Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Calls for Papers, Funding, and Resources, October 25, 2017

CONFERENCES
Humanities Education and Research Association conference
7-10 March 2018, Chicago, Illinois 
Theme: Humanities through the Ages
The HERA conference program committee invites proposals for presentations at the 2018 conference. The program committee’s theme is designed to incorporate any and all possible connotations: the history and development of the humanities, the changes in the humanities over time, the triumphs of and threats to the humanities, the importance of the humanities, the challenges to the humanities. Also included within the theme is the idea of humanities and humanities education being enriched and enlivened by commitment and dedication from all age levels, spanning the lives of individuals as well as history.
Submissions are encouraged from educators at all levels (including undergraduate/graduate students) as well as all those with an interest in the arts and humanities. Proposals for papers, panels, or workshops (150-200 words) must be submitted through the conference submission portal on the HERA website at www.h-e-r-a.org.
Contact Email: mgreen@sfsu.edu
Deadline for submission: no later than January 25, 2018


The Latina/o Literature & Culture Society of the American Literature Association
San Francisco, CA, May 24-27, 2018
In the past, the Latina/o/x Literature and Culture Society has organized panels that focus on literary genre, single authors, children’s literature, speculative fiction, comparative analyses, as well as cultural studies approaches. This year, we welcome a variety of theoretical and interdisciplinary approaches, as well as a variety of panel types, including traditional paper sessions, roundtable discussions, and sessions dedicated to the teaching of Latina/o/x literature. Given the location of the Conference in San Francisco, we solicit proposals focused on Latina/o/x experiences in San Francisco and the West Coast more broadly.
Deadline: January 8, 2018
Contact Email: cherrera@csufresno.edu


2018 Women's Leadership Summit
Women’s Network (WN) is a grassroots organization that aims to bring women to the forefront at all levels of corporate, community, and civic leadership. Under this mission, WN offers high-impact programming to women in areas of leadership development, professional advancement, and entrepreneurship and helps local businesses and organizations build programming that better serves emerging women leaders. The 2018 Leadership Summit welcomes work in the areas of leadership development for women, gender equity and unconscious bias in the workplace, and thought leadership on advancing women’s lives.
Deadline: January 15, 2018
Email all proposals to WNsummit2018@gmail.com


Joint Journalism and Communication History Conference
This one-day interdisciplinary conference welcomes scholars and graduate students with an interest in journalism or communication history. Innovative research and ideas from all areas of journalism and communication history and from all time periods are welcome. This conference offers participants the chance to explore new ideas, garner feedback on their work, and meet colleagues from around the world interested in journalism and communication history in a welcoming environment.
The final deadline for submissions is January 4, 2018.
Contact Email: eking@loyola.edu


Primary Source: An Interdisciplinary Conference on Memory and Identity
Fontbonne University, in partnership with the Missouri History Museum and sponsored by a National Endowment for the Humanities “Humanities Connections” grant, announces Primary Source, an interdisciplinary conference on the connections between memory—both individual and collective—and identity. We seek proposals that explore these topics from a variety of disciplines, and with a particular interest in the intersection of memory and identity for individuals and communities in migration, whether domestically or transnationally.
Deadline for abstracts is January 5, 2018
Contact Email: cwohlford@fontbonne.edu


Chicano/a Literature, Film, and Culture
Southwest Popular / American Culture Association, February 7-10, 2018, Albuquerque, New Mexico
Panels and individual papers on all aspects of Chicana, Chicano, and Chicanx culture are encouraged for our upcoming conference. The Chicana/o/x Literature, Film, and Culture area tends to be both multicultural and interdisciplinary, and panels and individual papers may explore any issues relevant to Chicana/o/x cultural studies.
Proposal submission deadline: November 15, 2017
email: llinares@css.edu    


Colonial Tourism: sites, resistances and performances
15- 20 July 2018 at the University of Warsaw
The session seeks critical readings of tourist infrastructures of the colonial state which occupied a distinctive position in the development of settler society. Hotels, inns, safari camps, tours, holiday camps, and resorts, together with colonial administrations, shipping, rail and eventual airline companies played critical roles in developing this network. These tourist sites and experiences often constituted a centrepiece of colonial representations and practices, as well as sites to showcase and subjugate indigenous peoples. They also played a key role in colonial violence.
Contact Email: denis.linehan@ucc.ie


