Wednesday, December 27, 2017

Calls for Papers, Funding, and Resources, December 27, 2017

CONFERENCES
Matter(s) of Fact
Graduate Student Conference presented by the Graduate Programs in Comparative Literature, Hispanic Studies, and Theory & Criticism at Western University
March 15-17, 2018
This year’s conference seeks to explore and cultivate the discussion surrounding our relationship to the factual, the tangible, and the constructed. Whether this discussion be through the lens of material culture, institutional, literary or cultural narratives, an inspection of how we approach facts weaves together linguistics and theory in a way that we hope builds bridges between disciplines and encourages ways of thinking that mediate—rather than aggravate—the unique perspectives that arise from such a multidisciplinary topic. This conference invites papers on literary, historical, and theoretical investigations of narratives, hermeneutics, and myths of facts and truths.
We are asking those interested in delivering 15 to 20-minute presentations to submit abstracts of no more than 300 words to themattersoffact@gmail.com by January 3, 2018.


Greenpeace 2018 Action Camp
Tampa Bay, FL, area from March 3-8, 2018
The creative, peaceful, diverse solutions and movements that we foster at Action Camp are even more necessary and vital.  We need people with skills and courage to gather, who are willing to stand up and speak out, who are willing to work for the liberation of brown and black folks, who love this world and will work tirelessly to protect it and make it a more just and equitable place for all.
Greenpeace is offering a six-day, intensive training to learn and share non-violent direct action skills like climbing, arts & creative resistance, kayaktivism, and blockades. We are looking for people who want to create change in their communities and in the world.
Applications will close on January 6, 2018


Migrant Knowledges: Concepts, Voices, Spaces
April 20-21, 2018, UC Berkeley
With particular but not exclusive focus on the inter-area and interdisciplinary history of the Americas from the 19th to the 21st centuries, this workshop seeks to explore the possible methodologies, narratives, and empirics that facilitate a critical engagement with the concept of “migrant knowledges.” Emphasis is put on migrants as producers and conveyors of knowledge. The format of the workshop is intentionally interactive and aims to engender exploratory discussion and debate through three consecutive roundtables. The goal is to develop a set of approaches that enable further research on and analysis of migrant knowledge and its histories. Toward this end, we will request submission of short pre-circulated statements, while the workshop will be dedicated mostly to discussion.
The deadline for proposals is February 5, 2018. Please send a statement of one page addressing one set of questions together with a brief academic CV in a single PDF file to Heike Friedman at friedman@ghi-dc.org. If you have questions concerning the workshop, please contact Andrea Westermann at westermann@ghi-dc.org.


New Approaches to Gender and Migration in the US Since 1900
The Department of History at Bates College invites papers on the topic of gender and migration to and/or within the United States since 1900. Presentations will be part of a day-long graduate symposium showcasing the work of emerging scholars (recent PhD or ABD) from historically underrepresented groups.
Abstract, CV, and statement should be submitted in PDF format by email to History2018@bates.edu by January 20, 2018. Questions may be addressed to Professor Caroline Shaw at cshaw@bates.edu.


2018 Africa Conference
University of Texas at Austin, March 30 – April 1, 2018
The 2018 Africa Conference will critically examine Africa’s political leadership and extant institutions vis-à-vis the continent’s history of underdevelopment, present challenges, and future trajectories within the global political economy. Scholars are invited to interrogate the nature and evolution of leadership and institutions in Africa from the pre-colonial era to contemporary times. Institutions in this context are broadly defined to include formal and informal institutions, including history, traditions and culture of the people.
Proposal deadline: January 20


Place and Displacement: The Spacing of History
The International Network for Theory of History (INTH) is happy to announce that its third network conference will take place in Stockholm from August 20th-22nd, 2018, at Södertörn University. The goal of the conference is to gather theorists and philosophers of history from around the world and to offer a forum for scholars to exchange ideas, questions and resources. The main focus of this conference is on place and displacement and its relevance for the theory of history.
Those interested in taking part in the conference are asked to send in abstracts of 300-500 words either in docx or pdf format to inthstockholm@gmail.com, by January 15th, 2018
Contact Email: inthstockholm@gmail.com


Crossing the Boundaries
Binghamton University's Art History Graduate Student Union seeks Dreamreaders (as in Haruki Murakami's dystopian novel Hard-boiled Wonderland and the End of the World) and others, from multiple disciplinary backgrounds, for the 26th annual Crossing the Boundaries conference, which will engage the concept of [pl.]: Exploring the Multiple. The recent return to issues of the real and unreal, stimulated by disourses around art objects, techno-culture, and systems theory, prompts continued searching for multiple, unstable, even incoherent statuses and possibilities, and their relocation within an ocean of networks. The making of such alternative constellations is the aim of this gathering.
Submissions due by Friday, February 9, 2018
Contact Email: buctbconf@gmail.com


