Showing posts with label Afterlife. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Afterlife. Show all posts

Thursday, February 29, 2024

CFP Afterworlds: Communication and Representation of the Afterlife (Spec Issue of ECHO) (3/17/2024)

CFP - Afterworlds: Communication and Representation of the Afterlife


deadline for submissions: March 17, 2024

full name / name of organization: ECHO – Interdisciplinary Journal of Communication Languages, Cultures, Societies

contact email: rivista.echo@uniba.it

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/02/20/cfp-afterworlds-communication-and-representation-of-the-afterlife


Afterworlds

Communication and Representation of the Afterlife



Life after death is a fiction. It imagines a world other than our own […] Fiction is also a kind of life after death and, in contemporary culture, the afterlife finds its most pervasive and diverse manifestations in the forms of narrative fiction.

(Bennett 2012, p. 1)



Imagining, depicting, and contemplating otherworldly realms characterize the afterlife as a cross-cultural constant throughout world history, dating back to the inception of human imagination questioning the limits of existence and the potential for transcending its boundaries. However, in the last century, representations of life after death have undergone a profound transformation, intertwining ancient traditions with new perspectives, sparking a fertile and ongoing debate.

Recent reflections on death and its aftermath, encompassing interdisciplinary studies like Thanatology, have significantly expanded and revitalized the field of contemplation on the after-life. Departing from well-established narratives and supported by enduring cultural traditions, the exploration of the afterlife has expanded to encompass various 'other' and relational forms between pre- and post-death.

Literature and the arts have grappled with the challenge of narrating life after death, adopting schemes and conventions that often defy socio-cultural norms. Fictional narratives often go beyond the simplistic life/death binarism, expanding their semantic field to explore the ways and the worlds where ‘after’ and ‘before’ meet, proposing intricate relationships and spatial dimensions. While death is often considered unspeakable, attempting to translate it into narrative, images, and experiences is an anthropological constant, as “]death and dying are always culturally defined and embedded in a system of cultural beliefs and values" (Kalitzkus 2004, p. 142). It is no coincidence that the afterlife - like fiction itself (Lavocat 2016) - has often been thought of in terms of a 'territory', a real 'possible world' (Pavel 1986) with distinct nomenclatures (such as the Greco-Roman Hades, Norse Valhalla, the Bardo of Tibetan Buddhism, Christian Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise) and recognizable rules governing access and movements within its boundaries.

The imagery associated with afterworlds extends beyond physical spaces to encompass their inhabitants. Myths, religions, literary traditions, and popular folklore are interwoven with a myriad of figures—deities, revenants, ghosts, vampires, zombies, and more. These entities collectively challenge the conventional dichotomy between life and death, prompting a reconsideration of what common sense might suggest. Speculative inquiry into the afterlife not only witnesses the semantization and signification of life after death but also serves as a lens to study the cultural systems producing these narratives. Death, as a crucial anthropological experience, becomes a prism to interrogate the ideology, conventions, hopes, fears, and anxieties of an era.

Even the process of secularization, which has notably impacted the Western world since the modern age, has not hindered artistic representations of the afterlife. In a context of profound transformation, these representations have discovered novel modes of expression. Furthermore, the upheavals of the twentieth century and the post-modern era, accompanied by various changes, have influenced the depiction of the afterlife. This transformation often takes on a completely secular and immanent perspective.

In contrast to theorists like Philippe Ariès (1975), who suggested the isolation of death in heterotopic places, in a Foucauldian sense, numerous historical and artistic events, in decentralizing the subject, have uncovered and rediscovered narratives about death and the afterlife. These narratives transcend the life/death dualism, problematizing imaginative possibilities across different media, resulting in 'other' spaces narrating 'the other beyond life' in diverse ways. The afterlife is not merely an imagined space giving substance to human fears but is also symbolically linked to passage, borders, memory, and the hope for future survival.

