Thursday, May 28, 2026

Calls for Papers, Funding Opportunities, and Resources, May 28, 2026

 CONFERENCES  AND WORKSHOPS

Engaging Research Across the Humanities (ERAH) Conference

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20149864/smus-erah-graduate-conference

October 10-October 11, 2026, Southern Methodist University

ERAH 2026 will prioritize the development of interdisciplinary connections and aims to foster a supportive environment for both graduate students and advanced undergraduates engaged in strong research. There will be special emphasis placed on creating opportunities for participants with limited or no prior conference experience. The theme for ERAH 2026 is Movement & Borderlands. If you have any questions, please email arundhatig@smu.edu.

Submission Deadline: August 28, 2026

 

Surveilling Movement and Regulating Identity

https://history.unl.edu/2026-rawley/

University of Nebraska-Lincoln | November 5-6, 2026

The Rawley Conference strives to enhance our collective understanding of the humanities. We welcome submissions from those studying the humanities and related fields, including but not limited to: History, Classical and Modern Languages, Classics and Religious Studies, English, Philosophy, Anthropology, Sociology, Environmental Studies, Ethnic Studies, Great Plains Studies, Latin American Studies, Medieval/Renaissance Studies, Women’s and Gender Studies, and Digital Humanities. This year, we are looking for papers that cover issues relating to movement or where free expression of identity is limited.

Please submit proposals by September 15th, 2026.

 

Telling the truth? Authorship, audiences and authenticity across discourse, texts and narratives

https://telling-truth.sciencesconf.org/?lang=en

Thursday 5th- Friday 6th November, 2026, Online - The Open University, UK

What constitutes “the truth” underpins contemporary debates and is increasingly contested and politicised. This conference steps back to reflect on the role played by “telling the truth” in literary works and non-literary discourses across historical periods, languages and cultures, with the aim of bringing a wide range of perspectives to bear on a concept of enduring importance and throwing new light on present-day tensions.

Drawing on a range of analytical approaches from across linguistics, literature, creative writing and translation studies, contributions to the conference will focus not only on truth as epistemic accuracy but as a relational function, a premise for action, an ideological tool, an ethical act, a self- and other-positioning resource, an organisational device, and a mechanism of persuasion and control.

Abstracts should be submitted via https://telling-truth.sciencesconf.org/user/submit by Monday 1st June 2026. The language of the conference is English, and attendance is free. We especially encourage submission of abstracts from early-career researchers, including postgraduate research students and postdoctoral researchers. 

Submission deadline: Monday 1st June 2026, 11:59 PM (GMT)

If you have any questions, please contact the local organising committee at OU-Truth-Conference@open.ac.uk.

 

Mapping Post-Truth across Disciplines

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20150816/mapping-post-truth-across-disciplines

October 29th-30th, 2026, University of Memphis

“Post-truth,” broadly understood, denotes a general erosion of mutually shared reality, resulting in what some term an “epistemic crisis.” Such an ostensible epistemic crisis ranges in degree from the outright negation of commonly understood truth to a shift in how we categorically define, measure, or use truth. “Post-truth” as conceptual problematic has thus also been instantiated and reflected in various practical applications: mis-/dis-information; “fake news”; the rise of conspiracy theorization; artificial intelligence; censorship, suppression/repression, and manipulation; etc.  

We are particularly interested in proposals that produce generative solutions to the “post-truth” problematic, rather than critical, analytic diagnostics and descriptions of what it is. The goal of this conference is to seek trans- and inter-disciplinary collaboration on potential resolutions, (re)appropriations, and productive rethinking of (post-)truth, especially in the service of common good well-being.

Please submit all conference proposals, as well as any questions or concerns, to Dr. Scott Sundvall: posttruthconference@gmail.com by June 30th, 2026.

 

Ephemera Marks the Day: Holidays & Celebrations

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20151827/ephemera-marks-day-holidays-and-celebrations

Ephemera 47, the Ephemera Society of America (ESA) annual conference, will take place at the Hyatt Regency in Greenwich, Connecticut, March 2027. Each speaker will address a topic related to celebrations or holidays, relying heavily on tangible ephemera — posters, die-cut scraps, tickets, brochures, deck plans, official travel documents, menus, trade cards, broadsides, receipts, souvenirs, correspondence, itineraries, photographs, postcards, maps, diaries — to illustrate their subject. Keep in mind that our focus is not just the images of your chosen subject but the story of your subject – how it evolved over time, why it deserves a special day or celebration, how it is celebrated, etc. And of course you will use the ephemera to illustrate your story.