Graduate Student Conference in U.S. History
Friday May 4 and Saturday May 5, 2018, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
The world has constructed America, just as America has shaped itself--as a real and imagined place, constructed and reconstructed by transnational forces and figures.  America materializes through global alliance and opposition, immigration, urban development and rural economies, organization, consumption, and rebellion.  In whose image is America constructed? Where are its borders? The American History Workshop at the University of Michigan invites papers for its 2019 graduate student conference themed "Constructing America: Identities, Infrastructure and Institutions." Our keynote speaker is Professor Laura Barraclough (Yale University), hose work integrates archival, ethnographic, and spatial analyses of urban life and culture.
Please submit an abstract of 150-300 words and a CV to the conference planning committee at umusgradconference@gmail.com. Proposals are due by Sunday, January 28, 2018.


Performance, Politics, and Play
September 13-16, 2018, New York City
In response to the “performative turn” in the humanities, the ongoing interest in bio- and body-politics, and the growing attention to leisure, dance, and sport studies, the International Society for Cultural History invites paper and panel proposals for its 2018 annual conference on Performance, Politics, and Play. Scholars working on any historical period or location are encouraged to explore this theme.
DEADLINE: January 15, 2018.
Contact Email: isch2018@gmail.com


Translating Feminism: Multi-disciplinary Perspectives on Text, Place and Agency
University of Glasgow, United Kingdom, 13-15 June 2018
The focus of this Conference is on the translocal, transcultural and translingual connections between such texts and their authors in both historical and contemporary contexts.  In what ways do texts connect activists operating in different local environments? How are actors influenced by intellectual and political sources originating from other localities and different cultural environments? What happens to a text when it is adapted to a new environment and is politically operationalised in different circumstances? 
Please send us your abstract by 16 March.


Disco! An Interdisciplinary Conference
University of Sussex, 21-23 June 2018
From its origins as a New York City subculture amongst gay, black and Latino/Latina practitioners, and its transition into the mainstream, to its subsequent lives across international scenes, disco poses pivotal questions about the entanglements of art, industry, identity, and community. Disco is the site of many significant and lasting debates in popular culture, including those surrounding the figures of the DJ and the diva, the status and significance of dancing bodies, the tension between what is authentic and what is synthetic, and the historic maligning of society’s others. This major interdisciplinary international conference aims to examine and expand these debates.
Please send a 300-word abstract, along with a short biography and indication of the format of your proposed presentation to: disco@sussex.ac.uk by Friday 2 March 2018.


Collection Thinking
12-14 June 2018, Concordia University, Montreal
What is a collection? As a concept that signifies both an action (of gathering things together) and an entity (the things gathered), the collection raises important questions about how we create meaning through acts of selection, arrangement and description. The idea for this conference originates in a project that considers the literary historical and cultural significance of the author’s personal collection (of books, papers and ephemera) as a repository of materials with culturally-informed organizational structures.
Please send proposals of no more than 250 words for individual papers and panel sessions, plus a one-page CV for each presenter as Word or PDF attachment, to Chalsley Taylor chalsleytaylor@gmail.com by 1 March 2018.


#Metoo: Oral histories of sexual violence and harassment.
2018 OHA Annual Meeting. October 10-13, 2018, Montreal
From #believesurvivors to #me too, narratives around harassment, abuse, and sexual violence have become increasingly prominent in the media over the last few years. This panel draws on feminist oral history practice to explore critical questions relating to oral narratives of harassment and abuse. Oral history, with its ability to capture personal experiences and intimate narratives, is well-suited to document experiences of sexual violence, harassment, and abuse. The sharing of traumatic memories can also raise a range of ethical issues for narrators and interviewers. This panel explores how interviews exploring experiences of harassment and abuse, particularly within institutions and organizations, can shed new light on contemporary efforts to achieve justice for survivors.
Please send abstracts for papers to kja45@sfu.ca by January 14th.


