Sunday, November 24, 2024

Calls for Papers, Funding Opportunities, and Resources, November 24, 2024

CONFERENCES  AND WORKSHOPS

Stories of Climate Transformation

https://www.scienceandfiction.fiu.edu/nc-25-cfp

40th Annual International Conference on Narrative, April 2—6, 2025 | Miami, FL

We invite paper, panel, and roundtable proposals on all aspects of narrative in any genre, period, discipline, language, and medium.  The theme is neither prescriptive nor binding. Rather, it will be a thread in the program, indicative of a handful of special sessions we’ll hold to spark interdisciplinary collaboration.

Deadline: December 1, 2024.

Organizing committee:   sciandfi@fiu.edu

Conference coordinator: Rhona Trauvitch, rhona.trauvitch@fiu.edu

 

BAIT, PROMPTS, and AID: The Power and Poetics of Engagement in Art, Technology, History, and Human Nature/Nurture

https://rawconference2025.wixstudio.io/baitaid

The 16th Annual Research, Art, Writing Conference, March 1, 2025, University of Texas at Dallas

 RAW 2025 presents bait and aid as complementary concepts providing a compelling framework for addressing both the risks and opportunities posed by emerging technological tools. These dynamics, particularly in relation to the "risk of bait" in digital media, challenge existing norms. Bait and aid influence how we engage with these forces playing a critical role in shaping cultural identity, particularly within the contexts of migration, colonial legacy, and the preservation of cultural heritage. Notions of bait and aid extend beyond disembodied clickbait, online advertising, and social media to embodied human and interspecies interaction within history, literature, art, where anticipatory expressions create both suspense and curiosity. From the internet to analogue, bait and aid engage organisms as teleological forces and nuanced communicators. RAW 2025 queries, what are the qualities of an intelligence, whether organic or artificial, when engaging the dialect of bait and aid?

deadline: Friday, December 6, 2024, at 11:59 pm

email   rawconference@utdallas.edu

 

Law, Culture, and the Humanities Conference

https://lawculturehumanities.com/event/2025-twenty-seventh-annual-conference/

The Association for the Study of Law, Culture, and the Humanities is excited to announce that we are now accepting submissions for our Twenty-Seventh Annual Conference. The conference will be held in person (with some online components) on June 17-18, 2025 at Georgetown Law in Washington, D.C. This year's theme is "Speech Matters." 

We are also accepting applications for our annual Graduate Student Workshop, which will take place at Georgetown Law in Washington, D.C. on June 16, 2025 (the day before the conference).

The application deadline for both events is January 31, 2025.

Please contact us at lch@lawculturehumanities.com with any queries.

 

Democratizing Human Rights: Towards an Inclusive and Participatory Human Rights Agenda

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20048662/call-papers-workshop-democratizing-human-rights-towards-inclusive-and

July 2025 | Venue: Hamilton, Canada | Format: In-Person/Hybrid

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted by the United Nations in 1948, set forth fundamental rights and freedoms to which all individuals are entitled. However, the implementation and protection of these rights have often been uneven, as international human rights laws are frequently shaped by geopolitical dynamics and interests, questions of national sovereignty, and assertions of cultural particularities. Over 75 years later, the universality of human rights remains both a foundational ideal and a source of ongoing tension, as the practical application of these rights often reflects imbalances in power and privilege. This workshop will explore how participatory processes can address the tensions between majority rule and minority rights, and between the universality of human rights and the particularities of local contexts. Proposals should draw connections between democracy and human rights.

Proposals are due on January 15, 2025

email  participediahumanrightscluster@gmail.com

 

Eaton Conference on Speculative Fiction

https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/10/28/eaton-conference-on-speculative-fiction

We warmly invite established and emerging scholars to participate in the Eaton Conference on Speculative Fiction, which will be held in-person at the University of California, Riverside from April 4-5, 2025. All scholars, especially graduate and undergraduate students are encouraged to submit abstracts for a two-day conference on speculative fiction and the archive to share and engage in conversation about their work, foster community and collegiality, and gain conference experience. This event will be free and open to the public.

deadline: November 30

Please send any inquiries regarding the symposium to eatonconference@gmail.com.

 

Conference for Interdisciplinary Research

https://www.utrgv.edu/interdisciplinaryconference/call-for-proposals/guidelines/index.htm

The School of Interdisciplinary Programs and Community Engagement (SIPCE) in the College of Liberal Arts at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley invites proposals for its Fourth Annual Conference for Interdisciplinary Research, which will take place on April 24-25, 2025.  The conference will focus on identifying and addressing ethical issues, questions, and dilemmas encountered in interdisciplinary environments. Additionally, it will provide a platform to discuss how interdisciplinary research can offer solutions to today’s complex challenges and problems.

The deadline for submissions is Friday, December 30, 2024 (11:59 PM).

Contact Email  friederike.bruehoefener@utrgv.edu

 

Queer History South 2026

https://invisiblehistory.org/qhs2026/  

February 20-22, Fully Virtual Conference

Queer History South (QHS) is a network and conference for those interested in the preservation, research, and education of LGBTQ history in the US South. While QHS is centered on Southerners, those outside the region may find the conference informative. We will prioritize those working in and about the South, we may accept proposals about other regions.