Black Communities: A Conference for Collaboration
We are pleased to announce the Call for Proposals for  Black Communities: A Conference for Collaboration.  The event will take place on April 23-25 at the Carolina Theater in Durham, North Carolina.  This multi-disciplinary conference will connect academic researchers and Black Communities across North America and the world.  By creating new collaborations, we will help to document, safeguard and enhance the life of these communities.  Proposals are due November 14, 2017.
Contact Email: blackcommunities@unc.edu


Locating the “Avant-Garde”
Web Conference: Locating the “Avant-Garde”: (Post)Modern Music at the Boundaries in the 20th & 21st Centuries
Conference Dates: April 14-15, 21-22, 28-29, 2018
Throughout the 20th and 21st centuries, the term “avant-garde” has been used to describe myriad artists, genres, styles, and compositions, demonstrating that this term has had wide-ranging and yet socio-culturally specific significance. One of the goals of the recently founded Musical Avant-Gardes Project (MAG Project) is to interrogate what it means to be “avant-garde” as well as what performing the “avant-garde” means, has meant, and might continue to mean for those involved in musical histories and performances of avant-gardism throughout the world.
Proposal Deadline: 1 January 2018
Please direct questions to the above address, or contact Jill Rogers (jillian.rogers@ucc.ie) or Matt Friedman (m.w.friedman@gmail.com). For additional information on the MAG Project, visit our website: http://magproject.org/.


Literature and Intersectionality
We seek proposals that explore intersectional (see Kimberle Crenshaw) approaches to literature. We are interested in relfections on intersectionality as literary practice, as well as papers that engage with literary representations of struggles for racial, economic, and gender justice in the American and global contexts. Papers that engage with the intersection of racial, economic, and other struggles for justice in any area of literature are welcome. We are interested in papers that engage literature as a way of thinking about coalition building. We also invite proposals that explore anti-racist, anti-sexist, and anti-classist teaching practices, curricula, research, theory, and criticism.
Graduate students at all levels and/or independent scholars should send abstracts of no more than 300 words to Sam Sorensen and Joanna Grim at LSJLehigh@gmail.com by October 31, 2017.


Democracy on the Margins: Gender, Citizenship, and the Global Challenge to Democratic Freedoms
20th Annual Women's History Conference at Sarah Lawrence College, March 3-4, 2018
People who have historically been most excluded from the benefits of democratic citizenship are precisely those who have demanded that democratic nations live up to their professed ideals. This year, the 20th Annual Women's History conference will expand upon college’s yearlong discussion of the theme “Democracy and Education” by examining the challenges faced by those who live, work, and struggle on the margins of democracy. We will interrogate the history of democracy and the interplay between citizenship, race, gender, sexuality and inequality.  We ask: if we agree that equality is an important component of a liberal democracy, what impact does structural and systemic inequality have on an individual’s ability to experience the full range of democratic freedoms?
Deadline December 22, 2017.
Send proposals to: tjames@sarahlawrence.edu


Posthuman Ethics
NYU, April 27-28 2018
This Symposium is dedicated to the significance of the posthuman in relation to ethics and applied philosophy. We will address current global issues in order to spark a deep and multilayered analysis of what the notion of “posthuman ethics” implies. This Symposium wishes to engage in posthuman ethical reflections on AI, cyborgs, the digital turn, human enhancement and biotechnologies, genetic privacy, robots, environmental sustainability, drones, non-human animals, space, big data, the global dynamics of human interactions in relation to power and equity, among other topics. We invite your reflections on posthumanism both as a praxis and as a moral stance on the world, as exemplified by its advocacy of environmentalism, cyborg rights, animal personhood, sustainable advanced technologies and ethical economies.
We invite abstracts of up to 200 words and a short bio, to be sent to: NYposthuman@gmail.com
Abstracts should be received by December 31st 2017.


Bridges/Puentes – Digital Humanities Conference
Hosted by the Red de Humanidades Digitales (RedHD), La Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM) and El Colegio de México (Colmex)
26-29 June 2018
The Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations (ADHO) invites submission of proposals for its annual conference on any aspect of digital humanities. The theme of the 2018 conference is “Bridges/Puentes,” and contributions that speak to the theme or that focus on knowledge mobilization, collaboration among scholars and scholarly communities, relationships of North/South scholarship and epistemologies, globalization and digital divides, public-facing and community-engaged scholarship, translation, digital ecologies, hacker culture, and digital indigenous studies are especially encouraged.
deadline: 11:59pm GMT-6 (local Mexico City time) 27 November 2017
Contact email: dh2018@adho.org


