Saturday, January 18, 2025

CFP New Perspectives on Creature Features (3/10/2025)

 

New Perspectives on Creature Features

deadline for submissions: 
March 10, 2025
full name / name of organization: 
Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns

New Perspectives on Creature Features

 

Edited by

Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns (Universidad de Buenos Aires)

 

The editor is looking to put together an edited collection on creature features. The recent success of films such as Crawl (Alexander Aja, 2019) and the Monsterverse (Godzilla, King Kong, etc.), and the renewed interest in rebooting the classical monster pantheon (Leigh Whannell’s Wolf Man) has shown that there is a growing interest in monsters’ films. Arguably, horror cinema began with creatures such as Frankenstein, Dracula, the Mummy and the Wolf Man and they have been popular since then. During the 1950s, the classical monsters were replaced by hideous alien creatures and the 1970s were witness of the “animal revenge” horror cycle. Creature features is today as popular as yesterday (maybe even more), yet “monster movies” are still considered as lowbrow efforts. Thus, this edited collection looks for close readings of films led by creatures and monsters in the 21st Century. Classical films will be welcome if analyzed through new, contemporary theories to show how their purpose/meaning has changed over time.

This collection will be global in scope, and creatures features Asia, Africa, and Latin America are very welcome.

 

Contributions could include, but are not limited to, the following topics:

 

-Classical monsters (vampires, werewolves, the Frankenstein monster, etc.)

- Animals in horror cinema

-Aliens

-Cryptids

-Trash cinema

-The creature as metaphor

-Creatures features and humor

-Global creatures’ features

-Kaiju

-Cute monsters

 

 

We are open to works that focus on other topics as well. Prospective authors are well to contact the editor with any questions, including potential topics not listed above. Please submit a 300-500-word abstract of your proposed chapter contribution as a Word Doc (not PDF) with a brief bio (in the same document), current position, affiliation, and complete contact information to editor Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns to monstersfilms@yahoo.com by 10 March 2025. Potential contributors must keep in mind that this book will be edited by Peter Lang for its “New Perspectives” series (edited by Simon Bacon), which asks for short chapters of around 3,500-4,000 words.

Final chapters are likely due in August 2025.

Please share this announcement with anyone you believe would be interested in contributing to this volume.

Note: Acceptance of a proposed abstract does not guarantee the acceptance of the full chapter

 

 

Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns (PhD in Arts, PhD Candidate in History) works as Professor at the Universidad de Buenos Aires (UBA) - Facultad de Filosofía y Letras (Argentina)-. He teaches courses on international horror film. He is director of the research group on horror cinema “Grite” and has authored a book about Spanish horror TV series Historias para no Dormir (Universidad de Cádiz, 2020) and has edited books on Frankenstein bicentennial (Universidad de Buenos Aires), one on director James Wan (McFarland, 2021), the Italian giallo film (University of Mississippi Press, 2022), horror comics (Routledge, 2022) and Hammer horror films (Routledge, 2024). Currently editing a book on Baltic horror. He is Director of “Terror: Estudios Críticos” (Universidad de Cádiz, Spain), the first-ever horror studies series in Spain.

 

https://posgrado.filo.uba.ar/pagnoni-fernando

CFP The Gore Gore Film Book (2/28/2025)

 

The Gore Gore Film Book

deadline for submissions: 
February 28, 2025
full name / name of organization: 
Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns

The Gore Gore Film Book

 

Edited by

Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns (Universidad de Buenos Aires)

Kevin Wetmore (Loyola Marymount University)

 

We, the editors, are looking to put together an edited collection on gore on film and gore films. The recent success of films such as the Terrifier franchise and Smile has shown that there is a growing interest in gore films. This interest is not recent, as the gore film began in the mid-sixties, with the godfather of gore, Herschell Gordon Lewis, directing Blood Feast, a fringe hit that would bring gore to the forefront. That first success would be followed by others, each of them bloodier (The Wizard of GoreThe Gore Gore Girls) but gore would not reach mainstream cinema until the 1980s, with the rise of the slasher and its inventive murders. This new visibility would clash many times with the MPAA and feed the UK “video nasties” controversy. Magazines like Fangoria would be in charge of rescuing the gore scenes from the editing room floor, putting exploded heads on their covers.

However, gore was always frowned upon, a trashy resource to attract unsophisticated viewers. It is in our contemporary times that gore reached a novel point: mainstream recognition as another cinematographic tool to tell a story and appeal to the spectator’s sensorium. Today gore seems to have reached a certain degree of respectability.

However, it has not yet achieved critical recognition, with few studies on gore cinema within academic scholarship. This edited collection aims to begin to fill this gap by offering several chapters that conceptualize gore from different interdisciplinary perspectives, while offering close readings of gore films.

This collection will be divided into two main theoretical sections: the first will be focused to analyzing gore itself, centering on its aesthetics, its ethics, its relationship with the spectator, etc. The second section will be devoted to close readings of gore films of any period and nationality.

 

Contributions could include, but are not limited to, the following topics:

 

Section I:

-Gore and aesthetics (including color, thickness, digital blood vs. practical blood, etc.)

-Gore and humor

-Gore and ethics

-Gore and theology

-Gore and spectatorship

-Gore and art house sensibilities

-Gore and the body

-Gore on video vs. gore in cinema

-Gore and horror film magazines

 

Section II:

-American slashers

-Auteur cinema

-Gore in mainstream horror films

-European gore films

-Asian gore films

-Herschell Gordon Lewis’s films.

-Gore in classic films

 

We are open to works that focus on other topics as well. Prospective authors are well to contact the editor with any questions, including potential topics not listed above. Please submit a 300-500-word abstract of your proposed chapter contribution as a Word Doc (not PDF) with a brief bio (in the same document), current position, affiliation, and complete contact information to editors Kevin Wetmore and Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns to goregorebook@yahoo.com by 28 February 2025. Full chapters of 5,000-6,000 words are likely due in October 2025. A renowned publisher has shown preliminary interest.

Please share this announcement with anyone you believe would be interested in contributing to this volume.

Note: Acceptance of a proposed abstract does not guarantee the acceptance of the full chapter

 

 

Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns (PhD in Arts, PhD Candidate in History) works as Professor at the Universidad de Buenos Aires (UBA) - Facultad de Filosofía y Letras (Argentina)-. He teaches courses on international horror film. He is director of the research group on horror cinema “Grite” and has authored a book about Spanish horror TV series Historias para no Dormir (Universidad de Cádiz, 2020) and has edited books on Frankenstein bicentennial (Universidad de Buenos Aires), one on director James Wan (McFarland, 2021), the Italian giallo film (University of Mississippi Press, 2022), horror comics (Routledge, 2022) and Hammer horror films (Routledge, 2024). Currently editing a book on Baltic horror. He is Director of “Terror: Estudios Críticos” (Universidad de Cádiz, Spain), the first-ever horror studies series in Spain.

 https://posgrado.filo.uba.ar/pagnoni-fernando

Kevin Wetmore (Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh) is a professor of Theatre Arts at Loyola Marymount University, teaching courses in horror cinema and horror theatre, among others. He also transforms his university library into a literary haunted house every October. He is a six-time Bram Stoker Award nominee, author of thirteen books including Eaters of the Dead: Myths and Realities of Cannibal Monsters (Reaktion, 2021) and Post-9/11 Horror in American Cinema (Continuum, 2012), and editor or co-editor of another nineteen volumes, including The Streaming of Hill House (McFarland, 2020), Theatre and the Macabre (University of Wales Press, 2022) and The Many Lives of the Purge (McFarland, 2024).