Queer History South is open to proposals and sessions of all kinds, however we will give priority to the following topics:

Telling Our Histories: presentations on historical research for example, an overview of a local drag bar

Saving History: presentations that cover threats and potential solutions to LGBTQ archives in the South and elsewhere

Out of the Institution: presentations that address ways in which you are outreaching to the public, connecting with local communities, and working across generations (exhibits, social media, digital outreach, community archives, community education, tours, and so on)

State of the Field: presentations that explore the ways in which we conduct LGBTQ historical research, archives, and education and how to be successful doing so

Submissions open December 2, 2024 and close at midnight on March 16, 2025

 

Politics & Gender Conference

https://www.pagconference.org/

MAY 28-29, 2025, Rutgers University

The conference aims to represent the full range of questions, issues, and approaches on gender and women across the major subfields of political science, including comparative politics, international relations, political theory, and U.S. politics. We welcome research addressing fundamental questions in politics and political science from a gender perspective, as well as those that interrogate and challenge standard analytical categories and conventional methodologies. The organizers are open to submissions on all topics related to women, gender, and politics. We are particularly interested, however, in receiving submissions taking stock of the current political moment and/or addressing new and emerging questions in gendered political analysis.

January 15: Paper proposals due

Email: pag@apsanet.org

 

Conference on the Liberal Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences

https://sites.google.com/view/lahsscon/about?authuser=0  

Youngstown State University welcomes proposals from undergraduate and graduate students for the eleventh annual Valerie Waksmunski-Starr Memorial Conference on the Liberal Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (LAHSS-Con), to be held April 16-18, 2025, at the Youngstown Historical Center of Industry and Labor.

We invite proposals for individual papers, posters, panels, workshops, and roundtables on any subject related to the liberal arts, humanities, and social sciences, including from the disciplines of anthropology, archaeology, education, English, geography, gender studies, history, philosophy, political science, psychology, religion, and sociology. 

We are pleased to offer prizes to the best graduate and undergraduate presentations.

To apply, please submit an abstract of no more than 250 words to https://sites.google.com/view/lahsscon/submit-proposal?authuser=0  by January 17, 2025

Please direct any questions to Dr. Amy Laurel Fluker, with subject line LAHSS, at alfluker@ysu.edu.

 

 Worlding Beyond the End of the World

https://www.uwo.ca/theory/events/conferences.html

We are pleased to announce the in-person 2025 Theory & Criticism conference at Western University from April 25th-26th. This conference aims to look beyond visions of the future that are confined to the utopian-dystopian binary. To do so, it will feature theoretically rich work from decolonial, queer, trans, and crip-futurism(s) and their intersections. Questions this conference will address include: How do decolonial, queer, trans, and crip-futurism(s) offer visions of the future that challenge dominant imaginations? What might those worlds look like at the level of affective life, political procedure, techno-economic structure, and ecology? How does homo economicus or the white, abled, heteropatriarchal ‘Man’ contribute to current crises, and how can we move beyond him? What role does SF and experimental writing play in bridging the gap between theory and practice in envisioning alternative futures? What kind of art, performance, poetry, and fiction open new futures and horizons?

Contact Email  cstc-conference@uwo.ca

 

Conference on the Liberal Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences

https://sites.google.com/view/lahsscon?usp=sharing

Youngstown State University welcomes proposals from undergraduate and graduate students for the eleventh annual Valerie Waksmunski-Starr Memorial Conference on the Liberal Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (LAHSS-Con), to be held April 16-18, 2025, at the Youngstown Historical Center of Industry and Labor in Youngstown, Ohio. We invite proposals for individual papers, posters, panels, workshops, and roundtables on any subject related to the liberal arts, humanities, and social sciences, including from the disciplines of anthropology, archaeology, education, English, geography, gender studies, history, philosophy, political science, psychology, religion, and sociology.

To apply, please submit an abstract of no more than 250 words at the “Submit Proposal” link above by January 17, 2025.

Please direct any questions to Dr. Amy Laurel Fluker, with subject line LAHSS, at alfluker@ysu.edu.

 

Humanities Education and Research Association Conference

https://www.utep.edu/liberalarts/hera/conference/

HERA’s 2025 conference theme focuses on the questions, challenges, and opportunities presented by the growth of newer technologies alongside traditional approaches and methodologies associated with humanistic inquiry. To what extent can technology enhance or overshadow the Humanities? Are advances in technology affecting the culture of the Humanities? Whether your research is grounded in classical studies, explores more contemporary approaches, or falls somewhere in the middle, we welcome you to join us in at the University of Houston-Downtown, Houston, TX, March 12-15, 2025, to delve into discussion, discover new insights, and respectfully debate how traditions and technology will shape the future of our field.

Deadline for submission: no later than 12 February 2025. 

Questions may be directed to the conference organizer, Marcia Green (mgreen@sfsu.edu).

 

(Re)Placement

https://shiftingtidesanxiousborders.weebly.com/stab-2025.html

The Dept. of English, General Literature and Rhetoric at Binghamton University invites abstracts for papers for our graduate conference Shifting Tides, Anxious Borders (STAB) scheduled for March 29, 2025.

We invite scholars, artists, and activists to examine the processes through which spaces are transformed into places and the consequential impacts of such transformations. Of particular interest are the ways group identities redefine themselves in response to changes in their physical and conceptual 'territories', and how places shape our subjectivities and imaginations in the era of globalization and neoliberalization. We encourage exploration of the roles that 'places' play in the context of geopolitics, forced and voluntary migrations, and the rise of digital media. Additionally, we welcome investigations into how literature and other arts prompt reflection on our own placements within these negotiations and inspire reimagining of these positions.