Frederick Douglass Bicentennial Interdisciplinary Conference: Re-Imagining Diversity, Multiculturalism, and Social Justice
April 5-6, 2018, West Chester University in West Chester, PA
The Frederick Douglass Institute Collaborative within the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education (PASSHE) invites you to submit abstracts/papers/proposals for the Frederick Douglass Bicentennial Conference scheduled on April 5-6, 2018 at West Chester University. This bicentennial celebration will examine Douglass’ legacy within the contexts of his era and today. Scholars, academics, researchers and intellectuals of diverse backgrounds are encouraged to submit abstracts, papers or proposals related to the conference theme.
Proposal submission deadline: October 30, 2017
Contact Email: asargent@wcupa.edu


Conference on Language, Learning, & Culture 2018 -- Making Research Matter
April 6-7, 2018, Virginia International University
In focusing on “Making Research Matter,” our aim is to involve a diverse group of practitioners, researchers, policy-makers, community members, and other stakeholders in a multidirectional sharing of interests, values, and expertise. We especially welcome proposals involving projects in which the investigators considered the users and uses of their research from the very beginning and made decisions accordingly—from action-research projects conducted by individual teachers in their classrooms to larger-scale funded endeavors where collaborative teams had an eye toward wider public engagement and policy impacts, and everything in between.
Proposals for paper and poster presentations, workshops, colloquia, and panel discussions are invited until December 4, 2017.
Contact Email: kevin@viu.edu


TANGIBLE – INTANGIBLE HERITAGE(S): Design, social and cultural critiques on the past, present and the future
University of East London, UK, 14 – 15 June 2018
In a time when the construction of New Towns are on the agenda in UK, cities re being built from scratch across China and climate change threatens historic cities and landscapes. Socio-economic change means industrial communities crave investment and political answers from the likes of Donald Trump while tourist cities adapt to attract the holiday dollar. In this context, what can we mean by ‘heritage’?
This conference defines heritage as a physical, social, political, economic, artistic, media and design issue. It attempts to open up the concept of heritage to a reading that is interdisciplinary and concerned with the past, the future, physical infrastructure and community structures.
ABSTRACT DEADLINE: 01 March 2018 


Comics Arts Conference WonderCon
The Comics Arts Conference is now accepting 100 to 200 word abstracts for papers, presentations, and panels taking a critical or historical perspective on comics (juxtaposed images in sequence) for a meeting of scholars and professionals at WonderCon in Anaheim, CA, March 23-25, 2018. We seek proposals from a broad range of disciplinary and theoretical perspectives and welcome the participation of academic and independent scholars.  We also encourage the involvement of professionals from all areas of the comics industry, including creators, editors, publishers, retailers, distributors, and journalists. The CAC is designed to bring together comics scholars, professionals, critics, and historians to engage in discussion of the comics medium in a forum that includes the public.  Proposals are due December 1, 2017, to our submission website at http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/BZ8XV9N or by email to comicsartsconference@gmail.com.


Comics and the Graphic Narrative: The Future of the Movement
August 5-7, 2018, Kent State University
This call for proposals seeks original, interdisciplinary research in areas related to comics and graphic novels. Possible topics, as related to the conference theme, include (but are not limited to): Cultural constructions of comics and graphic novels; Reaching diverse readers via comics and graphic novels; Historical perspectives on comics and graphic novels ; Visual history/storytelling in comic books and graphic novels; Comics and graphic novels as propaganda directed at youth ; The future of  comics and graphic novels Political issues in comics and graphic novels.
January 15, 2018: Deadline to submit abstracts


Curating Resistance: Punk as Archival Method
February 9 - 10, 2018, University of California, Los Angeles
We invite submissions from all punk scholars, public intellectuals, music writers, resistant historians, critical students, misfit theorizers, queer thinkers, feminists, archivists, freaky writers, and anyone interested in the ways in which punk’s resistant musical literacies are protected, preserved, and circulated as well as the stakes of these practices. Papers, or alternative format presentations, may address any aspect of “curating resistance” and “punk as archival method,” such as punk identities that have been made marginal--queer, trans, punks of color, disability, women, among others--and expressive modes, intersectional oppression and inscriptive methods of resistance, the politics of punk preservation, critical approaches to punk media, dismantling white supremacy in archives or in punk, punk pedagogies, hidden transcripts and markets, border/genre transcending and crossing, resistant literacies and DIY genealogies, tensions between punk and institutions, punk as a space for historical presence/presents and futurities, and punk as space for the creation/maintenance of alternative genealogies, unconventional families, and community dialogue.
Send email inquiries to Jessica Schwartz, conference organizer and program committee chair, at schwartz@humnet.ucla.edu, and Candace Hansen, conference and program logistics/community outreach, at candacelhansen@ucla.edu.
Please submit proposals via a single Word document [labeled last name_first name.docx] to PunkUCLA2018@gmail.com by November 15, 2017