CFP Haunted Modernities Conference (3/17/2025; Cornwall, UK 7/16-18/2025)

 

Haunted Modernities

deadline for submissions: 
March 17, 2025
full name / name of organization: 
Falmouth University, 16-18 July 2025

This conference explores haunted modernities and spectral futures of all sorts. Looking back to the past as a haunted space and forward to the ‘spectres’ of the future, we want ‘Haunted Modernities’ to be indicative of wide open spaces and fruitful intersections in scholarship and practice. Whether work is hyper-local, global, or interstellar we welcome imaginative, creative, ethical, and diverse discussions from all disciplines and subject areas. As well as traditional papers, creative practice work is also invited in whatever form - written, film, audio, performance, exhibitions etc. 

 

Hosted by Falmouth University, and co-sponsored by Northeastern University, the Haunted Modernities conference will be held in Cornwall on the Falmouth Campus, which is set in lush tropical gardens a few minutes’ walk from its picturesque town and beaches.

 

Following on from our other international conferences which included Folk Horror in the Twenty-First Century and Haunted Landscapes I & II, please come and join us for this latest conference for the annual conference of the Dark Economies Scholarly Association (DESA).

 

Keywords/Possible Topics include (but are not bound by):

 

AI (affects and effects)

Architecture

Art      

Comics           

Climate Disaster

Consciousness

Crip Pasts/Futures

Cyber Spirituality

Data

Fugitivity

Futurism

Film

Games

Gender (of all and any sorts)

Gentrification

Ghosts

Heritage

Hauntology

Hyperconnection

Home/shelter/house/development

Infrastructure

Literature

Lots, allotments

Machines

Magic

Manifestos

Maps

Micro landscapes

Migration

Mobility/Stasis

Neuroscience

Nostalgia

(Post)colonial, (Post)apartheid

Queer geographies

Racial Capitalism

Reverberations and Echoes

Slippage

The Subterranean

Space - the interstellar

Traces

Trauma

Translocal, Transurban, Transnational

The Uncanny

Urban geographies

Vacancy/Vagrancy

The Weird

Work

 

 

Please send 250 word abstracts and a short bio (and any questions) to:

DESA@falmouth.ac.uk and, k.saxton@northeastern.edu

 

 

Deadline: March 17 2025

CFP Sea Changes Conference (2/7/2025; Open Graves, Open Minds Project London/Online 9/5-6/2025)

 

Sea changes: The fairytale Gothic of mermaids, selkies, and enchanted hybrids of ocean and river

deadline for submissions: 
February 7, 2025
full name / name of organization: 
Open Graves, Open Minds Project

OGOM Conference 2025: CFPSea changes: The fairytale Gothic of mermaids, selkies, and enchanted hybrids of ocean and river

Conference page: https://www.opengravesopenminds.com/sea-changes-2025/

Venue: The British Library, London, UK (and online) Date: 5–6 September 2025

Full fathom five thy father lies;
Of his bones are coral made;
Those are pearls that were his eyes:
Nothing of him that doth fade,
But doth suffer a sea-change
Into something rich and strange.
Sea-nymphs hourly ring his knell:
                                             Ding-dong.
Hark! now I hear them,—ding-dong, bell.

(The Tempest, i. 2. 400–07)

 

Fabulous, enchanted beings, hybridly human and other, populate the expanses of water of myth and folklore, whether oceans, rivers, and lakes or their boundaries. Such locations swarm with merfolk, nereids and other water nymphs, nixies, merrows, selkies, finfolk, kelpies, rusalkas. We want also, however, to give attention to and arouse discussion around their non-European counterparts: Mami Wata (West Africa), yawkyawk (Australia), iara (Brazil), ningyo (Japan), mondao (Zimbabwe), siyokoy (Philippines) and many more. All these beings are often alluring, frequently dangerous.

In the West, oceanic beings take the form of merfolk, haunting the seas and luring humans into the depths. Rivers and lakes swim with nymphs, nixies, kelpies, and more. In regions such as the Shetlands and Orkneys selkies – hybrids between seal and human – are found on the shorelines.

The fluidity of water itself mirrors the tendency for such beings to be themselves shifting and protean; their hybridity through metamorphosis is dynamic. It suggests the quality of those who are both terrestrial and aquatic, those conscious beings embodied in a fluid medium, the substance from wherein life itself originates.

Hybridity and genre

The hybrid form of the mermaid, both piscine and mammalian, corresponds to the liminal quality of where these beings are most frequently encountered – the ambivalent border between land and sea of the shoreline. Selkies, metamorphosing between seal and human, are in the traditional tales perhaps even more associated with the shore.

The hybridity of these creatures is easily accommodated by the hybridity of genres that contemporary narratives employ. For example, in Melanie Golding’s The Replacement (2023), selkie folklore encounters the procedural detective genre in an unsettlingly ambiguous way. The commingling of Gothic horror, folklore, and analytical crime thriller subverts the rationalist mode of the latter by generating the mode of the Fantastic. Here, the vulnerability of motherhood, outsider communities, and mental illness come into focus. More generic cross-fertilisation comes with the presence of mermaids in Gothic-tinged Neo-Victorian novels such as Imogen Hermes Gowar, The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock (2018), and Jess Kidd’s merrow fantasy, Things in Jars (2020).

There are mermaids in science fiction, which are often monstrous (thus involving horror and thriller genres): Mira Grant, Into the Drowning Deep (2017), for example, results in the scenario of humanity pitted against the aquatic as Otherness, but also revealing a nature wounded by instrumental reason in this climate change thriller, and an ambiguity about the centrality of the human. A recurring theme concerning communication plays against the absoluteness of the Other, too. The collapse of a love affair between two women, one a deep-sea explorer, is figured poignantly as SF with overtones of Cosmic Horror in Julia Armfield’s Our Wives Under the Sea (2022).

Dangerous seduction

The allure of the mermaid is most often dangerous. It is disruptive of social norms and even the natural coherence of the self and the boundaries between human and animal. This danger may be concealed in comic mode as in H. G. Well’s The Sea-Lady (1902) or the films with the enchanting Glynis Johns, Miranda (1948) and its sequel Mad About Men (1954).  But this may also hold more inviting, enchanting prospects, including the pleasures and pitfalls of romantic fantasy, as from La Motte Fouqué’s Undine (1811) to the forlorn heroine of Andersen’s ‘The Little Mermaid’ (1837), then present-day paranormal romance. This latter genre frequently reworks Andersen’s tale. Related examples are the more gently innocuous Splash (1984), a Romcom with hints, like many of these works, of utopian freedom, and other romantic variants such as The Shape of Water (2017) (loosely based, like paranormal romance, on ‘Beauty and the Beast’ (1740). More sinister variants emerge such as Clemence Dane’s The Moon is Feminine (1938), even to overt horror like The Lure (2015). In a more sensational vein, there are many low-budget horror films where the mermaid is simply monstrous, as Mamula [Nymph] (2014).