The Women, Gender, and Sexuality Network of the Social Science History Association
“Histories of Disadvantage. Meanings, Mechanisms, and Politics”
44th Annual Meeting of the Social Science History Association,
Phoenix, Arizona, November 8-11, 2018
While we encourage contributions​ related to regional themes of borders and borderlands, histories of rebellious actions, and mobilization for rights (widely defined),​ we ​will be happy to consider papers or panels from all geographical regions that address ​related themes, offer new theoretical frameworks, and present materials that allow us to compare, contrast, and illustrate the complexity of rights (including, but not limited to legal concepts of gender/sexual power and norms, international/national dimensions of social/cultural/political/legal constructs of human rights, refugees and power/empowerment) as well as border crossings (including but not limited to the complexities of physical trespassing of nation-state borders, cultural ruptures, gendered and sexual transgressions).
Submission Deadline: February 16, 2018
For additional general information, please see www.ssha.org.
Dominique Grisard     dominique.grisard@unibas.ch
Jadwiga E. Pieper Mooney   jadwiga@email.arizona.edu


Ethics and social engagement of researchers
Often, starting a new research project or fieldwork begins with a self-reflective survey by the researcher of their own research practices. The URMIS graduate symposium, which is held once a year at Paris Diderot University or the University of Nice, France, offers to Ph.D students, senior Ph.D candidates and post-doctoral fellows in Anthropology, Sociology, History, Geography, and Ethnic Studies, an opportunity to present their reflections on methodological and ethical questions about research practices in their own fields. For the 2018 edition, which will take place at the University of Nice, we invite submissions on researchers’ attitudes to social and political engagement and on the ethics of research. The symposium will allow researchers to discuss their past or present research projects in the light of such questions, which are too often left unaddressed and remain hidden in our publications.
Those interested in presenting their research at this conference should send a 250-word abstract to jddurmis2018@gmail.com no later than February 1st, 2018.


Critical Disaster Studies conference
New York University, September 21-22, 2018
Disasters loom large in the human imagination. From the Biblical story of Noah’s flood to science fiction fantasies of nuclear war, every generation, it seems, envisions its own spectacular destruction. Today, in the context of climate change, urbanization, and global conflict, anxieties about environmental devastation, financial crisis, and terrorism join enduring fears of earthquakes, hurricanes, droughts, and disease. This conference will bring together new and established scholars of disaster and related themes in order to evaluate the state of this emergent field and to chart pathways for future research. We seek contributions from the humanities and interpretive social sciences that examine disaster in social, political, cultural, architectural, environmental, and transnational perspectives.
Please submit abstracts of approximately 300 words, along with a CV, to critical.disaster.studies@gmail.com by January 8, 2018.


Africans, African Americans, Academia, and Activism
Bowie State University, April 5-7, 2018
The Gloria Richardson Humanities Initiative at Bowie State University, therefore, invites individual paper and panel proposals for presentations at its second conference. Presentations may address any aspect of African, African American, or African Diaspora involvement in activism and/or protest on college or university campuses, or for demands for access to education at any level at any time anywhere in Africa, the United States, and/or the African Diaspora.
Please submit individual paper proposals (c.300 words), panel proposals (c. 500 words) and a brief CV (2pp. maximum) for each presenter by Saturday, February 17, 2018 to Humanities@bowiestate.edu


Resistance and Recovery across the Americas
Society for the Study of American Women Writers conference, November 7-11, 2018 | The Westin Denver Downtown
From Anne Hutchinson to Phillis Wheatley to the Crunk Feminist Collective, American women writers have historically engaged in resistance in their creative/activist works, pushing against restrictive gender norms, a patriarchal culture that devalued women in political and economic spaces, the tradition of silence and silencing, and any number of other obstacles that limited women’s voices and their freedom to explore the full breadth of their unique identities. At the same time, from scholars like Frances Foster to the initiatives championed by the likes of Legacy and the Colored Conventions Project, scholars also work toward recovery, eager to rediscover the works of American women writers who were active in their resistance, insightful in their social and political critiques, and responsive to the dominant discourse on race, protest, social justice, as well as identity, etc. emerging during their lives.
The deadline for proposals of approximately 250 to 300 words is Friday, February 16, 2018


Entangled Others – Other Entanglements: Critical Perspectives on the Relationship of Racism and Antisemitism
International Conference, Berlin, June 24-26, 2019
Critical inquiry into the relationship of racism and antisemitism is more urgent than ever. Due to the global resurgence of authoritarian movements and governments, the proliferation and acceptance of racist and anti-Semitic views is dramatically increasing. At the same time, the missing connection between the struggles against racism and against antisemitism has been all too often a serious political handicap. Despite all this, the conceptual and historical relationship of racism and antisemitism remains both strongly contested and unclear. Historical research often presupposes a specific understanding of this relationship but hardly ever inquires into it or even acknowledges it.
Entangled Others – Other Entanglements invites participants to discuss the potentials and pitfalls of an analysis of the relationship between racism and antisemitism. The conference aims to approach this relationship from a wide range of topical, theoretical, and methodological perspectives.
Deadline for the proposals is February 4, 2018.
Contact Email: felix.axster@tu-berlin.de