DEMOGRAPHIC, ECONOMIC, AND SECURITY CHALLENGES IN AFRICA
Tennessee State University, April 5-6, 2018
In its 2017 world population report, the Population Division of the United Nations indicated that half of the world’s population growth in the world between now and 2050 will likely come from Africa, and that the most populous country in Africa, Nigeria, will overtake the United States to become the third-most populous country in the world by 2050. Even though Africa’s population is expected to grow and its share of the world’s population is anticipated to increase from 17% in 2017 to 26 % by 2050, the population will grow slowly than in the past given substantial reductions in levels of fertility. Despite such prospects, recent discussions on sustainable development and demography place a lot of emphasis on the central role that Africa is playing in determining the future size and distribution of the world population and international migration flows/patterns.
This year’s conference will provide a platform for scholars and other participants to critically examine, within a multidisciplinary framework, contemporary African challenges pertaining to demographics, economics, and national security.
Contact Email: aoyebade@tnstate.edu


Refusing to Fight: Reimagining War in Global Perspectives
Violence and war play starring roles in historical research and education. They are also rich fodder for film and television, and books about war dominate the history sections of bookstores. Conflicts between and within groups, nations, empires, and kingdoms reveal political tensions, cultural divisions, social upheavals, and individual identities. This conference will explore the myriad ways and reasons why people decide not to fight, from the ideological and religious, to the personal and practical. It will also assess how states, professions and populations have responded to deserters or draft-dodgers and the extent to which perceptions, representations, and the treatment of these men and women have changed over time. By bringing together scholars who engage with alternative visions of violence, war, heroism and manliness, we hope to gain a broader understanding of how ‘refusing to fight’ has been experienced, studied, and remembered around the globe, from Antiquity to the 21st century.
Please submit your proposal/abstract to the conference organizers, at refusingtofight@gmail.com by December 31st, 2017.


Transnational belonging and subjectivity-in-process: contemporary women artists’ encounters with space
June 26 - 27, 2018, New York City
Current nation-state narratives and rising nationalisms demand that we rethink notions of space and politics of access to space. We live in a crisis in which we need to renegotiate and reframe the potential of solidarity and cooperation. This session destabilises the politics of space to consider ways in which female agency disrupts borders and activates concerns around different forms of belonging, citizenship and transnationalisms. What is the potential of common and ethical figurations of being, human and non-human?
The session acknowledges women’s generous encounters with space and their commitment to decolonize spaces through solidarity, hospitality and friendship. Contributions will signal transversal thinking and artmaking that articulates ‘in-between’ and co-affective models of belonging and questions current forms of citizenship and national subjectivity.
Paper proposals should include an abstract (max 500 words) and short biography (max 250 words), and be sent to Basia Slwinska (b.sliwinska@fashion.art.ac.uk) and/ or Catherine Dormor (catherine.dormor@rca.ac.uk)
Deadline: Dec 15, 2017


Making a Spectacle: Audience and the Art of Engagement
Friday April 20, 2018, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
What is spectacle and how do we represent it? What is at stake in these representations? How does spectacle operate in different spaces and eras? For centuries, artists and critical thinkers have reflected on the nature of spectacle and its role within society. In a famous philosophical text, French theorist Guy Debord offered one possible definition, which highlights the impact of visual culture on communal relations. His observation remains equally relevant today, in a world saturated with images and divertissements that clamor for our attention and influence the ways we interact with each other.
Please send your abstract and a current CV to rutgersarthistorygradsymposium@gmail.com by December 30, 2017. 


Precarity and Possibility: Imaginings of a New Academy
In the past two decades, scholarship in the humanities has sought to redefine the boundaries of disciplinary work in order to expand the ways we both produce and disseminate knowledge. The emerging field of interdisciplinary humanities attempts to bridge established disciplines with new modes of scholarly inquiry in order to account for the limitations of traditional disciplinary work. The Interdisciplinary Humanities Graduate Student Conference engages with this emerging field as one of the few interdisciplinary humanities programs in the nation that is located at the University of California, Merced, the first research university built in the U.S. in the 21st century. This unique formation of humanities makes UC Merced an important site to engage in discussion about precarity and possibility of the human, field formation, and the role of the university. 
Please submit 300 word abstracts for: individual papers, presentation, poster, or panel proposals, along with a brief CV, or any questions to: ihgradconference@ucmerced.edu. The deadline to submit a proposal is December 15, 2017. The conference will be held on March 16-17, 2018 at the University of California, Merced. For more information visit: http://ihgradconference.ucmerced.edu