Submission deadline: January 31, 2025

For questions, contact stab.binghamton@gmail.com.

 

Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Black Liberal Arts Tradition

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20050385/call-papers-martin-luther-king-jr-and-black-liberal-arts-tradition

The Morehouse College Martin Luther King, Jr. Papers Collection welcomes submissions for the symposium “Martin Luther King and the Black Liberal Arts Tradition”, which will be held on October 9-11, 2025, on the campus of Morehouse College.

We assert King as an exemplar of the Black Liberal Arts Tradition. Morehouse and other HBCUs placed the mission and vision of the liberal arts in the service of Black freedom. As a student, King encountered, in a powerful way, the questions that form the basis of intellectual inquiry – questions of existence, identity, and place in the world. He explored these and other questions across disciplines. King was not alone in this experience. His experiences reflect a larger process that influenced and continues to influence generations of Black students. The Black Liberal Arts Tradition serves as a doorway through which to explore the reverberations of this tradition as manifested in the work of generations of their alumni and the communities in which they lived and served.

Submit a 300-word abstract to mlksymposium@morehouse.edu by January 15, 2025

Contact Email  mckinneyc@rhodes.edu

 

Being Human: Individualism and the Self from the Renaissance to the 21st Century Conference

https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/arts/hrc/confs/bh/ 

Sponsored by the Humanities Research Centre at the University of Warwick, will take place on 22 February, 2025.

This one-day interdisciplinary conference will focus on the development, conceptualisation, and significance of individualism, human nature, and the self in the Western world, from the early modern era to the modern day. It aims to bring together a diverse range of scholars from history and literature through to philosophy and theology in an attempt to put disparate theoretical approaches in conversation with one another. In doing so, we hope to facilitate a nuanced consideration of these concepts’ historicity and cultural variability in a modern-day West which often assumes their total universality.

The submission deadline for our CFP is 15 DECEMBER 2024

 

 

PUBLICATIONS

Imagining Global Liberation: Antiracism, Anti-Imperialism, and the US Third World Left since the 1970s

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20048167/call-papers-edited-volume-imagining-global-liberation-antiracism-anti

In her 2006 book Soul Power, Cynthia A. Young coined the term “US Third World Left” to describe Americans of color who, in the age of decolonization, Black Power, and the Vietnam War, came to see antiracism and anti-imperialism as interlinked domestic and global imperatives. The US Third World Left encompassed both political frameworks that cast the domestic fight for racial justice as one front in a global movement for liberation, and the use of a shared, ‘Third World’ identity to imagine Americans of color into a global, resistant community. While a considerable body of scholarship has explored the ways Americans of color conceptualized the relationship between antiracism and anti-imperialism before and during the Vietnam War, no existing collection focuses on these themes in the period since the Vietnam War ended.

To address this lacuna, I am looking for papers that explore the ways antiracism and anti-imperialism have been understood and practiced as a transnational or global project by Americans of color since around 1973.

Interested parties can send inquiries and submissions to ikeda.j@northeastern.edu; submissions will be accepted through 12/15/2024.

 

Multispecies Intellectual History

https://www.environmentandsociety.org/arcadia/collection/18792

The Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society and Eiko Honda (Aarhus University) call for papers under the theme of ‘Multispecies Intellectual History,’ to be published in the peer-reviewed, open-access journal Arcadia: Explorations in Environmental History. The CfP aims to create the new thematic collection of featured articles within the journal on events in environmental history understood through a multispecies intellectual history perspective.

Please contact the journal editor Jonatan Palmblad (jonatan.palmblad@lmu.de) and the collection’s principal curator Eiko Honda (eiko.honda@cas.au.dk) if you are unsure about the topic and approach you are considering for your contribution.

Deadline: Jan 31, 2025

 

Palestine and Campus Movements: Sites of Transnational Feminist Solidarities

https://fisherpub.sjf.edu/gatherings/news.html

Since October 2023, university and college campuses across North America and around the world have become sites of increasing protests and actions in support of the struggle for the liberation of Palestine. They vary in their form and focus, including teach-ins, walk-outs, and encampments that spotlight issues such as the genocide of Palestinians in Gaza, the occupation of Palestine, the ongoing displacement of Palestinian refugees, Israeli illegal settlement in the occupied territories, Israeli apartheid, the targeted decimation of schools and universities in Gaza (“scholasticide”), U.S. support of the war, and university investments in the state of Israel and businesses that operate in the occupied territories. Across disciplines and backgrounds, academics and activists have gathered and mobilized in support of the student movement and encampments across the globe, demanding their protection and the broader protection of speech on campus. Scholars, students, and faculty–especially in women and gender studies programs–have been pushing the boundaries of public discourse, and we take inspiration from their work to produce this issue of Gatherings. Gatherings invites scholars, artists, and activists to reflect on this campus-based transnational activism. We encourage various modes of discourse, including research articles, memoir, video essays, digital art, interviews and more.

