree (Jessica Johns, 2023), and The Lamb (Lucy Rose, 2025).

Since the early 2010s, there has been a surge in horror cinema written and/or directed by women. Notable examples include Jennifer’s Body (written by Diablo Cody and directed by Karyn Kusama, 2009), American Mary (the Soska Sisters, 2014), The Babadook (Jennifer Kent, 2014), A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night (Ana Lily Amirpour, 2014), The Lure (Agnieszka SmoczyÅ„ska, 2015), Raw (Julia Ducournau, 2016), Saint Maud (Rose Glass, 2019), Candyman (Nia DaCosta, 2021), Pearl (co-written by lead performer Mia Goth, 2022). In 2024 alone, new releases included women-led horror films like The Substance (Coralie Fargeat), Lisa Frankenstein (directed by Zelda Williams and written by Diablo Cody), and I Saw the TV Glow (Jane Schoenbrun).

Possible topics may include but are not limited to:

● Madness, trauma, ‘hysteria’, or mental illness
● Corporeality, embodiment, body horror, or the body as a site of resistance
● Female or feminised monsters, i.e., witches, vampires, mermaids, sirens, etc.
● The environment (EcoHorror), nature, and anthropocentrism
● Cinematography, the female gaze, and bodies on screen
● Ageism and the ageing body
● Fatphobia and fat bodies
● Consumption and the grotesque
● Mothers, motherhood, pregnancy, and the maternal
● Adolescence and transformation
● Gynehorror and menstruation
● Religion and the supernatural
● Sexual violence, exploitation, (rape) revenge
● Indigenous horror and MMIW (Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women)
● Colonialism and neocolonialism
● The Black body and racism intersectionality
● Female social justice movements (including #MeToo and the Pussyhat protests)
● Classism, precarity, the neoliberal economy, and capitalism
● Transgender identities and bodies, body dysphoria, transphobia
● Sex, desire, transgression and “monster fucking”
● Sex work
● Social justice and activism
● Slasher films and the Final Girl characterization

Please send abstracts of 500 words and a brief CV to: mamarotta@wm.edu and miranda.corcoran@ucc.ie by August 1, 2025.

Once abstracts have been accepted, completed submissions of 5,000-6,000 words (including notes and references) are due by December 1, 2025.

The Horror Studies journal is double-blind peer-reviewed.

For further information, please see Intellect’s Information for Journal Editors and Contributors. Contributors are required to use the Intellect Style Guide for referencing.

Please direct inquiries to mamarotta@wm.edu and miranda.corcoran@ucc.ie

AI Statement: Authors should refrain my using generative AI in the writing of both abstracts and articles. If AI is used for other purposes (i.e., compiling graphs and charts), this should be stated at the end of the submission or in the footnotes. 

About the editors:

Melanie A. Marotta is a Visiting Assistant Teaching Professor in English and Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies at the College of William & Mary. Her monograph, African American Adolescent Female Heroes: The Twenty-First-Century Young Adult Neo-Slave Narrative, was published by the University Press of Mississippi and part of the Children’s Literature Association Series (2023). Recently, she has had publications in The Lion and the Unicorn, College Literature, and The Routledge Handbook for Transgender Literature.

Miranda Corcoran is a lecturer in twenty-first-century literature at University College Cork. She is the author of Witchcraft and Adolescence in American Popular Culture: Teen Witches, published in 2022 by the University of Wales Press. She currently the Chair of the Irish Association for American Studies and a co-editor of the journal Shirley Jackson Studies.


Last updated April 30, 2025

CFP Haunted by Hydrocarbons: Petrogothic and Petrohorror in the Contemporary Imagination (8/31/2025)

 

Edited Collection: Haunted by Hydrocarbons: Petrogothic and Petrohorror in the Contemporary Imagination

deadline for submissions: 
August 31, 2025
full name / name of organization: 
Jennifer Schell (University of Alaska, Fairbanks)

Edited Collection: Haunted by Hydrocarbons: Petrogothic and Petrohorror in the Contemporary Imagination

 

Deadline for proposal submission: August 31, 2025

 

Editors: Madalynn L. Madigar (Cherokee Nation, University of Oregon), Jennifer Schell (University of Alaska, Fairbanks)

 

Contact Email: mmadigar@uoregon.edujschell5@alaska.edu

 

For this edited collection, we invite proposals for essays that focus on and engage with petrogothic and petrohorror, emerging fields that examine the textual artifacts of hydrocarbon cultures through the lens of gothic and horror studies.

