Thursday, March 28, 2019

Calls for Papers, Funding Opportunities, and Resources, March 28, 2019


CONFERENCES
Slow: A Symposium in Praxis & Theory
MASS MoCA, November 1, 2019.
The Mind’s Eye, a symposium initiative and online journal of Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts (MCLA) in collaboration with Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (MASS MoCA) invites scholars, critics, visual artists, creative writers, activists, curators, and other cultural practitioners to submit abstracts for an interdisciplinary symposium engaging “slowness” as a praxis and theoretical framework. We are particularly interested in presentations that engage the topic of “slowness” from an interdisciplinary approach and welcome speakers from across fields.
Submit proposals to mindseye@mcla.edu by April 15, 2019.


Languages: Power, Identity, Relationships
This panel explores the power of image culture in shaping the visual identity of twentieth-century transatlantic vanguardisms. Since the inception of European experimentalism during the first decades of the twentieth century, a series of art movements engaged in radical art production that defied conventions. From the Cubist adoption of multiple viewpoints, through the Futurist celebration of technology and speed, the Expressionist distortion of form, to the Dadaist sense of provocation and the irrational juxtaposition of images in Surrealism, visual art has set precedents for literature on an international level of exchanges.
By May 31st, 2019, please submit a 300-word abstract in English or Spanish along with a brief bio and A/V requirements to Leticia Pérez Alonso (leticia.p.alonso@jsums.edu), Jackson State University.


Male (Un)Bonding: Men, Masculinities, and Homosocial Troubles
13-15 June 2019, Bush House, King’s College London
Male (Un)Bonding is a three-day workshop and networking event bringing together a group for researchers working on the study of contemporary and historical masculinities from multiple disciplines and scholarly backgrounds to consider the urgent question of the relationality of masculinities. How might we build on the foundational work on the topic to further theorize masculinity beyond identity and to think through the homosocial relations that produce and resist reactionary positions? How might destructive forms of masculinity be interrogated and dismantled at formative sites of masculine performance? Can we identify forms of homosocial interrelations in and beyond cis/trans and hetero/homosexual spectrums and binaries, and how might these forms model new ways of being together and social configurations?
Please send materials to Workshop Leaders at broderick.chow@brunel.ac.uk and eerolain@buffalo.edu by Monday 22 April 2019. 


‘Le Deuxième Sexe Seventy Years On: Reading Beauvoir around the World’
Atlanta, GA, 25-26 October 2019
Seventy years following its publication in France, Simone de Beauvoir’s Le Deuxième Sexe (1949) remains a fundamental source of philosophical feminist knowledge, providing concrete evidence of women’s societal oppression and delineating the constructed nature of gender through an existential, phenomenological lens. The aim of this conference will be to bring together international scholars working at the intersections of Beauvoirian Studies and Translation Studies in order to trace holistically the dissemination of Beauvoirian thought on a global scale
Abstract deadline: 31 May 2019
Contact Email: jbullo2@emory.edu


Veganism as Engaged Anthropological Theory
University of Massachusetts Amherst, October 3-6, 2019
Human domination over all global systems in the anthropocene has impacted nonhuman animal lives in diverse and wide-reaching ways, from the mass consumption of meat to the devastation of natural ecosystems. The meat and dairy industries are sustained by reproductive control and the objectification of female bodies. Achieving universal gender equality must necessarily involve the dissolution of these exploitative industries. In addition, the increasing quantity of meat eaten in the United States is a runaway byproduct of the ideological legacies of colonialism and imperialism. Veganism can therefore be a performative feminist and de-colonizing stance that rejects and bears witness to both human and nonhuman animal injustices.
To be considered for this organized session, please send a short abstract (200 words) of your proposed paper and a brief biographical statement by May 1, 2019 to Danielle Raad, draad@umass.edu.