The aim of this issue is to delve into the diverse meanings and narrative approaches employed in depicting afterworlds within contemporary literature and the arts. Submissions that examine representations of the afterlife from a comparative standpoint, spanning various national literatures or exploring inter-art relations, will be especially welcomed. The call encourages contributions that consider these themes both synchronically and diachronically, providing a comprehensive exploration of the evolving portrayals of afterworlds across different temporal and cultural contexts.



Deadlines:

Abstract (500 words): 17th March 2024

Notification of acceptance: 14th April 2024

Article submission: 23rd June 2024

Publication: 30th November 2024

Length of articles: max 7000 words

To submit an article, write to: rivista.echo@uniba.it



Potential research lines include but are not limited to:
  • Narratives of Afterlife Spaces
  • Narratives Beyond Life
  • Narratives of the Afterlife Influencing Attitudes Towards Death
  • Autotanatographic Narratives and Narrators who Tells after Death
  • Digital and Virtual Afterlife
  • Multicultural Perspectives on Afterlife Narratives
  • Spaces and Border Crossing
  • Figures of the Afterlife and the Return of the Repressed
  • Mythical (and non-mythical) Figures in Afterworlds Narratives
  • Cultural Memory and Narratives of the Afterlife
  • Intertextuality in Representations of the Afterlife
  • Temporal Aspects in Narrating Life Beyond Death


Essential Bibliography

Bassett, D. J. 2022, The Creation and Inheritance of Digital Afterlives: You Only Live Twice. Springer International Publishing, Berlin.

Bennett, A. 2012, Afterlife and Narrative in Contemporary Fiction. Palgrave Macmillan, London.

Bernabè, A. 2015, “What is a Katábasis? The Descent to the Netherworld in Greece and the Ancient Near East”, in Les Études Classiques 83 (1-4), pp. 15-34.

Burden, D., Savin-Baden, M. 2019, Virtual Humans: Today and Tomorrow (1st ed.), Chapman and Hall/CRC, London.

Carroll, E., Romano, J. 2010, Your Digital Afterlife: When Facebook, Flickr, and Twitter Are Your Estate, What's Your Legacy?, Pearson Education, London.

Danese, R. M., Santucci, A., e Torino, A. 2020, Acheruntica: La discesa agli Inferi dall'antichità classica alla cultura contemporanea. Letteratura e antropologia. Argalía, Urbino.

Doležel, L. 1998, Heterocosmica: Fiction and Possible Worlds. (Parallax: Re-Visions of Culture and Society), Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.

Edmonds, R. G. 2009, Myths of the underworld journey: Plato, Aristophanes, and the “Orphic” gold tablets, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Falconer, R. 2005, Hell in Contemporary Literature: Western Descent Narratives since 1945, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh.

Frankel, R., Krebs, V. J. 2021, Human Virtuality and Digital Life: Philosophical and Psychoanalytic Investigations, Routledge, London.

Foucault, M. 1966, “Les utopies réelles ou 'lieux et autres lieux', 07/12/1966”, disponibile su Radio France, https://www.radiofrance.fr/franceculture/podcasts/les-nuits-de-france-culture/heure-de-culture-francaise-les-utopies-reelles-ou-lieux-et-autres-lieux-par-michel-foucault-1ere-diffusion-07-12-1966-2759883

Gee, E. 2020, Mapping the Afterlife. From Homer to Dante, Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Ghyselinck, Z., Fabietti, E. 2023 (eds.), Necrodialogues and Media: Communicating with the Dead in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Century, De Gruyter, Berlin.

Hayes, E. T. 1994 (ed.), Images of Persephone: Feminist Readings in Western Literature, University Press of Florida, Gainesville.

Herrero de Jáuregui, M. 2023, Catábasis: el viaje infernal en la Antigüedad, Alianza Editorial, Madrid.

Holtsmark, E.B. 2001, “The Katabasis theme in modern cinema”, in M. Winkler (ed.), Classical Myth and Culture in the Cinema, Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 23–50.

