Sunday, January 28, 2018

Calls for Papers, Funding Opportunities, and Resources, January 28, 2018

CONFERENCES
Animals in the Humanities conference
Roanoke College, Virginia, Dates: March 23–24, 2018  
The human condition has always been defined in relation to the animal, from the ancients to contemporary “post-humanist” thinkers. Yet our relationships with animals have always been ambivalent and ambiguous. Pampered as pets, raised and killed in horrendous conditions as food, we idolize, exploit, and overlook them. Patriarchal culture has often linked animality with women (and the indigenous) and rationality with men (and civilization). To challenge some of these traditional practices and categories, recent studies of animals in culture have raised important theoretical questions about what constitutes the humanities. For example, why has there been an “animal turn” in the humanities? Why are so many intellectuals challenging the human-animal binary? Are animals no longer the “absolute other”?
Submission deadline: February 15, 2018
Contact Email: mdharris@roanoke.edu


Prison, Power, and Protest in Black History
This call for papers is for a proposed panel for the upcoming 103rd meeting of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH) in Indianapolis, IN between OCT 3-7 2018. (The panel has not yet been submitted to ASALH and I am currently collecting abstracts for the submission.) Once assembled, the panel will focus on themes of black legal confinement across the 20th century, and attempts to resist, protest, and dismantle unfair systems of incarceration. Papers on convict labor, imprisonment, parole, and execution are welcomed including work on broader themes such as mass incarceration, the war on drugs, and sentencing disparities. More specifically, papers that explore the depth of the experience of convicts, resistance to the impact of incarceration, and movements, ideologies, or cultures of opposition, are most fitting.
To apply as a panelist, please submit a CV and a short (500 word or less) abstract of the paper you would like to present by MARCH 10 to (dflowe@wustl.edu). 


Race and Intersecting Feminist Future
The Biennial Seneca Falls Dialogues is a collaborative effort to reinvigorate Seneca Falls as a site of feminist activism and intellectual exchange. Rather than featuring presentations of papers, the organizers invite presenters to lead structured dialogues aimed at fostering collaboration and insightful conversation among students, faculty, and activists. We invite students, faculty, and community activists to participate in a weekend of dialogue.
Proposal Deadline: April 30, 2018. Proposals will be accepted through our submission form, which is detailed below and accessible here:  https://airtable.com/embed/shrq7eJ2RjqO36lQA?backgroundColor=blue


Oral History Association Annual Meeting
The Oral History Association invites proposals for papers and presentations for its 2018 annual meeting and the second meeting outside the United States to be held at Concordia University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
As oral historians we explore and analyze how our interviews are shaped by the current climate and context that surrounds us when we record our stories.  We also believe that contemporary conversations can and will shape our annual meeting.  Events in the past year have reaffirmed OHA’s commitment to actively cultivating our organization as a space to fight inequality.  As oral historians and as members of OHA we “remain committed to documenting personal narratives of complex and diverse histories” and have reaffirmed our fundamental values of respect, empowerment, diversity, engagement, and inclusion. The Program Committee welcomes broad and creative interpretations of the conference theme.  We especially encourage presenters to think about innovative delivery models including dramatic performance, interactive sessions, and the use of digital media.
Paper Submission Deadline: January 31, 2018.
Contact Email: oha@oralhistory.org


Can a liberal education make you a better discerner of truth?
May 3 - 5, 2018, Mount Royal University in Calgary, Alberta
It seems as if we're awash in information. From the moment we wake until we turn off our phones at night, we are bombarded with images, messages, news and information from a confounding number of sources. The entirety of the world's collected facts, seemingly left unadulterated only for us to interpret and justify, never feels more than a few taps away. Today, ``alternative”, ``fake” or ``ideologically” driven news sources compete for audience attention and loyalty, often using emotion to rally people toward a certain political cause or issue. In the face of this, citizens often feel disoriented, unsure of where to turn to understand the world. They report an increasing mistrust in institutions of all kinds, including the courts, government, media organizations, universities, and ``experts”.
deadline: March 5th, 2018
Contact Email: kdharamsi@mtroyal.ca