 

Petrogothic and petrohorror scholarship serves to address the anxiety, terror, and disquiet surrounding “petromodernity,” a term coined by scholar Stephanie LeMenager to describe the role of oil in constructing the material and social culture of contemporary globalized society. While the extraction, production, and combustion of hydrocarbons—primarily coal, oil, and natural gas—has enabled a luxurious standard of living in the Global North, it has also caused widespread destruction on almost every scale. Our premise for this collection is that humanities scholars need to examine the ingrained presence of petrocultures in contemporary cultural artifacts—including those invoke anxiety, fear, revulsion, horror, and terror—in order to counter the continued use of polluting fossil fuels and understand the corrosive influences of contemporary energy regimes. We recognize that over the last several years, some scholars have criticized petrogothic and petrohorror texts for their so-called invocations of “gloom and doom.” However, in this collection, we wish to add nuance to this discussion. Rather than treating these texts as monolithic, we propose to examine their intricacies and complexities so as to learn more about what they have to say about contemporary oil cultures. In so doing, we seek to gain greater insight into the feelings, constructions, and structures of fear (as well as other connected affects) that pervade human interactions with hydrocarbons and manifest themselves in collective and individual petrogothic and petrohorrific expressions.

 

To better address the manifestations of petrohorror and petrogothic in the contemporary imagination, we invite proposals for essays that engage with literature, film, graphic novels, comics, theatre, music, art, or any other oily texts. We are particularly interested in proposals for essays that center marginalized perspectives and address environmental justice issues.

 

Chapters might examine (but are not limited to) any of the following themes as a means of approaching petrohorror and the petrogothic:

  • Temporality
  • Geology and Fossils
  • Extinction
  • Monstrosity
  • Spectrality
  • Apocalypse
  • Petromaterialisms
  • Infrastructure and Technology
  • Vehicular Cultures
  • Plastics and Petrochemicals
  • Pollution and Toxicity
  • Waste Streams
  • Illness and Disease
  • Climate Change
  • Environmental Justice
  • Indigenous Epistemologies
  • Necropolitics
  • Capitalism and Colonialism
  • Global and Regional Concerns
  • More-Than-Human Perspectives

 

Please send a 300-word abstract and a 100-word bio to editors Madalynn Madigar (mmadigar@uoregon.edu)and Jennifer Schell (jschell5@alaska.edu) by August 31, 2025. Full essays of 6,000 to 7,000 words will be tentatively due by June 30, 2026.


Last updated February 28, 2025

CFP Fungal Horror and Popular Culture (6/1/2025)

 

Fungal Horror and Popular Culture

deadline for submissions: 
June 1, 2025
full name / name of organization: 
Berit Åström, Umeå University

As editors of the planned Palgrave Handbook on Fungal Horror in Popular Culture, which has 33 commissioned chapters, Dr Katarina Gregersdotter and Dr Berit Ã…ström, UmeÃ¥ University, Sweden seek approximately 10 additional original essays. 

We are primarily looking for chapters on fungal horror in non-Anglophone material, but also welcome studies of less mainstream Anglophone texts. 

Fungi are entangled in our lives, as food, as medicine or drugs, but also as parasites and agents of destruction, such as black mould, dry rot and cordyceps, the zombie fungus. This entanglement carries over into popular culture, where fungi are used to carry out different kinds of work, articulating deep seated fears and desires, functioning as a threat to, but perhaps also a saviour of, an embattled humanity on the brink of possible extinction.   

This edited volume will be the first full-length scholarly study of fungal horror in popular culture such as, but not limited to, literature, film, television, comics/graphic novels, computer games, art and memes. We invite contributors to approach the topic broadly, both in terms of material analysed and in the themes explored. 

 The chapters should be c. 7 000 words, including endnotes and bibliography.  

Send your abstract, of no more than 300 words, together with a brief biography to Berit Ã…ström berit.astrom@umu.se and Katarina Gregersdotter katarina.gregersdotter@umu.se by 1 June, 2025. Notification of acceptance will be given no later than June 27, 2025.  

Deadline for submission of completed manuscripts is 15 January, 2026.


Last updated April 10, 2025