Still Screaming: An Online Conference Celebrating 30 Years of 'Scream'
deadline for submissions:
August 15, 2026
full name / name of organization:
Dr. Alissa Burger
contact email:
aburger@culver.edu
source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2026/07/07/still-screaming-an-online-conference-celebrating-30-years-of-scream
Still Screaming: An Online Conference Celebrating 30 Years of Scream
2026 marks the 30th anniversary of Wes Craven’s Scream (1996), which has had a profound impact on horror films and the slasher subgenre specifically. In the past three decades, Scream has become a franchise of seven films and a television series (2015-16, 2019). Scream has also expanded beyond the screen, reverberating throughout the popular culture landscape and serving as the foundation for a game, collectible figures, multiple Ghostface mask variations, and an entire collection of merchandise at Spirit Halloween (and elsewhere).
Proposals are invited for a one-day online conference celebrating Scream on Tuesday, November 24th, 2026.
Possible topics include (but are not limited to):
- Scream and slasher conventions
- Scream films as part of individual horror cycles (i.e. ‘90s horror, millennial horror)
- Sidney Prescott and the maturation of the Final Girl
- Variation, reworking, and subversion of the Final Girl figure (i.e. Jill in Scream 4, Tara and Samantha in Scream 5 and Scream 6, Tatum Evans in Scream 7)
- Role of evolving technologies (i.e. caller ID, cell phones, AI) in Scream films
- Themes of fame and notoriety within the Scream films
- Narrative construction and epistemology (i.e Stab franchise; role and process of adaptation in Scream 3; Sidney’s autobiology Out of Darkness in Scream 4)
- Characters’ perceptions of and responses to trauma in Scream films
- Spoofs of the Scream franchise (i.e. Scary Movie franchise, Shriek if You Know What I Did Last Friday the 13th)
- Scream merchandising (i.e. mask variations, collectibles, apparel)
- Scream and music (i.e. Nick Cave’s “Red Right Hand,” character themes, Ice Nine Kills)
- The return (and loveability) of Matthew Lillard
- Family dynamics, secrets, and generational trauma in Scream films
- Scream at horror cons, fright fests, and other fan events
Individual presentations will be 15-20 minutes. Proposals should be 250-300 words and accompanied by a brief (~100) word bio. Proposals are due to aburger@culver.edu by August 15th, with notification of acceptance by September 15th.
Contact Dr. Alissa Burger (aburger@culver.edu) with any questions.
Last updated July 7, 2026
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