Ev’ry Body, This Time: A Sexuality Studies Conference
University of California, Berkeley, April 12-14, 2018
“Ev’ry Body, This Time.” The elision in ev’ry gestures in multiple ways: to the bodies that have been exempted in various iterations of sexuality studies, and to our quixotic desire to (re-)emplace them. It refers as well to the shifting and ever-proliferating fact of bodies: the way that apparent gaps may not represent incompleteness, but point instead to troubled standards of perceiving or evaluating wholeness; that filling a gap can thus provisionally flesh out bodies that are at once legible and illegible. Race and gender, in their mutable complexities, sit at the core of these questions. Our apostrophe calls to a multitude of bodies, recognizing the potential for thinking through, substituting, re-visioning, and, ultimately, holding space for, bodies that exceed categorical legislation and rhetorical disciplinarity.
The submission deadline is Feb 7, 2018.
Please direct all INQUIRIES to cssc@berkeley.edu


History of Education Society
ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO, OCTOBER 31-NOVEMBER 4
The Program Committee for the 2018 Annual Meeting of the History of Education Society invites proposals on all topics related to the history of education, in any period or setting. The Committee defines education broadly to include all institutions of socialization—mass media, voluntary organizations, and so on—as well as schools; universities; learned and/or scientific societies; libraries, museums, and other cultural institutions; vocational and/or corporate training enterprises; after-school and out-of-school learning environments; international organizations; and technology-mediated systems of education. We invite proposals for individual papers, complete paper sessions, panel discussions, or workshops.
To submit a proposal, please go to https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/HES2018.
Proposals are due on or before March 15, 2018


American Political History Institute Graduate Student Conference
Boston University Department of History, April 6 - 7, 2018
Paying close attention to the way that politics and public policy structure everyday life, the American Political History Institute invites scholars to present work that engages in analysis of policy as well as the interconnectedness of personal networks and political endeavors, with an eye on the horizon: constructions of policy communities, political networks, personal relationships, and national and international connections at critical junctures in U.S. history.
Individual paper or panel proposals should be submitted in the form of a 300-500 word abstract by Friday, January 26, 2018
Contact Email: dshorten@bu.edu


Intersectionalities/Interconnections/Liminalities
The Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, the College of Arts and Humanities, and the University of West Georgia (UWG) invite you to celebrate the 33rd Annual Interdisciplinary Conference in the Humanities, October 25-27, 2018. We welcome submissions from across the Humanities, Fine Arts, and the Social and Natural Sciences, dealing with INTERSECTIONALITIES/INTERCONNECTIONS/LIMINALITIES and the many relations and intersections between them. Papers, exhibits, performances and screenings may be submitted by scholars, graduate students, writers, artists, and performers. 
Proposals are due by May 15th, 2018.
Contact Email: azapata@westga.edu


Placing Gender. A Workshop on Gender and Environmental History
Date: 10-12 December 2018
Location: Melbourne, Australia
Gender remains an under-developed area of inquiry in environmental history. Despite Carolyn Merchant's provocative 1990 article on gender and environment in the Journal of American History, little has happened to address this fact. This workshop aims to bring together scholars working in this area in order to advance the study of gender in environmental history. We hope to attract submissions which cover a range of time periods and diverse geographical areas.
Submissions due by 15 February 2018
Contact Email: events@rcc.lmu.de


Aesthetics and Poetics in the History of Political Thought
The uneasy distinctions between poetics, aesthetics and politics raise many important issues for historians of political thought. Can we sharply distinguish political and aesthetic concerns throughout history? Are political theories always determined by the languages and conventions in which they are uttered? What relationship does material culture have to the history of political thought? Aiming to explore these and related questions, the organisers of the 11th Annual Cambridge Graduate Conference in Political Thought and Intellectual History, scheduled for Wednesday, June 13, 2018, invite submissions for presentations on the theme ‘Aesthetics and Poetics in the History of Political Thought.’
The deadline for proposals is March 1, 2018.
Contact Email: mmh53@cam.ac.uk


Crosscurrents of Commensuration: An interdisciplinary conference
Crosscurrents of Commensuration will explore commensuration – in its widest possible sense – as a focus of critical analysis across the social sciences and humanities.  Construed broadly, commensuration involves equating units or entities judged in the first instance to be essentially different and incomparable with one another.  Such operations of same-making – along with corollary processes of differentiation and distinction – are fundamentally generative aspects of sociocultural life, and have proven to be highly fecund as both objects and optics of analysis across the social sciences and humanities.
Please submit an abstract of 200-300 words by February 15, 2018.  Abstracts should be sent to Trenholme Junghans (ftj23@cam.ac.uk).



