Saturday, May 26, 2018

Calls for Papers, Funding Opportunities, and Resources, May 26, 2018


CONFERENCES
Corrections, Rehabilitation, and Reform
On October 5, the Prison University Project will host an academic conference at San Quentin State Prison in which incarcerated students and outside scholars will exchange ideas about “Corrections, Rehabilitation, and Reform.”
In an era in which “rehabilitation” is increasingly rewarded but nevertheless difficult to quantify, in which prison populations increase at the same time as abolitionist movements intensify, and in which racial and economic injustice are prime contributors to prison overpopulation, it is urgent to generate new ideas. While many scholars outside of prison focus on just these questions, we posit that the answers are inadequate until incarcerated scholars are able to weigh in on the debates that shape their own lives and futures. This conference seeks solutions for the ills of the criminal justice system in the U.S. that came about in the 20th century. We believe that if incarcerated Americans come together with scholars from the outside, we might generate valuable debates and ideas about the direction that 21st century reform might take.
To propose a paper or panel please send a 300-500-word proposal, 100-word abstract (for the conference program), and a 50-word biography to Jesse Rothman at ajamgochian@prisonuniversityproject.org by May 31, 2018.


Spaces of Oppression: Creating a History That Fosters Tolerance
Society of Architectural Historians, 72nd Annual International Conference, Providence, Rhode Island, April 24–28, 2019
This session’s objectives are both scholarly and pedagogical.  It seeks to bring together historical studies of legally-sanctioned oppressive spaces from the fifteenth through twentieth centuries.  It also seeks to identify the topics, textual sources, and heritage sites for teaching the history of oppressive spaces.  Participants are asked to explore the premise that this architectural history—supported by scholarship as well as classroom and experiential learning—can play a role in creating greater tolerance within society today.  Everyone at some point has felt uncomfortable or trapped within his/her physical surroundings.  Can an understanding of the oppressive spaces of the past lead to greater empathy towards those in comparable situations today?
A 300-word abstract and CV (2 pages maximum) should be submitted no later than 11:59 p.m. CDT on June 5, 2018, to the online portal found at http://www.sah.org/2019.


Colonial Spatiality in African Sahara Regions
This session investigates the ways with which European colonial regimes have shaped the design of African Saharan aboveground and underground territories, cities, villages, infrastructures, and societies over the course of the 19th and 20th centuries. These Saharan regions comprise Algeria, Chad, Egypt, Libya, Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Niger, Sudan, Tunisia, and Western Sahara. Colonized by different European countries—including Britain, Italy, France, and Spain—these climatically challenging territories served primarily to search, extract, and transport the desert’s multiple natural resources and assets. Yet, in what exactly consisted these designs? This session aims at addressing these questions and exploring the relationship between spatial planning, architecture, environment, and European colonial practices in African Saharan regions. We seek papers that critically analyze the involvement of European colonial civil servants, military officers, engineers, planners, and architects in shaping the design of one or more African Saharan regions.
DEADLINE June 30, 2018
Contact Email: arch@samiahenni.com


Disability and Environmental History: A Place for Stories
How has environmental history privileged normative notions of environment and bodily experience? For example, how have mobility and abled forms of ecological work/contact/labor been centered as narratives and storylines in environmental history at the expense of stories about disabled bodies and alternative access? How might we write disabled and differently-abled communities back into the long and rich narratives of abled versions of environmental history? Picking up on the year's theme, “Using Environmental History: Rewards and Risks,” this roundtable will ask how environmental history can be used to build a politics of inclusion for disabled bodies. We will seek not only to answer these questions, but also highlight new work being done at the intersection of environmental history and disability studies/history.
Please send a 150-200 word proposal that elaborates your contribution to the roundtable to Sara J. Grossman at sjg52@psu.edu by June 15, 2018.


Resistance, Revolt, and Revolution
Our conference encourages graduate students to submit proposals that engage in the conference theme by examining power relations and activism in all historical fields, geographic locations, and time periods. The theme addresses the ways historical actors struggle to overcome oppression, whether their actions be against political, social, or cultural forces. This conference especially solicits proposals attending to international narratives of activism, interdisciplinary approaches, and comparative methodologies.
The deadline for submission is September 1, 2018
Please submit all materials to hgsa.csulb@gmail.com with the subject "Conference Proposal."