Kalitzkus, V. 2004, “Neither Dead-Nor-Alive Organ Donation and the Paradox of ‘Living Corpses’”, in A. Fagan, Making Sense Of Dying and Death, Rodopi, New York.

Klapcsik, S. 2012, Liminality in Fantastic Fiction: A Poststructuralist Approach. McFarland, Jefferson.

Lavocat, F. 2016, Fait et fiction. Pour une frontière, Éditions du Seuil, Paris.

Linàres Sanchez, J.J. 2020, El tema del viaje al mundo de los muertos en la Odisea y su tradición en la literatura occidental, Universidad de Murcia.

Mbembe A. 2003, “Necropolitics”, in Public Culture, vol. 15, n. 1, Duke University Press, pp. 11-40.

Moreman, C. M. 2017, The Routledge Companion to Death and Dying, Routledge, London.

Pavel, T. G. 1986, Fictional Worlds, Harvard University Press, Cambridge.

Puglia, E., M. Fusillo, S. Lazzarin, e A. M. Mangini 2018 (a cura di), Ritorni Spettrali. Storie e Teorie Della Spettralità Senza Fantasmi, Il Mulino, Bologna.

Savin-Baden, M. 2021, Digital Afterlife and the Spiritual Realm, Chapman and Hall/CRC, London.

Sisto, D. 2020, La morte si fa social. Immortalità, memoria e lutto nell'epoca della cultura digitale, Bollati Boringhieri, Torino.

Sisto, D. 2020, Ricordati di me: La rivoluzione digitale tra memoria e oblio, Bollati Boringhieri, Torino.

Smith, E.L. 2001, The Descent to the Underworld in Literature, Painting, and Film, 1895-1950: The Modernist Nekyia, Edwin Mellen Press, Lewiston.

Sozzi, M. 2009, Reinventare la morte. Introduzione alla tanatologia, Laterza, Bari.

Tanaseanu-Döbler, I., Ryser, G., Lefteratou, A., and Stamatopoulos, K. 2016 (eds.), Reading the way to the netherworld: Education and the representations of the beyond in later Antiquity, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen.

Wagner, R. 2012, Godwired: Religion, Ritual, and Virtual Reality, Routledge, London.

Weinmann, F. 2018, “Je Suis Mort”: Essai Sur La Narration Autothanatographique, Éditions du Seuil, Paris.

Wolf, M. J.P. 2012, Building Imaginary Worlds: The Theory and History of Subcreation, Routledge, London.



ECHO – Revue Interdisciplinaire de Communication. Langages, cultures, sociétés

CFP numéro 6/2024



Last updated February 21, 2024
This CFP has been viewed 366 times.

Sunday, April 30, 2023

CFP Versions of the Afterlife Conference (7/1/2023; online 12/7/2023)


VERSIONS OF THE AFTERLIFE (online conference)


deadline for submissions:
July 1, 2023

full name / name of organization:
Faculty of English, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan, Poland

contact email:
kbronkk@amu.edu.pl

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2023/04/17/versions-of-the-afterlife-online-conference



VERSIONS OF THE AFTERLIFE


7th December 2023

Online Conference



Call for Papers

Between Matthew’s description of heaven as a wedding (22 1-14) - most memorably delivered by Jesus in Martin Scorsese’s The Last Temptation of Christ - and Jean Paul Sartre’s verdict that “hell is other people,” there is not only a gap of centuries but also cultures and religions.[1] Despite their disparity, however, both conceptualizations render the fundamental human anxiety related to the weighty question of “what comes next?” They point to the necessity of envisaging the unfamiliar through the familiar, thereby taming the terrifying void.

Versions of the afterlife, therefore, are not only related to the need to imagine the hereafter in the sense of Heaven, Hell and Purgatory (for the Catholics), but also to the contemporary notions of “post-theory”, such as post-humanism and the ideas of postmodernism, post-feminism, post-colonialism and post-nationalism.