FUNDING
The Library Company of Philadelphia Fellowships
The Library Company, located in Center City Philadelphia, holds over half a million rare books and graphics that are capable of supporting research in a variety of fields and disciplines relating to the history of America and the Atlantic world in the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries. Fellows share opportunities to participate in the Philadelphia region’s vibrant intellectual life while conducting their research in the print, graphics, and manuscript collections of the Library Company and other local institutions.
The library offers dissertation and short-term research fellowships. Please visit the above URL for more information about the funding opportunities and whom to contact with questions.


Grant Opportunities: Eleventh Annual ASMEA Conference
The Association for the Study of the Middle East and Africa (ASMEA) is pleased to offer Research and Travel Grant opportunities in conjunction with its Eleventh Annual Conference being held November 1 - 2, 2018 in Washington D.C.
The Research Grant Program is designed to stimulate new and diverse lines of discourse on topics that deserve greater attention within the regions of the Middle East and Africa. Grants of up to $2500 will be awarded. Program guidelines and qualifying research topic areas can be found on the ASMEA website here.
The deadline to apply for grants is April 15, 2018.
Questions can be directed to info@asmeascholars.org or 202-429-8860.


Center for Communal Studies Annual Prizes & Research Travel Grant
The Center for Communal Studies at the University of Southern Indiana annually invites submissions for its prize competition for the best undergraduate and graduate student papers on historic or contemporary communal groups, intentional communities and utopias. Submissions may come from any academic discipline and should be focused on a topic clearly related to contemporary or historic communal groups or utopias.
Graduate Paper or Thesis or Dissertation Chapter
Author of the best graduate paper or thesis or dissertation chapter will receive $500. The annual deadline for submission is March 1. The prize winner will be announced in April 2018.
Research Travel Grant
The Center for Communal Studies at the University of Southern Indiana annually invites applications for a Research Travel Grant to fund research at the Communal Studies Collection at USI's David L. Rice Library.
Please direct inquiries and send application materials as email attachments to Casey Harison at charison@usi.edu


Visiting Summer Research Fellowships at UNC’s Wilson Special Collections Library
The Wilson Special Collections Library at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Libraries is pleased to announce that it will award up to eight short-term summer research fellowships in the amount of $1,250 to support intensive, innovative, and impactful research use of its collections.
The application deadline is February 15, 2018.
Contact Email: wilsonlibrary@unc.edu


2018 American Folklife Center Awards and Fellowships
*Archie Green Fellowships of up to $35,000 each to support new, original, independent field research into the culture and traditions of contemporary American workers and/or occupational groups within the United States.
*The Gerald E. and Corinne L. Parsons Fund Award to increase awareness of the ethnographic collections at the Library of Congress and to make the collections of primary ethnographic materials housed anywhere at the LOC available for the needs and uses of those in the private sector.
*Henry Reed Fund Awards to support activities directly involving folk artists, especially activities that reflect, draw upon, or strengthen the collections of the American Folklife Center.
Contact Email: ngro@loc.gov


Charles Redd Center Grants and Fellowships
The Charles Redd Center for Western Studies at Brigham Young University is pleased to announce multiple awards for 2018 that are available for research and public programs related to Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, or Wyoming. Please see the descriptions below.
Follow the link to https://reddcenter.byu.edu/Pages/Apply-for-an-Award.aspx for application instructions. Applications for 2018 are due by 11:59 p.m. MST on March 15
If you have any questions about the application process or about submitting your application, please contact Amy Carlin at 801-422-4048 or amy_carlin@byu.edu. If you have questions about the substance of your application you may contact either Brenden Rensink at bwrensink@byu.edu or Brian Cannon at brian_cannon@byu.edu.