Repair Work
National Council for Public History annual meeting, Hartford, Connecticut, March 27-30, 2019
Public historians have long been engaged in acts of repair. We restore and preserve objects and buildings. We reconstruct fragmentary evidence about the past and reconsider the stories it has been used to tell, including stories about past commemorations themselves. We contribute, directly or indirectly, to economic and civic revitalization efforts. Increasingly, we also align our work with social and environmental projects of reparation, putting ourselves in service of overcoming or resisting the effects of past damage, injustice, and exclusion.
NCPH invites proposals that explore how public history intersects—sometimes purposefully, sometimes with unintended consequences—with the ongoing task of
Final submissions are due Sunday, July 15, 2018 at 11:59 pm. Please email NCPH Program Manager Meghan Hillman at meghillm@iupui.edu with any questions.


Emergency and Emergence
Los Angeles, CA, October 18-20, 2018
First Forum invites submissions that explore the many meanings and implications of the concept of emergency in relation to cinema and media scholars and practitioners. Emergency and emergence can be considered catalytic concepts, cultivating moments of potential and fostering new forms of organization to respond to an emergency’s urgent call. What kinds of action are motivated by emergency thinking? How do viewers respond to media produced under emergency conditions? What other vocabularies might be employed to characterize radical change or a disruption in norms? Is there a way to conceptualize emergency that takes into consideration different modalities and histories? We invite interrogation of the potential of the theory and practice of emergency and of alternatives to this term, as ways of thinking about social, political, technological, and aesthetic transformations that occur during times of uncertainty.
Non-traditional, creative projects are welcome, as are individual papers,pre-constituted panels or workshops. Please email your submissions and inquiries to firstforum18@gmail.com by June 1st, 2018.


Paranoia in the Americas: American Anxieties in a Transnational Context
University College Cork, 24 November 2018
From the earliest moments of its existence, the optimistic dream of America has been underpinned by a much darker sense of anxiety and paranoia. Whether embodied in early colonial fears of nefarious witches corrupting pious Puritan settlements, Cold-War fantasies of “reds under the bed,” or porous borders unable to keep the Other out, American culture and politics has often been defined by fears of the enemy, the Other, the invisible saboteur. Drawing together literary scholars, cultural theorists, historians, political scientists and diverse thinkers from every discipline, this one-day symposium seeks to explore the role of paranoia in American culture and politics. Not merely limited to the United States, the anxieties that afflict contemporary America are truly transnational in nature. As such, this symposium seeks to incorporate a broad range of perspectives in order to fully explore the nature, scope and implications of the current resurgence of American paranoia.
Abstracts of no more than 250 words and short biographical notes (no more than 4-5 lines) should be sent to Dr Donna Alexander (donna.alexander@ucc.ie) and Dr Miranda Corcoran (miranda.corcoran@ucc.ie) by Friday the 3rd of August 2018.


Power and Struggle
University of Alabama Graduate History Association Conference, October 5-6, 2018
Our conference encourages graduate students to submit proposals that engage the conference theme by examining power relations in all historical fields and time periods. The theme addresses new approaches to historical analysis that focus on the relationship between struggle and power, especially people who struggled to break, transform, or reclaim the boundaries constructed by those in power. The Conference seeks proposals employing innovative approaches, interdisciplinary methods, comparative perspectives, and multi-archival research bases.
The deadline for proposal submission is May 30, 2018.
Contact Email: ghaconference@gmail.com


In Search of Global Impact of Asian Aesthetics on American Art and Material Culture
October 11-12, 2018, The University of Delaware and Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library
We invite graduate students from a variety of fields, from all regions of the world to submit a short abstract of a dissertation in progress or a project that: 1) redefines the canon of art history, with a focus on the multidirectional impact of Asian aesthetics on American art and material culture, and/or 2) proposes new interpretations of the transcultural and transhistorical flow of aesthetics that not only redefine the geocultural boundaries of Asia and North America, but also rethink methodological formations of aesthetic emergence.
To apply, send a short abstract written in English (300-500 words) and a 2-page CV to:  “global-aesthetics@udel.edu” by June 8, 2018.