In the early twentieth century, the darker, Gothic aspect appears in J. M. Barrie’s Peter Pan narratives. The mermaids represent death and oblivion. In the scene on Marooner’s Rock (a place where sailors were tied up and drowned), Wendy is dragged by her feet into the water by mermaids. For the first time Peter is afraid, a drum is beating within him, and it is saying ‘to die will be an awfully big adventure’.

The dangerously seductive sexuality of the mermaid is frequently associated with music – they sing with irresistible glamour, dance, or play the harp. In Thomas Moore's ‘The origin of the harp’ from Irish Melodies (1845), the tragic sea maiden, singing under the sea for her lost lover, is transformed into a harp; there are associations with Irish Nationalism here. The harp as siren or mermaid is also explored in Henry Jones Thaddeus's painting The Origin of the Harp of Elfin (1890). The harp is prominent in Scandinavian lore as the instrument of the Danish river spirit, the Neck (Nökke). He sits on the water and plays his golden harp, the harmony of which operates on all of nature.

The Lorelei is one famous incarnation of these sinister songstresses. In Kafka’s paradoxical tale, it is the silence of the Sirens that is dangerous. (The Sirens – who were originally birdlike – become identified with mermaids in the early Christian era; the overwhelming glamour of their song is notorious.) The piscine may also overlap with the serpentine as in the legend of Melusine; we are interested not just in mermaids and selkies but less-known creatures, especially the more monstrous such as kelpies, merrows and Jenny Greenteeth.

Avatars and adaptation

Mermaids and their kin are depicted in many ways, from medieval romance and the ballad to Romantic poetry (as in Thomas Moore) and beyond. They flourished in the Victorian period, too, with painting and the poetry of George Darley, Thomas Hood, Tennyson and Arnold. Thus, we are keen to hear from scholars of these periods, which produced some key mermaid narratives.

For example, Oscar Wilde’s ‘The Fisherman and His Soul’ (1891) is a complex working out of the conflicts of the spirit and the flesh, earth and heaven. The fisherman lives happily with the mermaid until his rejected soul returns. Corrupted without heart or conscience, it claims the fisherman’s life in a manner similar to Dorian Gray, written in the same year.

Adaptations, of folklore and of such archetypal tales as ‘The Little Mermaid’ are of especial interest. These might include sympathetic revisions of the monstrous Sea Witch from ‘The Little Mermaid’ (Sarah Henning, Sea Witch (2018)), along with the many reworkings and expansions of that tale itself, often as paranormal romance, usually with a contemporary feminist slant (for example, the YA novel Fathomless (2013) by Jackson Pearce, Christina Henry’s The Mermaid (2018) and Louise O’Neill’s The Surface Breaks (2018)). We would note the rich tradition of folkloric adaptation in Eastern European filmmaking, especially in animation (in particular, with ‘The Little Mermaid’); a gorgeous animated example is the Russian Rusalochka [The Little Mermaid] (1968).

Mermaids in art

The mermaid is an enduring and widespread image in paintings from the classical period to the present. Mermaids appear in the work of Ancient Greek vase painters and medieval miniaturists, and in the paintings of Rubens and Raphael, Turner, and the Pre-Raphaelites (notably Burne-Jones and Waterhouse). They fascinated the symbolists (Moreau, Bocklin, Klimt) and surrealists (Magritte and Delvaux) alike and lurk in the enchanting book illustrations of Rackham’s Undine (1909) and Peter Pan (1906), Dulac’s The Little Mermaid (1911) and Heath-Robinson’s ‘Sultan and the Mer-Kid’ from Bill the Minder (1912).

In the nineteenth century, paintings (mainly by men) of sirens and mermaids were depicted as sexually alluring and predatory in contrast to the ‘ondines’, who were the cultured pearls of modern passive femininity (as shown in the paintings of Pierre Dupuis). Mermaids at Play is a series of orgiastic marine fantasies painted by Arnold Böcklin in the 1880s.

Mermaids in late Victorian art are murderous, preying on adventurers, fishermen, sailors and poets. Waterhouse showed a doomed sailor drowning under the haughty gaze of his seductress in The Siren (1900) whilst Edvard Munch’s The Lady from the Sea (1896) crawls threateningly towards us. The siren in Gustave Moreau’s The Poet and the Siren (1895) pushes the boy poet, who clamours for mercy, into the primal mud from which she emanates. In Burne-Jones’s The Depths of the Sea (1885) a mermaid with hypnotic eyes and a vampire’s mouth is carrying her male prey downwards into oblivion.

Freudian thought exposed the fish-tailed seductress as the personification of hidden desires of the sexually subconscious; the legacy of this is shown in the twentieth century, when the mermaid abandoned her marine habitat to re-emerge in the irrational dream settings of the surrealist imagination. Magritte’s stranded inverted mermaid, The Collective Invention (1934) humorously undermines the perverse eroticism of her original.

The global mermaid

Not all of these beings originate in Europe and our colloquy will be much enriched by fishing off further shores. We seek to include explorations of global sea people in folklore and contemporary reworkings, such as Japanese ningyo, Mami Wata and Afro-Caribbean mermaids (Natasha Bowen, Skin of the Sea (2021) and Monique Roffey, The Mermaid of Black Conch: A Love Story (2020)). Many of these facilitate a postcolonial reading of the mermaid and kindred beings.

Ningyō, 人魚 [human fish], have been part of Japanese myth since the year 619 ce (when they appeared in Nihonshoki in Osaka). Whilst the term Ningyō is often translated as mermaid, this is misleading as the Japanese term is not gendered and Ningyō are more varied in shape and often monstrous in appearance. When caught, these piscine-humanoid beings are treated as sacred objects, thought to bring good fortune and immortality. Ningyō fakes or grotesque caricatures appeared from the 1860s onwards. In his 1876 account, Nichols Belfield Denny recounts seeing the circus entrepreneur P. T. Barnum’s celebrated purchase (allegedly from Japanese sailors) which became known as the Fiji Mermaid.

Andersen’s ‘The Little Mermaid’ was translated into Japanese in the 1910s. Its popularity contributed to what Philip Hayward has termed the ‘mermaidisation of the Ningyō’ (evolving into western-like mermaids). In the twentieth century, Kurahashi Yumiko’s parodic rewriting of ‘The Little Mermaid’, translated as ‘A Mermaid’s Tears’, has led to comparisons with Angela Carter.

This global approach includes recent novels reworking ‘The Little Mermaid’ from a non-Western perspective, such as Rosa Guy, My Love, My Love: Or The Peasant Girl (1985), made into a Broadway musical. Thus, other media are of interest too – Dvorák’s opera Rusalka, drawing on Slavic folklore, stands out.

Selkies

Selkie narratives tend to be more purely romantic and frequently tragic as are the original tales and ballads themselves. One early transformation of selkie folklore into novel is The Secret of Ron-Mor-Skerry by Rosalin K. Fry, filmed as The Secret of Roan Inish (1994), which draws on the selkie to explore feral children and animal parent narratives. Selkie novels often address feminist concerns as in Margo Lanagan’s Margo, The Brides of Rollrock Island (2013).