European Social Science History Conference – Sexuality Network
Leiden, The Netherlands, 18 – 21 March, 2020
The ESSHC Sexuality Network is inviting paper and panel proposals for its biennial meeting in 2020. Founded in 1998, the Sexuality Network is Europe’s oldest and only recurrent forum for the presentation of new work in the history of sexualities from around the globe. It brings together both junior and senior scholars of sexual history from a wide range of countries, and is neither restricted to European topics, nor to European historians.
In recognition of the growing need for non-Western, transnational, transcontinental and global perspectives, the 2020 edition is especially interested in papers and panels that focus on exchanges, networks and developments across cultural and international borders. In recognition of the need to understand gender beyond the binary, the Network also encourages ground-breaking work on trans, intersex, and non-binary gender history in previously unstudied contexts and settings.
Abstract deadline: April 15
With regard to the Sexuality Network in particular, please contact its chairs:
Chiara Beccalossi (cbeccalossi@lincoln.ac.uk)
Julie Gammon (j.gammon@soton.ac.uk)


25 Years of Zapatismo Across Time and Space / Años de Zapatismo através del tiempo y el espacio
California State University Los Angeles, April 26 and 27, 2019
We invite proposals for papers, panels, roundtables, workshops, art projects, performances, installations, booths, dialogues, and other activities related to the Zapatista movement and to movements and organizations that are inspired by it. We welcome proposals from students, artists, organizers, activists, independent scholars, and faculty.
To participate, please submit a short description of your proposal to las@calstatela.edu by April 5.


Mobilities & Immobilities: Histories of Modern Migration to and in the Americas
This workshop will convene on Thursday, September 12th and Friday, September 13th at Harvard University.
Questions of migration are being debated across the globe with alarming urgency. Yet, contemporary forms of migration and the debates that arise from them are underscored by historical processes often rooted in concerns related to race, gender, sexuality, labor, class, and the state. This workshop aims to pull together scholars committed to the study of migration to and in the Americas during the modern period. In this regard, we hope to facilitate a larger conversation that underscores the various historical concerns that have produced mobility for some and immobility for others, and, at times, sustained shifting relations between mobility and immobility.
Interested applicants should submit a 400-word proposal in PDF format by May 15th to historiesofmodernmigration@gmail.com.


Visualizing the Self in Flux
25th - 26th October 2019, Pennsylvania State University
The Liberal Arts Collective invites scholars and professionals to submit presentation proposals around issues of visuality and the self in flux,  the self in search of identity, in transformation, or the self which is in process. We borrow the word flux from metallurgy where it is used as an agent to promote melting and de-oxidize the surface of a metal so that it can be joined with another metal in the process of soldering or welding. Likewise, we hope to encourage flow between disciplines and promote discussion on transformative processes.  How can this process of joining, via the agent flux, be applied to thinking of identity formation and the self in visual and literary forms?
The deadline for the submission of paper and panel proposals will be April 5th at 11:59pm EST.
Please submit all proposals and direct any inquiries to libarts.co@gmail.com.


Indigenous Studies, Midwest Popular Culture Association/Midwest American Culture Association
10-13 October 2019, Cincinnati, OH
The Indigenous Studies Area of the Midwest Popular Culture Association calls for papers, abstracts, and panel proposals for the annual Midwest Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association Conference. Abstracts may address any aspect of Aboriginal, First Nations, Maori, Sami, and other Indigenous popular cultures. In addition, the area highly encourages comparative papers between Indigenous and, say, Asian, Latin American, Pacific Islander, or African popular cultures.
Proposal deadline: April 30
Send questions and inquiries to the Area Chair, Anthony Adah at tony.adah@gmail.com


