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CFPs Seminars

CfP: Collaborations & Networks symposium, 4-5 Sep 2021 (abstract 31 Mar; deadline 31 July)

Virtual Symposium

Irish Women’s Writing Network

4-5 September 2021

The period 1880-1940 was marked by the emergence of a diverse range of Irish women writers into both the public sphere and public consciousness. This development was not accidental but was instead fostered by a variety of networks and collaborations that connected Irish women to one another across space and time. Katharine Tynan and Dora Sigerson, for instance, hosted literary gatherings at their family homes that facilitated wider networks of influence, while collaborative writing efforts forged by Irish women during the period stretched from the works of Somerville and Ross through to the transnational publishing efforts of the Ladies’ Land League and into educational and journalistic endeavours in which Irish women played central roles. These included the foremost Irish literary periodical of the day, The Irish Monthly, in which women writers featured regularly, and the Irish Fireside Club, whose central ‘Uncle Remus’ role was fulfilled by two Irish women writers (Rose Kavanagh and Hester Sigerson). Meanwhile, the efforts of women editors including L. T. Meade, whose London-based periodical Atalanta promoted Irish authors abroad, and family-based connections from the widely known (Constance and Markievicz and Eva Gore-Booth) to the more obscure (M. E. Francis, Agnes Castle and Margaret Blundell) were central to Irish women’s creativity and innovation.

With close attention to both individual collaborations and wider networks, the symposium will direct attention to how women writers endeavoured to tell, share and publish their stories. Recognizing the need for research in the field of Irish women’s writing that moves beyond the single-author approach, we are particularly interested in work that considers new critical perspectives on women writers’ creative innovations through collaboration across genres and media and their personal networks and strategies to establish themselves as writers within a rich web of personal connections alongside institutional and infrastructural possibilities, both at home and in transnational contexts.

This symposium will feed into a double issue of English Studies.

Prospective contributors are invited to submit 300-word abstracts for max. 15-minute papers for the one-day symposium. Topics might include but are not limited to the following:

  • collaborations between literature and other forms of production (ie. co-authoring; text and image; dramatists and theatre makers)
  • cross-media storytelling
  • collaborative work and activism
  • collaborations across genres
  • collaborations across media
  • women writers and their private and public networks
  • collaborations between networks
  • self-promotion (memoir/autobiography; travel writing; journalism)
  • salons, “At Homes”, reading groups
  • learned societies and associations
  • alternative networks and spaces (incl. National Library of Ireland; British Library; the Society of Women Journalists etc)
  • networking through paratexts (dedications; prefaces etc)
  • writers and their publishers
  • writers, editors, periodicals and print cultures
  • national and transnational collaborations and networks
  • writing women’s literary history in the period
  • protegées and mentors
  • women writers’ archives and archive networks
  • methodological approaches and challenges

Format

In keeping with the theme of ‘Collaborations and Networks’, the symposium’s structure will follow a more engaged format to focus on time for dialogue between participants. Speakers will be invited to submit short papers of 2500 in advance, which will form the basis of a 10-15 minute presentation to be followed by facilitated discussions via a respondent. Presenters will be encouraged to prepare some questions and/or flag areas where they would like specific feedback. Given this format, there is a 2-stage submission process:

  1. Please submit your 300-word abstract for 15 mins presentations with title and a short biography to collaborationsandnetworks@gmail.com by 31st March 2021.
  2. Accepted papers of max. 2,500 words are due by 31st July 2021.

Publication

For the publication of the double-issue of English Studies, we seek to invite a selection of symposium contributors to submit an extended article of max. 10,000 words by 31st January 2022. All submissions considered for publication will be subject to peer review.

We look forward to receiving your abstracts.

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CFPs

CfP: Another Revolution: Building Modern Worlds (abstract 28 Feb; deadline 30 June)

For a prospective peer-reviewed cluster on Modernism/modernity’s Print Plus platform, we seek proposals for original essays that analyze the role of art and culture in building modern worlds in the aftermath of revolutions. Situated within the discourse of global modernisms, the transdisciplinary cluster probes whether there is something intrinsic to the post-revolutionary reconstructive moment that can be teased out through focused studies on contemporaneous constellations between the aesthetic and the political around the globe during the twentieth century.