Please submit a 300-word abstract and a 100-word bio via the online submission form by November 15, 2024

 

Call for Reviewers - Journal of Popular Culture

The Journal of Popular Culture is looking for those who are interested in reviewing books. These reviews will be due on January 10, 2025.  If you have a completed Master's degree or higher, one of these books is in your field of study, and you are interested in writing a review for us, please contact me at kiuchiyu@msu.edu, noting your preferred title and your mailing address. Please also send a short explanation to state what makes you a good reviewer of the book (or you may send me your CV). The reviews need to be between 500 and 1,000 words and documented in MLA style. Physical books may only be sent to an address in the U.S. International reviewers will receive an e-copy of the book.

Available Books

Reginald Wiebe and Doothy Woodman, The Cancer Plot: Terminal Immortality in Marvel's Moral Universe, Alberta

Jon Langmead, Ballyhood: The Roughhousers, Con Artists, and Wildmen Who Invented Professional Wrestling, Missouri

Kitty Ledbetter and Scott Foster Siman, Broadcasting the Ozarks: Si Siman and Country Music at the Cross Roads, Arkansas

Glenn Gerstner, Andy Varipapa: Bowling's First Superstar, McFarland (Only available as PDF)

James Scorer, Latin American Comics in the Twenty-First Century: Transgressing the Frame, Texas

Frank Garcia, Clicas: Gender, Sexuality, and Struggle in Latino/a/x Gang Literature and Film, Texas

Megan Amber Condis and Mike Sell, Ready Reader One: The Stories We Tell With, About, and Around Videogames, LSU

Matt Foy and Christopher Olson, Mystery Science Tehater 3000: A Cultural History, Rowman and Littlefield

Vicki Valosik, Swimming Pretty: The Untold Story of Women in Water, Liveright

Molly Schneider, Gold Dust on the Air: Television, Anthology Drama and Midcentury American Culture, Texas

Mark Hibbett, Data and Doctor Doom: An Emperical Approach to Transmedia Characters, Palgrave

Daniel Worden, Petro-Chemical Fantasies: The Art and Energy of American Comics, Ohio State U

Sam Langsdale, Searching for Feminist: Gender, Sexuality, and Race in Marvel Comics, Texas

Gary Kuchar, Shakespeare and the World of Slings and Arrows, McGill

Jordan Carroll, Speculative Whiteness, Forerunners

Mel Stanfill, Fandom is Ugly: Networked Harassment in Participatory Culture, NYU

Robyn Muir, The Cultural Legacy of Disney: A Century of Magic, Lexington

Ed Gruver, The Wee Ice Mon Cometh: Ben Hogan's 1053 Triple Slam and One of Golf's Greatest Summers, Nebraska

Marie-Pier Luneau, Love Stories Now and Then: A History of Les Romans d'Amour, Baraka Books

Aditya Misra, Theorizing the Superhero: Performativity and Politics, Palgrave

Patrick Lewis, Playing at War: Identity and Memory in Civil War Video Games, LSUP

Reem Hilu, The Intimate Life of Computers: Digitizing Domesticity in the 1980s, Minnesota

Krista Noble, One with the Force: 18 Universal Truths in Star Wars, Rowman & Littlefield

M. Keith Booker, American Noir Film: From the Maltese Falcon to Gone Girl, Rowman & Littlefield

Ben Robbins, Faulkner's Hollywood Novels: Women Between Page and Screen, Virginia

Megan Hunt, Southern by the Grace of God: Religion, Race, and Civil Rights in Hollywood's Amercan South

 

Queering Affective and Social Reproductive Labor in Post-Pandemic Life

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20049995/invitation-contribute-special-issue-queering-affective-and-social

Calls for Submissions: Invitation to Contribute to the Special Issue on "Queering Affective and Social Reproductive Labor in Post-Pandemic Life" for Women's Studies in Communication (WSIC). Calls for Submissions: Invitation to Contribute to the Special Issue on "Queering Affective and Social Reproductive Labor in Post-Pandemic Life" for Women's Studies in Communication (WSIC). Hence, in this special issue, we invite submissions from people who engage with overarching research questions such as but are not limited to - what does social reproductive labor look like, in the interpersonal and family space in the new normal?

If you are interested in submitting for the special issue please send us a brief abstract with a note of your interest as soon as possible.  Completed first drafts due: January 8, 2025

Abstracts can be submitted directly to the special issue editors at radhik@bgsu.edu  and drahut@bgsu.edu.

 

Dissenting Feminisms

https://irw.rutgers.edu/about-rejoinder?view=article&id=736:call-for-submissions-september-2024&catid=42:web-journals

From campaigns against disenfranchisement to protests against sexual and gender-based violence, feminism has historically combined dissent—against exclusion, subordination, and prevailing power structures—with a focus on the imperative for social and political transformation. This issue of Rejoinder explores the history of feminist dissent and how it has shifted through the decades, both for activists and academics. In addition to a historical focus, we seek to address contemporary manifestations of dissent within feminism, exploring who successfully forges narratives that challenge feminism’s dominant iteration(s)—and what accounts for their success. We ask whose feminist voices are excluded from, or marginalized in, prevailing feminist discourse and consider what this implies about feminism's future. We encourage contributions that explore feminism(s) from a wide range of positionalities, contexts, and geographical regions. Submissions may include essays, commentary, criticism, fiction, poetry, and artwork. We particularly welcome contributions at the intersection of scholarship and activism.

