Thursday, May 14, 2026

Kalamazoo 2026 Sponsored Session - Magics, Marvels, Metamorphoses, and Monsters: Horrors of the Medieval Past, Present, and Future

Here are the final details on our sponsored session for this year's International Congress on Medieval Studies.


Magics, Marvels, Metamorphoses, and Monsters: Horrors of the Medieval Past, Present, and Future

61st International Congress on Medieval Studies

Western Michigan University (Kalamazoo, Michigan)/Online through Confex

Session 282: Friday, 15 May 2026, 3:30 PM - 5:00 PM


Co-Sponsored by Monsters & the Monstrous Area of the Northeast Popular Culture Association; Association for the Advancement of Scholarship and Teaching of the Medieval in Popular Culture, International Society for the Study of Medievalism

Organized by Michael A. Torregrossa, Bristol Community College; June-Ann Greeley, Sacred Heart University.


Presider: June-Ann Greeley, Sacred Heart University 


1 - The Dragon and the Witch in the Medieval Greek Romance Kallimachos and Chrysorrhoe

Rui Carlos Fonseca, Univ. Madeira; Centro de Estudos Clássicos, Univ. Lisboa

This paper examines the roles of the Dragon and the Witch in the fourteenth-century Greek romance Kallimachos and Chrysorrhoe. Due to their actions contrary to human nature, both magical figures are killed by royal male characters.

Rui Carlos Fonseca is Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Madeira, Funchal, and Researcher at the Centre for Classical Studies, University of Lisbon. He holds a Ph.D. in ancient Greek literature (2013). Among other publications, he is the author of Epopeia e Paródia na Literatura Grega Antiga (2018). He was a postdoctoral research fellow at the Centre for Classical Studies, working on Byzantine vernacular romance (2015–2021). His research interests focus on Homeric poetry, Byzantine literature, and Reception studies.


2 - Medea Translated and Erased: Late Medieval Depictions and Reconfigurations of Medea

Molly Bronstein, Univ. of Toronto

This paper examines Medea’s reception in Middle English and Middle French, arguing that a distinct division in her more notable representations—that is, a tendency to either to erase or amplify her sorcery—makes her an especially fraught and useful figure for the violence of textual lineage and translation.

Molly Bronstein is an Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto's English Department as well as Victoria College, where she teaches literary studies and creative writing. She previously earned her PhD in Comparative Literature and Medieval Studies from UC Berkeley in 2022 and has also worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Tübingen in Germany. Her research focuses on translation history and Ovid’s medieval reception. (She's also a horror and fantasy writer with an interest in the ongoing legacy of monsters and witches in recent speculative fiction.)


3 - “She is not known to God:” The Female Giant as Familial and Social Horror

Tina Boyer, Wake Forest Univ.

This paper analyzes giantesses in the German epic Eckenlied, arguing their true horror stems from social transgression, not physical monstrosity. By fighting like men, they challenge patriarchal norms, embodying medieval anxieties about female autonomy, kinship, and the “wild” woman outside patriarchal control, revealing a complex gendering of the monstrous.

Tina Boyer is an Associate Professor of German at Wake Forest University. Her research interrogates the intersections of medieval German literature and linguistics. She is the author of “The Giant Hero in Medieval Literature” (Brill 2016) and has published extensively on topics ranging from medieval religious morality to contemporary digital folklore, including work on the Slender Man mythos. Her recent scholarship includes a co-edited special edition on "Conceptions of Race in Premodern German Studies” for the journal Seminar, forthcoming at the end of the summer.


4 - Illuminated Nightmares: Marginal Monsters in Medieval Manuscripts and Their Digital Afterlives

Cristian Vechiu, Independent Scholar

How did medieval readers experience the grotesque creatures lurking in manuscript margins? Through analysis of reader interactions and material evidence, this paper reconstructs the medieval encounter with marginal monsters and explores how these liminal beasts created "movements of the mind" that shaped perceptual strategies still active today.

Cristian Vechiu is an independent researcher whose work focuses on medieval mysticism and Renaissance esoterism, while maintaining a close look upon the religious ideas of Late Antiquity (as a nexus from which streamed major spiritual practices and conceptions from the Early Middle Ages to the end of the Renaissance). He has a PhD in theology and religious studies at the University of Bucharest, with a thesis on Anselm’s last treatise, De concordia. During his PhD he was a short-term fellow at Trinity College, University of Cambridge. He recently participated at the XXIII International Association for the History of Religions World Congress, with a presentation titled “Being a Scholar as an Outsider”. For the last ten years he has been teaching courses in the history of religions at a cultural NGO in Bucharest.



Thursday, May 7, 2026

CFP NEPCA Monsters & the Monstrous Area (6/15/2026; Online 10/15-17/2026)

CFP NEPCA Monsters & the Monstrous Area 2026


The Monsters & the Monstrous Area of the Northeast Popular Culture Association (a.k.a. NEPCA) seeks proposals for inclusion in NEPCA’s 2026 annual conference.


The event will run as a virtual conference from Thursday, October 15th, through Saturday, October 17th. Virtual sessions will take place via Zoom throughout the day on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. Registration will open up in mid-July. The registration fee is expected to be around 50 USD.


The Monsters & the Monstrous Area welcomes proposals that investigate any of the things, whether mundane or marvelous, that scare us. Through our sessions, we hope to pioneer fresh explorations into the darker sides of the intermedia traditions of the fantastic (including, but not restricted to, aspects of fairy tale, fantasy, gothic, horror, legend, mythology, and science fiction) by illuminating how creative artists have both formed and transformed our notions of monsters within these sub-traditions in texts from various countries, time periods, and media and for audiences at all levels. Our primary goal is to foster a better understanding of monsters in general and to examine their impact on those who receive their stories as well as on the world at large.


In addition, as a component of the Northeast Popular Culture Association, the Monsters and the Monstrous Area is also especially interested in fostering discussion and debate on the monsters and the monstrous of the Northeastern United States (here defined as New England and New York). Topics might include the Borden Family Murders, the Bridgewater Triangle, the Legends of Sleepy Hollow, the New England Gothic tradition, the New England Vampire Panic, the New England Witchcraft Hysteria, and the life, works, and legacies of local Gothic/horror authors such as Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Joe Hill, Shirley Jackson, Stephen King, and H. P. Lovecraft.


NEPCA prides itself on holding conferences that emphasize sharing ideas in a non-competitive and supportive environment. We welcome proposals from graduate students, independent scholars, disciplinary professionals, junior faculty, and senior scholars. NEPCA conferences offer intimate and nurturing sessions in which new ideas and works-in-progress can be aired, as well as completed projects.


The call will be open until Monday, June 15, by 5 pm EDT. Submissions should be made directly at https://www.northeastpca.org/call-for-papers. This site offers full information on the submission process and a link to send your proposal to us. If you have any questions about the conference, please reach out to the Executive Secretary, Lance Eaton (northeastpopculture@gmail.com).


Questions on the Monsters & the Monstrous Area can be directed to the area chair, Michael A. Torregrossa (popular.preternaturaliana@gmail.com). The area maintains a series of blogs that offer resources and potential topics. Please access them at Popular Preternaturaliana: Studying the Monstrous in Popular Culture (https://popularpreternaturaliana.blogspot.com/).