Imagine Queer: Exploring the Radical Potential of Queerness Now
Newcastle University, 12th October 2018
The aim of the conference is to consider interdisciplinary approaches to the transgressive potential of queerness today. Considering grassroots LGBTQ+ activism, artistic practices, as well as academic discourse of queer theory, we seek to identify and address issues arising in the current transnational socio-political conditions. How can biopolitics be challenged by queer temporalities? How can radical activism of preceding decades be re-contextualised and employed now? Can queer social formations, based on friendship, kinship, and affective communities, be used to reconsider the heteronormative structures aided by the legislation in the international context?
Proposals should be sent to imaginequeer2018@gmail.com by 31st May 2018.


Denial: The Final Stage of Genocide
April 13-14, 2019, University of North Carolina Charlotte
Denial is often the “final stage of genocide,” Gregory H. Stanton asserted twenty years ago. The perpetrators “deny that they committed any crimes, and often blame what happened on the victims…. The black hole of forgetting is the negative force that results in future genocides.” (Stanton, 1996, 1998) The ways in which portrayals of genocide are constructed may contribute to creating “zones of denial” (Shavit 2005) that allow space for minimizing the harsh realities of genocide in our collective understanding. For victims and their descendants, denial brings additional injustice and trauma.
This conference will examine multiple cases of denial and place them in comparative context. We seek to explore strategies of denial and to confront denial and its effects on survivors and upon collective memory.
Submit abstracts by November 1, 2018 to hghr.uncc@gmail.com. 
Contact Email: hghr.uncc@gmail.com


Settler Colonialism at the Bar: an Interdisciplinary Workshop on Law, Race and Colonial History
Utrecht University, the Netherlands
While the decolonisation of academia and society have become important topics, the significance and potential of such an approach is open to interpretation and often the subject of passionate debate. The Decolonisation Group at Utrecht University, which was created in January 2018, brings together historians, lawyers and postcolonial theorists to explore what can be gained from an interdisciplinary discussion. This workshop wants to invite scholars from the field of history, law, political science, sociology, economics and Media and Cultural Studies as well as other academics who work on the topics of Settler Colonialism and property law – broadly defined – to join this conversation.
Please send an abstract of max. 500 words and a short CV to decolonisationgroup@gmail.com by 15 June 2018
For more information you can contact Frank Gerits f.p.l.gerits@uu.nl , Stacey Links  s.links@uu.nl or Rachel Gillett r.a.gillett@uu.nl



“Making it like a man”: men, masculinities and the modern “career”
Recent critical representations of the workplace seem to leave little doubt about its gendered norms and conventions. Glass ceilings, the gender pay gap, leaky pipelines, old boys’ networks, calls for women to lean in (not to mention recurring reports of gendered harassment) all point to an assumption of male homosociability as an enduring norm in 21st century ‘work’.
In this conference, we aim to focus on the multiple and diverse masculinities ‘at work’ in the processes of professionalization and career management that typify modern working life. Spanning both historical approaches to the rise of ‘profession’ as a marker of masculinity, and critical approaches to the current structures of management, employment and workplace hierarchy, we set out to question what role masculinity plays in cultural understandings, affective experiences and mediatized representations of a professional ‘career’.
Abstracts of no more than 250 words should be uploaded at https://elomake.helsinki.fi/lomakkeet/89548/lomake.html by June 30, 2018.


Women Warriors and Popular Culture: Representations across Time and Space
2018 Conference of the Northeast Popular Culture/American Culture Association (NEPCA)
Worcester State University, 19-20 October 2018
Women warriors have been important figures throughout history, but their reception and representation in popular culture is often overlooked. As a means of furthering discussion and debate on these individuals, the Association for the Advancement of Scholarship and Teaching of the Medieval in Popular Culture invites paper proposals that explore the histories, mythologies, cultural presentations and workings of women warriors across time and space. We welcome papers that delve into the popular cultural appropriation of notable women warriors, such as Boudicca, Joanna of Flanders Joan of Arc, or Grace O’Malley, as well as papers that address the place and signification of women warriors in the historical and mythic fiction of popular culture (TV, movies, comics, etc.), such as Snow White and the Huntsman, The Vikings, and Wonder Woman.
Proposals due 1 June 2018