Art, Design and Cultures - Complexity and Contradiction – Conference
University of Arizona, Tucson, 22 – 23 February 2018
Today, Donald Trump promises investment in infrastructure, China continues to urbanize and pollute, global cities are often surrounded by slums. Alongside this, the arts and cultural industries seen as economic motors and media representations of urban life continue to stigmatize and idealize in equal measure. To understand the way we live in cities, towns and communities today requires what Jane Rendell calls ‘critical spatial practice’ – critique from different disciplines: the arts, cultural studies, social sciences and the design sector – architecture, landscape design etc.
Abstracts due: 05 Dec 2017
Contact Email: info@architectturemps.com


Alter-Globalizations
Dominant narratives in today’s global sociopolitical landscape reinforce a dichotomy between globalization and anti-globalization. This dichotomy ignores not only the connections between these two poles as they have emerged in the Global North but also the plethora of alternatives formulated by communities and movements at the margins. Alter-Globalizations foreground myriad imaginaries from below, presenting a host of possibilities for another world.
This conference will be held March 2nd & 3rd 2018 at the University of California, Santa Barbara.


Dangerous bodies - Look out! Fashioned bodies on the boundaries.
Art & King's College, London.
5 – 7 April 2018
This panel explores the cultural intersection between bodies, fashion and transgression. Bodies are political players in culture -  what role do fashioned bodies play in resistance, in meeting governmental boundaries or institutional power? Fashion is an aspect of modern warfare. Style can defend and attack in cultural space. How do fashioned bodies occupy the grey area between social control and the resistance to power? In relation to Judith Butler and Athena Athanasiou’s idea of the ‘performative in the political’ (2013) this session would like to consider how fashioned bodies - which are ‘revolting’, ‘laughing’, ‘unruly’, ‘grotesque’, ‘contaminating’, explicit, or silent and still – enact resistant strategies of protest.
Contact Email: j.m.willson@leeds.ac.uk
Please send 250 word abstract to the panel convenors by deadline of Nov. 6th.


Borders and Borders Walls, A New Era? (In)security, Symbolism, Vulnerabilities
September 27-28, 2018, Montreal, Quebec
The fall of the Berlin Wall and the following redefinition of international relations were meant to open an age of globalization in which states and sovereignty were to become obsolete and borders irrelevant. However, in the wake of 9/11, borders came back into focus and new ones were drawn. With this trend, border barriers, fences, and walls that were expected to be a historical symbol of a collapsed bipolar system were erected at a pace that defied all predictions. Many of them are armored, cemented, monitored, filmed, and patrolled. In this new environment, walls, razor wire, sensors, helicopters, barriers, (wo)men, border guards and drones have become the accessories of hard borders in an open world, complemented and reinforced by policies oriented towards the double movement of externalization and internalization of borders and the hardening of visa and asylum policies.
Deadline for abstract submission: March 31, 2018
Contact Email: BordersandWalls@gmail.com


CUNY Games Conference
Game-based pedagogy uses some of the best aspects of collaborative, active, and inquiry-based learning. With the growing maturity of game-based learning in higher education, the focus has shifted from whether games are appropriate for higher education to how games can be best used to bring real pedagogical benefits and encourage student-centered education. The CUNY Games Network is dedicated to encouraging research, scholarship and teaching in this developing field. We aim to bring together all stakeholders: faculty, researchers, graduate and undergraduate students, and game designers.
Questions? Get in touch at contactcunygames@gmail.com! Visit our conference website as www.cunygames.org.
Proposals are due on November 1st, 2017.



PUBLISHING
Encyclopedia of Sexism in American Cinema
This volume takes up the topic of sexism within American Cinema from its early days of film production to the present. Covering over 400 entries that include films, producers, directors, actresses, actors, genres, as well as conceptual and critical interpretations, the breadth and depth of this volume will generate some highly significant material for both academics and general audiences alike. The first of its kind—indeed there are no other encyclopedias that cover this topic anywhere on the market—The Encyclopedia of Sexism in American Cinema is a timely companion to the ever-growing field of critical film studies.
The first deadline for contributor submissions will be 1 December 2017.