The aim of this conference organized by the Faculty of English at Adam Mickiewicz University, in Poznan, Poland – and co-hosted with the Faculty of Philosophy, AMU, and the Poznań Chapter of the Agder Academy of Social Sciences and Letters – is to explore and discuss the literal, the literary and the metaphorical meanings of the notion of “the afterlife”. We welcome papers representing the humanities in their conceptualizations and literary reifications of the religious, medical and political “hereafters”.

Literature (in English) / Art
  • Literary narratives on the hereafter across cultures and religions
  • Saints’ lives and visions
  • Theatre and the drama of/on the hereafter
  • Gothic literature and the visions of the afterlife
  • Literary visions and versions of post-apocalyptic reality
  • Artistic representations of the afterlife: Imaging the hereafter
  • The afterlives of theory: post-humanism and the ideas of postmodernism, post-feminism, etc.
  • The afterlives of ideologies, doctrines, political systems as represented in literary works (post-nationalism, post-colonialism, etc.)
  • The afterlives of literary texts and their authors: adaptations, rewritings, etc.

Medical Humanities / Social Sciences (in literary texts in English)
  • The moment of passing
  • The mystery of one’s body shutting down
  • Marketing death and the life after death
  • Out-of-body experience
  • End-of life dreams and visions versus science

Theology / Ethics (in literary texts in English)
  • Versions of the afterlife from the earliest records to contemporary times across cultures and religions
  • Ars moriendi (good endings vs bad endings)
  • Secular / atheist alternatives for life after death

300-400 word abstracts should be sent to BOTH afterlifewaconference@gmail.com and kbronkk@amu.edu.pl by 1st July 2023. Notifications of acceptance will be sent by the end of August 2023. There will be no fees for conference participation, but active and passive participants need to register in advance.




[1] Sartre, Jean Paul. Huit-Clos [Przy Drzwiach Zamknietych]. Dramaty: Muchy, Przy Drzwiach Zamkniętych, Ladacznica z Zasadami, Niekrasow, translated by Jerzy Lisowski. Warszawa: Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy 1956.



Last updated April 27, 2023

Thursday, March 2, 2023

CFP What is a life worth living? Speculative Fiction and Eternal Life (3/15/2023; MLA Philadelphia 1/4-7/2024)

What is a life worth living? Speculative Fiction and Eternal Life


deadline for submissions:
March 15, 2023

full name / name of organization:
Christene d'Anca, University of California Santa Barbara

contact email:
christene_danca@ucsb.edu

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2023/01/22/what-is-a-life-worth-living-speculative-fiction-and-eternal-life.


Despite numerous post-apocalyptic storylines, many science fiction texts are a celebration of life and seek ways of prolonging it, whether artificially or by providing warnings against our current behavior in order to preserve the life that already exists. The fact that death and potential immortality are so frequently featured throughout the genre underscores our preoccupation with overcoming the limitations imposed on our bodies by nature, while seeking means to go beyond what is currently possible.

Such an interest has informed a broad literary fascination with immortality and rebirth, particularly in nineteenth and early twentieth century fantasy and science fiction, with Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, H. Rider Haggard’s She, or Arthur Conan Doyle’s “The Ring of Thoth” being prime examples. These concerns persisted into the late twentieth century, especially in the aftermath of two world wars, and continue to intrigue us in the twenty-first.

Moreover, we look towards modern technology to grant us invincibility, and these developments have been foreshadowed through a variety of texts from Ovid’s Daedalus in antiquity to Bruce Sterling’s Holy Fire, Richard Morgan’s Altered Carbon, and Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam trilogy in the modern era, to name but a few. As such texts interrogate what a world might look like in which human and/or non-human beings experience immortality, or versions of it, they address questions such as what constitutes the human soul, individuality, and our relationships with others as well as the planet over periods of time beyond a single human lifespan.