Performance Studies In and From South Asia
Oct 11, 2018, Madison, WI
The aim of this symposium is to facilitate a dialogue between the fields of South Asian Studies and Performance Studies, by bringing together scholars and artists who work at the intersection of these two disciplines. In so doing, it addresses two major lacunae: The under-representation of performance as a tool and an object of analysis in the study of South Asia; and the dominant Euro-American-centrism of the discourse of Performance Studies. This year, we will focus on how performative analysis might generate new understandings of subjects as diverse as the neoliberal Indian city or the staging of Sanskrit epics.
Please email your 250-word abstracts to performancesymposium2018@gmail.com by June 1, 2018.





PUBLISHING
together
In recent years, a diverse range of actors have emphasized the need to come together, to join forces and mobilize against/in the context of escalating ecological disaster, permanent war and empire, violence against women, growing economic precarity, the prison industrial complex, and heightened state-sanctioned racism and xenophobia (for example, the Women’s March, #MeToo, the Poor People’s Campaign, #BlackLivesMatter, trans justice, sanctuary, global anti-austerity movements, the International Women’s Strike, and BDS, among others). Many of these calls align with long traditions of organizing against the gendered dimension of local and global forms of structural violence that have included Black Freedom struggles, anti-colonial struggles, and struggles against settler colonialism.
In this issue, we seek to build upon and continue earlier conversations in WSQ taken up in the special issues Engage (2013) and Solidarity (2014). We invite contributions that engage feminist theory to reflect on long-standing debates and theorizations about the limitations and possibilities of coming together.
Priority Deadline: September 15, 2018 (Please send complete articles, not abstracts)
Scholarly articles and inquiries should be sent to guest issue editors Ujju Aggarwal, Linta Varghese, and Rupal Oza at WSQTogether@gmail.com.


Gender and Popular Culture: Representations and Embodiment
Contributions are invited toward an edited volume of critical essays on Gender and Popular Culture: Representations and Embodiment. Gender and popular culture are connected in multiple ways. Popular culture is a comprehensive and highly mediated phenomenon that consists of an extensive range of cultural texts and practices from films to newspaper and television, from designing computer games to creating cartoon series. Gender as a social and religious construct is continually produced, consumed and represented in popular culture.
Interested contributors are requested to submit a short abstract of 1000 words to editor Kusha Tiwari at kushatiwari@gmail.com not later than 30th May, 2018.


Practices of Listening
For the first issue of ​Soapbox​, a graduate journal for cultural analysis, we invite submissions that explore listening as a critical practice. With this topic, we aim to bring together accounts of listening as both a method and object of analysis, including everyday practices and new modes of research that articulate who or what can listen and who or what can be heard.
Please submit your abstract (max 300 words) to soapboxjournal@gmail.com by May 30. 


Decolonizing Ways of Knowing: Heritage, Living Communities, and Indigenous Understandings of Place
This special issue of Genealogy invites essays on the topic, “Decolonizing Ways of Knowing: Heritage, Living Communities, and Indigenous Built Environments.” Manuscripts may focus on all aspects of heritage, heritage preservation, and traditions of knowing and engaging the past in the present. The “State of the World’s Minorities and Indigenous Peoples 2016” report, published by the Minority Rights Group International (MRG), emphasized the close interconnections between culture and nature, the relationship between people and places, and that these associations are particularly relevant to indigenous communities. We invite contributions that imagine possibilities and associations that mark our humanity cross-culturally including practices of honoring the dead, worshiping/acknowledging ancestors, tracing kinship/genealogical associations, transmitting local histories and knowledge of place, and creating shared identity through oral history and storytelling.
Deadline: 15 November 2018
Contact Email: genealogy@mdpi.com


Difficult Conversations: Collaborative art practices across political divides
Activist art is one of the most visible artistic outputs of the early 21st century.  Political and Activist art often crosses national boundaries and allows artists both professional and amateur to participate in the important political and artistic discussions. This volume hopes to continue conversations on how both academics and artists could help to create bridges of understanding in the most contested geographical areas.
Abstracts of approximately 500 words are due on June 10.
Contact Email: myzelev@geneseo.edu