Proposals must be submitted via e-mail or post by September 15, 2026

e-mail: bjloe@earthlink.net

 

Gendered Narratives / Narratives of Gender

https://engender-academia.com/conference-2026/

This year’s En-Gender conference invites contributions that engage with gender through the lens of narrative. We are interested in the ways gender is produced, stabilized, and contested through stories: in academic writing, in media, in institutions, in everyday life, and in embodied experience. Rather than treating narratives as mere representations, we approach them as constitutive: narratives shape what can be known, felt, and lived as gender. They organize knowledge, structure experience, and are always embedded in power relations. We understand storytelling here not as anecdotal or supplementary, but as a critical feminist method—one that makes visible how knowledge is situated, how categories are lived, and how dominant narratives form us but can also be interrupted.

Please send in your abstract by filling out this form until 31 May 2026.

Contact Email engenderingthepast@gmail.com

 

 

PUBLICATIONS

Religion, Transhumanism, and Posthumanism

We invite contributions to an edited academic volume offering a critical theological reflection on transhumanism and posthumanism from an interfaith perspective. Transhumanism raises questions concerning human enhancement and the transformation of human capacities, while posthumanism challenges established understandings of the human by rethinking anthropocentrism, embodiment, and the boundaries between human and non-human life. In response, religious thinkers have begun to articulate a range of positions across different traditions. This volume aims to provide a second-stage reflection: not only engaging transhumanism and posthumanism themselves but also evaluating how theology has thus far responded to them.

Deadline for abstracts: June 14th, 2026

Contact Email  nils.schuetz@ts.uni-heidelberg.de

 

Unsettling Homelands: Radical Histories of the (Ethno)Nation-State

https://www.radicalhistoryreview.org/unsettling-homelands-radical-histories-of-the-ethnonation-state-proposals-due-6-15-26/

The homeland is not a place. It is a problem. It is the central problem of modern politics: the violent, enduring, and unsettling question of who belongs, and who gets to decide. This question animates the nostalgic longing of diasporas, the exclusionary fervor of ethnonationalists, the economic strategies of developing states, and the relentless resistance of Indigenous peoples for whom the homeland was never a question, but an answer, an answer that settler colonialism has spent centuries trying to erase. This issue seeks submissions that critically examine the politics of the “homeland” in its various geopolitical, infrastructural, and affective forms. We seek submissions that elucidate the relationship between these formations. At what point, for example, does a diasporic longing for a homeland abroad inadvertently align with the settler colonial logics that continue to dispossess Indigenous peoples of their homelands here?

By June 15, 2026, please submit a 1-2 page abstract

Contact: contactrhr@gmail.com

 

Visual Propaganda in an Era of Instability

https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20151744/call-papers-visual-propaganda-era-instability

This is a call for papers for an international edited volume tentatively titled ‘Visual Propaganda in an Era of Instability’. Based on distinct case studies explored in a wide range of book chapters, the main objective of the volume is to analyse the role of the image in driving public opinion and perception. The main historical period under investigation is from 2020 onwards: a time that is marked by significant social, cultural, political and ideological tensions. Book chapters should critically examine the role of the image in driving, challenging or at times agitating public opinion for a clear cultural, political or ideological purpose.

A 250-word abstract and a 50-word short bio should be sent to the editor of the volume Marco Bohr at marco.bohr@ntu.ac.uk by the 1st of September 2026.

 

Aesthetics, Performance, Discourse and Spectacle in the Age of Trumpism

https://erevistas.publicaciones.uah.es/ojs/index.php/reden/announcement/view/73

The special dossier is meant to delve into the evolution of (discursive, cultural, visual, and digital) aesthetics and performance that characterize Trumpism specifically, and/or cultural artifacts produced and “consumed” in the so-called Trump era.

Deadline for submission of full papers: November 1, 2026

Contact Email  annamarta.marini@fu-berlin.de

 

Hip-Hop Diaspora: Memory, Technology and the Politics of Electric Infrastructure

https://www.intellectbooks.com/global-hip-hop-studies#call-for-papers

This Special Issue examines hip hop diaspora (HHD) in what Asante and others have identified as a ‘post-hip hop’ moment, one where Afrobeats, Amapiano and other sonic formations – from French, Latin and Polish trap to Korean hip hop to Indigenous Australian rap – challenge hip hop’s centrality in global musical expression and its assumed relationship to singular racial or cultural origins. This Special Issue examines, rather than assumes, how hip hop’s evolution relates to technological and infrastructural conditions, questioning teleological narratives of inevitable progression from analogue to digital, from local to global, from underground to platform.

