Showing posts with label Southern Gothic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Southern Gothic. Show all posts

Monday, June 2, 2025

CFP Return to the South: The Complexities of Southern Culture in Ryan Coogler's film Sinners (7/1/2025; Special Issue Journal of American Culture)

 

Return to the South: The Complexities of Southern Culture in Ryan Coogler's film Sinners

deadline for submissions: 
July 15, 2025
full name / name of organization: 
Journal of American Culture

Return to the South: The Complexities of Southern Culture in Ryan Coogler’s film Sinners. 

On April 18, Warner Brothers released Ryan Coogler’s long anticipated film Sinners. Since its release, the film has achieved both critical acclaim and popular resonance, marking a significant entry in contemporary Southern cinema. Critics and audiences praise Sinners for its nuanced treatment of inter/intra-racial dynamics, spirituality, and regional identity. In addition, the film has prompted sustained cultural discourse, and now, academic interest in the South. Its layered narrative and atmospheric rendering of the South position Sinners as a vital text for examining the complexities of Southern culture and history.

The Southern United States has long been mythologized, contested, and critically dissected; its socio-cultural historical complexities have been largely ignored. Ryan Coogler’s Sinners presents the complexities of the South and Southern culture(s) as it situates the story within the Mississippi Delta in 1932. Coogler utilizes the genre of horror and the conventions of the vampire to explore these complexities through a contemporary lens. The film situates itself at the crossroads of religion, race, history, and redemption, challenging romanticized and reductive portrayals of the American South.

The Journal of American culture is seeking contributions for a special edition titled, Return to the South: The Complexities of Southern Culture in Ryan Coogler’s film Sinners. We invite scholars, critics, and practitioners to submit papers that explore the multilayered dimensions of Sinners, with particular attention to how Coogler crafts, critiques, and complicates Southern cultural narratives. Interdisciplinary approaches, especially, are welcome, drawing from fields such as film and visual culture studies, Southern studies, African American studies, gender studies, theology, history, and cultural geography.

An abstract of 250-500 words is due July 15, 2025. If the abstract is accepted, the complete paper (3,500–7,500 words) is due October 15, 2025. Include your full name, institutional affiliation, title, and email address (not included in the 250-500 text limit) at the beginning of your abstract. Submissions and queries should be sent to Kwakiutl L. Dreher kdreher2@nebraska.edu and Katrina Moore katrina.moore@slu.edu

Topics of interest include but not limited to:

  • Coogler’s directorial vision in reimagining the South
  • The return to the south as a space of (re)ro(u)oting
  • Identity of Cast and Director with the South
  • Folklore and folk traditions in Southern Black culture
  • The politics of sin, salvation, and moral ambiguity in Southern storytelling
  • (Black) fe/male entrepreneurship
  • Nature (birds, land, cotton, etc.)
  • Lessons taught/lessons learned
  • The performance of Black love and Black Joy
  • Representations of kinship
  • Generational trauma
  • Black Southern identity and cultural resistance
  • The role of religion, churches, and spiritual spaces
  • Memory, land, and contested Southern geographies
  • Intersections of gender, sexuality, and faith in Southern contexts
  • Cinematic aesthetics of the Southern Gothic and its subversion
  • Historical reckoning and the burden of legacy
  • The role of sound, music, and silence in evoking Southern atmospheres
  • Immigrant culture and influence/exchange on Black Southern tradition
  • Dance and Spirituality
  • Secular and Sacred traditions
  • African/Ancestral cultural traditions in religion, dance, music, etc in Southern society
  • Voodoo, Christianity and other practices
  • Cultural analysis of other works by Coogler



Last updated May 28, 2025

Saturday, March 9, 2024

CFP Southern Gothic Area (6/15/2024; PCAS/ACAS 10/17-19/2024)

THE SOUTHERN GOTHIC AT PCAS/ ACAS 2024


deadline for submissions: June 15, 2024

full name / name of organization: Popular Culture / American Culture Association in the South

contact email: SouthernGothicPCAS@gmail.com

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/03/04/the-southern-gothic-at-pcas-acas-2024


Steeped in the wide-flung diaspora of the Gothic mode, the Southern Gothic is one of the most prominent ways the South is represented in media and culture. Represented in the works of writers as varied as Carson McCullers, Flannery O’Connor, and William Faulkner to Cormac McCarthy, Cherie Priest, and Jesmyn Ward, whether categorized as a form, a style, or a genre, the Southern Gothic is bound up with the specificity of regional cultural anxieties about race, class, gender, sexuality, history, and geographic identity itself. From its most stereotypical depictions to more nuanced, complex interpretations, the Southern Gothic shapes the wider perception of regional identities in ways that invite our contemporary scholarly engagement.



The Southern Gothic area of the Popular Culture / American Culture Association in the South (PCAS/ ACAS) invites proposals for individual presentations, roundtable discussions, or full panels of 3-4 papers at the 2024 PCAS/ ACAS Annual Conference, to be held October 17 - 19, 2024 in Greenville, SC.



