Amazon
Saturday, November 4, 2023
Call for Papers: Narratives of Land: Place, Space, and Human Identity- January 2024
Call for Papers Adaptation: Literature, Film, and Culture (Deadline Extended) -February 21-24, 2024
Proposal submission deadline: Extended to November 14, 2023
Proposals for papers and panels are now being accepted for the 45th annual SWPACA conference. One of the nation’s largest interdisciplinary academic conferences, SWPACA offers nearly 70 subject areas, each typically featuring multiple panels.
The Adaptation: Literature, Film, and Culture area invites you to submit proposals for presentations that critically engage with the subject of adaptation. While the term “adaptation” most commonly refers to a film based upon or inspired by a novel (or the process of developing such a film), proposals for adaptations involving other media as source texts or final products are also welcome (for example, adaptations that involve art, theater, music, dance, television shows, video games, photographs, or comic books). Topics for paper proposals include, but are not limited to:
All proposals must be submitted through the conference’s database at http://register.southwestpca.org/southwestpca
For details on using the submission database and on the application process in general, please see the Proposal Submission FAQs and Tips page at http://southwestpca.org/conference/faqs-and-tips/.
Individual proposals for 15-minute papers must include an abstract of approximately 200-500 words. Including a brief bio in the body of the proposal form is encouraged, but not required.
For information on how to submit a proposal for a roundtable or a multi-paper panel, please view the above FAQs and Tips page.
Amy S. Fatzinger, Ph.D.
Friday, November 3, 2023
Call for Papers: #Folklore and Popular Culture Area -March 2024
- Folklore in Popular Culture/Folklore as Popular Culture
- Folklore and digital media
- Influence of folklore on other forms of culture (literature, film, music, etc.)
- Folklore and Religion
- Folklore and Material Culture
- The difference between oral and literary sources of tradition
- Folklore and Gender
- Folklore and children
- Uses of folklore
- Folklore and Globalism/Regionalism/Localism
- Illustrators/Illustrations of and in folklore
- Folklore and memory/memory studies
- Symbolism in folklore
- The relationship between folklore and fairy tale studies/literary studies/anthropology
Thursday, November 2, 2023
Call for Papers: Academic Conference on Terminator @40: Origins and Legacies
An academic conference hosted by The Centre for Film, Television and Screen Studies, Bangor University, Wales
18 & 19 June 2024
The Terminator franchise has left an indelible mark on popular culture. In 1984, James Cameron’s dark vision of the future created a cultural shock that continues to resonate to this day not only in cinema but also in literature, art, design, gaming, and critical theory and is even credited with having spawned several aesthetic trends, such as tech-noir. What started as a film has now become a multi-media universe consisting of sequels, a television series, web series, comics, video games, board games, novels and theme park rides. The franchise is also frequently cited in debates related to multinational corporations, robotics, biopolitics, post- and transhumanism, artificial intelligence, and nuclear apocalypse.
Hosted by the Centre for Film, Television and Screen Studies at Bangor University in North Wales, this symposium proposes to bring together scholars from diverse disciplinary backgrounds – such as cultural and screen studies; the history of art, design, fashion and architecture; musicology; philosophy; political sciences; computer science and robotics; literature; urban and ecological studies; and race, gender, queer and sexuality studies - to explore The Terminator forty years after its release, explore its origins and legacies and consider its position within wider visual culture.
We welcome contributions from any perspective such as (but not limited to) the following:
Terminator and its origins, influences, production, publicity, reception and afterlife
Terminator and aesthetics
Terminator and biopolitics, posthumanism and urban planning.
Terminator and capitalism, neoliberalism, post-industrialism and multinational corporations
Terminator and design
Terminator and ecological studies
Terminator and fandom and ‘cult’
Terminator and gender
Terminator and James Cameron
Terminator’s multi-media franchise (sequels, television, web series, comic books, video games, board games, novels and theme park rides)
Terminator and psychoanalysis
Terminator and race, ethnicity and/or the “Other”
Terminator and robotics, artificial intelligence, cybernetic organisms, the transhuman and post-human
Terminator and sci-fi
Terminator and sexuality
Terminator and stardom
Terminator and tech noir, retrofuturism, future noir, and cyberpunk.
We are applying for funding to facilitate postgraduate and unwaged participation.
Please submit an abstract here by 1 March 2024.
