Categories
Call for submissions Postgraduate Uncategorized

CFS: Special Issue: Encyclopedia Joyce, James Joyce Quarterly

The Call for Submissions is now open for a special issue of the James Joyce Quarterly entitled “Encyclopedia Joyce”. Complete essays are requested by January 31, 2017.

About the issue

Ulysses and Finnegans Wake are encyclopedic novels—whatever that means. Joyce thought of Ulysses as “a kind of encyclopaedia” (SL 271), and he drew heavily on the eleventh edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica in writing it and the Wake. Both novels have the heft and polymathic breadth of a compact reference encyclopedia. One or the other of them is at the heart of every substantial analysis of encyclopedic literature that extends to modernism, from Northrop Frye’s to Edward Mendelson’s to Paul Saint-Amour’s. Whatever the encyclopedic novel is, surely they’re it. Yet just about everyone who writes about Joyce’s encyclopedism has something different in mind, and a spate of new work on the encyclopedia by historians (Ann M. Blair, Richard Yeo, Jeff Loveland, Joanna Stalnaker) and literary scholars working in earlier periods (Mary Frankin-Brown, Seth Rudy) has suggested numerous other, unexplored avenues for thinking through his relationship to the encyclopedic tradition. Everyday immersion in encyclopedic networks, which has lately revived and refocused scholarly conversation about the encyclopedia in those other fields, ought to refresh our reading of Joyce. The nature and significance of his encyclopedism is a vexed question, but it should also be a hugely generative one.

The encyclopedia is a byword for totalizing literary projects and a genre that has, for centuries, rehearsed the impossibility of writing totality. It names an epistemological ideal and a pedagogical one, as well as a genealogy of sprawling, Brobdingnagian books that overwhelm ordinary reading and thrive on multitudinous contradiction even as they aspire to those ideals. It stands for a tradition of information management with deep roots in the Middle Ages and early modern period (Blair); a “broad, fast, informational, fragmentary, and networked… style of reading and thinking” that links Enlightenment and post-Internet subjectivities (Daniel Rosenberg); and a “repertoire of necessary-impossible negotiations” between the impulse to comprehensiveness and the refusal of coherence that constitute a modernist alternative to epic (Saint-Amour). It’s reference encyclopedias and encyclopedic literature and the nebulous something-or-other that connects them.

When we talk about the encyclopedia, we refer to some or all of the meanings, connotations, histories, forms, practices, epistemologies, and bodies of knowledge that have attached to the term since antiquity. JJQ welcomes submissions that draw on the critical resources the term consolidates for a special issue, “Encyclopedia Joyce.” We are open to any approach to the theme but are especially eager to read essays that make use of recent scholarship on the encyclopedia; that consider how gender and race might determine what counts as an encyclopedic text and who gets to write one; that read Joyce alongside authors not usually discussed in studies of encyclopedic literature (e.g. Dorothy Richardson, Gertrude Stein, Jean Toomer); that think about Joyce’s encyclopedism in relation to the book’s transition from bound pages to networked screens; that have something new to show about Joyce’s use of reference works; that reflect on the usefulness or limitations of the encyclopedia in comparison with related critical categories (e.g. modern epic, the long novel, the maximalist novel); or that examine his role as model or subject for contemporary encyclopedic projects.

How to submit

Submissions are due January 31, 2017. They should not be longer than twenty pages, including notes.  Send them electronically to James Phelan (james.phelan@vanderbilt.edu) and Kiron Ward (k.ward@sussex.ac.uk).

Categories
Call for submissions Postgraduate

CFS: Special issue: “James Joyce, Animals and the Nonhuman”

The call for submissions is now open for a special issue of Humanities on the subject of James Joyce, Animals and the Nonhuman.

Deadline for proposal submissions: 31st October 2016

About the issue

Humanities, an international, scholarly, open access journal, and its Guest Editor, Dr Katherine Ebury (University of Sheffield), are seeking proposals for a Special Issue focused on ‘James Joyce, Animals and the Nonhuman’. The Special Issue is scheduled to appear in September 2017, with a manuscript delivery deadline of June 2017.