Disabled Latinx Movement
May 31 - June 2nd 2018, Austin, Texas
CNLD & the Coalition of Texans with Disabilities invite proposal submissions from individuals, academics, practitioners, activists, advocates, community members, self-advocates and more (with preference given to those who identify as Disabled Latinx). You can submit proposals to present individually, via teleconferencing and/or in groups (of no more than four individuals). Through submissions we hope to uplift the experiences of individuals who identify as Disabled, Deaf, and/or Blind and Latinx (Chicanx, Hispanic, Latinx, Mexican, Mestiza, etc.), and those representing other marginalized identities such as undocumented, LGBTQIA, elder, Afro-Latinx, and neurodiverse.
Submission deadline: March 1st 2018
Contact Email: Washiekatorres@gmail.com


Annual Conference on Women in Higher Ed
Women's & Gender Studies at Texas Tech University proudly announces a call for proposals for the 34th Annual Conference on the Advancement of Women, which will take place on the campus, April 20, 2018. Guest Speakers include; Dr. Norma Cantu (Chicana/o & Latina/o scholar and Favianna Rodriguez, artist/activist. We invite papers and panel proposals that explore the manifold meanings of movement and change as connected to, created by, and/or caught up in the presence of women's, gender, and identity issues, in both contemporary and historical frameworks. Interdisciplinary proposals, as well as those from disciplines and specialty subject areas are also encouraged to submit.
Submit an 250-word abstract including the proposal title, name, affiliation and contact information for all author(s) on or before February 23, 2018.
Contact Email: womens.studies@ttu.edu


Society for U.S. Intellectual History
The Society for U.S. Intellectual History invites proposals for its 2018 annual conference. This year’s event will be held November 8-11, 2018, at the Warwick-Allerton Hotel, a historic hotel on Chicago’s Magnificent Mile.The 2018 theme is “Anti-Intellectual Sensibilities.” We interpret this broadly to include topics such as “alternative facts,” unreason, anti-elitism, ignorance, the distortions of ideology, thoughtlessness, post-truth phenomena, and anti-establishment movements. We expect to see proposals touching on science, culture, politics, race, gender, government, society, education—covering all time periods and various events in U.S. history.
For submission guidelines go to  https://s-usih.org/conference/2018-call-for-papers/
Contact Email: USIH2018@gmail.com


Art, Materiality and Representation
Royal Anthropological Institute
In particular, this panel will explore the political possibilities opened up by a conversation between art and infrastructure. Do infrastructural publics (Collier et al. 2016) mark the emergence of new forms of political consciousness for art today? How do conceptualisations of infrastructure as a public good define a new civil contract (Azoulay 2008) for artistic practices? How do the visual, material and digital politics of infrastructure reconfigure art spaces, audiences and curatorial roles? This panel welcomes ethnographic accounts of, and creative engagements with / through / about infrastructure, that speak to anthropological theories of materiality, agency, and the politics of representation.
Please send abstract proposal (max 250 words) by 8th January 2018 to the online form:https://nomadit.co.uk/rai/events/rai2018/conferencesuite.php/panels/6072


Innovative Perspectives in History Conference
The History Graduate Student Association at Virginia Tech invites proposals for papers to be presented at the 21st Annual Brian Bertoti Innovative Perspectives in History Graduate Conference. This interdisciplinary conference will be held at the Virginia Tech Graduate Life Center in Blacksburg, VA on March 30-31, 2018. A one-page abstract and a short vita should be submitted by January 10, 2018. Please send to: Ellen Boggs atvthgsa@gmail.com.


Teaching on the Extreme Right: New Challenges, Fresh Approaches
University of Northampton, Park Campus, 12 April 2018
The impact of extreme right politics has changed in recent times, creating new challenges for those who teach on this topic. This one-day conference will bring together academics and practitioners to discuss fresh approaches to teaching about the extreme right, as well as reflecting on established approaches.
If you would like to submit a paper for the conference please contact Daniel Jones (Daniel.Jones@Northampton.ac.uk) or Dr Paul Jackson (Paul.Jackson@Northampton.ac.uk) with an abstract or any queries you may have before 15th February 2018.


(dis)COVERING DISCOURSES
Transdisciplinary Conference in University College Cork, Ireland, 18th / 19th May 2018
Given the symbiotic relationship we have with discourses whereby we are unremittingly surrounded by, embedded in and informed by discursive ensembles, whilst simultaneously actively shaping them, the aim of this transdisciplinary conference is to offer researchers a space to explore and challenge current discourses. We wish to think not only about current hierarchies and the power they affirm, but also about what is absent in the current discursive regimes. Since discourse is perceived as having formative, regulatory and authoritative characteristics, in this conference we aim to cover ongoing discourses and to peel back layers and thus dis-cover discourses hidden in society.
Potential themes on Discourse that we would like to address: Architecture/Arts, Borders, Body, Class, Gender, Health, Identity, Institutions, Integration, Knowledge, Literature/Literary Critique Economy, Migration, Multilingualism, Nature/Animals, Precarity, Religion, Silence, Social Media, Space, Violence.
Please submit your abstract (max. 300 words) and a brief biography (max. 70 words) to discoursescfp@gmail.com by 12th February 2018.