For further information, please contact the organisers Professor Nathan Abrams (Bangor University) and Dr Elizabeth Miller (Bangor University) at TerminatorConference@gmail.com
Best,
Wednesday, November 1, 2023
INTERNATIONAL #CONFERENCE ON #MEMORY #STUDIES -DEPARTMENTS OF ENGLISH AND HISTORY LORETO COLLEGE, #KOLKATA- February, 2024)
CONCEPT NOTE:
Memory studies is a multidisciplinary field which combines intellectual strands from literature, history, philosophy, psychology and sociology, among others. Henri Bergson’s Matter and Memory (1896), Paul RicÅ“ur’s Memory, History and Forgetting (2004), French historian Pierre Nora’s Realms of Memory (1996) and Jacques Le Goff’s History and Memory (1992) have inspired much research in the area of memory studies. Memory can be both an individual phenomenon as well as societal and collective. Forms of remembering operate as individual and collective representations of the past and they constitute a range of cultural resources for personal, social and historical identities, privileging particular readings of the past and subordinating others. Collective memory can serve as a therapeutic practice for a community and its members, as it comprises an active constructive process during which the members of a community participate in interpreting and processing shared past experiences (particularly traumas) into eventual memory representations, often in such forms as narratives, dramatizations, art, and ritual. Literature thus forms an important medium of cultural memory. The mass media plays a key role in the constitution of memory – and the politics of remembering is intrinsically connected to power. The act of remembering, whether involving individual, socio-historical or cultural representations of the past, is a process which involves selections, absences and multiple, potentially conflicting accounts. Memories are part of a larger process of dynamic cultural negotiation involving history and literature, which defines memories as narratives, and as fluid and mediated cultural and personal traces of the past. In the modern world, then, memory is an important means of establishing authority or destabilising grand narratives of history and power, of evoking nostalgia and helping to forge personal and national identity.
The conference will seek to address issues such as the following:
How do we represent the past to ourselves and to others? Which of our many pasts do we represent, and when, where, and why do we change those representations? How do those representations shape our actions, identities, and understandings? How do individual-level processes interact with collective ones, and vice versa? What does it mean to think about “memory” in these broad ways? In what ways are we ethically and politically obligated to remember, and what are the consequences of forgetting or failing to meet these obligations?
Keynote Speakers:
Prof. Stef Craps (University of Ghent, Belgium)
Dr. Abhishek Parui (IIT Madras)
Special Plenary Sessions:
Dr. Itay Lotem (University of Westminster, London)
Ms. Roberta Bacic (Founder of Conflict Textiles, Northern Ireland)
We invite paper submissions of 15-20 minutes duration from scholars whose work addresses topics including, but not limited to the following fields:
- Memory and oral history
- Contested histories and memory
- Memory, memorials, the visual arts, archives, installations
- Landscape and memory
- Memory and trauma (slavery, Partition, World Wars, Holocaust, Irish conflict, genocide, apartheid, 9/11, pandemic etc)
- Literature and nostalgia
- Memory and the diaspora
- Memory and the Media
- Collective Memory
- Cultural Memory
To submit a proposal, please send abstracts to conferencememorystudies@gmail.com
Please include the following in one PDF:
Paper presenters will be informed by 15 November, 2023.
Conference Convenor: Sukanya Dasgupta
Co-Convenor: Suparna Ghosh
Head of the Organizing Committee: Srijita Chakravarty
Following the conference, a selection of papers will be chosen by the organizers for inclusion in a proposed edited volume.
Decolonial Dialogues: An International Colloquium in Literature, Linguistics and Education
Dates: June 27-29, 2024
Despite the decolonization processes of the twentieth century, minds, institutions and knowledge practices around the globe continue to be shackled by colonial logic. “Decoloniality” identifies and engages with ongoing patterns of coloniality. It unlocks new institutional, pedagogical, curricular and interdisciplinary avenues. Beyond the implementation of inclusion and reparation measures, it inspires radical new ways of being and thinking. “Decolonial Dialogues” provides a space of encounter between multiple perspectives. We are interested in how “decoloniality” pertains to both research and lived experience, as it exists in different regions of the world, and as it is constantly reinvented in the entwined fields of literature, linguistics and education.
Within this framework, the decolonization of knowledges and the decentering of thought processes are not only deconstructive endeavors, but also founts of renewed approaches to languages and cultures. How might we renew knowledge by dismantling the ideological constructs rooted in a prevailing coloniality? What new critical toolkits and conceptual frameworks allow us to trace contemporary evolutions in thought? Ultimately, how might these interrogations enable the (re)evaluation of identities from cultural and intellectual perspectives?
In addition to academic panels, this colloquium will include an "unconference” day and several outings and activities in order to foster connections beyond the confines of traditional academic structures.
Contributions may be in English or French, and may include theoretical, practical and experiential perspectives, as well as critical analysis. Presentations will be organized around the following three clusters below and the (non-exhaustive) list of proposed topics:
KEY DATES
November 30, 2023:
Abstract submission deadline. 200-300 words in English or French via this link (https://forms.gle/Jhx8cq9bssWHRPEGA). For any questions, please contact nikhita.obeegadoo@ubc.ca
December 10, 2023: Notification of acceptance
February 15, 2024: Tentative program
June 27-29, 2024: In-person conference (no virtual attendance permitted)
Organizing Committee
Collaborators
Call for Papers | 11th Annual Conference on Comparative Equality and Anti-Discrimination- 2024-National Law University Bangalore
The National Law School of India University and Oxford Human Rights Hub are jointly hosting the 11TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2024 of the Berkeley Center on Comparative Equality and Anti-Discrimination at the NLS campus in Bengaluru from 26th to 28th July 2024. The conference in Bengaluru builds upon the past success of BCCE’s annual conference which in the past has been held in:
- Paris (Sciences-Po 2012)
- California (Berkeley Law 2013)
- Brussels (Université Libre de Bruxelles 2014)
- Shanghai (Jiao Tong University 2016)
- Dublin (Trinity College 2017)
- Melbourne (Melbourne Law School 2018)
- Stockholm (University of Stockholm 2019)
- Cape Town (University of Cape Town 2021)
- Hong Kong (University of Hong Kong 2022)
- Netherlands (Utrecht University 2023).