Please send completed written work (2,000-2,500 words max -- MS Word), jpegs of artwork, and short bios to  irw@sas.rutgers.edu with "Rejoinder Submission" in the subject line by December 15, 2024

 

Gendered Life Stories and the Politics of Imagination

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20049610/cfp-special-issue

Portal: Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies, special issue

Why do some personal narratives spark national or global movements? How do gendered life stories transcend individual experiences to challenge societal norms and drive social change? This special issue seeks to open new scholarly conversations by examining how gendered life stories spark public revolutions and reshape cultural discourses. When amplified through digital platforms, the potential of gendered life stories to spark change is magnified, making them critical tools for reimagining social realities and driving cultural and political shifts. We invite contributions that offer new insights into how gendered life stories act as agents of social change.

Submit an abstract of up to 300 words outlining your proposed contribution by 28 February 2025 to portal.scholarly.journal@gmail.com.

 

 

FUNDING/FELLOWSHIPS/PRIZES

National Council on Public History (NCPH) Diversity Travel Award

https://ncph.org/about/awards/ncph-diversity-travel-award/  

Four $500 travel grants to support attendance at the NCPH Annual Meeting for representatives of minority-supporting institutions, including but not limited to universities (including HBCUs, HSIs, etc.), museums, historic sites, and other organizations that base their primary work in supporting marginalized communities through public history broadly defined. Applicants must be members of NCPH and represent a minority-supporting institution and/or be a member of an underrepresented group, broadly defined, to be eligible for this award.

Nominations must be received no later than December 1, 2024. Late submissions will not be considered.


Women's Campaign School

https://lbjwcs.lbj.utexas.edu/how-apply

The Center for Women in Government provides full tuition reimbursement grants to qualified Texas residents to attend this training program specifically for women seeking elected office or work on campaigns. The LBJ WCS sixth cohort will begin in mid-May 2025 with an in-person kick-off in Austin followed by five live, online classes, eight total mentoring and networking sessions, and one media training. Applications are now open and the priority deadline is fast approaching!

Round 1 (priority funding) application deadline: Dec. 16, 2024

 

Houghton Library Visiting Fellowship Program

https://library.harvard.edu/grants-fellowships/houghton-library-visiting-fellowships

The Visiting Fellowship program offers scholars at all stages of their careers funding to pursue projects that require in-depth research on the library’s holdings, as well as opportunities to draw on staff expertise and participate in intellectual life at Harvard. Houghton Library has historically focused on collecting the written record of European and Eurocentric North American culture, yet it holds a large and diverse amount of primary sources valuable for research on the languages, culture and history of indigenous peoples of the Americas, Africa, Asia and Oceania.

Fellows in the 2025–2026 cohort will receive a $4,500 stipend and are required to be in residence at Houghton for four weeks within their fellowship year

Applications are due January 17, 2025

 

Special Collections Research Fellowships | University of Michigan Library

https://www.lib.umich.edu/research-and-scholarship/awards-and-grants/special-collections-research-fellowships

The University of Michigan Library invites applications for fellowships for research in residence. Three fellowship opportunities are available to researchers whose work would benefit from onsite access to our special collections. The current application cycle is open from 1 November 2024 through 31 January 2025.

 

Pomegranate Writing Fellowship for Jewish Women of Color

https://jwa.org/pomegranate

A year-long writing Fellowship for Jewish women of color and racially and ethnically diverse Jewish women* that supports the development of their talents, provides a platform that amplifies their voices, and builds the field of Jewish women of color thought leaders. *JWA embraces expansive understandings of Jewishness and gender. We include Jews from all backgrounds and those who are non-binary, genderqueer, or gender-questioning.

Applications for the Pomegranate Writing Fellowship close December 16, 2024.

 

Center for Southern Jewish Culture at the College of Charleston research fellowship program

https://jewish-south.charleston.edu/about-research-fellowships/

Charleston Fellows will receive research grants to cover the cost of travel and residency while conducting archival research in Special Collections at the College of Charleston. Applicants must be working on projects of scholarship, public history, or artistic production that would benefit from research in Special Collections at the College of Charleston. Preference will be given to candidates coming from out of state and those using materials from the Jewish Heritage Collection at the College’s Addlestone Library. Recipients may include scholars at all stages of their career including graduate students, independent researchers, as well as journalists, filmmakers, artists, and exhibition curators.

The fellowship committee will begin reviewing applications on March 1, 2025.

For any inquiries regarding the fellowship, please contact Ashley Walters at waltersa1@cofc.edu.

 

Schlesinger Library Grants

https://apply-radcliffe-institute.smapply.io/

The Schlesinger Library invites predoctoral scholars whose dissertation research requires use of the Library’s collections to apply for research support. Grants of $3,000 will be given on a competitive basis. Applicants must have advanced to candidacy in a doctoral program in a relevant field and have an approved dissertation topic. Priority will be given to those whose projects require use of materials available only at the Schlesinger Library.

Applications must be received by Sunday, January 26, 2025

Questions? Contact slgrants@radcliffe.harvard.edu   

 

Research Fellowship in Texas History

The Texas State Library and Archives Commission (TSLAC) offers each year the Research Fellowship in Texas History for the best research proposal utilizing collections of the State Archives in Austin or the Sam Houston Regional Library and Research Center in Liberty, Texas. Research topics should be significant to Texas history, with preference given to fresh areas of study and/or under-sourced archival collections. Applicants may contact ref@tsl.texas.gov for more information about collections. Apply by January 15, 2025. Find more information and the application form online here: https://www.tsl.texas.gov/arc/researchfellowship

 

2025-26 Fellowships, Linda Hall Library

https://www.lindahall.org/research/linda-hall-library-fellowships/

The Linda Hall Library is now accepting applications for our 2025-26 fellowship program. These fellowships provide graduate students, postdoctoral researchers, and independent scholars in the history of science and related humanities fields with financial support to explore the Library’s outstanding science and engineering collections. The Library offers residential fellowships to support on-site research in Kansas City, as well as virtual fellowships for scholars working remotely using resources from the Library’s digital collections. Applicants may request up to four months of funding at a rate of $3,000 per month for doctoral students and $4,200 per month for postdoctoral researchers.