(Un)common worlds: Contesting the limits of human–animal communities
7-9 August 2018 – Turku, Finland
Humans and other animals share spaces and create communities together. They touch each other in various symbolic and material ways, constantly crossing and redrawing communal, ethical and very practical boundaries. As of late, this multifarious renegotiation of human-animal relations has sparked intense debates both in the public arena and in academia. With this Call we invite you to discuss and develop ideas about human-animal worlds both common and uncommon. We invite presentations to this interdisciplinary conference from various fields, including but not limited to social sciences, law, arts and humanities, and natural and environmental sciences.
CFP is open until 28 February 2018.


Moving Monuments: History, Memory and the Politics of Public Sculpture
On-going events in the United States concerning the removal of Confederate soldier-statues, together with similar discussions in the UK linked to various memorials and monuments from the age of Empire, make clear that despite living in an era of increasingly 'virtual memory', public sculpture continues to draw – and provoke – engaged political debate. Prompted by these contemporary ‘culture wars’, and in order to provide a space in which scholars, heritage professionals and interested members of the public might gather to interrogate the politics of commemorative sculpture, the Manchester Centre for Public History and Heritage is organising a two-day conference for 20 – 21 April 2018.
Abstracts of c.300 words, plus a one page CV should be sent to Sam Edwards at s.edwards@mmu.ac.uk by Friday 26th January 2017.


Exploring photography in the History of the immigration to the USA
The workshop aims at taking this discussion further, with a particular focus on “the work” photography is doing in culture. It attempts to establish an understanding of the role of photographs in the many small narratives that make up the history of the migration to the USA from the 1850s-1980. It may thus be thought of as a contribution or a piece to a greater, transnational, migration-historical jigsaw puzzle that is as yet barely begun.
A 500-word proposal and a curriculum vitae (including email address) should be received by the organizers by January 15, 2018. The proposal and CV should be sent as attachments to an email sent to Sigrid Lien at Sigrid.Lien@uib.no
Questions may be addressed to Justin.Carville@iadt.ie


Real and Imagined Borders: People, Place, Time
Central Michigan University in Mt. Pleasant, Michigan, April 6 - 7, 201
We invite graduate students from across the social sciences and the humanities to submit proposals for papers or panels that adopt an interdisciplinary or transnational approach, but we are also seeking papers or panels that approach historical topics in more traditional ways. All submissions must be based on original research. In keeping with the theme of the conference, individual papers will be organized into panels that cross spatial, temporal, and disciplinary boundaries.
The final deadline for submission is February 11, 2018.
Contact Email: histconf@cmich.edu


F*ck May ’68, Fight Now: Exploring the Uses of the Radical Past from 1968 to Today
This conference takes the 50th anniversary of 1968 as an occasion to critically assess the various ways in which radical events and movements since the 1960s have been retold, not just in historical writing, but through a broad range of cultural media, activities, and practices, including by activists themselves. It also seeks to explore how the representation of the past is involved in the struggle over cultural and political meaning in the present, over what counts as history and what does not. Finally, it aims to reflect on how memory and history continue to inform political activity in the contemporary moment. In doing so, the conference organisers invite contributions from activists, historians, and other scholars, but also artists, journalists, curators, archivists, educators, filmmakers, musicians, and cultural workers.
Contact Email: fmay68fightnow@gmail.com





PUBLISHING
Afro-Intellectualism: Past, Present, and Future Dimensions
Africology: The Journal of Pan African Studies seeks  submissions focused on: the African intelligentsia, the African brain drain, decolonizing education in Africa and the African world community, institutional development and support for the African intelligentsia, the internationalization of African intellectualism, organic scholars within the African intelligentsia, the sociology of African intellectualism, the scholar-activist tradition/practice within the African intelligentsia, critical biographical profiles of the African intelligentsia, book reviews, the motion and behavior through space and time of African intellectualism in relationship to energy and force (the physics of African intellectualism), interviews, art and the African intelligentsia, Afro-futurism, the African intelligentsia absent of egocentricity, the conscious and unconscious dynamics/psychology of African intellectualism, etc. All relevant topics and subtopics will be considered for this edition.   