For our panel at the 2024 MLA conference January 4-7 in Philadelphia, we welcome 250-300 word abstracts for 15-minute papers focusing on the extension of life in science fiction or fantasy, with topics including, but not limited to the following:

- Human enhancement

- Monstrosity and reconceptualization of the human body

- Digital consciousness

- Carnality and bodily experience

- Bodily commodification

- Immortality pros/cons

- Death as a character

- Life-extending instruments and technology

- New perspectives on death, immortality, and rebirth

- Theological afterlives

- Time travel

Please address abstracts and/or questions to Christene d’Anca (christene_danca@ucsb.edu) and Darren Borg (borgdj@piercecollege.edu).




Last updated January 26, 2023a

Friday, January 20, 2023

CFP Defying Death: Immortality and Rebirth in the Fantastic (1/31/2023; Magdeburg, Germany 4/29-5/1/2023)

Defying Death: Immortality and Rebirth in the Fantastic


deadline for submissions:
January 31, 2023

full name / name of organization:
Inklings Society for Literature and Aesthetics

contact email:
carsten.kullmann@ovgu.de

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/10/05/defying-death-immortality-and-rebirth-in-the-fantastic


In fantasy and science fiction, death, immortality and rebirth are topics that feature frequently, elucidating that the loss of life and the questions of how it might be prevented or reversed are at the centre of human concern. These questions also constitute an essential focal point of the works of the Oxford Inklings, particularly Tolkien and Lewis. They created places of immortality, such as Valinor, also known as the undying lands in Tolkien’s legendarium, or Aslan’s Country in Lewis’s Chronicles of Narnia, wrote about the struggles of immortal beings amongst mortals in the fight of good versus evil, and frequently introduced ideas of resurrection or rebirth (the White Tree of Gondor, Gandalf the White, Aslan, the multitude of worlds in The Magician’s Nephew) and the neither living nor dead (The Nazgul, The (un-)Dead Men of Dunharrow) in their works.

Yet, the Oxford Inklings were by far not the only ones concerned with such themes. An interest in ancient belief systems, alchemy, theosophy, and science informed a broader literary fascination with immortality and rebirth, particularly in 19th and early 20th century fantasy and science fiction, with Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein or Arthur Conan Doyle’s “The Ring of Thoth” being prime examples.

Issues of life and death, immortality and rebirth remained a persistent concern in the later 20th century, especially in the aftermath of the two world wars, and continue to fascinate us in the 21st century. In the fantastical imagination, texts in all media, such as The Sandman, Good Omens, The Expanse, A Song of Ice and Fire, Harry Potter, Hologrammatica, Altered Carbon, or the Maddaddam Trilogy, to name just a few examples, all explore the idea of what a world might look like in which human and/or non-human beings experience immortality, or versions of it, thereby addressing questions of what constitutes the human soul, individuality, and the significance of existence beyond a single lifetime.

2023 marks the anniversary of the death of J. R.R. Tolkien (50) and C.S. Lewis (60) as well as the 40th anniversary of the establishment of the German Inklings-Society. We take these anniversaries as a cue to discuss the intersection of death, rebirth, and immortality in our symposium.

We invite contributions investigating how these topics are represented in the mode of the fantastic beyond the limitations of realism, including but not limited to the following possible topics: 

  • death as a character
  • psychopomps
  • (dis)advantages of immortality
  • the pursuit of immortality
  • art and immortality
  • elixirs of life
  • life-extending instruments and measures
  • metaphorical or literal rebirth
  • rebirth as new beginning or redemption
  • afterlives and underworlds
  • ethical, philosophical and religious perspectives
  • circle(s) of life
  • (ab)use of power
  • new perspectives on death, immortality, and rebirth in Tolkien’s and Lewis’s works in particular

Please send proposals (300–500 words, either in German or English) as well as a short bio to carsten.kullmann@ovgu.de or maria.fleischhack@uni-leipzig.de. Please use the subject line “Inklings Symposium 2023”. The deadline is 31 January 2023. Presentations at the symposium should be 20 minutes long and a selection of them will be published in the Inklings Yearbook.