Both selkies and mermaids have been enlisted to dramatise the fluidity of the self, particularly with regard to sexuality and gender. Examples are Betsy Cornwell’s excellent YA selkie novel, Tides (2014) and Maggie Tokuda-Hall’s The Mermaid, the Witch and the Sea (2020). They have been taken up as a metaphor for transgender teens: ‘the secret me is a boy; he takes his girliness off like a sealskin’ (Rachael Plummer, ‘Selkie’ (2019)).

Many of these narratives place the love element foremost, allowing a space for female-centred erotic and gay romance; these forms flourish especially in the recent explosion of self-publishing and on-line texts.

These creatures facilitate the interaction between humanity and nature (both inner and outer). In their Gothic aspect and engagement with darkness, they may adumbrate a reenchantment of the disenchanted world (following Weber and Adorno); reconciliation with Otherness; and new relationships with the natural world. We are looking for presentations that look at narratives of merfolk and their kin in the light of their Gothic aspects and that highlight their connection with folklore, dwelling on the enchantment of their strange fluidity. We invite contributors to create a dialogue amidst these sea changes into something rich and strange.

Keynote speakers:

Prof. Catherine Spooner, Professor of Literature and Culture, Lancaster University; on mermaid ambiguity in new creative fiction

Dr Monique Roffey Novelist, Manchester Metropolitan University; as author of The Mermaid of Black Conch on Caribbean mermaids

Dr Sam George Associate Professor, University of Hertfordshire, Co-Convenor of the OGOM Project; on Japanese Ningyo: human-fish hybrids and the rise of the fake museum mermaid

Dr Katie Garner, Senior Lecturer in Nineteenth-Century Literature, University of St Andrews; on ‘Forging the Mermaid’ – Scottish mermaid project

Topics may include but are not restricted to:

Aquatic beings and dis/re-enchantment
Liquid bodies and fluid sexuality
Destiny, agency, and biological determinism
Tragedy, comedy, and RomCom
The natural world and environmental issues
Global and postcolonial merfolk
Musicality and the Siren’s song
Film, TV, and new media
Adaptation of folklore and fiction
YA and children’s literature
Paranormal Romance
The Gothic and the monstrous in the depths
Hybrid bodies, hybrid genres
Kelpies and water-bulls, merrows and other less-known creatures of the depths
Relationships with the Other
Borders and shorelines
Animality/culture
The merfolk of medieval Romance
Retellings of ‘The Little Mermaid’
Disneyfication of ‘The Little Mermaid’ and its controversies
Retellings of selkie stories
Blue Humanities and aquatic bodies
Eastern European folklore, fiction, and film
Mami Wata and her kin
Aquatic dissolution of the self
Merfolk and selkie ballads
The mermaid in Victorian poetry and painting
Fake mermaids/sacred objects from the sea

Submission:

Abstracts (200–300 words) for twenty-minute papers or proposals for panels, together with a short biography (150 words), should be submitted by 7 February 2025 as an email attachment in MS Word document format to ogomproject@gmail.com

Please prefix the document title with your surname. The abstract should be in the following format: (1) Title (2) Presenter(s) (3) Institutional affiliation (4) Email (5) 5–10 keywords (6) Abstract.

Panel proposals should include (1) Title of the panel (2) Name and contact information of the chair (3) Abstracts of the presenters.

Please state whether you would prefer to present online or in person. Presenters will be notified of acceptance after the deadline has passed in 2025.

There will be an opportunity to submit your paper for our OGOM publications.

Visit us at OpenGravesOpenMinds.com and follow us on X via @OGOMProject. 

 

Friday, January 17, 2025

CFP Medieval + Monsters Conference (3/15/2025; event 10/17-18/2025)


Medieval + Monsters:

MAM, MAMA, and IMA Joint Conference with The Newberry Library

October 17 & 18, 2025

Hosted @ Dominican University & the Newberry Library



Call for Papers

Individual abstracts of 250 words should be submitted to: Monsterconference2025@gmail.com by March 15, 2025.

If you are graduate student, note if you want to participate in an on-line session in your proposal. Proposed panels are also accepted. Questions: Mickey Sweeney

Abstracts focused on medieval, or medievalism monstrous themes are welcome; this topic is broadly conceived to encourage colleagues from all relevant disciplines, such as art historians, linguists, literature, theologians, historians, history of science, and forms of medievalism etc., to apply. We also have an active group of graduate students & emerging scholars who are interested in developing online sessions, as well as in-person workshops in teaching the medieval through medievalism, gaming, etc. Please note on your abstract if you are interested in an in-person session or an online session and if you are proposing a graduate session/roundtable/traditional paper/session.


Thursday, January 16, 2025

CFP Dragons in Fairy Tales Collection (1/20/2025)

Dragons in Fairy Tales


deadline for submissions:
January 20, 2025

full name / name of organization:
Rachel L. Carazo

contact email:
rachel.carazo@snhu.edu

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/11/19/dragons-in-fairy-tales


I have several chapters for this collection, but I am looking for four or five more. Please send abstracts or inquiries by January 20, 2025. Chapters will be due by July 15, 2025.

All topics about dragons will be considered.

Please be advised that dragons are the primary focus of the collection. I have received several abstracts about fairy tales in general, and I apologize for any confusion caused by the CFP. All chapters must discuss dragons in some way.

Please send abstracts and a brief bio to Rachel Carazo at rachel.carazo@snhu.edu


Last updated December 10, 2024

CFP International Conference "Monsters, Sorcerers, and Witches of Northwestern Europe" (proposals 3/2/2025; Siena 7/9-11/2025)

International Conference "Monsters, Sorcerers, and Witches of Northwestern Europe"


deadline for submissions:
March 2, 2025

full name / name of organization:
Prin 2022 Project "Monsters, Sorcerers, and Witches of Northwestern Europe: The Medieval and Early Modern Construction of Otherness in Literature for Popular Audiences

contact email:
monsterswitchesnorthwesterneu@gmail.com

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2025/01/10/international-conference-monsters-sorcerers-and-witches-of-northwestern-europe.



To mark the conclusion of a biennial research carried out by four Italian Universities (Siena, Turin, Florence, and Naples “L’Orientale”), the scientific committee of the PRIN 2022 Project Monsters, Sorcerers, and Witches of Northwestern Europe: The Medieval and Early Modern Construction of Otherness in Literature for Popular Audiences invites abstract submissions for a three-day international conference, to be hosted at the University of Siena on 9-11 July 2025.

The conference will devote attention to monstrous births of human beings, illicit magic, and witchcraft – three features at the core of the Renaissance preternatural imagination – in order to highlight the connection between prodigious events and marginality, placing a special emphasis on the resulting social relegation of the individuals involved in them.

Particularly appreciated will be contributions taking into examination non-canonical sources, such as ballads, broadsheets, pamphlets, as well as manuals, sermons, and annals, which were destined for large and culturally varied audiences, including those with limited literacy. The time frame under consideration will encompass the late Middle Ages and the whole early modern period, so as to inspect both the genesis, development, and aftermath of such phenomena in Northwestern European texts.