Abstract submissions due: 1 August 2026 (sent to hiphopdiasporaghhs@gmail.com)

 

 

JOBS/INTERNSHIPS

Tenure Track Position in American Studies

https://www.scrippscollege.edu/hr/faculty/tenure-track-position-in-american-studies

Scripps College, a women’s liberal arts college with a strong interdisciplinary tradition, invites applications for a tenure track assistant professor in American Studies to begin July 1, 2027. The area of specialization is open but candidates with a background in comparative ethnic studies are especially encouraged to apply. Preference will be given to candidates whose research and teaching complements or adds new areas to the existing curriculum, including through Native American Studies, indigenous studies, queer studies, and ethnographic approaches. Applicants should submit the following materials online at https://apply.interfolio.com/186652.

Review of applications will begin Friday, September 11, 2026, and continue until the position is filled.

For matters other than the submission of materials, contact Vanessa Chavira at vchavira@scrippscollege.edu.

 

Postdoctoral Associate, Humanities Leadership

https://apply.interfolio.com/185526

The Whitney Humanities Center at Yale (WHC) seeks to appoint one Postdoctoral Associate in Humanities Leadership. We seek an interdisciplinary scholar with a demonstrated interest in humanities leadership and administration. Competitive applicants will have a record of service in higher education and prior experience in program building and innovative humanities work. This is a bridge position, intended as a career-building opportunity for a recent Ph.D. interested in exploring the evolving landscape of the humanities within universities today. Ph.D. in a humanities discipline, conferred no earlier than December 2023, or ABD with dissertation defense anticipated prior to the start of the appointment.

Application deadline: June 12, 2026. Questions? Contact Deputy Director Diane Berrett Brown, diane.b.brown@yale.edu

 

 

FUNDING/FELLOWSHIPS/PRIZES

Coordinating Council for Women in History Awards

https://theccwh.org/awards

Carol Gold article award

A $500 prize given to the best article published in a peer-reviewed journal in the year of the award or the two prior years.

Catherine Prelinger Award

To a scholar whose career has not followed a traditional path through secondary and higher education and whose work has contributed to women in the historical profession ($20,000).

Ida B. Wells Graduate Student Fellowship

To a graduate student working on a historical dissertation that interrogates race and gender, not necessarily in a history department.

Applicants must be current members of the CCWH at the time of application.

APPLICATION DEADLINE:  JUNE 30, 2026

 

Research Travel Grant Program at William & Mary Special Collections

https://libraries.wm.edu/scrc/research/scrc-research-travel-grants-program

The Special Collections Research Center (SCRC) of William & Mary Libraries is pleased to announce that it will award travel grants to faculty members, graduate students, and/or independent researchers to support research use of its collections. Writers, creative and performing artists, filmmakers, and journalists are welcome to apply. Strengths of the collections include, but are not limited to, books on dogs, fore-edge painting books, Virginia family papers and libraries, twentieth-century Southern politics, women’s diaries, travel diaries, veterans’ letters, notable alumni, and university history.

June 12, 2026: All application materials are due.

Contact Email spcoll@wm.edu

 

Archives Travel Grants

https://www.bgsu.edu/library/cac/events-and-programs/access-to-the-archives-travel-grants.html

The Center for Archival Collections (CAC), one of the Special Collections units in the University Libraries at Bowling Green State University (BGSU), offers annually up to three competitive Research Travel Grants to support researchers who plan to spend at least five full working days using collections held by the CAC. The award is intended to promote and support original scholarly or creative work and to defray the costs of travel to and residence in Bowling Green, not to exceed $1,500 per award. Anyone - including but not limited to faculty, students, public historians, visual and performing artists, and independent researchers - who wishes to pursue a Research Travel Grant may apply.

Contact Email msweets@bgsu.edu

 

GDAC Artist Micro-Grants

https://dentonarts.com/grants

GDAC’S ARTIST MICRO-GRANT program will award individual artists of various disciplines up to $500 per grant to complete a creative project. Designed to encourage the many musicians, actors, poets, visual artists, writers, and designers of our community, artists of all backgrounds and practices are encouraged to apply. Grants are made possible thanks to the support of the City of Denton.