Jewish Ghosts: Haunting and the Haunted in Literature and Culture
CUNY Graduate Center and Columbia University, October 30th and 31st, 2019
Throughout literature, art and culture, haunting is tapped to figure a number of topics. It seems to recur in works by or referring to Jews. This conference will explore the many renditions of haunting which appear in the Jewish imaginary and in the imagination of Jews. What do these specters, haunted spaces and ghostly objects symbolize? How do they help or harm Jewish identity? What do they indicate about Jewish concepts of time and history? Has the shape of these Jewish hauntings altered over time? How might haunting act as a critical lens for understanding the Jewish experience? This conference aims at an inter-disciplinary look at this trope as it arises in a number of fields from the 19th century to the present day, including history, art, literature, religious studies and psychology.
Deadline: April 28th, 2019
Contact Email: JewishHaunting@gmail.com




PUBLICATIONS
Female Death Work and Feminist Deathways in the American South
This call for papers, tentatively entitled Female Death Work and Feminist Deathways in the American South, is for an edited volume that focuses specifically on the history of women, gender, and death in the American South to be published by an academic press. Recent scholarship has demonstrated that the South does indeed possess a unique history of death and dying. Southern terrain and climate, western expansion and forced migrations, the centrality of slavery, the cultural impact of African cosmologies and social practices, the Civil War and Reconstruction, white terrorism, the globalization of the American South, and a distinct and uneven shift toward modern industry and institutions all worked to produce regionally-marked mortality rates and southern deathways. This volume will build on such scholarship with a sharpened focus on the role of women and gender in shaping the southern history of death.
Deadline for Submissions: September 1, 2019
Address All Questions, Submissions, etc. to: femaledeathwork@gmail.com


Art, Activism, and the Pursuit of a Better Life
Recently there has been a surge in art of dissent as creators and performers respond to the uptick of injustice, inequality, and authoritarianism around the world. Adding urgency to this trend, the Trump administration’s recent travel ban prompted MOMA to rehang part of its permanent collection with work by artists from the seven targeted nations. Following a fractious election year and in the face of an uncertain political/social future, it seems protest has again been mobilized, and with it the art of activism, as gestures of aesthetic resistance are endowed with a renewed sense of energy and purpose.
This edition of Interdisciplinary Humanities will explore the complex terrain of artistic dissent and activism as both a contemporary practice and a tradition. How is artistic dissent visualized, enacted, performed, disseminated?
Inquiries and submissions should be sent to Wendy Chase at wendy.chase@fsw.edu and Elijah Pritchett at elijah.pritchett@fsw.edu.


Gender and Sexuality in Critical Animal Studies
A growing number of scholars, activists, and concerned citizens have come forth to advocate for those who struggle to secure equity, inclusion, and justice. This book contributes to this struggle by highlighting the interests of nonhuman animals related to gender and sexuality issues. Critical analysis such as this has the potential of operating as a powerful force for countering the stigmas that continue to oppress nonhumans. Thus my aim in creating this book is to demonstrate that critical commentary can create content that is inclusive and empowering for nonhumans.
Contact Email: Drambergeorge@gmail.com


Activism in the Name of God: Religion and Black Feminist Public Intellectuals from the Nineteenth Century to the Present
The volume’s goal is to present an historical and rhetorical trajectory of black female religious public intellectuals from the nineteenth through the twenty-first century and thus seeks papers that will demonstrate these women’s efficacy in calling for and effecting social change. The editor welcomes proposals from scholars in various fields whose interests are aligned with the issues outlined above. These primarily include African American Studies (and history),  religious studies; and disicplinary fields such as feminist, gender, and sexuality studies and rhetorical history
Interested authors should submit to jami.carlacio@yale.edu the following for consideration, by May 15, 2019


Machine Learning and Social Justice
We seek contributions on emerging problems associated with the proliferation of the Artificial Intelligence (AI) use in decision making. This interdisciplinary edited volume focuses on topics of morality and social justice and discusses Machine Learning (ML) algorithms, including sources of potential social biases, from technical perspectives. Please submit your abstract (approximately 300 words), along with your CV by April 22 to Dr. Dmitry Kurochkin dkurochk@tulane.edu and/or Dr. Elena Shabliy eshabliy@tulane.edu.