Demands for revolution emerge whenever the status quo makes an existing social order no longer tenable for a significant portion of the population. Revolution is often understood as a force from below, one in which a group exerts its will against an established governmental or political order. But revolutionaries usually have as their ultimate goal the establishment of a new social or political system—a new normal—rather than a perpetual state of upheaval. They envision new possibilities, and different worlds. The production of culture in various forms—fine art, literature, music, performing arts, visual culture, philosophy, and so on—are essential to their success, both in consolidating the revolution’s narrative, and in producing as well as sustaining the resultant new realities. Indeed, the expectation of their role as spearheads in revolution is embedded in the very phrase “avant-garde.”

If not an exclusively modernist phenomenon, localized revolutions in the modern era have been characterized as affirmative responses to Enlightenment values such as liberty and equality, and have frequently sought to overthrow absolutist, autocratic, and colonial rule. The establishment of new forms of government are often the result. But radical change is by no means guaranteed to be emancipatory, liberal, and egalitarian in character, nor is it always successful. As evidenced by Italian fascism, the so-called “conservative revolution” in Germany during the interwar-period, or the Chinese “Cultural Revolution,” a revolution might well slide into dictatorship, create a power vacuum in which multiple agents claim control, or engender oppressive political systems. Similarly, avant-garde art and culture are not immune from stifling and perverting critical, transgressive impulses. Indeed, their post-revolutionary impact has sometimes been framed as “propaganda,” or as “selling out” to become palatable to “the masses.”

Taken together, the articles chosen for this cluster will map out parallels as well as divergences in “avant-garde” or otherwise transformative cultural attempts to displace “old” worldviews, institutions, and forms of coexistence by asking questions such as “What political developments affected cultural production and vice versa, particularly in their contact with ideological shifts and technological innovations?”, “What factors and conditions enabled new cultural practices and perceptions to take root?”, or “What transnational mechanisms were at work in cultural attempts at building modern worlds?”.

Offering an alternative understanding of revolutionary worldbuilding through culture from the vantage point of an era that is itself characterized by a multiplicity of crises and by profound, though not always progressive transformations, this cluster aims at challenging the once widespread perception of the “failure” of twentieth century revolutions and, with that, of the “death” of the avant-garde.

Topics of particular interest include but are not limited to theoretically-driven case studies from:

–       The Bolshevik Revolution and the Russian avant-garde

–       The 1911/Chinese Revolution and end of the Qing Dynasty

–       The German or November Revolution and the Weimar Republic

–       The Mexican Revolution and cultural renaissance

–       Societal transformation in Japan during the late Taishō period and the Mavo art movement

–       Postcolonial/independence movements in the second half of the twentieth century from Cuba to Iran

The cluster seeks to bring into dialogue regionally-specific scholarship in the humanities, especially in the arts and design, in literary and film studies, and in aesthetic and political theory, to foster a global perspective. We particularly welcome submissions that draw on the unique possibilities afforded by Modernism/modernity’s Print Plus platform. For recent examples of essay clusters, see https://modernismmodernity.org/about.

Abstracts of 250 words accompanied by short biographies are due February 28, 2021. A total of five to seven proposals will be accepted; completed essays of approximately 3,000 words will be due June 30, 2021. Once essays are submitted, the entire cluster will undergo peer review. Please submit abstracts and inquiries to Monica Bravo (bravo@cca.edu) and Florian Grosser (fgrosser@cca.edu).

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Uncategorized

Publication: Transnational Jean Rhys

Transnational Jean Rhys investigates the frameworks that can be applied to reading Caribbean author Jean Rhys. While Wide Sargasso Sea famously displays overt forms of literary influences, Jean Rhys’s entire oeuvre is so fraught with connections to other texts and textual practices across geographical boundaries that her classification as a cosmopolitan modernist writer is due for reassessment.