Litany in the Arts and Culture
Scholars representing various disciplines are kindly encouraged to submit paper proposals focusing on litanies and their forms and representations in different spheres of culture, including liturgy, literature, music, the visual arts, spirituality, and philosophy. The litany derives from ancient religious rites. Throughout the ages, however, it spread across many countries and became much more than a mere form of prayer. The litanic verse is marked by religious semantics, but it also bears the mark of inter-European divisions, such as those experienced between and within various denominations, countries and nations, as well as the original folk cultures. Therefore, the litany may be of interest to scholars specializing in areas such the emergence of national identities and religious minorities, the crossover between art and religion as well as between music and poetry, the history of liturgy and spiritual life, the cultural exchanges between various nations.
The final deadline for submission of abstracts is June 20, 2018.
All proposals and queries should be addressed to: sadowski@uw.edu.pl


Children and Spirituality
This child worship echoes back to the ideation of the holy child in Romantic thought,a child who is in close proximity to God. How does this lingering idea fare today? How holy is the child when there is no God in our age of secularization? Is the child of a same-sex couple considered as angelic as a straight couple’s child? How about the HIV-positive child? Is the child still innocent given the know-how of technology that puts the child ahead of any parents or grandparents? What form of parenting does an unholy, knowing child inspire? What is the child's relationship to God? Is God a part of childhood in the secular age? Where is God in childhood? Are we still God’s children Does God corrupt childhood? How is God showing up in our discourses about children and childhood today? While the demonic child has received a lot of attention, this volume is interested in a variety of angles about the relationship between God and children, our angelic children, such as the following, non-exclusive list:
Please submit a 350 word abstract, a short bio, and full contact information by 30 June 2018  to childrenandspirituality@gmail.com. Completed chapters are due 31 January 2019.


Socio-Political Context of Death and Dying
This Special Issue of Societies invites scholars to examine both the social and political circumstances in which death and dying are experienced. The issue pays close attention to the abundant socio-political changes, nationally and internationally, which directly and indirectly influence how people die or experience the death of a loved one. The last ten years alone, not only in the UK, the care of the dying and bereaved has seen increasing interest by governments, while medical, clinical and technical approaches pertain. People die in hospitals, hospices or other institutions more often than they die in the comfort of their own home. The ambiguity of identifying when one is ready to die keeps medicine attuned to the task of preserving and prolonging life. This issue would like to explore in more detail the socio-political context in which death is experienced and examine how shifting societal and political attitudes influence how we die and vice versa. Finally, the issue is interested in bringing together both empirical and theoretical papers, aiming at conceptualising the current governance of death and dying, while focusing on the impact of the former on the latter.
Deadline for manuscript submissions: 15 October 2018
Contact Email: p.pentaris@gre.ac.uk


Woman Suffrage
The editorial board of DEP: Deportate, esuli, profughe / Deportees, Exiles, Refugees welcomes submissions for a Special Issue edition, entitled ‘1918 and Beyond: New Votes, New Voices? – Retrospectives, Assessments, Outlooks’ and commemorating the centenary of women’s suffrage in numerous states.
DEP invites transdisciplinary approaches to and perspectives of these topics and themes, as well as contrastive analyses, interfacing narratives, aspects, and historiographies from diverse countries. Proposals by graduate students and postdoctoral or early career researchers are particularly encouraged.
Please send a 500-word article synopsis and a 300-word résumé before 30 June 2018 to: NewVotesNewVoices@gmail.com


State Killing: Queer and Women of Color Manifestas against U.S. Violence and Oppression
Feral Feminisms, an independent, inter-media, peer-reviewed, and open-access online journal, invites submissions from artists, activists, and scholars for a special issue titled, “State Killing: Queer and Women of Color Manifestas against U.S. Violence and Oppression,” guest edited by Annie Hill, Niq D. Johnson, and Ersula Ore. The issue will center the voices and anti-violence work of queer and women of color activist-intellectuals by providing a forum for provocative manifestas and manifestations of feminism. Submitted contributions may include full-length theoretical essays (5000 – 7000 words), shorter creative pieces, cultural commentaries, personal narratives or auto-ethnographies (500 – 2500 words), poetry, photo-essays, short films/video (uploaded to Vimeo), visual and sound art (jpeg Max 1MB), or a combination of forms. Please send inquiries and submissions to the guest editors: Annie Hill (anniehill@utexas.edu); Niq D. Johnson (niq.djohnson@pitt.edu); and Ersula Ore (ejore@asu.edu); cc’ing Feral Feminisms in the email (feralfeminisms@gmail.com).
Please send submissions with a 60-word author biography and 100-word abstract to the three guest editors by 31 August 2018. For detailed submission guidelines, please visit: http://www.feralfeminisms.com/submission-guidelines/.