Residence Grant at the Center for Urban History
The program includes five one-month residence grants for young researchers, working on their PhD thesis or preparing them for publishing, and five two-week residence grants for advanced researchers. The program also provides for three residences in digital urban history, jointly with the Lviv Interactive project, an online-encyclopedia representing the history of Lviv through places and spaces. The researchers are expected to have an interest in preparing materials for the project while placing their own research focus within the spatial aspect of Lviv and engaging digital methods to study the topic under analysis.
The residence grants are offered to researchers of various fields in the humanities from different countries. We especially encourage historians, culture studies scholars, and anthropologists.
Application deadline March 15, 2018
Contact Email: grants@lvivcenter.org


Gerald R. Ford Scholar Award (Dissertation Award) in Honor of Robert M. Teeter
The Gerald R Ford Scholar award in honor of Robert M. Teeter is an annual award of $5,000 Given to a doctoral student to support dissertation research in any field related to any aspect of the United States political process and public policy during the last half of the 20th century. Of special intrest is the role and analysis of public opinion in that process. The recepiant determines use of the award money including, but not limited to: travel, reproduction fees, administrative costs, and other research and writing expenses. The Application deadline is March 31, 2018.
Contact Email: ford.library@nara.gov


Gender, Transgender and other Transitions
Fellowships are available for the 2018 CrossCurrents Research Colloquium. Spend the month of July in New York working on a research or writing project of your own design and collaborate with others engaged in this issue from Christian, Buddhist, Muslim, secular and other perspectives with access to Union, Auburn, Columibia University and Jewish Theological Seminary Libraries.
Application Deadline:  February 15
For futher information about the colloquium as well as how to apply, please visit:  http://www.crosscurrents.org/colloquium.htm


Sandra L. Panther Fellowship in the History of Family Medicine
The Center for the History of Family Medicine (CHFM) is proud to announce its eighth annual Fellowship in the History of Family Medicine. Now renamed the Sandra L. Panther Fellowship in the History of Family Medicine in honor of former AAFP Foundation executive director Sandra L. "Sandy" Panther, interested family physicians, residents, students, other health professionals, historians, scholars, educators, scientists and others are invited to apply.
The deadline to apply is by 5:00 PM (CDT), Saturday, March 31, 2018.
Contact Email: chfm@aafp.org


Fellowship Opportunities at the American Philosophical Society Library
The American Philosophical Society Library is now accepting applications for long and short-term research fellowships for scholars working in the fields of history of science, technology, and medicine; early American history; and Native American and Indigenous studies. Applicants whose research subjects overlap any other APS Library fellowship programs may also submit applications to other pertinent programs, though only one fellowship can be awarded to an individual.
Comprehensive, searchable guides and finding aids to our collections are available online at http://www.amphilsoc.org/library.
Visit the URL below for more information about the different fellowships
Contact Email: alink@amphilsoc.org


2018-2019 New York Public Library Short-Term Research Fellowships
The New York Public Library is pleased to offer short-term research fellowships to support graduate-level, post-doctoral, and independent researchers.  Individuals needing to conduct on-site research in the Library’s special collections to support projects in the humanities, business, and the fine and performing arts are encouraged to apply.
To apply, submit an online application at https://fellowships.nypl.org/home.
Application Deadline:  February 15, 2018
Contact Email: meredithmann@nypl.org


Cold War Center Dissertation Fellowships & Travel Grants
The Center for the United States and the Cold War at NYU's Tamiment Library supports research on the Cold War, especially on the ways in which this ideological and geopolitical conflict with the Soviet Union affected American politics, culture, and society. We will be offering a dissertation fellowship and several travel grants to scholars who are interested in using Tamiment's holdings to further their research.
Applicants for the dissertation fellowship must have passed their comprehensive examinations and expect to complete their dissertations within two years of the start of the 2018-2019 academic year. The dissertation fellow/s will receive either a stipend of $15,000 for one semester or $30,000 for a nine-month academic year.
The Center's Agnese N. Haury travel grants range from $500 to $3,000, depending on need, to support research in the holdings of the Tamiment Library. Research trips may last any length of time, however only scholars outside the New York metropolitan area will be considered.
Deadline: March 31, 2018
Contact Email: ColdWarCenter@nyu.edu


2018 James P. Danky Fellowship
The University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Center for the History of Print and Digital Culture, in conjunction with the Wisconsin Historical Society, is again offering its annual short-term research fellowship (http://www.wiscprintdigital.org/fellowship/). Prior to applying it is strongly suggested that applicants contact Lee Grady at the Wisconsin Historical Society (lee.grady@wisconsinhistory.org or 608-264-6459) to discuss the relevancy of WHS collections to their projects. 
Contact Email: chpdc@ischool.wisc.edu