Breaking the Fourth Wall: Live Performances at Museums and Other Cultural Institutions
Collections: A Journal for Museum and Archives Professionals
In an age when technology and virtual experiences monopolized our attention, a conscious attempt has been made to reinstate the importance and success of ephemerality. For instance, in recent years, performance art has increased in popularity, particularly within the context of live exhibitions within museums. Internationally, museums have chosen to emphasize the nuanced resurgence of performance through exhibitions in on site concert halls or interactive displays. For this issue, we invite articles that discuss live performances, their meaning, and their effect in engaging communities within and around museum collections. Contributors are invited to investigate the broadest range of performance from dance, music, theatre, film to video, installation, and projection mapping.
Authors should express their interest by submitting a 150-word abstract to the guest editors and the journal editor by February 15, 2018.
Contact Email: jdgsh@rit.edu


Countercultures
FORUM Postgraduate Journal of Culture & the Arts
Art, fashion, literature, cinema and music have historically been vehicles to express and disseminate dissent. From the murals of Diego Rivera to those of Banksy, and from the Romantic Jacobins to the South African EFF, dissenting and countercultural movements have used the arts to stand against powerful social institutions. Likewise, countercultural movements have found their way into the politics of those who want to preserve the existing social structures. Donald Trump’s promise to ‘Drain the Swamp’ while reinforcing conservative values appealed to a large mass of US voters who saw the rise of the left as a menace to their lifestyle. In this context of anti-establishment sentiment, large corporations, too, have made use of the aesthetics of dissent for private gain, as was the case with Pepsi Co.’s controversial Kendall Jenner ad. Issue 26 of FORUM seeks contributions from a range of disciplines that engage with the notions of counterculture and dissent.
Please e-mail your article, a short abstract and your academic CV in separate, clearly labelled DOC(X). files to editors@forumjournal.org by 26 February 2018.


Queering Girlhood
This Special Issue of Girlhood Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal takes up the project of bringing the queer girl from the margins to the center of girls’ studies by inviting articles from various disciplinary perspectives that explore the experiences and representations of queer girls, as well as the impact of queer girl cultures on the understanding of girlhood. When they appear in public discourse or popular representations, which happens far too infrequently, queer girls usually act as representative of a problem to be solved, a phase to grow out of, or a minor point within a larger debate about young female sexuality. In considerations of queer youth, they again find themselves marginalized or silenced by a seemingly inescapable focus on their male peers. Theirs are, in short, voices we too rarely hear and experiences too rarely figured. Yet, because they are so obviously marginalized by and/or resistant to normative constructions of gender and sexuality, queer girls provoke a number of important critical questions for definitions of youth and of girlhood.
Please direct inquiries to Barbara Jane Brickman (bjbrickman@ua.edu) and send expressions of interest and/or abstracts to her by 19 February 2018.
For more information, see www.berghahnjournals.com/girlhood-studies.


Jewish Studies and the Jewish Question after Trump
The election of Donald Trump has brought the “Jewish Question” back onto the intellectual agenda in a way that it has not been for decades. If the term was employed first by non-Jews in the context of emancipation, it was subsequently put into frequent use by Jews themselves to describe the vexed relationship between Jewishness and the dominant social formations of the modern world—whether Christianity, Europe, the West, the Nation State, Enlightenment, etc. The Jewish Question named, and names, a fundamental and unstable self-other relationship that is central to the production of both Jewish and non-Jewish identities in modernity.
Prospective contributors should email abstracts of 500-600 words by April 30, 2018.
Michael Rothberg (mrothberg@humnet.ucla.edu) and Neil Levi (nlevi@drew.edu)


T(r)opophilia: Haunting/Haunted Places
The academic journal Messages, Sages and Ages (http://www.msa.usv.ro/), based at the English Department, University of Suceava, Romania, invites contributions for an issue focusing on t(r)opophilia: sense/love of place.
We welcome papers in English and invite proposals (no more than 9,000 words) from senior as well as junior academics. Please send the manuscript, an abstract (cca. 200 words) with 5 keywords, and a brief curriculum vitae as attachments to BOTH msa@usv.ro and msa_usv@hotmail.com.
Deadline: June 1, 2018.
Contact Email: 


Memory, Amnesia, Commemoration
Special Issue, ELN (English Language Notes)
This proposed special issue takes as its focus the topic of memory and its cognates, amnesia and commemoration. Memory has witnessed a remarkable efflorescence in the past few years, both in scholarly work in the humanities and in popular efforts to address the collective forgetting of traumatic pasts. While the interrelationship between history (the study of past events) and memory (the ways in which the past is remembered and accessed), and the role of institutions such as museums and monuments in memorialization have been staple topics of academic historiography, scholars in recent years have turned their attention to how catastrophes—colonization, slavery, war, genocide, and disease pandemics—impact memory, and how traumatic events are remembered by victims, survivors, and descendants.
Papers are due July 31, 2018