Women Writing Diaspora: Transnational Perspectives in the 21st Century
In the 21st century, female authors have moved beyond the margins of male-authored texts to command new spaces of prominence in the African literary canon. African women's creative artistry has garnered critical acclaim through distinguished awards, best-selling fiction and penetrating insight into women's experiences. Many contemporary women writers share the distinction of living in the west, which confers education and new and expanded opportunities along with paradoxical realities of otherness. The essays in this volume will explore a range of themes on all aspects of African women's writing from the diaspora.
250 word abstracts and a 150-word biography are due by January 31, 2018
Contact Email: sackeyfior@wssu.edu


Barack Obama: Presidential Years, Impact and Legacy
The conclusion of any presidential term presents an appropriate  time for assessment. We pose the question: What are legacies of the Barack Obama administrations (2009-2017)? Eschewing the vulgarity of “pro–” and “con–” analysis, we seek a balanced range of submissions. Seeking a “balanced range of submissions,” we acknowledge our  responsibility to produce assessments that serve as “the judgement of history” (Van Ranke, Theory and Practice of History, 1973). The UK Public Records Office’s “thirty year rule” (1967) was founded on the assumption that time and distance permit such assessments of history. At the same time, we acknowledge such legal innovations as the Freedom of Information Act (1979), and social developments such as twenty-first century “hacker culture” to permit the “history of the present” which Walter Benjamin foresaw during the age of radio (Illuminations, 1968).
Submissions should include a 300 word abstract and a 2-page CV with full contact information. They should be sent to obamalegacies@gmail.com before 30 November 2017.  


Critique in the Trump Era
The contentious campaign, election and presidency of Donald Trump have yielded two inextricable phenomena. On one hand, readers across the globe confront a daily onslaught of events, information and misinformation; on the other, we have seen a similar glut of affective and politically active responses and commentary—on both sides of the issue. This maelstrom of information has overwhelmed traditional forms of scholarship that rely on time, reflection, and hindsight to process. In this spirit, Contemporaries at Post45 is launching a series of atypical critical pieces that directly address this moment of political turmoil and attendant questions about the public value of intellectual work.
We invite short collaborative essays, dialogues, arguments, creative critical works, and other forms of scholarship that emphasize interdisciplinarity and build new coalitions both in and out of the academy.
We invite pieces of 1500-2500 words, with flexibility depending on form, to be submitted on a rolling basis beginning in November 2017 with the goal of beginning publication in January 2018. Please email submissions, with 1-2 sentence bios for each contributing author, to gwald@gwu.edu and thomasdolan@gwu.edu.


Streetnotes 26: From Above: The Practice of Verticality
Streetnotes is seeking submissions for 26th issue titled “From Above: The Practice of Verticality.” Cities may be old or new, modern or post-modern, global or not quite yet so. Cities are in fact increasingly vertical, and verticality may be regarded as a universal asset: the higher (the building, hill or mountain), the better (the view, for all purposes). In an attempt to critically engage with a possibly arising culture of verticality, we are interested in collecting a variety of contributions that explore the experience and imagination attached to gaining a bird’s (or God’s) eye view. Particularly, we aim at understanding how and in which ways the production and/or consumption of verticality helps document the contemporary urban experience.
Submit all articles through Streetnotes submission system, by January 1st, 2018


Hip Hop and Social Justice
The goal of the volume is to document and analyze the ways in which Hip-Hop music, artists, scholars, and activists have discussed, promoted, or supported social justice challenges. This manuscript is soliciting chapters that examine the relationships between Hip-Hop culture, political engagement, and social justice work over the last four decades. This volume will explore topics such as: Hip Hop and education, Hip Hop and the Black Lives Matter movement, Hip Hop and mass incarceration and the prison industrial complex, Hip Hop and electoral politics, Hip Hop and gender and sexuality, Hip Hop and public policy, Hip Hop, race and racism and Hip Hop and social justice globally.
Email either Lakeyta Bonnette-Bailey at lbonnette@gsu.edu or Adolphus G. Belk, Jr. at belka@winthrop.edu with an abstract of 500 words or less of your proposed contributions and a brief bio. All abstracts are due November 15, 2017. 