Topics might include (but are in no way limited to):

  • representations of the Southern Gothic in film, TV, and literature
  • adaptation(s) of Southern Gothic literature
  • the Southern Gothic in popular music
  • Global elements of/ approaches to the Southern Gothic
  • the Southern Gothic in new media (games, podcasts, graphic novels, etc.)
  • the emergence of “Southern noir” as a subgenre
  • race, class, gender, and/ or sexuality in the Southern Gothic
  • Southern true crime as a cultural phenomenon
  • documentary and the Southern Gothic
  • Southern Gothic tourism
  • monsters in the Southern Gothic: vampires, zombies, ghosts, etc.
  • mental health narratives in the Southern Gothic
  • specificity—or generality—in Southern Gothic geographies
  • pedagogical approaches to/ uses of the Southern Gothic
  • the spectre of history in the Southern Gothic
  • sites of intersection between the Southern Gothic and other genres/ modes

PCAS/ ACAS is dedicated to working toward equity, diversity, and inclusion both within our organization and in academia at large. As such, we particularly welcome submissions by underrepresented and marginalized scholars across categories such as race, gender, sexuality, ability, and employment status (e.g., graduate students and non-tenure track or unaffiliated/ independent scholars).

To propose a presentation (of 20 minutes or less) or a roundtable discussion for the Southern Gothic Area, please send the following to Area Chair Stephanie Graves at SouthernGothicPCAS@gmail.com by June 15, 2024:

Name of presenter(s), institutional affiliation (if applicable), & email address for each presenter


Type of submission (individual paper, roundtable, or full panel)


Presentation abstract (250 words or fewer)


Indication if you need access to A/V (not all rooms have A/V available—if you don’t indicate the need, you may be scheduled in a room without AV)

Submission deadline is June 15, 2024; notifications of acceptance will be sent by July 1, 2024.

PLEASE NOTE: In order to be considered for the Southern Gothic Area, please follow the instructions above rather than submitting through the PCAS/ ACAS website.Everyone is invited to submit one academic paper and can, in addition, participate in one round-table discussion or creative session. Only those proposals intended for the Southern Gothic area should be submitted as outlined above; the PCAS/ ACAS website has an online submission form for the General Call.



Last updated March 6, 2024

Thursday, March 17, 2022

CFP Southern Gothic Area at PCAS/ACAS 2022 (6/1/2022; New Orleans 10/13-15/2022)

CFP: Southern Gothic Area at PCAS/ACAS 2022


Source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/03/03/cfp-southern-gothic-area-at-pcasacas-2022

deadline for submissions:
June 1, 2022

full name / name of organization:
Popular Culture/ American Culture Association in the South

contact email:
SouthernGothicPCAS@gmail.com



CALL FOR PROPOSALS: THE SOUTHERN GOTHIC AT PCAS/ ACAS 2022


Submission deadline: June 1, 2022; Notification of acceptance by July 1, 2022



Despite the difficulty in defining what exactly the Southern Gothic is, it nevertheless is one of the most prominent ways the South is represented in media and culture. From Flannery O’Connor to The Originals, Truman Capote to True Detective, and William Faulkner to The Walking Dead, whether categorized as a form, a style, or a genre, the Southern Gothic is bound up with regional cultural anxieties regarding shifting discourses of race, class, gender, sexuality, and geographic identity itself. From its most stereotypical depictions to more nuanced, complex interpretations, the Southern Gothic shapes the wider perception of regional identities in ways that invite our contemporary scholarly engagement.

To this end, the Southern Gothic area of the Popular Culture / American Culture Association in the South (PCAS/ ACAS) invites proposals for individual presentations, roundtable discussions, or full panels of 3-4 papers at the 2022 PCAS/ ACAS Annual Conference, to be held October 13 - 15, 2022 in New Orleans, LA.

Topics might include (but are in no way limited to):
  • the Southern Gothic in film, TV, and literature
  • adaptation(s) of Southern Gothic literature
  • the Southern Gothic in new media (games, podcasts, graphic novels, etc.)
  • the emergence of “Southern noir” as a subgenre
  • race, class, gender, and/ or sexuality in the Southern Gothic
  • Southern true crime as a cultural phenomenon
  • documentary and the Southern Gothic
  • Global elements of/ approaches to the Southern Gothic
  • Southern Gothic tourism
  • monsters in the Southern Gothic: vampires, zombies, ghosts, etc.
  • mental health narratives in the Southern Gothic
  • specificity—or generality—in Southern Gothic geographies
  • the Southern Gothic in popular music
  • pedagogical approaches to/ uses of the Southern Gothic
  • the spectre of history in the Southern Gothic
  • sites of intersection between the Southern Gothic and other genres/ modes



PCAS/ ACAS is dedicated to working toward equity, diversity, and inclusion both within our organization and in academia at large. As such, we encourage submissions by underrepresented and marginalized scholars based upon race, gender, sexuality, and employment status (e.g., graduate students and non-tenure track or unaffiliated/independent scholars).



To propose a presentation (of 20 minutes or less) or a roundtable discussion for the Southern Gothic Area, please send the following to Area Chair Stephanie Graves at SouthernGothicPCAS@gmail.com by June 1:
Name of presenter(s), institutional affiliation (if any), & email address for each presenter
Type of submission (individual paper, roundtable, or full panel)
Presentation abstract (250 words or fewer)
Indication if you need access to A/V (not all rooms have A/V available)

Submission deadline is June 1, 2022; notifications of acceptance will be sent by July 1, 2022.



NOTE: In order to be considered for the Southern Gothic Area, please follow the instructions above rather than submitting through the PCAS/ ACAS website.

Everyone is invited to submit one academic paper and can, in addition, participate in a round-table discussion or creative session. Only those proposals intended for the Southern Gothic area should be submitted as outlined above; the PCAS/ ACAS website has an online submission form for the General Call.




Last updated March 8, 2022