Showing posts with label Afterlives. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Afterlives. Show all posts

Saturday, January 18, 2025

CFP A Warning to the Curious: Ghostly, Supernatural and Weird Tales Conference (4/10/2025; Online 8/23-24/2025)

 

Online Conference: A Warning to the Curious: Ghostly, Supernatural and Weird Tales

deadline for submissions: 
April 10, 2025
full name / name of organization: 
Romancing the Gothic

CFP for A Warning to The Curious: Ghostly, Supernatural and Weird Tales

 

An ONLINE conference on 23rd and 24th August 2025 marking the 100th anniversary of MR James A Warning to the Curious and Other Ghost Stories

SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 10th April 2025

The conference is fully online and is open to scholars and experts from around the world.

In 1925, M R James published his final collection of ghostly tales: A Warning to the Curious and Other Ghost Stories. Often thought of as a writer of ‘ghost stories’, James’ works span a range of supernatural manifestations and generically sit on the cusp of the ghostly and weird. James’ name has become almost synonymous with the ghostly tale and many of his works have been adapted. This conference seeks to explore not only James’ work but also its legacy and it aims to put James’ work within the wider context of ghostly, supernatural and weird writing on both a national and international level. We therefore welcome papers on writers and artists from any historical period and any country.

The year’s conference seeks to mark the anniversary of James’ collection with a conference exploring three key themes:

1)      MR James’ work, its reception, adaptation and legacy

2)      Short form terror – weird fiction, ghost stories, and other short forms traditions (including oral and digital modes)

3)      20th-century supernatural writing

 

We welcome papers focusing on ghostly and supernatural traditions globally as well as papers on the British tradition of which MR James formed such a key part. We do not wish to impose rigid definitions of the weird, ghostly, or ‘ghost story’ and welcome a wide range of approaches. While the conference predominantly focuses on written forms, we also encourage papers that look at oral and non-traditional modes of story production and non-narrative forms e.g. art and music.

Romancing the Gothic seeks to encourage innovative conversations across barriers, bringing together scholarship and research from different countries, traditions, sub-fields and perspectives.

We welcome scholars, researchers and experts from all stages of their career and from every background

What are we looking for?

We welcome:

  • 20 minute papers
  • 10 minute lightning talks
  • Panels (3-4 papers of 20 minutes with or without a suggested panel chair)
  • Workshops (cooking, writing, art, music, craft, drama, dance) related to the key themes of the conference

Potential Topics

We welcome papers on a range of topics. The below are suggested areas but we welcome papers from outside these themes.

  • The production and dissemination of MR James’ work
  • MR James’ short fiction
  • Intersections between James’ academic work and his fiction
  • Adaptations of James’ work
  • Horror and the antiquarian
  • Intersections of the archaeological and horror
  • James’ legacy
  • Fictional representations of MR James
  • The Victorian or Edwardian ghost story (focus on any specific author or text welcomed)
  • Early Weird Fiction
  • Ghost belief in the late 19th and early 20th centuries
  • 20th century developments in the ghost story
  • Adaptations of 19th and early 20th century ghost tales
  • The ghost story as form
  • Oral traditions of ghost-telling
  • Christmas story-telling and adaptation traditions

 

An abstract of 150-250 words should be sent to awarningtothecuriousconference@gmail.com before 10th April 2025. If you have not written an abstract before, I will be running workshops on abstract writing. Please enquire at the email above. Your abstract should function as a short summary of your paper and demonstrate your expertise in the area. You can also include a short biography (<100 words) but all submissions will be judged solely on the abstract and a biography is not required at this stage.

Accessibility Notes

We want to work with all contributors to make sure that the conference is fully accessible for them. We work entirely online. Subtitles are auto-generated during the conference. Information is provided with alt-text where required and accessibility training is offered to all speakers. For the conference itself, clear information on the timetable, running of the event and what to expect is provided ahead of time. We have a clear code of conduct which is used to maintain a welcoming atmosphere and a comfortable space for all participants. We are explicitly queer friendly and aim to be an inclusive conference for all. If you have any questions, queries or requests at this stage or at a later stage, please do not hesitate to contact me at awarningtothecuriousconference@gmail.com

 

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

Monday, August 9, 2021

CFP Stranger Worlds: H. G. Wells, Transgression and the Gothic (8/15/21, virtual UK 11/13/21)

2021 Conference Call for Papers

Call for Papers

Stranger Worlds: H. G. Wells, Transgression and the Gothic 

Saturday, 13 November 2021  

Source: http://hgwellssociety.com/statementofobjects/2021-conference-call-for-papers/


There you touch the inmost mystery of these dreamers, these men of vision and the imagination. We see our world fair and common … By our daylight standard he walked out of security into darkness, danger and death. But did he see like that?

H.G. Wells, The Door in the Wall


This year marks the seventy-fifth anniversary of Wells’s death. In a career that spanned fifty years and over a hundred books, Wells invited his readers to step across the threshold of human consciousness and to venture into realms beyond space, time and morality. His scientific romances expose the fragility of the human body and the thinness of humanity’s separation from the animal (The Time Machine, The Island of Doctor Moreau). A reviewer of The Time Machine felt that Wells’s imagination was ‘as gruesome as that of Poe’ and his short stories often dramatize gothic transgressions between the living and the dead. Later works such as The Croquet Player and The Camford Visitation see consciousness slipping its moorings and inhabiting or possessing other bodies.     


Once considered an annexe or niche in literary studies, the Gothic is now firmly established as a key mode of understanding research in, and the enormous global popularity of, genres such as horror, science fiction and fantasy. We invite applications for papers that consider the importance of the Gothic in the work of H. G. Wells. Papers need not be exclusively confined to Wells, but may also consider Wells’s gothic afterlife, reception and influence.  


Presentations will take the form of 20-minute papers, given via Zoom.   


Topics may include, but are not limited to:  

  • Wells and Gothic genres and his relationship to his Gothic predecessors including Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne and Mary Shelley 
  • Wells’s use of horror and terror in for instance, The War of the Worlds
  • Gothic bodies; the Gothic across species  
  • Gothic geographies  
  • Returns from the dead; buried secrets; Gothic histories  
  • Ghosts, monsters, apparitions and vampires  
  • Transgressive behaviour and crime in Wells’s work
  • Wellsian afterlives in science fiction, the graphic novel, cinema, TV, and computer games  

Please send a 250-word abstract to Dr Emelyne Godfrey juststruckone@hotmail.com by 15 August 2021.


Members: Free


Non-members: £10 Applicants will be notified by 31 August 2021. We encourage attendees to become members of the H.G. Wells Society and look forward to seeing you there.