Applications are due by 5pm on June 12, 2026

 

Oral History Project Grant

https://www.hagley.org/research/grants-fellowships/oral-history-project-grant

The Oral History Office of the Hagley Library invites applications for oral history project support. These grants of up to $5,000 are awarded twice annually. Project grant funds may be used to reimburse costs associated with travel to interviewees. Funds may also be for equipment purchases but not stipends. Reimbursement of costs will take place promptly after submission of the interview sound file, metadata, release forms, and receipts. Interviews must be conducted in English and in accordance with the standards of the Oral History Association and the Hagley Library’s own technical requirements (available upon request). Oral history projects must fit within Hagley’s collecting scope; broadly the interconnected histories of American business, technology, and society.

Deadline: June 1

email: bspohn@hagley.org

 

 

EVENTS: WORKSHOPS, TALKS, CONFERENCES

Aro/Ace Online Talk Series

https://www.aroaceresearch.com/events

Every week on Friday at 3 pm (UK time, exception noted in schedule), we will be joined by researchers, academics, and activists who will give us insight into their projects and current topics in aro/ace research. The talks will take place online on zoom and there is no registration required! They are free and open for everyone to attend.

5 June - Space, Place, and Asexuality: Introducing Asexual Geographies, Rachel Bayer and Joe Jukes

12  June - Aromantic Sense of Belonging to Queer and Aromantic Communities,  Alex Jacquemot-Krupp

19 June - "If only there was more": Aceness in Online Fandom – A Case Study of Baldur's Gate 3, Polina Smirnova

26 June - Panel on Asexual Activism, Pragati Singh, Yasmin Benoit, Sally Ogongo and Sofía from Aces Uruguay

3 July - The Queerly Platonic: Studying Love, Friendship, and Pleasure, Theressa N Kenney

10 July - Asexual SI*t: A Reading & Discussion About the So-Called Contradiction, Sophie Gusenko,

17 July  - TBD, KJ Cerankowski

24 July  - Between Erasure and Agency: Disabled Asexual Lives in India , Malavika and Bibhuti M. Kachhap

31 July (1pm)  - Global Asexualities and Aromanticisms: Scholar-Activist Reflections on the Erotics of Editing, Ela Przybyło and Yo-Ling Chen

7 August – TBD, lanna Hawkins Owen

 

Lunch & Learn: Unleashing Black Power

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/lunch-learn-unleashing-black-power-tickets-1984979011658

June 9  •  12 PM - 1 PM CDT

Dr. Peter D. Blackmer will examine the methods, uses, and impact of state repression using the Municipal Archives’ NYPD Bureau of Special Services & Investigation (BOSSI) Collection. The author of Unleashing Black Power: Grassroots Organizing in Harlem and the Advent of the Long, Hot Summers, Dr. Blackmer, will also explore how archival records can help us understand, analyze, and write more complete and compelling histories of the Black Freedom Movement in New York and beyond.

 

Research talk on the history and legacy of maroon communities in the Americas

https://mailchi.mp/miami.edu/libraries-kislak-fellows-in-review-with-jamie-mcghee-june-16-2026   

Tuesday, June 16, 1 p.m. (EDT)

During her month-long residency, Jamie McGhee worked extensively with the Kislak Collection to advance her research on the history and legacy of maroon communities in the Americas—societies formed by people who escaped enslavement and established independent settlements across the Caribbean, Central America, and South America—to strengthen a novel she is writing set in 1760 Jamaica. McGhee will share her recent findings and discuss how the collection has supported her creative endeavors.

QUESTIONS? Please contact the University of Miami Libraries at library.events@miami.edu.

 

Black Magic art exhibition and artist talk

https://www.facebook.com/events/1027181213315432/

BLACK MAGIC, an MA Exhibition curated by Taylor Hilley-Carroll, will open June 1 in the TWU West Gallery, and will run through June 26, 2026. A reception will be held Friday, June 12, from 5:00–7:00 p.m. An artist talk will begin at 6:00 p.m. This exhibition explores how Black women artists engage hoodoo, ancestral practices, and visual culture as forms of healing, resistance, and spiritual activism.


RESOURCES
Immigration Game: Find Your Path To U.S. Citizenship
The Cato Institute is launching a new online game called the Green Card Game. Americans will—for the first time—see firsthand what it’s like to try to get a green card, or permanent residence, in the United States. The game’s goal is to show people the massive difficulties that immigrants can face in finding a path to U.S. citizenship. Few people realize that legal immigration is not just a matter of putting your name down on a list. America’s legal immigration system is nearly impossible, and this game will help people realize why. 

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