Is There Hope for Equality Law?
After 10 successful iterations, as the conference travels to South Asia this year, we ask: is there hope for equality law? Inaugurating the global decolonial moment, the nations of the subcontinent constituted themselves into new republics with a lot of optimism and creative energy expended in reimagining and setting up just and fair societies. Giving shape and form to the principle of equality in political, economic and social lives was foremost in their agenda. But today, in the twenty-first century, there are growing concerns in this region, as there are all over the world, about the rise of inequality.
In the recent past, we have witnessed the growing awareness of different conceptions of equality, including substantive and transformative equality, systemic and structural inequality, indirect and effects-based discrimination which have made it possible to respond not only to intentional harms but to institutional harms as well. There has also been an expansion in the canon of identity characteristics protected under equality law. Yet, despite these gains and the centrality of equality to the political and legal order of so many countries, stakeholders around the world are questioning whether the legal right to equality is capable of addressing current inequalities. There are concerns that equality law is not up to the challenges of the climate crisis; ever-increasing wealth and income inequality; with the ever-widening disparities in access to rights and justice on the basis of religion, race, caste, sex and disability; tax injustice; growing informal work, the demonization of migration, the decay of democratic institutions, the power of multi-nationals, or the rise of artificial intelligence. This conference asks the bold question: In light of the doubts on the relevance of equality, is there hope for equality law?
The aim of the conference is to explore whether and how equality law can take the next step forward and offer insights and remedies to contemporary global challenges. Scholars and activists have used equality law to diagnose how laws, policies and programmes have created or enhanced poverty, disadvantage, stereotypes, stigmas, prejudice, oppression, and social exclusion. These laws, policies and programmes have been challenged in domestic, regional, and international courts and decision-making bodies. Although equality law has at best had a mixed record of success and failure, does it still have any untapped promise and potential to ensure that the world is fairer and more just for all peoples? While recognising the severity of current challenges, this conference seeks to explore whether and how equality law can develop to tackle the problems of today and of the future. It aims to bring together leading scholars to consider not only how foundational concepts may be re-thought and reimagined but also how theory and doctrine may evolve in a dynamic and transformative manner to realize the hope of equality law.
We are seeking paper proposals that address the broad questions posed by the conference. We encourage proposals to explore the following concepts and questions:
- the tension between equality and other foundational values such as liberty or other ideologies such as neoliberalism or neocolonialism
- the debates on the aims of equality law, such as debates on redistribution and recognition
- the role of affirmative action in redressing equality harms
- the role of proactive powers and duties
- the role of intersectionality in addressing systemic exploitation and oppression
- the challenges of achieving equality in specific fields of life such as:race, religion, caste, class and age discrimination (as illustration)informal employment and lack of social protectionland, water and material resourcesIndigenous rightslanguage, cultural and ways of lifedecolonization;o disability and ableismo wealth and tax inequalityo family, public life and gendero AI and technologyo citizenship, migration and statelessnesso climate crisiso violence
- the impact of social justice movements on equality law
- the relationship of equality law with rising authoritarianism and democratic decay
- equality and international law
Instructions for submission
We invite submissions for individual presentations as well as panel proposals on the theme of the conference. We also encourage authors of recent monographs and edited collections to submit proposals to have panel discussions of their recent scholarship on the hope of equality law. We encourage submissions from scholars at all stages of their career. We also welcome a wide range of approaches and perspectives including normative, doctrinal, critical and interdisciplinary. Submissions are invited from scholars working in law and allied disciplines of social sciences and humanities.
Abstracts should not exceed 500 words and clearly indicate how your paper fits the theme of the conference, the objectives of the paper and its methodology. Please include a brief biography of maximum 100 words which is suitable for publication on the conference website, including affiliation, your email-address and a link to online bio, if available. Panel submissions should include a title and an abstract for the entire panel as well as titles, abstracts, and author information for all papers. Each panel should contain between three and four papers. The panel can be submitted by any of the authors.
Timeline
- Abstracts are due 1 December 2023.
- The abstracts will be reviewed, and invitations will be sent in February 2024.
- Full papers or presentations will be due on 1 July 2024 from authors whose abstracts are selected. Full papers will be made available to the participants of the conference. Subject to prior approval from authors, their papers and presentations may be posted on the conference website.
Finances
The conference organizers strive to keep the conference fee as low as possible. The fee will likely consist of 400 USD for participants outside India and INR 6000 for persons from India. The conference organizers can regrettably not cover travel and accommodation. Fee waiver may be considered subject to availability of funds. Those wishing to apply for it are required to submit a statement indicating why they require a full or partial waiver.
Contact Us
Please send the abstract and any queries relating to the conference to oxfordhumanrightshub@law.ox.ac.uk