Proposals seeking to investigate the processes of interpretation and exploitation of the preternatural will also be very welcome, as will those scrutinising the mechanisms of repression underlying the narration of preternatural events, by relating them to their prescriptive framework.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following themes:

  • Monstrosity, witchcraft, and gender.
  • The witch, the deformed child’s mother and their connections with other liminal subjects.
  • Metamorphosis and shapeshifting.
  • Crossing boundaries with monstrosity and witchcraft.
  • Border conflicts or crossings between normativity and non-normativity.
  • Transgression through monstrosity and witchcraft.
  • Classifications and fluidity of monstrosity and magic.
  • The non-normative body and/or intellect in the late Middle Ages and the early modern period.
  • Monstrosity and witchcraft as markers of physical and intellectual disability.
  • Medical, legal, religious, social or political evaluations of monstrosity and witchcraft.
  • Monstrosity, witchcraft and related textual genres (teratologies, chronologies of strange events, demonological treatises, etc.).



We are particularly keen to promote interdisciplinary approaches and encourage submissions that engage with literary, historical, theological, medical, legal, or cultural perspectives.



Papers should not exceed 20 minutes and will be followed by a five-minute discussion.



Paper submission

If you wish to present a paper, email an abstract of 250-300 words alongside a short bionote (100-150 words).

Please send your proposals to: luca.baratta@unisi.it; monsterswitchesnorthwesterneu@gmail.com

Deadline for proposals: 2 March 2025

Notification of acceptance: 16 March 2025



Conference dates: 9-11 July 2025

Venue: Department of Philology and Literary Criticism

University of Siena

Pionta Campus – Logge del Grano Hall

Piazzetta Logge del Grano, n. 5 – 52100 Arezzo (Italy)



Project & Conference website: https://sites.google.com/view/monsterswitches/conferences/international-conference-prin2022-project-monsterswitches


Last updated January 10, 2025

Friday, August 9, 2024

CFP Medieval Monsters as Modern Monsters (virtual) (9/15/2024; ICMS Kalamazoo 5/8-10/2025)

Medieval Monsters as Modern Monsters: Exploring Continuums of the Monstrous (virtual)


Sponsored by Association for the Advancement of Scholarship and Teaching of the Medieval in Popular Culture and Monsters & the Monstrous Area of the Northeast Popular Culture Association

Organized by Michael A. Torregrossa


60th International Congress on Medieval Studies

Western Michigan University (Kalamazoo, Michigan)

Hybrid event: Thursday, 8 May, through Saturday, 10 May, 2025

Please Submit Proposals by 15 September 2024


Session Information


Medieval monsters and ideas about them remain at the base of many of our modern conceptions of monsters and the monstrous, but few studies have explored the tracks of these ongoing traditions for representing monstrosities in the post-medieval world. It is our intention in this session to shed some light on these creations and their impact today.

We seek in this panel to unite the fields of Medieval Studies, Medievalism Studies, Monster Studies, and Popular Culture Studies to highlight the links between medieval monstrosities and their post-medieval incarnations and successors.

We hope presenters will explore both continuity and change in addressing how terrors rooted in the medieval world have been portrayed beyond the Middle Ages and/or how modern monstrosities seem to draw indirectly from medieval traditions.



Thank you for your interest in our session. Please address questions and/or concerns to the organizers at MedievalinPopularCulture@gmail.com.


Submission Information


The process for proposing contributions to sessions of papers, roundtables and poster sessions for the International Congress on Medieval Studies uses an online submission system powered by Confex. Be advised that submissions cannot be accepted through email. Rather, access the direct link in Confex to our session at https://icms.confex.com/icms/2025/paper/papers/index.cgi?sessionid=6429. You can also view the full Call for Papers list at https://wmich.edu/medievalcongress/call.


Within Confex, proposals to sessions of papers, poster sessions and roundtables require the author's name, affiliation and contact information; an abstract (300 words) for consideration by session organizer(s); and a short description (50 words) that may be made public. Proposals to sessions of papers and poster sessions also require a title for the submission (contributions to roundtables are untitled).


Proposers of papers or contributions to roundtables for hybrid sessions should indicate in their abstracts whether they intend to present in person or virtually.


If you need help with your submissions, the Congress offers some resources at the Particpating in the Congress page at https://wmich.edu/medievalcongress/participating-congress. Click to open the section labeled “Propose a Paper” and scroll down for the Quick Guide handouts.



Be advised of the following policies for participating in the Congress:


You are invited to propose one paper (as a sole author or as a co-author) for one session of papers. You may propose a paper for a sponsored or special session or for the general sessions, but not both. You may propose an unlimited number of contributions to roundtables and poster sessions, but you will not be scheduled to actively participate (as paper presenter, roundtable discussant, poster author, presider, respondent, workshop leader, demonstrator or performer) in more than three sessions.


Further details on the Congress’s Policies can be found at https://wmich.edu/medievalcongress/policies-guidelines.



A reminder: Presenters accepted to the Congress must register for the full event. The registration fee is the same for on-site and virtual participants. For planning, the cost for the previous year’s event is posted at the Congress’s Registration page at https://wmich.edu/medievalcongress/registration.


If necessary, the Medieval Institute and Richard Rawlinson Center at Western Michigan University offer limited funding to presenters. These include both subsidized registration grants and travel awards. Please see the Awards page at the Congress site for details at https://wmich.edu/medievalcongress/awards.


For more information on the Association for the Advancement of Scholarship and Teaching of the Medieval in Popular Culture, please visit our website at https://medievalinpopularculture.blogspot.com/.

For more information on the Monsters & the Monstrous Area of the Northeast Popular Culture Association, please visit our website at https://popularpreternaturaliana.blogspot.com/.


Thursday, August 8, 2024

CFP Dinosaurs in Film, Literature, and the Arts Collection (9/25/2024)

Dinosaurs in Film, Literature, and the Arts


deadline for submissions:
September 25, 2024

full name / name of organization:
Rachel Carazo

contact email:
rachel.carazo@snhu.edu

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/05/01/dinosaurs-in-film-literature-and-the-arts


This collection seeks essays on dinosaurs in film, literature, and the arts. The Jurassic Park franchise solidified the presence of dinosaurs in the pop cultural imagination, but there have been other media and dinosaur portrayals that have captured the public's imagination. Topics can include, but are not limited to:

-Studies of specific films

-Studies of specific novels

-Studies of special effects renderings of dinosaurs

-Artwork with dinosaurs

Chapters will be due in April 2025. Chapters should be approximately 5,000 to 7,000 words, with Chicago-style endnotes and a bibliography page.

Abstracts and a brief bio should be submitted by September 25, 2024, to Rachel Carazo: rachel.carazo@snhu.edu



Last updated August 1, 2024

CFP H(a)unted Grad Conference (9/8/2024; 10.25/2024)

H(a)unted


deadline for submissions:
September 8, 2024

full name / name of organization:
Georgetown University English Graduate Student Association (EGSA)

contact email:
egsa@georgetown.edu

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/08/07/haunted



H(a)unted

October 25, 2024

________________________________________________________________________

“O monstrous! O strange! We are haunted.”

- William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night’s Dream

“If he looked into her face, he would see those haunted, loving eyes.”

- Toni Morrison, The Bluest Eye

“A spectre is haunting Europe—the spectre of communism.”