Location: Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg

Date: 29 April to 1 May 2023

Travel Allowance: There will be a small allowance available to speakers for accommodation and travel expenses.

Organisers: Carsten Kullmann, M.A. (Magdeburg) and Dr. Maria Fleischhack (Leipzig)


Last updated October 10, 2022

Friday, July 29, 2022

CFP- Depicting the afterlife: morality and religion in contemporary film and media (collection) (abstracts by 11/17/2024)


CFP- Chapter abstracts for the edited collection “Depicting the afterlife: morality and religion in contemporary film and media 

source: https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/10556125/cfp-chapter-abstracts-edited-collection-%E2%80%9Cdepicting-afterlife
 
Announcement published by Angelique Nairn on Friday, July 29, 2022

Type: Call for Papers

Date: November 17, 2022

Location: New Zealand

Subject Fields: Film and Film History, Literature, Philosophy, Popular Culture Studies, Religious Studies and Theology




(For possible inclusion as part of the Routledge Advances in Popular Culture Studies series)

As Garrett (2015) contends, popular cultural representations of the afterlife are a means of imaginatively and creatively grappling with the unknown. These representations can offer explanations about life after death or the in-between, to rationalize the existential, support and challenge religious doctrines, and entertain and educate so that society might live life to the fullest or feel assured that there is something more.

According to O’Neil (2022), at their crux, these representations hinge on hope and the prospect of happiness, permeable boundaries that see a blurring of ‘here’ and ‘there,’ self-determination as key to understanding the afterlife, and acts of sacrifice and love that forge the conditions of eternal happiness. These ideas about the afterlife construct perceptions of morality and religion: what one must do now to reap the benefits once one has passed over.

These popular cultural representations, then, present “a range of narratives, consumer choices, moral dispositions and selected rituals of conduct” (Saenz, 1992, p. 43), which people “may adopt, adapt, criticize or reject as components in our implicit knowledge” (Dant, 2012, p. 24). With media such as The Good Place, Upload, The Inbetween, Afterlife of the Party, Coco, Soul, Reaper, Elsewhere, If I Stay, and Boo Bitch (to name but a few), focused on the afterlife, it seems timely to explore the messages promulgated in such texts about morality and/or religion. This is especially given media can prompt questioning and reasoning that aids self-reflection (Hawkins, 2001) and integrates people into an established order offering models of appropriate ways of being (Krijen & Verboord, 2016).

Therefore, this collection aims to explore representations of morality and/or religion in 21st-century popular cultural texts that feature and emphasize the afterlife. It asks how the afterlife is understood but moreover, how are people encouraged to live their lives? Such aims will inevitably consider what place (if any) religion has in shaping popular cultural texts and understandings of the beyond, and what perceptions of morality are favoured and guide character story arcs. Ultimately this edited collection will contribute to a continued and growing discussion on the representations of morality, religion, and the afterlife in contemporary society.

Please send 300- word abstracts, including a title and short biography to Angelique Nairn angelique.nairn@aut.ac.nz by November 17th 2022.

Please note that the edited collection will not be published before 2024.

Possible topics might include, but are not limited to:

  • Moral motivation/reasoning and life after death
  • Dichotomies of Heaven and Hell
  • Representations of the ‘soul’
  • Cultural differences in constructions of the afterlife
  • Depictions/constructions of the spiritual realm
  • Ghosts, the paranormal, and the afterlife
  • Religious motifs in texts that feature the afterlife
  • Representations of Supreme Being(s)
  • Notions of suffering and reward in the afterlife



Contact Info:


Dr Angelique Nairn

Auckland University Technology
Contact Email:
angelique.nairn@aut.ac.nz