While ecocritical approaches to Joyce, in particular in Eco-Joyce (Brazeau and Gladwin) and The Ecology of Finnegans Wake (Lacivita), have recently generated interest in Joyce’s environmental imagination, connections between Joyce and animal studies, or Joyce and the ‘nonhuman turn’, have yet to be explored. In Portrait, Temple is credited with the idea that ‘The most profound sentence ever written…is the sentence at the end of the zoology. Reproduction is the beginning of death’. But although excellent critical work on Joyce and animals has certainly appeared, with perennial interests being Tatters of ‘Proteus’, the Blooms’ cat, Garryowen of ‘Cyclops’, and, of course, cattle disease, a sustained volume or special issue certainly seems necessary.

Equally, the voice of the printing press, which, Bloom reminds us in ‘Aeolus’, ‘speaks in its own way. Sllt.’ (7: 174–7) has been heard, but not so far in the sense of the ‘nonhuman turn’ which only emerged in 2012. This Special Issue seeks to offer a space for sustained consideration of how Joyce represents the animal and the nonhuman throughout his works. Contributions that suggest how we might feed Joyce’s example into contemporary conversations about animals and the nonhuman are also sought.

We welcome submissions that interrogate and interpret Joyce’s relation to the world beyond the human and are open to a range of approaches, including theoretical, textual, genetic and historical. We also welcome submissions from both emerging and established scholars.

We seek 250–500 word proposals for original contributions and a 100-word biography (included selected publications) by 31 October 2016; please email both the Guest Editor and the journal.

Contact email: k.ebury@sheffield.ac.ukhumanities@mdpi.com

Dr. Katherine Ebury
Guest Editor

Further details about the CFP and the journal are available on the journal’s website.
Categories
Call for submissions CFPs

CFP: Writing Europe, Kingston, Nov 2

The call for papers is now open for a one-day conference on Writing Europe, to be held at Kingston University, London on Wednesday, November 2nd.

Proposals are invited by August 15th.

About the conference

In the wake of the European referendum result, what does literature have to contribute to current and future thinking about the relationship between the UK and the rest of Europe? How are works of fiction engaging with the socio-political shifts of the new millennium? And does literature still possess a pragmatic political function? In this one day conference, we aim to provide a forum for academics to position their own work in relation to the idea of European identity, and indeed to consider what part literature and those who study it might have in the forthcoming political landscape.

Submissions

Papers are invited in two formats:

  • Conventional 20 minute papers
  • 10 minute ‘thought pieces’ which represent immediate responses to the current situation

We welcome diverse interpretations of the conference theme. Subjects for discussion might, however, include:

  • Representations of UK/European relations
  • Representations of Europe and/or European migrants
  • The refugee crisis and its wider ramifications
  • The British ex-patriot community in Europe
  • The ‘lessons’ of literature in the wake of the referendum: models of community, identity politics and the economy
  • Regional UK identities and their contribution to European identity
  • The causes of Brexit: national identity in literature
  • The role of the academic and/or the literary text in relation to Brexit as a discourse of major political change
  • The role of dystopian/utopian literature in anticipating or imagining political futures for Europe

How to submit

Please send 200-250 word abstracts with brief biographical notes (50 words) to S.Upstone@kingston.ac.uk or KShaw@lincoln.ac.uk by 15th August.

Please indicate on your abstract whether you would like to present a 20 minute or 10 minute paper. Panel proposals also welcome.

Select papers will be invited to contribute to a related edited collection.

Categories
Call for submissions CFPs

CFP: Irish Modernisms: Gaps, Conjectures, Possibilities – Vienna, 29 Sep–1 Oct

We are proud to open a call for papers for Irish Modernisms: Gaps, Conjectures, Possibilities, an international conference dedicated to testing the borders of Irish Modernism to be hosted by the Dept. of English and American Studies, University of Vienna, 29 Sept–1 Oct 2016.

The deadline for submission of abstracts is August 1st.