- Karl Marx, Communist Manifesto



Living in the present, we are often haunted by remnants of the past—especially unresolved issues from our history—and by apprehensions about the future, such as the looming fear of robots taking control over humanity. For this conference, we explore the interplay of the terms “haunted” and “hunted” and propose a new term, “h(a)unted,” to mark the generative interchanges between them.

Throughout history, the socially, politically, and economically dominant agents have often “hunted” weaker opponents to assert their power. Conversely, literature and other forms of media have provided outlets where the oppressed, “hunted” subjects can, in turn, haunt their perpetrators, thereby reversing power dynamics. Our proposed term “h(a)unted,” however, also invites us to call into question the assumed causal relationship between “haunted” and “hunted,” highlighting that these phenomena can occur simultaneously or even in potentially reversible order, with haunting preceding being hunted in certain contexts.

The English Graduate Student Association of Georgetown University seeks proposals from various disciplines and theoretical approaches addressing, but not limited to, the following questions: Who has been h(a)unted? How have experiences of h(a)unting been envisioned and represented? How have the meanings of the words “haunted” and “hunted” and their interrelations been registered in different forms of media? What is the nature of being h(a)unted? Which cultural forms and genres have most richly captured the experiences of being h(a)unted?

This conference welcomes an interdisciplinary dialogue inviting scholars in a range of fields including literary, studies, film and media studies, history, philosophy, sociology, political science, postcolonial studies, trauma studies, environmental studies, critical race studies, diaspora studies, narrative studies, and other related fields of study within the combined thematic, theoretical, and critical orientation provided by “h(a)unted.”



Possible topics may include, but are not limited to:

● Memories and Traces

● Ghosts and Monsters

● Silencing and Silenced

● Borders and Boundaries

● Incompleteness in Context and Form

● Alternative Forms of Storytelling

● Balance and Imbalance

● Mythology

● Appearance and Disappearance

● Spirituality

● Aesthetic Forms

● Homecoming



Please submit (1) a 300-word abstract, including the title of your proposed paper, and (2) a 100-word bio as an attached document in an email with the subject line “Conference_[Full Name]” to egsa@georgetown.edu by September 8, 2024.

Proposals may also be considered for inclusion in Predicate, EGSA’s interdisciplinary journal in the humanities, which will be published in Spring 2025.



Last updated August 8, 2024

CFP Horror Cinema and Class Critique: Between Reaction and Revolution (9/30/2024; NeMLA 3/6-9/2025)

Horror Cinema and Class Critique: Between Reaction and Revolution


deadline for submissions:
September 30, 2024

full name / name of organization:
Northeast Modern Languages Association (NeMLA)

contact email:
ryustealonso@stetson.edu

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/08/06/horror-cinema-and-class-critique-between-reaction-and-revolution


56th NeMLA Annual Convention, March 6-9, 2025 in Philadelphia, PA

Horror’s current market(able) shock value and reinvigorated political potential for social commentary have contributed to a wave of narratives and diverse voices that, both before and behind the camera, unearth the genre’s thought-provoking aesthetics while offering fresh takes on social anxieties, fears, and traumas. In this complex landscape, class dynamics permeate horror’s texture both diegetically and extra-diegetically. On the one hand, narratives, tropes, and characters can be read according to their relation to class; on the other, an effective material critique must concentrate on the apparatus that is horror, taken as an object able to defy—or conversely, reinforce—bourgeois ways of seeing/being.

For years, we have invited scholars from various disciplines to reflect on horror from this perspective: our collective has been growing, bringing to the fore methodological tools that have successfully influenced the study of the genre through a Marxist lens. In light of the 2025 NeMLA theme, we are interested in discerning the forces that animate horror by investigating its relation to the ominous ideology of capital.

Together with the accepted discussants, we look forward to considering some pressing questions: In the current crisis of visual culture, is horror still a persuasive apparatus that employs fear to thrust dominant ideologies upon us? Or does the genre radically destabilize the imposed social order through the interpellation of fear, chaos, and violence? Could these opposing dynamics coexist, and if so, what are the contours of horror’s contradictions?

We are thrilled to accept proposals that effectively blend movie analyses with theoretical discourses that attempt to answer these inquiries. Please submit abstracts of 200-250 words in English by September 30, 2024, at https://www.cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/21191. Accepted participants must send their paper draft no later than February 1, 2025, to be shared with the collective. Essays should be between 10-15 pages, double-spaced, and include a “Works Cited” section. All participants are expected to read each other’s work before the session and provide a one-paragraph response to one person as assigned by the chairs.

If you have any questions regarding the roundtable, please contact the organizers directly: Valeria Dani (vd76@cornell.edu) and Ruth Z. Yuste-Alonso (ryustealonso@stetson.edu).


categories
film and television
interdisciplinary
popular culture
twentieth century and beyond

Last updated August 8, 2024

CFP Dark Entries: Rethinking the Horror in Folk Horror Conference (9/13/2024; online 10/11/2024)

Dark Entries: Rethinking the Horror in Folk Horror


deadline for submissions:
September 13, 2024

full name / name of organization:
Brooke Cameron and Noah Gallego

contact email:
noahrgallego@gmail.com

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/08/06/dark-entries-rethinking-the-horror-in-folk-horror

Dark Entries: Rethinking the Horror in Folk Horror



Deadline: Friday, September 13, 2024

Symposium Date: Friday, October 11, 2024

Format: Online (via Zoom, EST)

Abstract: 150 words + short biographical statement + time zone

Submit to: brooke.cameron@queens.edu.ca and noahrgallego@gmail.com

Organizers: Brooke Cameron, Ph.D. (Queens’ University at Kingston, Ontario, CA) and Noah Gallego, M.A. (California Polytechnic State University, Pomona, USA)

Keynote: Nina Martin, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Film Studies (Connecticut College, USA)



In response to revived interest in folk horror amid rumors of a new installment of the iconic film, The Blair Witch Project (1999), we are seeking proposals from interested scholars from across the disciplines and professional paths that critically engage with the genre of folk horror for a one-day online symposium.



Folk horror, according to Adam Scovell (2017:7), can be broadly understood as
  • A work that uses folklore, either aesthetically or thematically, to imbue itself with a sense of the arcane for eerie, uncanny or horrific purposes.
  • A work that presents a clash between such arcania and its presence within close proximity to some form of modernity, often within social parameters.
  • A work which creates its own folklore through various forms of popular conscious memory, even when it is young in comparison to more typical folkloric and antiquarian artifacts of the same character. [1]


Presenters are welcome to explore the genre across multiple media, including, but not limited to: literature, film, television, video games, internet, and music.



The symposium will be held over Zoom at no cost. We will be on EST time, so, if accepted, please plan according to your respective time zones.



We expect the general time frame to be between 9:00am - 6:00pm EST, with each session lasting approximately 90 minutes; each presenter will have about 15-20 minutes to present with about 10 minutes after for Q&A. They may present a traditional paper or creative work. (A Google Slides/PPT/etc. presentation is not required but encouraged!). While we understand that under certain circumstances presenters may refrain from having their cameras on, we strongly recommend those who are able to show themselves in the spirit of fostering community.