University of Chicago Library - Robert L. Platzman Memorial Fellowships - Summer 2018
Any visiting researcher, writer, or artist residing more than 100 miles from Chicago, and whose project requires on-site consultation of University of Chicago Library collections, primarily archives, manuscripts, rare books, or other materials in the Special Collections Research Center, is eligible. Support for beginning scholars is a priority of the program. Applications in the fields of late nineteenth- or early twentieth-century physics or physical chemistry, or nineteenth-century classical opera, will receive special consideration.
The deadline for applications is March 19, 2018.
Contact Email: arch@uchicago.edu


Gilder Lehrman Center Fellowship
The Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition, part of the MacMillan Center at Yale University, is pleased to announce that we are accepting applications for the following fellowships. For 2018-2019, the GLC is offering two types of postdoctoral and faculty fellowships that advance the study of slavery, its role in the creation of the modern world, and its legacies.
The deadline for applications for the 2018-2019 fellowships is March 1, 2018. For further information regarding specific fellowships and the application process see the Gilder Lehrman Center website: http://glc.yale.edu/fellowships.


Du Bois Visiting Scholars Fellowships
Fellows may come from any field and any perspective, and they may work on any topic, but their research should explore the major themes that characterize Du Bois’s scholarship and activism.
This includes the history and meaning of racial, social, and economic justice; the problems of democracy and political inclusion; the role of capitalism in world affairs; and the global influence of African cultures. Comprehensive, searchable guides and finding aids to SCUA’s collections are available online at http://www.library.umass.edu/spcoll/.
Full-time faculty or independent scholars (with a PhD) are eligible to apply. Fellows will receive a stipend of $4,500 for an eight-week library residency. With a housing allowance of $2,500 as well as a research allowance of $600.  The deadline for applications is March 16, 2018. For more information: http://bit.ly/dubois_fellowship.
Contact Email: scua@library.umass.edu


2018-2019 Women in Medicine Legacy Foundation Research Fellowship
https://networks.h-net.org/node/24029/discussions/1260843/call-applicants-2018-2019-women-medicine-legacy-foundation
The Women in Medicine Legacy Foundation is pleased to provide one $5,000 grant to support travel, lodging, and incidental expenses for a flexible research period between July 1, 2018 and June 30, 2019. Foundation Fellowships are offered for research related to the history of women to be conducted at the Center for the History of Medicine at the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine.
Deadline May 15, 2018


Smith College Special Collections Fellowships and Grants
Special Collections at Smith College offer four fellowships. Faculty members, independent researchers, and graduate students who live at least 50 miles from Northampton, MA, and whose research interests and objectives would be significantly advanced by extended work in the holdings of the three collections may apply. Recipients will be expected to present an informal work-in-progress colloquium to the Smith College community during their residency and, at some later time, to send the Special Collections a copy of the final results of their research, whether in published or unpublished form. We encourage potential applicants to contact our reference archivists to inquire about the relevance of our collections for their projects before submitting proposals. Application deadline is February 15, 2018.
Queries can be made by emailing specialcollections@smith.edu or by calling 413-585-2970.  Application instructions are online at https://www.smith.edu/libraries/special-collections/services/grants.



PUBLISHING
How to Engage (for) Social Change?
This edited volume invites contributions that reflect on the phenomenon of social engagement, aiming to conceptualize this phenomenon and/or apply it in social research. In terms of conceptualizing social engagement, we invite contributors to address a broad range of questions related to the ontological status and conceptual boundaries of “social engagement”, which we believe call for further elaboration: what type of human action does the term social engagement refer to?
Alongside theoretical investigation, we also wish to examine whether social engagement, as an analytical concept for social research, has any comparative advantage over more established terms in social sciences that are closely related to it, such as social movements, civic activism, new forms of “horizontal” democratic protest, etc.
Short abstracts (around 300 words) are due March 5, 2018
Contact Email: submit@instifdt.bg.ac.rs