About the conference

Over the course of the past two decades, the coordinates of Irish studies and modernist studies have shifted dramatically. Where once the critic may have nodded in agreement with Ezra Pound’s estimation that Joyce “writes as a European, not as a provincial” and approved of Pound’s implication of an oxymoronic quality to the notion of an Irish Modernism, the ongoing historicising turn has irrevocably problematised these critical commonplaces. Significant studies re-positioning Yeats, Joyce, and Beckett’s modernist impulses in their Irish contexts have traced their sustained, if often contentious engagements with overlapping debates regarding Irish aesthetics, politics, and identities. At the same time, the previously assured binaries of Revivalist and Modernist creative modes have been profoundly complicated and disrupted.

The rise of New Modernist studies, with its insistence upon a plurality of modernisms, has also refocused the critical lens to look to marginal modernisms and previously neglected genres, forms, and sites of publication or expression. Casting a critical eye across this transformed landscape, Edwina Keown and Carol Taaffe observe that if “the incompatability of modernism and Ireland gradually became a critical staple, juxtaposing an enlightened internationalism with an insular and conservative nationalist culture,” recent critical work has revealed “not only the importance of modernism to Ireland, but also of Ireland to modernism”.

The Cambridge Companion to Irish Modernism, published in 2014, presents an ideal occasion to take stock of this critical turn, to evaluate its past and future influence in the field and investigate it for gaps, oversights, and unfulfilled potential. Boasting contributions by leading figures in the field, the volume aims both to stabilise and push the ground upon which Irish Modernism can be conceived. A note by the editor Joe Cleary impresses that this volume “serves as an incisive and accessible overview of that brilliant period in which Irish artists not only helped create a distinctive national literature but also changed the face of European and Anglophone culture”.

This vantage encourages us to complicate and nuance our historical view in a dual direction, noting the anti-realist experimentation of the Revivalist turn away from the modern alongside Jean-Michel Rabaté’s insistence that “in most recently produced histories of the concept of modernity, the return of the past is too often overlooked because the declaration of the ‘new’ is taken at face value”. A vista of new critical considerations thus comes into view, incorporating Irish modernism’s roots in, and debts to, the 19th century as well as residual or belated modernisms in mid-century and (post-)Celtic Tiger Ireland; the too often marginalised importance of women’s writing to the Irish avant-garde; the interventions of Irish-language, bilingual, and diglossic modes; the exchanges and clashes of mass culture and rural modernisms.

Keynote Speakers

Patricia Couglan (University College Cork)
Barry Sheils (University College Dublin)

Submissions

The conference invites critical, scholarly, and creative responses to the question of Irish Modernism as characterised in this Cambridge Companion. Rather than restating past gains, we propose to initiate a conversation that treats the field’s borders, coordinates, and key texts as fluid and open to further investigation.

As we mean to foster dialogue, debate and exchange on this focused topic, in addition to the submission of papers (15–20 minutes in length) and themed panels (maximum 3 speakers), the organisers particularly welcome alternative forms of presentation and dialogue, such as roundtables, workshops, debate motions (and debaters), creative responses, etc. which tackle the question of Irish Modernism and engage with the parameters of the Cambridge Companion project.

Topics for presentation & discussion include:

  • Direct responses to The Cambridge Companion to Irish Modernism
  • Unearthing omissions, oversights; proposing expansions, additions
  • Its value and place beside previous engagements with the concept; e.g. Kearney, Transitions: Narratives in Modern Irish Culture (1987), Booth and Rigby, Modernism and Empire (2000), Keown and Taaffe, Irish Modernism: Origin, Contexts, Publics (2009),
  • Reviewing the European, American, and Imperial modes, communities, and geographies that shape Irish modernism (and vice versa)
  • Mediating between traditional and modern scripts, local and international perspectives, mass and minority cultures, and between avant-garde and conservative approaches to science, history, religion, and literary tradition
  • Marginal modernisms, neglected forms
  • Testing and revising the relationship between the Anglo-Irish Literary Revival, Irish-language writing, Romanticism, Realism, Modernism, Late Modernism, Postmodernism, New Modernist Studies etc.
  • Neglected genres and forms, such as journals, newspaper columns, autobiography, oral history, westerns, sci-fi, fantasy, performance, visual arts, ‘political theatre’.