Depending on the continuity of the content of the submissions, we may group presenters according to a common theme, but at this time, we are not accepting panel proposals. However, if you would like to be considered for a specific session, please make a note in your submission what kind of theme you would like to be a part of.



Please send abstracts of 150 words as well as a brief (100 word) biographical statement highlighting your status, institutional affiliation(s), scholarly awards or achievements, etc. to brooke.cameron@queens.edu.ca and noahrgallego@gmail.com by September 13. In your document, please also indicate your time zone so you may be slated at an appropriate time.



The status of proposals will be revealed after the deadline has passed. Presenters may expect confirmation as soon as a week after.



Please direct any and all inquiries to us. We look forward to your submissions!



[1] Scovell, Adam. 2017. Folk Horror: Hours Dreadful and Things Strange. Liverpool University Press.


Last updated August 8, 2024

CFP Making Madnesses in Early Modern England (8/12/2024; RSA Boston 03/20-22/2025)

Making Madnesses in Early Modern England (RSA Boston, March 20-22, 2025)


deadline for submissions:
August 12, 2024

full name / name of organization:
Avi Mendelson / RSA Conference, Boston, 2025

contact email:
amendel@brandeis.edu

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/08/05/making-madnesses-in-early-modern-england-rsa-boston-march-20-22-2025

In John Ford’s raucous tragicomedy, The Lover’s Melancholy (1628), the proto-psychiatrist Corax attempts an experimental treatment on his forlorn melancholic patients: he stages a masque – acted by the allegorical figures of psychic ailments, including Dotage, Phrenitis, Hypochondria, St. Vitus’ Dance, Hydrophobia (rabies), and Lycanthropia (the delusion that you’ve transformed into a wolf) – in order to shake his afflicted clients out of their melancholic funk. Pulling from Robert Burton’s massive tome, The Anatomy of Melancholy, Ford’s play showcases the sheer variety of madnesses – even within a subgenre such as “melancholy” – that were active, endemic, and of great dramatic interest in early modern England. These madnesses, as trailblazing scholarship by Carol Thomas Neely, Bridget Escolme, and Duncan Salkeld has shown, were also imbedded within a network of other rhetorical structures – from the medical to the astrological; from political fears of sedition to witchcraft legislation; and from early modern theatre to modern dramatic reimaginings of mental health from that era.

Playwrights from the period were obsessed with mental illness – and not just Shakespeare with his well-known depictions of madness in Macbeth, King Lear, and The Comedy of Errors, among other dramas. The singing madmen in The Duchess of Malfi beg to “howl some heavy note” for the play’s harassed and tortured heroine; the rabidly jealous doctor Alibius in The Changeling rents out his medically incarcerated patients as wedding entertainment. London’s Bethlem Hospital (also known as “Bedlam”) – though intended as a charity – was often described as a space where squalor, neglect, and abuse ran rampant. In addition to Bethlem, physicians such as Richard Napier wrote extensive medical records, which we could access, of the mentally ill people he treated in Buckinghamshire. Given all of the above, this panel seeks papers that explore any way madness was portrayed in early modern England.



A list of potential questions and topics that is in no way exhaustive:

*Showing how madness intersects with other realms of subjecthood: race, class, gender, sexuality, and disability.

*Links between madness and the arts: music, theater, poetry, rhetoric, or painting.

*Reading madness through a Disability Studies lens. Is madness always a disability? Can it be an advantage?

*Connections between madness and the supernatural or preternatural: witchcraft, demonic possession, werewolves, or lunar disturbance.

*What is the relationship between madness and discourses of love/pleasure?

*Reading madness through histories of medicine, disease, emotion/affect, or dreams/visions.

*Representations of early modern doctors and “psychiatric” hospitals.

*Why do some characters fake madness in these plays? What’s the difference between real and spurious madness?

*Analyzing how early modern madness is depicted either in modern stage productions or via other media (films, paintings, graphic novels, websites, etc.).

*How can we foster a mad or mental illness positive pedagogy? Can early modernists blend historical discussions of madness, with activism and advocacy for those with mental illness?





Please submit the following materials to Avi Mendelson, at amendel@brandeis.edu, by August 12th to be considered for this panel: Your field of study; your paper title (15 words maximum); an abstract (200 words maximum); a one page abbreviated CV (.pdf or .doc upload); PhD completion date (past or expected); full name / current academic affiliation / email address. Please note that the RSA is very strict about word count, and will not accept entries that go beyond the maximum word limit.




Last updated August 8, 2024

CFP Seen and Unseen in Supernatural Literary Contexts of the Long-Nineteenth Century (8/31/2024; SAMLA 11/15-17/2024)

The Seen and Unseen in Supernatural Literary Contexts of the Long-Nineteenth Century


deadline for submissions:
August 31, 2024

full name / name of organization:
Ben P. Robertson / Troy University

contact email:
bprobertson@troy.edu

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/08/05/the-seen-and-unseen-in-supernatural-literary-contexts-of-the-long-nineteenth-century


The Seen and Unseen in Supernatural Literary Contexts of the Long-Nineteenth Century
South Atlantic Modern Language Association (SAMLA) Conference
15-17 November 2024
Jacksonville, Florida, USA



From ghosts in Shakespeare’s plays to mysterious curses in the poetry of Tennyson, literary depictions of the supernatural provide important sites of division between the seen and the unseen. This panel will explore how authors from diverse cultural backgrounds leverage supernatural phenomena as critical components of their literary explorations of identity in the long nineteenth century. Ironically, that which is unseen often serves as a catalyst for transformative personal development that brings the unseen into the realm of the seen.



This panel will focus the conference theme (Seen/Unseen) on supernatural phenomena as a means of engaging in the greater conference-level discussion about the seen and the unseen, either literal or figurative.



Possible topics might include (but are not necessarily limited to) the following: Ghosts, hauntings, spiritualism, supernatural/mythical creatures, prophecies, destiny, folklore, ancestral spirits, curses, adaptations, personal identity, revelations



This panel will include traditional academic papers for presentations of approximately 15 minutes each. Please submit abstracts of about 250 words by 31 August 2024 to the session link at https://samla.ballastacademic.com/Home/S/19207. Questions may be addressed to Ben P. Robertson, Troy University, at bprobertson@troy.edu.



More information about SAMLA: https://southatlanticmla.org/



Last updated August 8, 2024

CFP Spill Your Guts! A Graduate Student Work In Progress Symposium (9/16/2024; online event 11/2024)

Spill Your Guts! A Graduate Student Work In Progress Symposium


deadline for submissions:
September 16, 2024

full name / name of organization:
Horror Studies Scholarly Interest Group (SCMS)

contact email:
horrorstudiessig@gmail.com

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/08/05/spill-your-guts-a-graduate-student-work-in-progress-symposium

Calling all graduate students working in Horror Studies! This year, the SCMS Horror SIG will be convening a graduate student symposium, and we invite proposals from graduate students outlining their primary research topic.

The goal of the symposium is to offer a collegial forum for students to share work-in-progress and receive friendly feedback and advice from Horror SIG members. We welcome students at any stage of their academic journey, and strongly encourage Masters students and early year PhD students to participate. If you are at an early stage of a project, this is the perfect opportunity to work through ideas that are still in process and unpolished in a non-judgmental environment. There is no specific theme, as long as your project is related to horror in some way.