Transnational Jean Rhys argues against the relative isolationism that is sometimes associated with Rhys’s writing by demonstrating both how she was influenced by a wide range of foreign – especially French – authors and how her influence was in turn disseminated in myriad directions. Including an interview with Black Atlantic novelist Caryl Phillips, this collection charts new territories in the influences on/of an author known for her dislike of literary coteries, but whose literary communality has been underestimated.
Table of contents

Introduction: On reading Rhys transnationally
Juliana Lopoukhine (University of Paris-Sorbonne, France), Frédéric Regard (University of Paris-Sorbonne, France) and Kerry-Jane Wallart (University of Orléans, France)

Part 1 Lines of transmission: Rhys’s continental transculturalism
1. The white Creole in Paris: Joséphine, Colette and Jean Rhys’s Quartet and Good Morning, Midnight
Elaine Savory (New School, USA)
2. Strange defeat: Good Morning, Midnight and Marc Bloch’s L’Étrange défaite
Scott McCracken (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
3. ‘Also I do like the moderns’: Reading Rhys’s reading
Andrew Thacker (Nottingham Trent University, UK)
4. ‘Parler de soi’: Jean Rhys and the uses of life writing
Simon Cooke (University of Edinburgh, UK)
5. Jean Rhys and Indonesia: A lineage and alineage
Chris GoGwilt (Fordham University, USA)

Part 2 Lines of flight: Rhys’s transnational legacy
6. Jean Rhys in Australian neo-Victorian and Great House imaginaries
Sue Thomas (LaTrobe University, Melbourne, Australia)
7. Twisted lines in Caribbean postcolonial Modernism: Jean Rhys and Edward Kamau Brathwaite
Françoise Clary (Rouen University, France)
8. Dressing and addressing the self: Jean Rhys, Jamaica Kincaid and the cultural politics of self-fashioning
Denise deCaires Narain (University of Sussex, UK)
9. ‘Competing conversations’: Voice and identity in Caryl Phillips’s A View of the Empire at Sunset
Kathie Birat (University of Lorraine, France)
10. ‘A journey into the familiar underworld’: Revisiting Jean Rhys in Caryl Phillips’s A View of the Empire at Sunset
Catherine Lanone (Université Sorbonne-Nouvelle, Paris, France)
11. ‘The small things that they’ve not been able to talk about’: An interview with Caryl Phillips about his novel A View of the Empire at Sunset (2018)
Kerry-Jane Wallart

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Elections

BAMS Elections 2021: call for nominations (deadline 15 Jan)

2021 Call for Nominations

For: The 2021 Election of the British Association for Modernist Studies (BAMS) Executive Steering Committee.

There are three vacant positions on the committee, and we seek nominations for those vacancies.

Nominations will now be accepted up to 15 Jan 2021, and the online election will take place 22nd January-28th February 2021.

Executive Steering Committee

Nominees for membership of the steering committee will ideally be in academic posts, as members are expected to take a turn in hosting executive meetings and the annual postgraduate training symposium, and to fund their attendance at BAMS events and meetings (financial support is provided for postgraduate representatives only). Members of the steering committee attend two committee meetings a year, organise an annual postgraduate training symposium, operate membership of the association, maintain and develop BAMS’s online presence, support existing modernist programmes and events (such as the several modernism centres and seminars) and generally promote modernist activity in Britain. BAMS especially welcomes nominations from Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) members, and we are firm and unflinching in our commitment to a vision of an inclusive and diverse Exec.

Existing committee members are eligible for re-election at the conclusion of their term of office for one further period of three years.

Candidates for the Executive Committee require a nomination from an existing member of BAMS and must themselves be members of the association. Instructions for joining BAMS can be found on the website: https://bams.ac.uk/membership/. The final selection will be made through an online election process open to all BAMS members.

Candidates are asked to submit a brief biography as well as a 250-word proposal outlining their vision for the future of BAMS, their suitability for the role, and their envisaged contribution to the association. Nominees may, if they wish, express interest in one of the vacant named officer positions – Treasurer or Vice-Chair.

The name of the nominator should be included in the proposal. Applications should be emailed to the BAMS Chair, Dan Moore (d.t.moore@bham.ac.uk) no later than 15th January 2021.

Postgraduate Representatives

Applications for 2 two-year postgraduate representative positions are also sought from registered doctoral students in their first or second year of study (or PT equivalent). The elected representatives will join Bryony Armstrong and Joshua Phillips, who are a year into their own two-year term as PG Reps for BAMS. BAMS especially welcomes applications from Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) postgraduate members, and we are firm and unflinching in our commitment to a vision of an inclusive and diverse Exec.