Abstracts

If you wish to propose a paper, panel, roundtable, workshop, debate motion (and debaters), creative response, etc. please submit a 250-word abstract, together with a short biographical note, to irishmodernismvienna@gmail.com by 1 August 2016.

Tamara Radak (University of Vienna)

John Greaney (University College Dublin)

Paul Fagan (Salzburg University/University of Vienna)

Categories
Call for submissions Essay Prize Past Events Postgraduate

The British Association for Modernist Studies Essay Prize 2016

The British Association for Modernist Studies invites submissions for its annual essay prize for early career scholars. The winning essay will be published in Modernist Cultures, and the winner will also receive £250 of books.

 

The BAMS Essay Prize is open to any member of the British Association for Modernist Studies who is studying for a doctoral degree, or is within five years of receiving their doctoral award. You can join BAMS by following the link on our membership pages: https://bams.ac.uk/membership

 

Essays are to be 7-9,000 words, inclusive of footnotes and references.

 

The closing date for entries is 31 October 2016. The winner will be announced by 31 January 2017.

 

Essays can be on any subject in modernist studies (including anthropology, art history, cultural studies, ethnography, film studies, history, literature, musicology, philosophy, sociology, urban studies, and visual culture). Please see the editorial statement of Modernist Cultures for further information: http://www.euppublishing.com/journal/mod.

 

In the event that, in the judges’ opinion, the material submitted is not of a suitable standard for publication, no prize will be awarded.

 

Instructions to Entrants

Entries must be submitted electronically in Word or rtf format to modernistcultures@gmail.com and conform  to Chicago style.

 

Entrants should include a title page detailing their name, affiliation, e-mail address, and their doctoral status/ date of award; they should also make clear that the essay is a submission for the BAMS Essay Prize.

 

It is the responsibility of the entrant to secure permission for the reproduction of illustrations and quotation from copyrighted material.

 

Essays must not be under consideration elsewhere.

 

Enquiries about the prize may be directed to Jeff Wallace, Chair of the British Association for Modernist Studies, at jwallace@cardiffmet.ac.uk.

Categories
Call for submissions News

News: Katherine Mansfield Studies and Essay Prize

The Katherine Mansfield Society has two calls for submissions open.

The first is for volume nine of Katherine Mansfield Studies, on the topic of Katherine Mansfield and Russia.

The second is for the 2016 Essay Prize on the same topic.

Submissions for both close on the 31st of August, 2016.

Call for submissions: special issue on “Katherine Mansfield and Russia”

Katherine Mansfield’s passion for Russian literature and culture is well known. Anton Chekhov was not just her most significant literary influence, he was a mythological presence with whom she felt a close bond. Indeed, this emotional bond became even stronger when she discovered the two of them shared not just similar artistic sensibilities but also the same deadly disease – tuberculosis. While Chekhov reigned supreme in Mansfield’s world, several other Russian writers, and Russia in general, fascinated her for most of her adult life. This volume seeks essay submissions that engage with all aspects of Mansfield’s response to Russian literature, culture and history, as well as to the Russians she met in England and France.

Submissions of between 5000–6000 words (inclusive of endnotes), in Word format and using MHRA style, should be emailed to the Guest Editor for this volume, Professor Galya Diment, accompanied by a 50 word biography: kms@katherinemansfieldsociety.org

Call for submissions for the 2016 Essay Prize

The Katherine Mansfield Society is pleased to announce its annual essay prize competition for 2016, open to all, on the subject of Katherine Mansfield and Russia.