Potential presentation topics might include, but are not limited to:

  • Teaching horror/horror studies in the university
  • Researching the (historical-) industrial dimensions of horror films, tv, etc.
  • Indie horror, fringe horror, and mainstream horror
  • The contemporary landscapes of horror
  • Queer and feminist horror
  • Race and horror
  • Labor practices, star systems, and taste discourses around working in horror
  • Generic hybrids at the box office/tv screen
  • Podcasting horror
  • Streaming horror
  • Licensing horror: IP, copyright, etc
  • Horror and the archive
  • Regulating horror (horror hosts as containment strategy, gatekeeping + power, TV code, etc)
  • Horror and shifting exhibition strategies/technologies (3D, the William Castle approach)
  • Transmedia approaches to horror (Universal Studios, Vegas attractions, haunted theme parks, fashion, etc.)

The presentations themselves will be shorter than a typical conference paper, with 5-10 minutes per person, depending on how many submissions we are able to include.

The symposium will take place online in November, 2024, date to be determined.

You do not have to be a member of SCMS or the Horror SIG to participate.

Please submit an abstract of no more than 250 words along with a bio of no more than 100 words to horrorstudiessig@gmail.com by 16th September.




Last updated August 8, 2024

Monday, August 5, 2024

CFP The Films of George A. Romero Collection (11/30/2024)

Call For Papers: The Films of George A. Romero


deadline for submissions:
November 30, 2024

full name / name of organization:
Sue Matheson

contact email:
smatheson@ucn.ca

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/07/11/call-for-papers-the-films-of-george-a-romero.


A Critical Companion to George A. Romero



Part of the Critical Companion to Popular Directors series edited by Adam Barkman and Antonio Sanna



Dubbed “The Godfather of Horror” and the “Father of the Modern Movie Zombie,” maverick filmmaker, George A. Romero is known for his horror and independent films. Credited with the invention of zombie culture, The Dead series, beginning in 1968 with Night of the Living Dead and ending in 2009 with Survival of the Dead, has revolutionized the possibilities of horror. Romero’s collaborations with Stephen King—which produced Creepshow (1982) and its comic tribute to 1950s gruesome EC comics, and The Dark Half (1993), a serious psychological study—are also well-known. His versatile career also includes the lesser-known romantic comedy, There’s Always Vanilla (1971); the action drama Knightriders (1981); and revolutionary genre films such as Season of the Witch(1972), The Crazies (1973), and Martin(1977). Marked with satire, his indie horror contains complex ideas, uncomfortable truths about human nature, and social and political critiques. His better-known works have been taught in courses on the history of the horror genre, while many others deserve critical reexamination as this counterculture director’s career did fluctuate between the commercial and his authorial voice.

This anthology seeks previously unpublished essays that explore George A. Romero’s entire body of work. It is open to submissions on films belonging to The Dead seriesfranchise (including George A. Romero’s Diary of the Dead [2007] and Survival of the Dead [2009]) and his collaborations with Stephen King, but will particularly welcome interdisciplinary approaches that can illuminate overlooked and underappreciated films like There’s Always Vanilla (1971), Season of the Witch (1972), The Crazies (1973), The Amusement Park (1975), Martin (1977), Knightriders (1981), Monkey Shines (1988), Two Evil Eyes (1990), and Bruiser (2000). Submissions on Romero’s short films Romero’s Elegy (1963), The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar (1990), and Jacaranda Joe (1994) are also particularly welcomed.



This volume will be interdisciplinary in scope, including approaches from philosophy, literary studies, film studies, gender studies, history, psychology, hauntology, ecology, etc. The chapters will be peer-reviewed, scholarly, and written at a high academic level.

Contributions could include, but are not limited to, the following topics:



• Thematic and structural analysis of one or more films

• Visual style

• Notions of evil

• Photography and cinematography

• The supernatural

• Romero as an auteur

• Romero and franchises

• Soundscapes and music

• The American family

• Film as philosophy/philosophy in film

• Failed parenthood

• comedy, black humor, and irony

• Social and cultural contexts

• American youth

• Influences

• Landscapes as sites of horror

• Literary adaptations

• Exploration of the sub- and unconscious

• Class, sexuality, gender and queer readings



This anthology will be organized into thematic sections around these topics and others that emerge from submissions. It is open to works that focus on other topics as well. Prospective authors are well to contact the editor with any questions, including potential topics not listed above. Please share this announcement with anyone you believe would be interested in contributing to this volume. Please submit a 300-400 word abstract of your proposed chapter contribution, a brief CV / bio, current position, affiliation, and complete contact information to Sue Matheson (smatheson@ucn.ca) by the 30th of November 2024. Full chapters of 6,000-7,000 words are likely due in May/June 2025 after signing a contract with the publisher (in the ongoing Critical Companion to Popular Directors series edited by Adam Barkman and Antonio Sanna, published by Lexington Books at Bloomsbury, which will count 13 volumes by the end of 2024).



Note: Acceptance of a proposed abstract does not guarantee the acceptance of the full chapter


Last updated July 15, 2024

Thursday, July 18, 2024

CFP Celebrating 215 years of Edgar Allan Poe Conference (proposals by 9/13/2024)

Celebrating 215 years of Edgar Allan Poe


deadline for submissions:
September 13, 2024

full name / name of organization:
Noah Gallego (California Polytechnic State University, Pomona)

contact email:
eap215conference@gmail.com

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/01/09/celebrating-215-years-of-edgar-allan-poe


Deadline: September 13, 2024

Conference Date: October 5, 2024

Format: Online (via Zoom)

Abstract: 200 words + short biographical statement + timezone

Submit to: eap215conference@gmail.com



Ring in the Halloween season by celebrating the life and works of the U.S.’s grandfather of Goth, Edgar Allan Poe! Scholars from across all disciplines are invited to convene for a (tentatively) two-day conference on the weekend of his 215th deathday where we will critically examine the Tomahawk’s works, including his poetry, prose, novel, and essays. (Other media such as theatrical, graphic, televised, or cinematic adaptations of his work may also be considered, provided they relate back to the author’s legacy and work. For instance, any of the Universal Studios adaptations or Scott Cooper’s loosely biographical The Pale Blue Eye (2022) or the recent Mike Flanagan production The Fall of the House of Usher (2023) may be explored).



Lenses through which to consider presentations may include but are not limited to:

  • Orientalism
  • Psychoanalysis
  • Feminism
  • Marxism
  • Gothic
  • Corporeality
  • Other-than-human
  • Gender, sexuality, and/or queerness
  • Spatiality and Temporality
  • Race
  • Narratology
  • New Materialism
  • Disability
  • Trauma
  • Monstrosity and Abjection
  • Religion, spirituality, the occult, and theology
  • Ecocriticism
  • Rhetoric and Poetics


Please submit abstracts of 200 words as well as any and all inquiries to eap215conference@gmail.com. Please also provide a short biographical note of up to 100 words in addition to your timezone in order to best arrange presentation times for those outside of PST. This conference will be held online at no charge. The Zoom link will be sent out the week prior.




Last updated June 17, 2024