Feminist and Queer Activism in Britain and the United States in the Long 1980s
Feminist and queer activism in the long 1980s has recently become subject to renewed scrutiny. Scholarship has challenged the perception that the period was one of quiescence after the tumult of the 1970s. In this edited volume we seek to bring together work that positions the 1980s as an era of formative activism and critical debate in Britain and the United States. The collection will demonstrate how an inattentiveness to the 1980s, as with other perceived fallow periods of feminist activism, has obscured the work of women of colour, working-class women, and queer communities. The edited volume will bring researchers working in different geographical contexts and disciplines into discussion with one another in order to enhance our understanding of feminist and queer activism in Britain and the United States.
30th June 2018: Deadline for submission of abstracts


Religion and Black Feminist Public Intellectuals from the Nineteenth Century to the Present
Since the nineteenth century, Christian black female public intellectuals have called attention to and protested against the discrimination of African American women on the basis of their race, class, and gender, and particularly in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, their sexual orientation. Drawing on their spiritual authority, many of these black feminists, including Maria Stewart, Anna Julia Cooper, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, Pauli Murray, bell hooks, Maya Angelou, Oprah Winfrey, and Renita Weems, have attempted to dislodge the normative thinking that has occluded the presence of these injustices. Whether marching, writing, preaching, or speaking, their goal has been to challenge and undermine discriminatory practices in all areas of social and political life and spur the public into action.
The volume’s goal is to present an historical and rhetorical trajectory of black female religious public intellectuals from the nineteenth through twenty-first century and thus seeks papers that will demonstrate these women’s efficacy in creating a movement for social change.
Abstract deadline: June 25, 2018
Contact Email: jami.carlacio@yale.edu


Activists Lives
This special issue seeks to bring together articles that contribute historical depth and comparative breadth to the subject of activist lives. By taking seriously the role of emotion and affect, and by focusing on individual and collective biographies, the co-editors hope to move beyond institutional or issue-based histories to show how movements for social change have flowed into one another through the medium of relationships. The aim is to show that social movements-from gender justice to workers' rights to radical environmentalism and far beyond-are constituted by consecutive or overlapping scenes, subcultures, and often highly conflicted movement currents.
Send a 300-400 word abstract and a short 2-page CV by July 1, 2018 to Lana Dee Povitz and Steven High at steven.high@concordia.ca.


Confronting and Combatting Othering in English Studies
If 2017 has taught us anything, it is that “Othering” is still defiantly alive almost two decades into the 21st century; in fact, it seems to be on the increase. We see and hear it every time we turn on the television or access our social media: calls for immigration bans across the globe, for building walls and barriers to prevent infiltration by undesirables, the language of vile and divisive dissension in global politics, the rise of hate speech of all kinds. In this upcoming issue, we ask the loaded question: what is the responsibility of English Studies in confronting, combatting, and maybe even dismantling the Othering trajectory that the world seems to be on? How do we create a pedagogy of democracy in our classrooms, our writings, our research, and our extracurricular activities that foster true inclusion, solidarity, and intersectionality?
Submission deadline: June 10, 2018.


Policing, Justice, and the Radical Imagination
Radical History Review seeks proposals for contributions to a forthcoming issue that will bring together historically oriented scholarship and politically engaged writing that examine places and times without police. Social movements like the Brazilian campaign Reaja ou será mort@ (React or Be Killed) and Black Lives Matter in the U.S. seek not only to redress and prevent the harms inflicted by police and prisons, but also to reenvision forms of social organization that do not rely on such institutions of state violence at all. Indeed, the Movement for Black Lives (M4BL) centrally calls for their abolition, meaning not just dismantling these institutions of public discipline but also redistributing their capacities into institutions of real community safety, like schools, hospitals, and public spaces. While the idea of a world without police may appear utopian, this issue of RHR challenges us to take this proposition seriously. What would a world without police look like, and how might it function? How might radical histories of policing allow us to imagine such a world?
Abstract Deadline: September 1, 2018
ontact Email: contactrhr@gmail.com