All application materials are due no later than January 17, 2025

email fellowships@lindahall.org

 

 

JOBS/INTERNSHIPS

Assistant Professor of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies

Cottey College, a private liberal arts and sciences college for women, invites applications for a full-time, tenure-track position in women, gender, and sexuality studies (WGS), starting August 2025. We are looking for a motivated candidate who is interested in teaching a broad range of courses in a student-centered, collaborative environment. The preferred candidate will have earned a Ph.D. in WGS, Rhetoric & Composition, or related field; have shown a record of excellence in undergraduate teaching; and have demonstrated evidence of scholarly work in WGS. Successful candidates will also be expected to coordinate the WGS program. The WGS program includes faculty across the disciplines and reflects the College’s three threads: leadership, social responsibility, and global awareness.

Review of applications will begin December 2, 2024, and continues until the position is filled.


Postdoctoral Fellowship - Gender Studies

The Gender Studies Program at the University of Notre Dame invites applications for a two-year postdoctoral fellowship in Gender Studies to begin August 2025.Applicants must be fluent in feminist and queer theories and methodologies and prepared to teach both core courses (feminist and gender theory) and Gender Studies electives in their area of specialization. Evidence of scholarly achievement and successful teaching experience is essential. Applications are welcome from scholars who hold a PhD in Gender / Feminist / Sexuality Studies. All degree requirements should be completed before August 1, 2025.

Applicants must submit a cover letter, CV, a short (one-page) statement of teaching philosophy, and three letters of recommendation to http://apply.interfolio.com/ by December 10, 2024.Questions may be addressed to Barbara Green, Director of the Gender Studies Program, at bgreen@nd.edu. 


African American Studies Assistant Professor

https://jobs.cofc.edu/postings/16109

The College of Charleston’s African American Studies Program invites applications for a tenure-track assistant professor position starting August 16, 2025. We seek a dynamic and productive scholar with a demonstrated record of excellence in applying interdisciplinary and intersectional approaches to scholarship and teaching who works in African American/Black Studies from across the disciplines. We are particularly interested in scholars with expertise in African/African American foodways. Candidates must have a Ph.D. in African American Studies or a discipline within the humanities or social sciences, with a strong record of effective teaching and active research. The standard teaching load will be 3/3, and the candidate should be able to teach Introduction to African American Studies and upper-level courses, including the Capstone in African American Studies. The candidate must have completed their Ph.D. by the beginning of the appointment.

For full consideration, applications should be received by December 31, 2024

Questions about the search can be directed to the Director of African American Studies/Search Committee Chair, Anthony D. Greene: greenead@cofc.edu or 843-953-0675.

 

Assistant or Associate Professor - Black/Africana/African American Studies

https://www.higheredjobs.com/faculty/details.cfm?JobCode=178948524

The Africana and Latinx Studies Department department at the State University of New York at Oneonta invites applications for an Assistant or Associate Professor of Black/Africana/African American Studies beginning Fall 2025. Primary Specialization: Interest in one or more of the following: Freedom Trail Histories, Emancipation Studies, Race and Ethnicity in Medicine and Health Care, Race and Ethnicity in Ecologies and Environment, and/or Queer Studies. Secondary Specialization: Interests in one or more of the following: Labor Studies, Religion and Liberation Theologies, Food Studies, Urban Studies, and/or Rural-Urban Migrations.

 

Postdoc - Feminism and the Culture Wars

https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/29141

The Duke University Program in Gender, Sexuality & Feminist (GSF) Studies invites applications for a residential postdoctoral associate focused on “Feminism and the Culture Wars” for the 2025-2026 academic year. Through research, teaching, and service, the associate will contribute to the overall work of the GSF Program. We seek candidates with training in Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies and allied fields with a specific research focus on the culture wars, broadly construed, and feminism’s historical and/or contemporary entanglements with moral panic. We welcome a variety of disciplinary and interdisciplinary perspectives that situate the culture wars in a transnational context, from anti-LGBTQ extremism and Islamophobia to the border “crisis” and climate change denialism. Research may examine the affective politics of moral panic, as well as liberatory modes of resistance like decolonization, demilitarization, abolition, and transformative justice. Scholars with expertise in the following areas are encouraged to apply: transmisogyny; the policing of sex and sexuality; anti-abortion movements; purity culture; xenophobia and the refugee crisis; the war on terror; the war on drugs; and anti-intellectualism.

Please submit applications electronically by January 15, 2025

 

Postdoctoral Fellowship at Notre Dame

https://apply.interfolio.com/157362

The Gender Studies Program at the University of Notre Dame invites applications for a two-year postdoctoral fellowship in Gender Studies to begin August 2025. The successful candidate will teach one course per semester and will be expected to pursue a program of independent research and participate in the scholarly life of the faculty. The fellow is expected to be in residence. Applicants must be fluent in feminist and queer theories and methodologies and prepared to teach both core courses (feminist and gender theory) and Gender Studies electives in their area of specialization. Evidence of scholarly achievement and successful teaching experience is essential.