Race and Revolution Series
Age of Revolutions invites submissions on the history of race and revolution. We welcome posts (800-1200 words) on historical topics relating to race as facilitating, mitigating, and/or limiting influence in revolutionary experience. Put another way: How has race impacted revolutionary experience, identity, and action?
Submissions on the American, French, Haitian, and Latin American Revolutions are welcome as are posts on other revolutions too. Age of Revolutions has organized similar series around issues like “Bearing Arms in the Age of Revolutions,” “Sexing Histories of Revolution,” and “(In)forming Revolution: Information Networks in the Age of Revolution.”
Proposals are due by December 1, 2016.
Please send your pitch through the following link: https://ageofrevolutions.com/submissions/


Asia and Globalization: Trends and Challenges
In collaboration with the , Asian Studies Minor Program at University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, NETSOL is pleased to call for papers for a special issue (Spring 2018) on Asia with a theme, Asia and Globalization: Trends and Challenges.   This special issue aims to attract papers from both the presenters at this symposium and other scholars with research on this field. Scholars with research consistent with this theme are encouraged to submit their papers for the special issue on Asia.
Deadline to submit papers: February 15, 2018.
Contact Email: tamer.balci@utrgv.edu


Using Television’s Material Heritage
The medium of television is responsible for a huge accumulation of redundant objects: old TV sets and VTRs (and the tables to put them on), superseded production equipment and software, videotape and film that is no longer useable. This raises various questions, from practical to historiographical and methodological ones.
What are we to do with this accumulation of objects, many of which are not easily recycled?  How do we approach these objects as historical records? What tools and research practices do we need to go beyond the written cultures of television and address its non-discursive experiences? How do we articulate historical narratives that may emerge out of television’s non-discursive past? What histories do these objects tell, other than what’s already been documented and preserved in written and audiovisual archives?
See www.viewjournal.eu for the current and back issues. 
Contact Email: support@viewjournal.eu





FUNDING
Short-Term Library Research Grants
Each year, the Friends of the Princeton University Library offer short-term Library Research Grants to promote scholarly use of the research collections. These Library Research Grants, which have a value of up to $4,000 plus transporations costs, are meant to help defray expenses incurred in traveling to and residing in Princeton during the tenure of the grant. The length of the grant will depend on the applicant’s research proposal, but is ordinarily up to one month.
Prospective grantees are urged to consult the Library’s home page at http://library.princeton.edu/ for detailed descriptions of the collections.
Library Research Grants awarded in this academic year are tenable from May 2018 to April 2019, and the deadline for applications is January 31, 2018.


Robert H. Zieger Prize for Southern Labor Studies
The Southern Labor Studies Association is currently accepting submissions for the Robert H. Zieger Prize for Southern Labor Studies. SLSA awards the Zieger Prize at the Southern Labor Studies Conference for the best unpublished essay in southern labor studies written by a graduate student or early career scholar, journalist, or activist. The Zieger Prize includes a $500 award.
Contact Email:  portiz@ufl.edu
Deadline: November 6, 2017


American Art Academic Awards
Terra Foundation academic awards, fellowships, and grants help scholars in the field of American art realize their academic and professional goals and support the worldwide study and presentation of the historical art of the United States. Award opportunities are listed at the following URL: https://www.terraamericanart.org/what-we-offer/grant-fellowship-opportunities/2018-terra-foundation-academic-awards-fellowships-grants/


Short-Term Fellowships
Short-Term Fellowships provide opportunities for individuals who have a specific need for the Newberry’s collection. Postdoctoral scholars, PhD candidates, and scholars with terminal degrees who live and work outside of the Chicago metropolitan area are eligible. Most fellowships are available for one month with a stipend of $2,500 per month. Awardees may combine their Newberry fellowship award with sabbatical funding or other stipendiary support.
The URL above lists the different fellowships available. All appear to have a December 15 deadline.


Wolfsonian Fellowship Program
The Wolfsonian–Florida International University is a museum and research center that promotes the examination of modern visual and material culture. The focus of the Wolfsonian collection is on North American and European decorative arts, propaganda, architecture, and industrial and graphic design from the period 1850-1945. The United States, Great Britain, Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands are the countries most extensively represented. There are also smaller but significant holdings from a number of other countries, including Austria, Czechoslovakia, France, Japan, the former Soviet Union, and Hungary. The collection includes works on paper (including posters, prints and design drawings), furniture, paintings, sculpture, glass, textiles, ceramics, lighting and other appliances, and many other kinds of objects.
Applicants are encouraged to discuss their project with the Fellowship Coordinator prior to submission to ensure the relevance of their proposals to the Wolfsonian’s collection. For more information, visit https://www.wolfsonian.org/research-library/fellowships or email to research@thewolf.fiu.edu.