Comics and Graphic Novels
Paradoxa Volume 32
In recent decades, the increasing critical recognition of comics as a legitimate artistic and literary genre has spawned the creation of several significant international events, such as the Angoulême International Comics Festival (France) and the Lucca Comics and Games convention (Italy), helping to further break down barriers and to bring national traditions into ever closer contact. What can a transnational analysis of the development of comics and graphic novels teach us about the nature of the genre? Do the exchanges and circulations (of authors, characters, styles, subjects, publishing formats…) between national traditions allow for a rewriting of the evolution of graphic narratives, outside of nation-based or linguistic models?
500-word abstracts of article proposals or questions regarding this project should be sent to frigerio@dal.ca by September 1, 2019.


Urban Gaming in the Smart, Creative, and Sustainable City
This proposed edited collection seeks papers that examine intersections between game studies, play studies, urban geography and other related disciplines. We seek contributions from scholars, artists, urbanists and commentators that explore the ways urban games, play and playfulness can connect with contemporary urban policy discourses that often ignore or overlook them. These discourses include the economic exigencies of the "creative city"; the environmental strategies of "the sustainable city"; and the technological optimization envisioned by the "smart city." Contributions may include comparative case studies, such as those that examine how specific urban games complicate, contradict, or complement visions of the near-future city as seamless, responsive, and adaptable to the challenges of urban life and infrastructural management.
Please submit along with CV by April 20th for consideration.
Contact Email: mowens@berkeley.edu


Crisis: Predicament and Potential
Aigne, 2019/2020 Issue
Crisis is a concept which often has strong negative connotations, particularly in a world experiencing a series of economic, political, and social crises within various contexts, territories, and vocations. While crisis and predicament seem to have an intuitive connection, crisis is also a catalyst for invention and innovation: for potential. Crisis encourages us to experiment with both reshaped and unprecedented paradigms, even in uncertain or turbulent scenarios which could appear transgressive at the time presented. It is important to value and understand, in the context of new emerging mind-sets, the potential of these transformations and the impact they could have for the world we live in.
Abstract Deadline April 19th, 2019
Email to: aigne@ucc.ie.


Historical Reflections/Réflexions Historiques
Historical Reflections/Réflexions Historiques (HRRH) has established a well-deserved reputation for publishing high quality articles of wide-ranging interest for over forty years. The journal, which publishes articles in both English and French, is committed to exploring history in an interdisciplinary framework and with a comparative focus. Historical approaches to art, literature, and the social sciences; the history of mentalities and intellectual movements; the terrain where religion and history meet: these are the subjects to which Historical Reflections/Réflexions Historiques is devoted.
Send submissions and complete contact information to the editor, Elizabeth Macknight at e.macknight@abdn.ac.uk.


“What the Hell is Going On?”: Essays on Faith & Theology in the Zombie Apocalypse
The editors seek original essays for an edited collection on the place of theology and belief in the context of the zombie apocalypse. This collection will address the function of faith and belief more broadly within existing and forthcoming zombie media. The evolving zombie studies space addresses many facets of human behavior and action in the post-apocalyptic landscape, but few address the presence of belief—ranging from how organized religion survives (or evolves) amidst zombies, how survivors cope with lingering spirituality or a desire to believe, or even how zombies themselves might express “faith” or “belief” in a post-human environment.
Preference will be given to abstracts received before June 30th, 2019.
Contact us and send abstracts to Ashley and Simon at theologyofzombies@gmail.com.


Boyhood Studies - An Interdisciplinary Journal
Boyhood Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal is a peer-reviewed journal providing a forum for the discussion of boyhood, young masculinities, and boys’ lives by exploring the full scale of intricacies, challenges, and legacies that inform male and masculine developments. Boyhood Studies is committed to a critical and international scope and solicits both articles and special issue proposals from a variety of research fields including, but not limited to, the social and psychological sciences, historical and cultural studies, philosophy, and social, legal, and health studies.
Contact Email: boyhoodstudies@gmail.com



Calls for Papers, Funding Opportunities, and Resources, March 9, 2019

The Western History Association Scholarships, Fellowships, Honors
Sara Jackson Graduate Student Award
In recognition of Sara Jackson’s commitment to minority students and graduate research, the WHA provides an annual award of $500 in support of graduate student (M.A. or Ph.D.) research on the North American West.