Food Fights: A Global Perspective
Zapruder World: An International Journal for the History of Social Conflict
This volume of Zapruder World will focus on how the production, distribution, and consumption of food—as well as its scarcity—have assisted or resisted the spread of state and commercial power in an increasingly “globalized” marketplace. We call for studies which move beyond the utilization of food as a proxy for analyzing (inter)national political or economic relationships, focusing instead on food’s contributions to the construction of global commercial or imperial systems and the ways in which global power dynamics have engendered forms of popular mobilization and resistance via food, food systems, and food cultures.
Abstracts in English (300-600 words) shall be sent to submissions@zapruderworld.org by January 15, 2018


Asian Diasporas Issue
This special issue aims to curate essays that theorize and narrate Asian diasporas through feminist frameworks. We invite contributors to foreground gender as they engage conceptually with Asian diasporas as spaces of un-unified and uneven gendering and queering experiences, identities, histories and hegemonies, compelling individuals to endlessly translate multiple forces into daily interactions. What are the local and global gendering moments in Asian diasporic transnationalism? How do we investigate “politics of destination” (Chu, 2010) in the often-described fluid movement of Asian diasporas? What unique struggles do Asian diasporas encounter as a historically feminized group in colonialist discourse? In what light should we study Asian diasporas beyond the Global North’s imaginaries of “Asia” and its related gender identities, localities, populations, and bodies? 
Scholarly articles and inquiries should be sent to guest issue editors Lili Shi and Yadira Perez Hazel at AsianDiasporasWSQ@gmail.com. We will give priority consideration to submissions received by March 1, 2018. Please send complete articles, not abstracts.
Contact Email: wsqeditorial@gmail.com


Ecofeminist Science Fiction
Chapter proposals are invited for an edited volume titled Ecofeminist Science Fiction. Interested authors should send a 300-word abstract, 200-word biography, and sample of a previously published chapter or article to dvakoch@meti.org by February 1, 2018.
Contact Email: dvakoch@meti.org


Creative Discovery in Human Robot Interaction: Technology and Techniques
Human–robot interactions (HRI) is an established, but rapidly-growing, field with many focal points. Whether we focus on humanoid robots, robot systems, or robotics incorporated in the human body, research in the area shares one theme: interaction. How do we relate to robots, how do robots relate to us, and how might we more clearly define the complexity of interaction with robots? While those working in science and engineering have taken the field of HRI to exciting areas, robots can be researched also as social actors, regardless of their technical attributes. This special issue aims at disseminating cutting edge HRI work emerging from domains that are less represented in mainstream HRI venues, work that is informed by performance research, the arts, architecture, design, literature and philosophy. This Special Issue seeks provocative and radical HRI scholarly work that will evoke novel methodical approaches to pressing robotic interaction questions, offering the community a chance to shake up our current thinking and practice, and to provide fresh insights into HRI.
Interested authors should submit a 100-word proposal through the journal website. Final papers to be submitted by April 1, 2018.
Contact Email: pfinn@ucalgary.ca


The Green Critique: A Collection of Critical Essays
Ecocriticism began as a result of the environmental revolution that had begun around the 1960s after the publication of Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring. It focuses on the importance of the relationship between human beings and nature, how human beings are both effecting and affecting nature and vice versa. With time, it started to lay significant impact over various other disciplines as well and emerged as an umbrella term in critical, cultural and academic discourse. As an ‘earth-centered approach’, it intersected environment and culture and calling for collaboration between natural scientists, writers, literary critics, anthropologists, historians, academicians and more.
15th January– Final Submission


Theatre and Performance in Muslim Worlds
This special issue of Ecumenica will focus on theatre and performance in Islamic countries and cultures, and (re)presentations of Muslim bodies on stage. The issue will interrogate the multiple ways in which Muslim bodies are (re)presented on stage, in everyday life, and in the archive.
Deadline for submissions is 30 January 2018.
Please address submissions or enquiries to clpamment@wm.edu and Hesamedin.Sharifian@tufts.edu


Art and Freedom of Expression
The upcoming issue of Seismopolite Journal of Art and Politics will discuss how different artistic forms and strategies may advance freedom of expression and be used to confront censorship in contexts worldwide. Contributors from diverse disciplinary backgrounds are invited to submit articles, reviews or interviews that address this theme through a high variety of possible angles and art forms.
We accept submissions continuously, but to make sure you are considered for the upcoming issue, please send your proposal/ draft, CV and samples of earlier work to submissions@seismopolite.com within January 14, 2018
Current issue: www.seismopolite.com