Summer Graduate Student Research Fellowships
Graduate Studies, Holocaust, Genocide, and Memory Studies, Human Rights, Jewish History / Studies, Modern European History / Studies
The Museum’s Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies is pleased to invite applications for Graduate Student Research Fellows, designed for students accepted to or currently enrolled in a master’s degree program or in their first year of a PhD program. Students who have completed more than one year of doctoral work will not be considered.
The Mandel Center welcomes applications from students in all academic disciplines, including history, political science, literature, Jewish studies, psychology, sociology, geography, and others. Students outside the field of History are encouraged to apply.
Applications are due January 1, 2018.


International Fellowship Program at the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
The program supports projects that are directly related with the diverse institutions and the rich collections of the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin. The fellowships, which can be held to up to three months, allow researchers to work on their individual projects and to establish professional contacts at the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin. The program aims to strengthen the position of the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin in the international research network and therefore specifically addresses scholars who do not reside in Germany. The fellows will also gain the opportunity to participate in the academic and cultural life at the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin and the Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz.
Deadline: December 31


Philip Jones Fellowship for the Study of Ephemera
The Ephemera Society of America invites applications for the Philip Jones Fellowship for the Study of Ephemera. This competition, now in its eleventh year, is open to any interested individual or organization for the study of any aspect of ephemera, defined as minor (and sometimes major) everyday documents intended for one-time or short-term use.
Applications are due December 1, 2017.


Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives
The Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives is pleased to invite applications to its annual Fellowship Program for the 2018-2019 academic year. The Marcus Center's Fellowship Program provides recipients with month long fellowships for research and writing at The Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives, located on the Cincinnati campus of the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion. Applicants for the Marcus Center Fellowship Program must be conducting serious research in some area relating to the history of North American Jewry. Typically, Marcus Center Fellowships will be awarded to post-doctoral candidates, Ph.D. candidates who are completing dissertations, and senior or independent scholars.
Contact Email: dherman@huc.edu


Charles Montgomery Gray Fellowship
The Charles Montgomery Gray Fellowship provides access to the Newberry’s collection for PhD candidates or postdoctoral scholars. This fellowship is open to applicants in all areas of study appropriate to the library’s collection. Preference will be given to those working in the early modern period or Renaissance, as well as in English history, legal history, or European history.
Short-Term Fellowships are available to postdoctoral scholars, PhD candidates, and those who hold other terminal degrees. Short-Term Fellowships are generally awarded for 1 to 2 months; unless otherwise noted the stipend is $2,500 per month. These fellowships support individual scholarly research for those who have a specific need for the Newberry's collection and are mainly restricted to individuals who live and work outside of the Chicago metropolitan area. The deadline for short-term opportunities is December 15.
Contact Email: research@newberry.org


Lemelson Center Fellowships and Travel Grants
Through its fellowships and travel grants, the Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation supports research projects that present creative approaches to the study of invention and innovation in American society. Projects may include (but are not limited to) historical research and documentation projects resulting in dissertations, publications, exhibitions, educational initiatives, documentary films, or other multimedia products. The URL below lists several different fellowship opportunities.
Contact Email:  hintze@si.edu
Applications Due: 1 December 2017


Jefferson Studies Fellowships
Short-term fellowships are awarded for one or more months, and open to academics from any country, subject to selection by committee.  Successful applicants will be working on Jefferson-related projects. Priority is given to Jefferson-related projects using the Digital Archeological Archive of Comparative Slavery or Getting Word.
Fellows are expected to be in residence at the Robert H. Smith International Center for Jefferson Studies (ICJS), where they will have access to Monticello's expert staff and research holdings at the Jefferson Library as well as those of the University of Virginia.
Application deadlines are November 1 and April 1.


WORKSHOPS
Urban Utopias: Memory, Rights, and Speculation
21 February 2018, 9-17, Utrecht University
Utopia articulates dreams of a better life and anticipations of the future; as social dreaming, utopia combines communal and imaginative experimentation. Reconfigurations of the past often help to constitute utopian urban visions of the future.  A heuristic, speculative, mobile approach to cultural texts (literature, film, art, other texts) capturing these phenomena can help us understand better the shifting layers and many kinds of movements, in the plural sites of  the urban, in an uneven, globalized world and earlier in the colonial and precolonial periods. We are looking for papers that focus on Asia or Europe or both and allow for a comparative approach with a focus that could be on any aspects of the intersection of utopia, memory, and the urban. Rights (human, environmental and animal) and the domain of speculative arts (science fiction, dystopia, utopia) are also relevant subjects in this workshop.
Please send abstracts of 300 words and a biographical note of the same length (for the workshop digital brochure) by 15 November 2017 to B.Bagchi@uu.nl.


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