WHA-Huntington Library Martin Ridge Fellowship
In recognition of Martin Ridge's long service to both the Western History Association and The Huntington Library, this $3500, one-month research fellowship at The Huntington Library has been established in his honor. Eligible applicants must have a Ph.D. or equivalent or be a doctoral student at the dissertation stage.

Walter Rundell Award
In recognition of the late Walter Rundell, Jr.’s commitment to graduate education in the field of Western History, the Western History Association offers a graduate student award for $1500.
All deadlines: June 15


Resident Fellowship at the Summer Institute for Chinese Studies, University of Pittsburgh
Applications for a week-long intensive academic career development program are invited from junior scholars who have received their PhD degrees after 2013.  Eight scholars in a range of disciplines will be selected from a pool of international applicants.  Scholars will engage with leading Chinese studies faculty to make creative use of new media to produce public knowledge about Chinese society, culture, and history and develop research-based expertise in teaching.  Selected fellows will come to the University of Pittsburgh to join a team of international faculty for one week, May 26th – June 1st, 2019.
Applications, including a letter with details on teaching and research experience, a CV, a draft syllabus, and the names and contact information of two referees must be submitted no later than April 10th to Dr. Joseph S. Alter at asia@pitt.edu. Early applications are strongly encouraged.


LSU Libraries Special Collections Research Grant
The LSU Libraries is offering research travel grants of $1000 each to support the work of researchers who use the rich holdings of the LSU Libraries Special Collections. The purpose of the grant is to support a researcher’s travel and lodging costs associated with a research trip to Baton Rouge, LA. Graduate level, post-doctoral, faculty and independent researchers who live outside the Baton Rouge area are encouraged to apply.
Application deadline: April 30, 2019
Email special@lsu.edu with any questions about the research travel grants. 


Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics Funding
For more information about the awards and application details, please visit http://dolearchives.ku.edu/grants.
Research Fellowship
The Dole Archive and Special Collections is now accepting applications for the 2019 Research Fellowship.  Graduate students and post-doctoral scholars are eligible to apply for this $2,500 award, which will support substantial contributions to the study of Congress, politics, or policy issues on a national or international scale.
Applications must be received in whole on or before May 31, 2019.

Travel Grants
The Dole Archive and Special Collections is now accepting applications for 2019 Travel Grants.  The travel grant program is intended to defray costs associated with research-related travel to the Dole Institute.  This program offers reimbursements of up to $750 to undergraduate and graduate students, post-doctoral researchers, and independent scholars.
There is no deadline to apply, and applications will be accepted until funds are exhausted.


Coordinating Council For Women In History 2019 Awards
CCWH Nupur Chaudhuri First Article Award 2019
The winning article for 2019 must be published in a refereed journal in either 2016 or 2017. An article may only be submitted once.  All fields of history will be considered.

CCWH Ida B. Wells Graduate Student Fellowship 2019
The Coordinating Council for Women in History Ida B. Wells Graduate Student Fellowship is an annual award of $1000 given to a graduate student working on a historical dissertation that interrogates race and gender, not necessarily in a history department.

CCWH Catherine Prelinger Memorial Award 2019
The Coordinating Council for Women in History will award $20,000 to a scholar, with a Ph.D. or has advanced to candidacy, who has not followed a traditional academic path of uninterrupted and completed secondary, undergraduate, and graduate degrees leading to a tenure-track faculty position. Although the recipient’s degrees do not have to be in history, the recipient’s work should clearly be historical in nature

The deadline for the awards is 2 April 2019. Please go to www.theccwh.org for membership and online application details.

No comments:

Post a Comment