Beyond Love
For its twenty-ninth issue, InVisible Culture: An Electronic Journal for Visual Culture invites scholarly articles and creative works that address the complex and multiple meanings of love. For IVC 29, we invite contributors to explore visual representations and contestations of the concept of love. What does love look like? How is it displayed? What are the conditions and/or/of possibilities for love? Where do we locate love’s value? Can love bear witness to violence? Are love, erotics and abjection mutually exclusive? What distinguishes love as either ideal or rational? Who or what dictates this categorical distinction and how do these types of love appear? We welcome papers that interrogate/excavate/trace love as concept and/or practice in visual culture.
Please send completed papers (with references following the guidelines from the Chicago Manual of Style) of between 4,000 and 10,000 words to invisible.culture@ur.rochester.edu by January 15, 2018.


Disability & Shame
RDS is a peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary, international journal published by the Center on Disability Studies at the University of Hawai‘i at Manoa. This Call for Papers proposes a forum on the subject of shame and disability, broadly conceived. It is hoped that through critical discourse addressing the historical and current contexts, contributing factors, effects, and responses to shame, greater understanding of this phenomena will diminish discrimination and violence.
We look forward to receiving your submissions. If you have any questions, please contact
Contact Email: rdsj@hawaii.edu


Disney Theme Parks and Performance
We are seeking interested scholars to join an anthology/edited collection of essays focused on performance and Disney theme parks, tentatively titled Carousel of Performance: The Tourist as Actor in the Mouse’s Kingdom. Several authors have already contributed work to this collection in progress, and discussions have begun with an interested academic publisher.
If you would like to contribute an article, please submit a 500 word abstract to the project’s co-editors, Jennifer Kokai (jenniferkokai@weber.edu) and Tom Robson (trobson@millikin.edu) by Monday, January 22. We also invite interested parties to email us to discuss possible ideas.




FUNDING
James W. Scott Research Fellowship Awards
The James W. Scott Regional Research Fellowships promote awareness and innovative use of archival collections at Western Washington University, and seek to forward scholarly understandings of the Pacific Northwest. Fellowship funds are awarded in honor of the late Dr. James W. Scott, a founder and first Director of the Center for Pacific Northwest Studies, and a noted scholar of the Pacific Northwest region. Up to $1000 funding is offered in 2018 to support significant research using archival holdings at WWU’s Center for Pacific Northwest Studies (CPNWS), a unit of Western Libraries Heritage Resources.
Applications are accepted from individuals in doctoral programs as well as individuals who have finished the Ph.D.
Applications for the award will be reviewed after April 1, 2018.
Contact Email: Ruth.Steele@wwu.edu


Research Travel Grants: Sallie Bingham Center, Rubenstein Library, Duke University
The David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library is now accepting applications for our 2018-2019 research travel grants: http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/research/grants-and-fellowships/.
Of particular interest to the fields of Women’s, Gender, Feminist, and Sexuality Studies, the Sallie Bingham Center for Women’s History and Culture offers Mary Lily Research Grants for research in these areas. The Sallie Bingham Center documents the public and private lives of women through a wide variety of published and unpublished sources, including personal and family papers, organizational records, print sources such as books and periodicals, and audiovisual materials. Particular strengths of the Sallie Bingham Center are feminism in the U.S., women's prescriptive literature from the 19th & 20th centuries, girls' literature, zines, artist's books by women, gender & sexuality, and the history & culture of women in the South.                                                                                                           
The deadline for application is January 31, 2018 by 5:00 PM EST.


Winterthur Research Fellowship Program
Winterthur is once again offering short-term “Maker-Creator” Fellowships. These short-term fellowships are designed for artists, writers, filmmakers, horticulturalists, craftspeople, and others who wish to examine, study, and immerse themselves in Winterthur’s vast collections in order to inspire creative and artistic works for general audiences.
Fellowship applications are due January 15, 2018. For more details and to apply, visit the Research Fellowship web page or e-mail researchapplication@winterthur.org.


Digital Humanities
The German Literature Archive Marbach, the Klassik Stiftung Weimar, and the Herzog August Library Wolfenbüttel collect, preserve, and provide access to more than 500 years of German and European cultural history. The three institutions are calling for applications for several fellowships in the field of Digital Humanities, ideally lasting six months (at least three, a maximum of twelve). The programme is open to all disciplines and is directed towards young scholars (graduates at Master level) from Germany and abroad. Applicants must be working on a project linked to the interests and collections of at least one of the three institutions and make use of methods and techniques from the Digital Humanities (e.g. Markup Methods for Electronic Editions, Stylometry, Topic Modelling, Visualisation). Prior to the application it is recommended to contact the respective collection department for further information on the holdings of interest.
Application deadline: January 15



No comments:

Post a Comment