Responsibilities include attending two Exec meetings a year and helping out with PG events and workshops (travel expenses paid). Responsibilities shared between the four PG reps include editing The Modernist Review, running BAMS social media, answering info@BAMS.ac.uk emails and sending welcome emails to new members. There are also opportunities to launch new initiatives such as the BAMS networking day organised by our current PG reps.

Candidates are asked to submit a brief biography as well as a 250-word proposal outlining their vision for the future of BAMS, their suitability for the role, and their envisaged contribution to the association.

Candidates for the Postgraduate Representative positions do not require a nomination from an existing member of BAMS. They must themselves be members of the association. Instructions for joining BAMS can be found on the website: https://bams.ac.uk/membership/ The final selection will be made through an online election process open to all BAMS members.

Applications should be emailed to the BAMS Chair, Dan Moore (d.t.moore@bham.ac.uk) no later than 15th Jan 2021. If you would like some more information about the roles before applying, please do write to Dan.

Co-option

The BAMS constitution allows us to co-opt up to four committee members in the interests of furthering interdisciplinary connections.  These also serve a three-year term, but are not elected positions as such.  Our core membership is in English/literary studies, but we are an inclusive organisation and are always looking for ways to connect with colleagues in other areas.  We welcome expressions of interest; please contact Dan.

Categories
CFPs Events

CfP: Charlotte Mew and Friends: Decadent and Modernist Networks, 9 July 2021 (online; deadline 31 Jan 2021)

A one-day virtual symposium 9 July 2021

Organisers

Dr Megan Girdwood, University of Edinburgh

Dr Francesca Bratton, Maynooth University

Dr Fraser Riddell, Durham University

Keynote

Professor Joseph Bristow, UCLA

Call for Papers

‘I think it is myself I go to meet’ ‘The Quiet House’ (1916)

Charlotte Mew (1869-1928) was a British poet and author of short stories whose life and body of work have so-far remained critically neglected in studies of late Victorian and modernist writing. Yet Mew was far from unknown in her own lifetime: she was admired by Walter de la Mare, Edith Sitwell, and Virginia Woolf; Lady Ottoline Morrell tried (and failed) to collect her for her London literary salon; and Thomas Hardy believed her to be ‘the best living woman poet’. Among her friends and acquaintances were Henry James, Aubrey Beardsley, May Sinclair, and Ella d’Arcy, while her writing appeared in influential periodicals including The Yellow Book, The Egoist, and Temple Bar. Throughout her life, Mew lived in Bloomsbury – the traditional heart of modernism’s queer and artistic networks – where she was close friends with Harold and Alida Monro, proprietors of the Poetry Bookshop on 35 Devonshire Street. Mew’s work is elusive, idiosyncratic, and stylistically diverse, from the decadent short stories ‘Passed’ (1894) and ‘A White Night’ (1902) to her best-known poetry collection The Farmer’s Bride (1916; 1921), which plays with the conventions of the pastoral in poems that are rhythmically and typographically experimental. Both her short fiction and her poetry trouble straightforward distinctions between the heady ennui of the fin de siècle and modernism’s spirit of novelty, revealing instead the porousness of such periodic markers and the literary forms they appear to denote.

This one-day symposium will open up fresh conversations about Mew’s writing and her position within the literary cultures and networks of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Initially associated with the spirit of the ‘yellow nineties’ and the figure of the New Woman, Mew found new readers during the First World War, and her output provides a fascinating counterpoint to traditional understandings of periodization and genre, signalling important continuities between the fin de siècle and the age of modernism. Marking 150 years since her birth, a new edition of Mew’s Selected Poetry and Prose (Faber & Faber, 2019) has recently been released, while a forthcoming biography by the poet Julia Copus (Faber & Faber, 2021) promises to offer a comprehensive account of Mew’s life, building on Penelope Fitzgerald’s experimental biography Charlotte Mew and her Friends (1984). This symposium will therefore provide new scholarly contexts to support this renewed interest in Mew, which will undoubtedly bring her work to a wider readership. As an author who defied easy categorisation in both her life and her writing, Mew speaks to contemporary debates around gender and sexuality, while offering an intriguing case study for scholars working within the elastic parameters of the ‘long nineteenth century’ and the ‘new modernist studies’. Papers may address, but are not limited to, the following topics:

  • Mew, periodicals and publishing networks
  • Queerness, gender and sexuality
  • Decadent Mew and the ‘Yellow Nineties’
  • Mew and the short story form
  • The pastoral and the ecological in Mew’s work
  • Reading Mew and modernism
  • Bloomsbury networks
  • Mew and the New Woman writers
  • Mew’ s poetic voice, form and dialect
  • Mew and the dramatic monologue
  • Mew and other late Victorians
  • Embodiment and the senses in Mew’s work
  • Health, illness and care in Mew’s work
  • Mew, religion and the spiritual
  • Mew, travel and colonialism
  • Mew and First World War poetry
  • Mew and childhood
  • Loss, longing, death and memorialisation in Mew’s work
  • Mew, history and periodisation
  • Mew’ s afterlives, influence and reception

Papers should be 15 minutes in length. Please send 300-word abstracts and a brief biography to charlottemewandfriends@gmail.com by 31 January 2021.

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Events Featured NWIMS Past Events Postgraduate

New Work in Modernist Studies, Friday 11 December 2020: registration and programme

About the conference
The tenth one-day graduate conference on New Work in Modernist Studies will take place online on Friday 11 December 2020, in conjunction with the Modernist Network Cymru (MONC), the London Modernism Seminar, the Scottish Network of Modernist Studies, the Northern Modernism Seminar, the Midlands Modernist Network and the British Association for Modernist Studies (BAMS).

BAMS is dedicated to fostering a culture of diversity and inclusion (please see our Code of Conduct).

Click for the programme.

Registration
Please complete the registration form.  This applies whether you are presenting or simply planning to watch and listen in.  We welcome attendees.

Applicants and delegates are encouraged to let us know about any access needs they might have, and if we are able to make adjustments to the application or presentation process, we will endeavour to do so.

Questions about the event should be sent to nwims@bams.ac.uk.

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Call for submissions CFPs

CfP: Ethical Crossroads in Literary Modernism (book; abstract 1 March; essays 3 Aug 2021)

Discontent with the prevailing culture, modernist artists sought to break the world apart in order to remake it, calling into question long-held assumptions about ethics and consciousness, identity, religion, responsibility and accountability. Further, the scientific discoveries and technological innovations that took place during this period resulted in a culture that was in need of near constant redefinition. This edited collection seeks to reexamine these ethical questions in light of the present  moment by engaging with recent scholarship and the extended canon of the new modernist studies. The current COVID-19 outbreak and its similarities with the Pandemic of 1918 have brought these questions to the fore once again, exposing the tensions between our ethical responsibilities and the deep-seated racial/class divisions and political schisms ingrained in modern societies. Our primary objective is to draw attention to the ethical dimensions that mediate the human, non-human, and posthuman crossroads that form integral aspects of literary modernism, thus expanding the scope of discussion beyond the realm of interpersonal and intercultural relationships. 

In addition to welcoming proposals that foreground the ethical dynamics in canonical modernist texts, the editors especially invite proposals which expand the boundaries of modernist studies horizontally—to writers working outside the metropolitan epicentres most closely associated with aesthetic modernism and to writers working outside of the 1890-1945 time period—as well as vertically—blurring the boundaries between high modernism and alternative modes of written expression, such as travel writing, journalism, non-fiction essays, graphic novels, etc. We are open to interventions which hold modernism to account for its ethical and political failings and blindspots, as well as reflections on its radical and positive influence.

Possible subjects might include, but are not limited to:

  • Biopolitics and the Medical Humanities
  • Gender, Ethnicity, and Sexuality
  • Gerontology and Youth Studies
  • Environmental and Ecological Concerns
  • Animals and the Anthropocene 
  • Energy and Consumption
  • Narration, Dramaturgy, and the Ethics of Alterity
  • Utilitarianism, Deontology, Perspectivism, and Moral Relativism
  • Colonialism and Postcolonialism
  • Crime and Punishment
  • Institutions and Infrastructures 
  • Science and Technologies 
  • Mapping and Cartography
  • Human Migration, Cultural Diversity, and Acculturation 

Please send bios and abstracts of no more than 500 words to Katherine Ebury, Matthew Fogarty and Bridget English at ethicalcrossroads@gmail.com by March 1st. Essays will be 6,000 words and due by August 3rd.