Animals with (or without) Borders
We are seeking papers on the theme of “Animals with (or without) Borders” for the summer 2018 issue of the semi-annual scholarly journal, Pakistan Journal of Historical Studies (PJHS), published by the Indiana University Press (Bloomington, USA).
This guest-edited issue explores the interaction between human boundaries and animal lives. As a historical phenomenon, such interaction would include the imposition of borders on existing trade routes and seasonal migration of pastoral societies, and attempts to politically corral animals to fit human boundaries. Socially, it might address problems such as the difference in animal production or welfare on two sides of a border. Politically, it would extend to veterinary, epidemic and tax controls on the movement of animals or animal products, and the role of infrastructure and development capital in the regional development of breeding and production chains.
For more information or to propose an idea, please email to pjhs@khaldunia.org (cc to thomas_dubois@yahoo.comhak@khaldunia.org)
Deadline for submitting articles is 20th April 2018.


What remains of postmodernity?
Since the 70s, the word postmodernity has articulated a tendency, a state of mind, and a condition that resists conceptualization or complete definition. Although the intellectual community has agreed to situate J. F. Lyotard and his key work, The Postmodern condition (1979), as the origin of the debate on this phenomenon, the truth is that the literary theorist Ihab Hassan had already used the word systematically in 1971. Since that date, the notion has spread across the fields of Literature, Architecture, Visual Arts, and the Social Sciences. These are two of the problems that one faces when approaching the surface of the postmodern phenomenon: its lack of definition and its ambiguous periodization. Along with these concerns, the thematic and disciplinary diversity of that which has been normalized under the name of postmodernity calls for a reassessment and a reconceptualization capable of assimilating decades of thinking under this subject.
Deadline: April 20th 2018
Contact Email: revista.forma@upf.edu


Global Urban Inequalities: Case Studies on Cultural Development and Change
This call seeks ethnographic cultural research that focuses on singular urban, metropolitan cities across the globe and highlights issues of inequality in at least one way that can include race, gender, culture, indigenous groups, inclusion, urban planning, cultural celebrations, use of space, politics, socio-economic processes, and many other forms. Ideally, this book will include ethnographic focused chapters from every part of the world and it will not just focus on capital cities or on already anthropologically rich areas. This call specifically asks for a diversity in theoretical lenses among the authors, ideographic studies that do not attempt to make comparative narratives, and have a singular geographic focus. This volume will balance both positive and negative perspectives on the inequality without necessarily a moral lesson, noting that issues of inequality often have both ups and downs.
Submissions are due May 1, 2018 and should be emailed to the editor, Jessica Bodoh-Creed at jbodohc2@calstatela.edu


Biopolitics, Necropolitics, Cosmopolitics: Feminist and Queer Interventions
Special Issue of *Journal of Gender Studies*
This special issue aims to both address these urgent issues and open them up onto new ways of imagining vital politics, resistance strategies, and other-than-merely-human agencies. In this way, we envision feminist and queer interventions that rethink categories such as ‘human’ and ‘subjectivity’ based on the classical modern premises. This special issue hopes therefore to produce resilient visions of transformation of the matrix of in-/exclusion into feminist/queer cosmopolitical futures that contribute to a new discourse of planetary social justice.
For consideration, *please email abstracts (300-500 words) by March 15, 2018* to Christine Quinan (C.L.Quinan@uu.nl) and Kathrin Thiele (K.Thiele@uu.nl). 


OBSCENITY: “I Know It when I See It”
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 the theme of obscenity. We envisage papers that follow suit to the growing literature on “obscenity & sexuality” (Nead, 1992, 2001), “speaking the unspeakable” (Michelson, 1993) and “art & obscenity” (Mey, 2007), not to mention “degradation” (Saunders, 2011).
Deadline: 1 September, 2018.


Migration, Sex, and Intimate Labor, 1850-2000
The Journal of Women’s History is seeking expressions of interest to submit articles to a special issue on migration, sex, and intimate labor in the period between 1850 and 2000, in any local, national, transnational, or global context. It seeks to frame “intimate labor” within the long history of women’s involvement in domestic and sexual markets and their movement across and within borders for myriad forms of care and body work (Boris and ParreƱas, 2010). This special issue will be positioned within an emergent historiography that examines the practices, discourses, regulation of, and attempts to suppress what has come to be known as “trafficking,” while foregrounding the ways in which a historical lens can destabilize this term.
Prospective contributors to this special issue are asked to send an extended abstract of 1,000 words to the issue’s guest editors, Julia Laite (j.laite@bbk.ac.uk) and Philippa Hetherington (p.hetherington@ucl.ac.uk) by 1 June 2018.