Applicants must submit a cover letter, CV, a short (one-page) statement of teaching philosophy, and three letters of recommendation to http://apply.interfolio.com/ by December 10, 2024.

Questions may be addressed to Barbara Green, Director of the Gender Studies Program, at bgreen@nd.edu.

 

Tenure-Track Assistant Professor in Black Feminist Studies

https://hr.wwu.edu/careers?job=501978

The Department of Women, Gender, & Sexuality Studies at Western Washington University invites applications for a full-time tenure-track position at the rank of Assistant Professor specializing in Black Feminist Studies beginning September 2025. This position is for a scholar who centers the knowledge production of women of color in ways that challenges historical inequities, state violence, and/or regimes of incarceration by encouraging Black Feminist Thought, visions of political and social transformation, and/or Black feminist collective organizing. Applicants from any discipline in the Humanities or Social Sciences will be accepted with a preference for candidates with a Ph.D. in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies or related interdisciplinary fields. We seek applicants with a well-established record of research and teaching that engages Black feminist themes in the field from a philosophical, racial, queer, trans, and/or comparative perspective.

Application review of complete files begins December 1st, 2024

For questions about the position, application process, or department, contact Dr. Rae Lynn Schwartz-DuPre Raelynn.schwartz-dupre@wwu.edu

 

Assistant Director of LGBTQIA+ Programs

https://jobs.odu.edu/postings/22155

The Assistant Director of LGBTQIA+ Programs plays a pivotal role in fostering a supportive, inclusive, and thriving environment for LGBTQIA+ students within the university community. This position is responsible for the recruitment, training, and selection of staff while designing, developing, and implementing innovative programs and services that address the unique needs of LGBTQIA+ students. These efforts aim to promote a sense of belonging, cultivate personal and professional growth, and empower students to achieve academic excellence. Central to this role is a strong emphasis on well-being, ensuring that all initiatives are aligned with principles of holistic student development inside and outside of the classroom. The Assistant Director contributes to creating a campus culture where LGBTQIA+ students feel valued, respected, and equipped to thrive. Key responsibilities include developing educational programming, Ally Bystander Intervention efforts, curriculum development, assessment, and outreach to university departments and community organizations to center intersectional programmatic efforts.

Application Review Date: 11/21/2024 (open until filled)

 

Modeling Interdisciplinary Inquiry, Washington University in St. Louis

https://apply.interfolio.com/154494

Washington University in St. Louis announces the twenty-fourth year of Modeling Interdisciplinary Inquiry, a postdoctoral fellowship program endowed by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and designed to encourage interdisciplinary scholarship and teaching across the humanities and interpretive social sciences. We invite applications from recent PhDs, DPhils, or D.F.A.s (with degree in hand by June 30, 2025, and no earlier than June 30, 2022) who have not previously held a research-oriented postdoctoral fellowship. This fellowship program is now housed in WashU’s Center for the Humanities.

Submit materials by Thursday, December 19, 2024

 

Africana Studies Assistant Professor, Stony Brook University

https://apply.interfolio.com/150577

The Africana Studies Department at Stony Brook University invites applications for a tenure-track Assistant Professor position in Human Rights, Critical Carceral Studies, and Education at the beginning of Fall 2025.  The candidate selected for this position is expected to work with the faculty to continue to develop and coordinate a prison/jail education program offered within SUNY Stony Brook and in the Long Island region, coordinate curriculum, create an interdisciplinary minor within Africana Studies designed to train students in issues surrounding abolition, reform, and the prison-industrial complex. In addition to traditional classroom teaching, the candidate will have opportunities to develop experiential learning options for students and teach in correctional facilities through Stony Brook’s developing prison education project.

The position will remain open until filled, with priority consideration for applications submitted by January 15th.

 

Collaborative Humanities Postdoctoral Fellowship

https://apply.interfolio.com/159013

We seek recent PhDs in the humanities and the humanistic social sciences who bring interdisciplinary approaches to crucial issues in contemporary life. During their time at Vanderbilt, CHPP fellows pursue research projects, design and teach undergraduate courses, craft professional skills, and receive active faculty mentoring. Each fellow is placed in a home academic department or program, and teaching opportunities are determined in coordination with that unit’s chair/director. The program offers fellows the opportunity to build research profiles, expand intellectual networks within Vanderbilt and beyond, and hone their teaching expertise.

All materials should be submitted via Interfolio by Sunday, February 2, 11:59pm CST.

 

Humanities Institute Research Fellowship

https://apply.interfolio.com/156402

The University of Connecticut Humanities Institute (UCHI) invites applications for 2025–26 residential fellowships. During this time of global change and uncertainty, UCHI seeks to mobilize the humanities as a revitalizing force for our academic communities, national conversations, and global commitments. With year-long fellowships offering a $50,000 stipend, an office, and all the benefits of a R1 university, UCHI equips scholars to engage in these crucial undertakings and hone their research in a vibrant, interdisciplinary community of fellows. Fellows are expected to participate in UCHI’s scholarly events, attend our grant workshops, and are required to give a public talk.

Application materials must be received by 11:59 pm (EST) on February 1, 2025.