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Call for submissions CFPs Postgraduate Scholarships

Essay prize: The Emerging Beardsley Scholar Prize (deadline 31 Dec 2020)

To mark the foundation of the Aubrey Beardsley Society, a prize for the best short essay on any aspect of Beardsley’s work, life, and reception will be awarded to an outstanding emerging scholar. The Society aims to encourage new work that is intellectually adventurous and stylistically accomplished, and seeks submissions that highlight Beardsley’s relevance today.

Eligibility
• Postgraduate (MA, MPhil, PhD) and early career researchers who have not held a permanent academic post are invited to participate.
• The participants should join the Aubrey Beardsley Society (discounted
membership).
• Essays should be up to 2,500 words and formatted in accordance with the MHRA style.

The amount of the Emerging Beardsley Scholar Prize is £500. Two runners-up will be awarded £100 each, and the three winning pieces will be published in the AB Blog. The Prize is supported by the Alessandra Wilson Fund.

Deadline
Please email your submission by 31 December 2020 to Dr Sasha Dovzhyk at
contact@ab2020.org.

Categories
CFPs Events Postgraduate

New Work in Modernist Studies, online 11 Dec 2020 (CfP deadline 19 Oct)

About the conference

The tenth one-day graduate conference on New Work in Modernist Studies will take place online on Friday 11 December 2020, in conjunction with the Modernist Network Cymru (MONC), the London Modernism Seminar, the Scottish Network of Modernist Studies, the Northern Modernism Seminar, the Midlands Modernist Network and the British Association for Modernist Studies (BAMS).

BAMS is dedicated to fostering a culture of diversity and inclusion (please see our Code of Conduct).   As in previous years, this conference will take the form of an interdisciplinary programme reflecting the full diversity of current graduate work in modernist studies; it encourages contributions both from those already involved in the existing networks and from students new to modernist studies who are eager to share their work.  We particularly encourage proposals from BAME students, who we recognise are underrepresented in the field.

Usually the event is open only to students at British and Irish institutions as we offer each student a travel bursary.  However, as the event will be held virtually this year we encourage PhD students from around the world to apply.  The conference will be held during the working day in the UK (approx. 9.30am – 5pm, with regular breaks); please let us know if you are attending from elsewhere in the world and need that to be taken into account.

The day will include a plenary session with Dr Sarah Bernstein and Dr Patricia Malone (both University of Edinburgh) on the principle of difficulty as a theoretical concept and as an experience in constructing an academic career.

Unfortunately the coffee breaks and drinks reception will have to be in your own home this year.  We are still keen to enable the making of connections that usually happens in those spaces between academic papers and panels, and are working on ways of doing so.

Proposals
Proposals are invited from registered PhD students, for short (10 minutes maximum) research position papers.  Your proposal should be no more than 250 words. Please also include a short biography of no more than 50 words.  If you are outside the UK and Ireland, please give your location and time difference to the UK.

Proposals for and questions about the event should be sent to nwims@bams.ac.uk.

Deadline for proposals: 9am UK time, Tuesday 20 October 2020.

Acceptance decisions will be communicated within seven days.

Applicants and delegates are encouraged to let us know about any access needs they might have, and if we are able to make adjustments to the application or presentation process, we will endeavour to do so.

Registration
We’ll host the conference by Zoom, and there won’t be any charge to attend.

Categories
Call for submissions CFPs Events Lecture Seminars Workshop

Publicising your call for papers and/or event via BAMS

A quick reminder on the different ways you can communicate with the BAMS community to promote your call for papers and/or event.

1: Use the JISCMail list

If you join the BAMS jiscmail list you can post directly to it.

2: Tweet @ us

If you mention us @modernistudies in a twitter post it’ll come to several of our phones and we’re happy to retweet.

3: Post to the Facebook group

There’s a BAMS Facebook group you can join and post to.

4: Ask for it to be posted on the website

You can email the BAMS info email address (see Contact page) with formatted text (in Word is fine – it holds formatting when pasted into WordPress) and the Web Officer will post the call when they see it. It might take a little while to respond, so do allow a bit of lead time when requesting web posts.