Culture, Theory and Critique
Culture, Theory and Critique is a refereed, interdisciplinary journal for the transformation and development of critical theories in the humanities and social sciences. It aims to critique and reconstruct theories by interfacing them with one another and by relocating them in new sites and conjunctures.
Please visit our website (http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rctc20/current) for instructions and guidelines on how to submit an article. 


Women Rewriting History: Critical Resistance through Literature, Film, and Art
Rewriting historical and canonical texts has been a continuing tradition in literature, but takes on particular significance in women’s revisions of literature, legends, and myths created by men. Women writers across the world have revised male texts from different epochs, particularly focusing on the representation of women as historical, legendary, and mythic subjects. This volume will include women writers, filmmakers, and artists from all centuries and diverse cultural backgrounds who have revisited classical texts, especially those that question or challenge the roles of women. We seek to include women from all national and cultural backgrounds and artistic and literary genres who rewrite and reconceive historical, legendary, and mythic figures.
Deadline for Proposals: April 1, 2018
Please direct all submissions and inquiries to Lisa Bernstein at lbernstein3@gmail.com and Tulin Ece Tosun at ttosun@purdue.edu


Blackness and Labor in the Afterlives of Racial Slavery
A Special Issue of International Labor and Working-Class History
Between the nineteenth and the twentieth centuries, the history of labor on a global scale was shaped by the ambiguities and contradictions accompanying the legal abolition of Black slavery and the persistence of racialized coercion within putatively “free” contractual arrangements. Critical Black studies have placed such questions within the conceptual framework of the “afterlife” of slavery, defined by authors like Saidiya Hartman (Lose Your Mother, 2008) and Christina Sharpe (In the Wake, 2016) as a state of continuous vulnerability and endangerment of Black lives, shaping the present in ways that reflect the limitations and constraints of “freedom.” The afterlives of slavery, whose persistence is most evident in the continuously unaddressed demand that “Black Lives Matter”, also challenge labor scholarship.
Abstract deadline: January 31, 2018
Contact Email: barchiesi.1@osu.edu


Subjects, Objects, Others: Materialisms from the Enslaved and Colonized
A Special Issue of darkmatter
This issue of darkmatter is concerned with interrogating this problematic by focusing on objects laden with stories of slavery, colonization and their aftermaths, and thus offers materialist responses that address the capitalocene itself, and the uneven lived experiences of those upon whose subjugation and dispossession it has been built. Attending to objects that have lives of their own ‒ speaking, acting, and making claims upon the world, through their materials, craft, and form ‒ we seek to draw out depictions and theories of the material that emerge from these objects themselves.
Abstracts should be submitted by 15 February 2018.


Surveillance Cultures
This special issue of On_Culture charts the fundamental changes in cultural agency brought about by expansion, digitalization, and de-materialization of surveillance technologies. These developments penetrate every-day experiences down to the most quotidian and unconscious practices as well as the very materiality of the affected bodies. As a growing performative force, these practices and the responses they elicit work towards an essential cultural restructuring that results in a plurality of surveillance cultures. This pluralization calls for a radical reconceptualization of surveillance with regard to the personal as well as systemic possibilities it re-determines.
abstract deadline: March 30, 2018
Contact Email: content@on-culture.org




WORKSHOPS
Justice After Atrocity?
The 4th Master Seminar on Post-Genocide Invites college seniors, graduate students, scholars, practitioners and policymakers, and others to submit a 250-word abstract to dklein@kean.edu by March 1 of a paper in progress or recently completed dealing with the seminar theme, "Justice After Atrocity?" The Seminar, which will be facilitated by Lawrence Douglas, James J Grosfeld Professor of Law, Jurisprudence and Social Thought, Amherst College, will permit participants to present their research and receive criticism and ideas for constructive, new lines of Investigation. it will take place at Kean University over two days, April 19-20, and is cosponsored by the Reflections in the Aftermath of War and Genocide Consortium, a coalition of scholars and practitioners affiliated with Cornell University, Kean University, Georgia State University, and Yale University committed to exploring the aftermaths of genocide.
Contact Email: dklein@kean.edu

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