Friday, August 26, 2022

CFP 2023 Wooden O Symposium (proposals by 5/5/2023)

2023 CALL FOR PAPERS

The Wooden O Symposium invites panel and paper proposals on any topic related to the text and performance of Shakespeare’s plays. Next year’s symposium encourages papers and panels that speak to the Utah Shakespeare Festival’s 2023 season: A Midsummer’s Night Dream, West Side Story, Jane Austen’s Emma, A Raisin in the Sun, The Play that Goes Wrong, Coriolanus, and Timon of Athens.

Abstracts for consideration for the Wooden O sessions and individual presentations should be sent to usfeducation@bard.org.

The deadline for proposals is May 5, 2023. Session chairs and individual presenters will be informed of acceptance no later than June 2. Please include 250-word abstracts or session proposals (including individual abstracts) and the following information:

  • Name of presenter(s)
  • Participant category (faculty, graduate student, undergraduate, or independent scholar)
  • College/university affiliation
  • Mailing address
  • Email address
  • Audio/visual requirements and any other special requests



Sunday, August 7, 2022

CFP: Nineteenth Century Studies Association (NCSA) 2023 Conference, “Remaking the Past,” Sacramento CA (proposals by 9/30/2022)

From H-Albion:

CFP: Call for Papers, Nineteenth Century Studies Association (NCSA) 2023 Conference, “Remaking the Past,” Sacramento CA

source: https://networks.h-net.org/node/16749/discussions/10601554/cfp-call-papers-nineteenth-century-studies-association-ncsa-2023

Discussion published by Elizabeth Sheckler on Saturday, August 6, 2022


Sacramento, host city for NCSA’s 2023 conference, lends itself to exploring issues of revivals and re-creations of the past. Sacramento’s nineteenth-century history encompassed California’s Gold Rush, the genocide and displacement of Indigenous populations, the construction of the Transcontinental Railroad, and the building of a capital city that became a stage for the reinventions–productive and problematic–of the past so central to the nineteenth century. Appropriately, Sacramento’s conference will explore the nineteenth century’s almost constant desire to re-envision and measure itself against the past, as well as our own responsibility as scholars to reassess the histories we tell about this era, using current critical approaches, concerns, and theories.

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We seek perspectives into the wide range of nineteenth-century reinterpretations of the past and their consequences. We invite papers and panels covering and uncovering political history, social history, history of science, literature, visual and performing arts, and popular culture. We welcome interdisciplinary and inclusive approaches that revisit and broaden ways of looking at the nineteenth century, including those that interrogate constructions of gender, race, settler-colonialism, and ethnicity as seen in, or that were created about, that era. We also invite papers that examine communities, artifacts, or epistemologies that resist remaking the past, including those that explore cultures for which preserving the past unaltered was/is a form of survival and resistance.

In addition, we welcome papers that scrutinize historical consciousness during the nineteenth century. These could assess the varied tendencies to rewrite history, to revive or bury the past, and to appeal to the past as a legitimizing force, as a spur to the imagination, and as a field for questions and contradictions. Such papers could consider the past as a force in political discourses, in education and science, and in debates on the value of studying it at all.

Topics may include:

• stylistic revivals in nineteenth-century art, architecture, and design

• traumatic or “buried” histories of displacement, forced migration, genocide

• recovering Indigenous and African-American nineteenth-century cultures of resistance

• antiquarianism and issues of historical preservation and interpretation of nineteenth-century material culture

• California history including Chinatowns, Spanish historical sites, settler-colonial sites of mourning, the preservation and interpretation of California’s Indigenous, Hispanic, and Asian communities

• uses of historical fiction and revivals of past authors, playwrights, and composers

• imagery of the past in nineteenth-century popular culture and advertising

• Neo-Victorianism, adaptations (both book and film), and digital/data-driven re-imaginings of the nineteenth century

• the use of real or imagined pasts in literature and the performing arts, the notion of revival as a trope, or of retrospection as a creative device

• remaking or “differencing” 19th-century canons, critical pedagogy, and banned books

• utopian golden ages of the past and future

• invented pasts/invented traditions, fakes, lies, and forgeries



Abstracts with one-page CVs are kindly requested by submission via a Google form found at https://bit.ly/3QkApzm by September 30, 2022. Abstracts should include the author’s name, institutional affiliation, and paper title in the heading. We welcome individual proposals, panel proposals with four presenters and a moderator, or larger roundtable sessions. You are welcome to share calls for panels and roundtable discussions on our social media channels. You may post your call to our Facebook page and we will share it, or tag us on Twitter and we will gladly retweet.

Note that submission of a proposal constitutes a commitment to attend if accepted. Presenters will be notified in November 2022. We encourage submissions from graduate students, and those whose proposals have been accepted may submit complete papers to apply for a travel grant to help cover transportation and lodging expenses. For questions, please contact us at 2023ncsa@gmail.com .

Related date:
August 1, 2022 to September 30, 2022


Wednesday, August 3, 2022

CFP: Tolkien’s Medievalism in Ruins: The Function of Relics and Ruins in Middle-earth at NeMLA

 

Tolkien’s Medievalism in Ruins: The Function of Relics and Ruins in Middle-earth at NeMLA

deadline for submissions: 
September 30, 2022
full name / name of organization: 
Nick Katsiadas and Carl Sell / Slippery Rock University and University of Pittsburgh

This call for papers is for the NeMLA conference which is scheduled to take place in person in Niagara Falls, NY between March 23-26, 2023.

 

Many notable scholars have probed the motif of ruins in ancient and medieval texts: Alain Schnapp, Alan Lupack, Geoffrey Ashe, and Richard Barber read the poetics of ruins in Latin poetry, the Exeter Book, and Arthuriana. Scholars working outside of the Classical and Middle ages have also examined how this topos persists in literary periods up through the Renaissance, Romanticism, and to today. In short, the structural and symbolic purposes of ruins in literary texts have a long history, and the literary-critical history of engaging these poetics influences our interests in presentations grounded in reading the relationships between ruins and Tolkien’s legendarium. It is time for a formal study on the topic, and we are pleased to welcome proposals from a variety of theoretical approaches for a special session at the 54th Annual Northeast Modern Language Association Convention, with possible inclusion in a special issue of The Journal of Tolkien Research.

 

Throughout J. R. R. Tolkien’s history of Middle-earth, ruins appear as images that capture the mood, personality, and disposition of the characters. From the ruins of Erebor in The Hobbit to the various images of Amon Sûl, Moria, and Osgiliath in The Lord of the Rings, Tolkien captures each character’s awareness of the glories of the past and their desire to emulate them. This panel seeks to deepen the awareness and importance of ruins in Middle-earth while simultaneously focusing on how Tolkien’s vision of history functions within and outside of the Middle Ages.  

 

Topics and texts about Tolkien’s legendarium may include, but are certainly not limited to, the following:

 

  • Ruins and trauma and/or war
  • Ruins and nostalgia and/or melancholy
  • Ruins and loss
  • Ruins and memory
  • Ruins and travel
  • Ruins and Medievalism
  • Ruins and Classicism
  • Ruins and Romanticism
  • Golden Ages
  • Literary History
  • Abandoned cities

 

We seek 300-word abstracts for critical essays across periods and nations that address topics related to ruins and Tolkien’s Middle-earth. Abstracts should clearly delineate the essay’s argument in relation to this theme. Once abstracts have been collected, the organizers will send out acceptance and rejection letters after the due date (30 September 2022). We ask that abstract submissions follow MLA format.

 

Please submit abstract proposals to Nick Katsiadas and Carl Sell through the NeMLA portal here: https://www.cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/19804