Showing posts with label International Gothic Association. Show all posts
Showing posts with label International Gothic Association. Show all posts

Friday, July 25, 2014

CFP Gothic Migrations (5/31/15; Vancouver 7/28-8/1/15)

INTERNATIONAL GOTHIC ASSOCIATION BIENNIAL CONFERENCE, 2015 
GOTHIC MIGRATIONS 
July 28th to August 1st 2015 Vancouver, BC
full name / name of organization:
INTERNATIONAL GOTHIC ASSOCIATION
contact email:
whatley@sfu.ca
Source: http://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/node/57669
More information at: http://www.sfu.ca/iga2015

GOTHIC MIGRATIONS

“Gothic Migrations” will concern the origins, transits, and transformations of global gothic in its various modes and cultural manifestations.

Since its inception, Gothic has been associated with mobility. The gothic has always involved translation, adaptation, travel, diaspora, migration and their variations in the lost son or daughter, the absent father, the escaped slave or criminal, the disappeared family member, the alien, underground networks, cross border movements of cults, banditti, terrorist and other conspiratorial webs. These themes have engaged gothic works and their criticism for some time and their significance is growing in a new global economy of the gothic. As a result, the areas of gothic study have become increasingly wide ranging and now contest any singular root and any singular route of such migration. Under the theme of roots we consider the patterns of place and stability, cultural centres, home, mother or father country, belonging, neighbourhood, any ancient locus, developed systems of privilege and aristocracy, or stable gender, sexual norm, or class patterns. We also include under roots, their underlying negations in the unheimlich, the underprivileged, the criminal, the decentred, the escaped, the alien, the other, rejected sexualities, or the hybrid. Under the theme of migrations, we consider the diasporic energies of the gothic, the migratory traces of vampires, wanderers, ghosts, demons, revenants, zombies, soucouyants, other supernatural tourists, phantasmal terrorists and gothic escapees of all kinds. The conference will thus focus on the international circulation of literary, filmic, dramatic and digital Gothic, and the establishment of new and old Gothic traditions across the globe that are in search of, or have found, new homes.

Please include your contact information, institutional affiliation and a brief biography with your abstract submission at the following website:

http://www.sfu.ca/iga2015

SUGGESTED PAPERS AND PANELS

Papers and panels could consider, but are by no means limited to the following headings:

  • How does the Gothic migrate?
  • How might we speak of a global Gothic when one considers the logistics of time and travel?
  • Generic routes/roots of the Gothic: novel to play, poetry to novel, novel to digitial game, novel to film, etc
  • Gothic Time and Time-travel
  • Trans-continental routes of the Gothic
  • Migratory routes of vampires, zombies, and Gothic wanderers more generally
  • The worldy unheimlich
  • Routes with no destination
  • Circuits of gothic exchange
  • Invasive Gothic
  • Reverse Colonisations
  • Supernatural Currencies
  • Home and Away
  • Gothic Cultural Machines
  • Global Gothic Crime
  • Tropical Gothic/Temperate Gothic
  • World Literary Gothic
  • Drugs, Machines, and Global Vampires
  • Gothic tourism
  • Lines of flight
  • Gothic Cultural Trauma
  • Networked Gothic and digital diasporas
  • Gothic maps and itineraries
  • Global Gothic, nationalism and cultural imperialism
  • Local to glocal Gothics
  • Gothic Wars



By web submission at 07/18/2014 - 22:40

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Call for Bloggers: International Gothic Association Postgrad Blog (no deadline)

Call for Bloggers: International Gothic Association Postgrad Blog
full name / name of organization:
International Gothic Association
contact email:
lrk207@lehigh.edu

Call for Bloggers: International Gothic Association Postgraduate Blog

The International Gothic Association fosters postgraduate/graduate student work through its student-run, student-written postgraduate blog. Every month, the blog features posts by a different graduate student working in the field of the Gothic, across time periods and disciplines, from French Revolution writers to Star Trek, ghost stories to zombies and beyond. Posts can consist of the writer's current dissertation/thesis work, but it may also include film/book reviews, teaching topics, events, discussion questions, etc. Each blogger usually writes between two and four posts for the month, of approximately 500-800 words. The posts can be formal or informal, depending on the writer's preference. You can see examples of past posts on the blog here: http://www.iga.stir.ac.uk/blog.php

We are searching for guest blog writers for the coming academic school year. Writers must be graduate students working with some aspect of the Gothic. This is a great opportunity to share your work and join the Gothic community! Please get in touch with the IGA Postgrad Reps: Laura Kremmel (lrk207@lehigh.edu), Chloe Buckley (c.buckley@lancaster.ac.uk) and James Campbell (jc92@stir.ac.uk) if you are interested or have any questions.


By web submission at 03/27/2014 - 14:07