Close encounters, displacement and war
Close Encounters in War Journal is a peer-reviewed journal aimed at studying war as a human experience, through interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary approaches ranging from the Humanities to the Social Sciences. The second issue of the journal will be a thematic one, dedicated to the experience of displacement as a consequence of war and conflict, and titled “Close encounters, displacement and war”.
Wars in general are cultural phenomena, among the most ancient and deeply rooted aspects of human cultural evolution: investigating their meaning, by reflecting on the ways we experience wars and conflicts as human beings is therefore essential. Conflictis deeply intertwined with language, culture, instincts, passions, behavioural patterns and with the human ability to represent concepts aesthetically. The concept of “encounter” is therefore fundamental as it involves experience, and as a consequence it implies that war can shape and develop our minds and affect our behaviour by questioning habits and values, prejudices and views of the world.
Deadline: June 1, 2018
Abstracts can be sent to:  simona.tobia@closeencountersinwar.com


Intersections of Critical Disability Studies and Critical Animal Studies
The Canadian Journal of Disability Studies
This special issue builds on an emergent body of scholarship located at the intersection of critical disability studies & critical animal studies, shedding light on ableism and speciesism as interconnecting oppressions, the ways in which animality and disability are mutually constitutive, as well as the tensions and coalitions shared by these two related fields.
Submissions due: June 1, 2018
Please submit electronically in Microsoft Word format to the special issue's guest co-editors: Alan Santinele Martino (santina@mcmaster.ca) & Sarah May Lindsay (lindsays@mcmaster.ca)




FUNDING
Malamy Fellowship
One recipient will be awarded the Francis E. Malamy Fellowship to perform independent scholarly research at the library within a three month time-frame between August 1, 2018 and July 31, 2019. Research must include use of archival materials held at the Phillips Library, and/or archiving activities under the direction of the Phillips Library staff.
All application materials, including references, must be received by June 15, 2018. All materials may be submitted electronically to research@pem.org 


Graduate Student Essay Prize
The Michigan Historical Review announces a call for graduate papers exploring themes from Michigan's past for its Graduate Student Essay Prize. The lucky winner will receive $2000 and publication in our journal. Deadline is 1 July 2018. Papers must use original, primary source material and will be judged on style, research, originality and proper documentation. They should be 10,000-12,000 words, double-spaced and footnoted, with the author's name not appearing anywhere on the paper. A cover letter with the name of graduate school and advisor must accompany. We are happy to answer any questions or concerns. Please send entry no later than July 1st to mihisrev@cmich.edu.


Yale-AvHumboldt short-time travel grants
This year we are pleased to offer up to 10 short-term research grants of between $1,000 and $4,000 to support travel (for up to three months) to or within Europe for research on topics in the following areas: European history, Middle Eastern history, global early modern history, the history of empires, and environmental history.  We encourage applications for projects that cut across geographies, chronologies, and methods. Priority will be given to those seeking support to visit archives and libraries to further their original research in the stated fields.  These grants can support the research of scholars at any stage in their careers past the point of Ph.D. candidacy.
Deadline: August 1, 2018


Women in Medicine Legacy Foundation Fellowship
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: June 1, 2018
Electronic submissions of applications and supporting materials and any questions may be directed to chm@hms.harvard.edu or (617) 432-2170.




RESOURCES
Black Arts Movement
Africology: The Journal of Pan African Studies has produced a special 341 page issue on the Black Arts Movement with guest editor Kim McMillon, a doctoral candidate at the University of California at Merced. The edition includes living icons of the Black Arts Movement (1965-1975) who were present at Black Arts Movement anniversary conferences in 2014 (University of California at Merced) and 2016 (Dillard University). The special edition has a three part introduction/dedication, a poetry section of 13 poets, 14 essays, and seven contributions in art, music, dance, and photography.
The edition (no-cost, open access) is available at: http://www.jpanafrican.org/vol11no6.htm
Contact Email: atjpas@gmail.org

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