 

 

RESOURCES

ALE’s Free "AI Tools Boot Camp for Researchers: Core Essentials" Course

https://www.aclang.com/ai-bootcamp.php

Jan. 20 and 27, 2025

As AI continues to reshape the academic landscape, staying one step ahead is essential. Join us for Academic Language Experts’ upcoming (free!) AI Tools Boot Camp for Researchers: Core Essentials course.  This course offers practical, hands-on training with essential AI tools to streamline your literature review search, conduct research more efficiently write and edit your papers.

Contact Email  elana@aclang.com

 

Trans Legal Aid Clinic of Texas December 2024 Express Clinic Intake Form

https://translegalaidtx.com/clinic-info/

Trans and non-binary Texans we know you have questions about the process to correct your name and gender marker on your ID documents and need help now. TLACT is offering ten opportunities for you to meet with volunteer attorneys for free and ask questions. We will provide written and video resources to explain the process, as well as fillable forms for you to get the court orders you need or get existing combined orders split into two separate, usable orders. Sign up is required to attend and space is limited. Clinic dates are Dec. 1, 2, 4, 6, 10, 11, 12, 14, 16, 17.

 

Open Access Journal: Aspasia: The International Yearbook of Central, Eastern, and Southeastern European Women's and Gender History

https://www.berghahnjournals.com/view/journals/aspasia/aspasia-overview.xml

Aspasia is the international peer-reviewed annual of women’s and gender history of Central, Eastern, and Southeastern Europe (CESEE). It aims to transform European women’s and gender history by expanding comparative research on women and gender to all parts of Europe, creating a European history of women and gender that encompasses more than the traditional Western European perspective. Aspasia particularly emphasizes research that examines the ways in which gender intersects with other categories of social organization and advances work that explores transnational aspects of women’s and gender histories within, to, and from CESEE. The journal also provides an important outlet for the publication of articles by scholars working in CESEE itself. Its contributions cover a rich variety of topics and historical eras, as well as a wide range of methodologies and approaches to the history of women and gender.

Contact: info@berghahnjournals.com

 

Open access book: Abortion Pills: US History and Politics by Carrie Baker

https://www.fulcrum.org/concern/monographs/m900nx46q

This is the first book to offer a comprehensive history of abortion pills in the United States. Public intellectual and lawyer Carrie N. Baker shows how courageous activists waged a decades-long campaign to establish, expand, and maintain access to abortion pills. Weaving their voices throughout her book, Baker recounts both dramatic and everyday acts of their resistance. These activists battled anti-abortion forces, overly cautious policymakers, medical gatekeepers, and fearful allies in their four-decade-long fight to free abortion pills. In post-Roe America, abortion pills are currently playing a critically important role in providing safe abortion access to tens of thousands of people living in states that now ban and restrict abortion. Understanding this struggle will help to ensure continued access into the future.


Trans-estry Zine

This zine serves as a basic introduction to saving your archival records as a transgender, nonbinary, gender nonconforming, and gender diverse person in the US South. While the zine is specifically tailored toward people living in the South, it may be helpful for others both inside and outside the US. This zine is a companion document to the Southern Trans Collection Guide (STCG) developed by Invisible Histories and a group of LGBTQ and supportive archivists, researchers, historians, and educators. The STCG is intended for archivists who want to expand their trans and gender diverse collections. This zine is meant for you, the donor!

 

Resources and tools to enhance teaching and learning

https://about.jstor.org/educators/

As educators, you’re navigating a challenging landscape: balancing increasing workloads, sparking and sustaining student engagement, developing innovative curricula, and adapting to the rapid pace of change in educational technology—all with limited resources. You’re also championing the humanities and social sciences, highlighting both their economic and humanistic value in a society that needs them now more than ever. To support you, JSTOR offers practical teaching tools, curated resources, and a global community of fellow educators working to make an impact. Find lesson plans, classroom activities, and assignments. Enhance the impact of your teaching with topical reading lists and syllabi, as well as information about features and tools to support your course preparation.

 

 

EVENTS: WORKSHOPS, TALKS, CONFERENCES

How Do I Take Action Where I Am? A Workshop Series for Grounding Ourselves in the Fight Ahead

https://prisonculture.substack.com/p/how-do-i-take-action-where-i-am

These five 90-minute sessions happening in December & January are intended to provide concrete ideas and steps that anyone can take. Each session is facilitated by long-time activists and organizers. The sessions will be offered as Zoom webinars, but we will not record them. Importantly, these workshops are appropriate for people who are new to activism and organizing. They will not be useful if you are a long-time activist and organizer because you’re already taking action.

Please DO NOT register if you know you cannot attend. This is important. Space is limited. So please don’t register as a placeholder.

 

Gaiagraphies: Inside the Critical Zones

November 29, 14:30 pm–15:15 pm, 

Alexandra Arènes will discuss fieldwork in the critical zones observatories where scientists measure environmental disturbances across the Earth in specific places. Through ethno-cartographies, the "Gaiagraphies" research project, aims to create alternative cartographies of the critical zone, as new cosmograms for thinking the Earth, architecture and science together. Thanks to the mapping of scientists' sensors, the Gaiagraphies and Terra Forma maps make visible the elements, agents and entities that compose landscapes, thereby increasing knowledge and improving ecological practices in the field of architecture.
Please register via panel@planet.uni-giessen.de by November 25th, 2024

 

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