The winner will receive a cash prize of £200 and the winning essay will be considered for publication in Katherine Mansfield Studies (the peer-reviewed yearbook of the Katherine Mansfield Society, published by Edinburgh University Press)

The distinguished panel of judges will comprise:

Professor Galya Diment, University of Washington, Seattle, US, Chair of the Judging Panel

Dr Rebecca Beasley, University of Oxford, UK

Dr Joanna Woods, Author of Katerina: The Russian World of Katherine Mansfield

Professor Claire Davison, Sorbonne Nouvelle, France

Submissions of between 5000–6000 words (inclusive of endnotes), in Word format and using MHRA style formatting, should be emailed to the Guest Editor for this volume, Professor Galya Diment, accompanied by a 50 word biography: kms@katherinemansfieldsociety.org

Possible topics for both include:

• KM and Russian Literature
• KM and Chekhov
• Translating with Koteliansky
• KM and Tolstoy
• KM, Gurdjieff and his Institute
• The Hogarth Press and Russia
• KM and Marie Bashkirtseff
• KM and Dostoevsky
• KM and Constance Garnett
• KM and the Russian Revolution of 1917
• KM and Russian Ballet and/or Theatre

More information is available on the Katherine Mansfield Society website.

 

Categories
Call for submissions Uncategorized

Call for Submissions: Dandelion Journal: Nostalgia

The Dandelion editors seek submissions on the theme of NOSTALGIA for their forthcoming issue.

 

Nostalgia is a ubiquitous presence in contemporary culture. Images and fantasies of the past permeate cultural and political discourses: from the mediated recycling of retro culture and popular history, to nostalgia as a method of political renewal (for example, Donald Trump’s campaign slogan ‘Make America Great Again!’ and Ken Loach’s The Spirit of ‘45).

 

Nostalgia is readily apparent in the current popularity of culture that celebrates our national past, while self-styled ‘progressive’ cultural institutions are increasingly turning to the past in order to better understand the contemporary: for instance, the reproduction of Richard Hamilton’s installations ‘Man, Machine and Motion’ (1955) and ‘an Exhibit’ (1957) at the ICA, London, in 2014. As the RetroDada manifesto declares ‘why shouldn’t a .gif run backwards as well as forwards?’

 

To this end we ask: why the resurgence of nostalgia? Is it merely a displacement strategy for a world convulsed by social, political, economic, and environmental crisis, or is there something salvageable in its longing for a prior wholeness, in its desire to seek out a moment when the new was still possible? Should nostalgia be condemned as an ethical and aesthetic failure? Is nostalgia a hindrance to making it new; a symptom of lateness, of a loss of the future? Or can nostalgia be a productive force that provides, both for the self and society, insights into our present?

 

This journal invites submissions that address the theme of nostalgia across the spectrum of Arts and Humanities research.

 

Topics may include, but are not limited to:

 

  • Genealogies of nostalgia: from its earliest expositions in medical science through its Romantic and now latest twenty-first century phase
  • Homesickness, exile and diaspora
  • Nostalgia, nationalism and the nation
  • Postcolonial nostalgia
  • Institutionalised nostalgia: heritage, memorials and/or museums
  • Life writing and memoirs
  • The restaging of exhibitions and past live art events
  • Nostalgia and film: remakes, mediating history through dramatic reconstruction, retro-soundtracks
  • Nostalgia and digital technologies
  • Genres of nostalgia: ranging from the Romantics to the return of the long novel and to science-fiction, steampunk, and retro-futurism
  • Nostalgia for the avant-garde and avant-garde nostalgia
  • Communist and fascist nostalgia: utopia
  • Temporalities of nostalgia: late time and belatedness
  • Scenes of nostalgia: the ruin, the country house, reconciliation with nature

 

We welcome short articles of 3000-5000 words, long articles of 5000-8000 words and critical reviews of books, film, and exhibitions. We also strongly encourage submissions of artwork including visual art; creative writing; podcasts and video footage (up to 10 minutes). We would be happy to discuss ideas for submissions with interested authors prior to the submissions deadline.

 

Please send all submissions to mail@dandelionjournal.org by 20th April 2016.

 

Please also include a 50-word author biography and a 200-300-word abstract alongside your submission. All referencing and style is required in full MHRA format as a condition of publication and submitted articles should be academically rigorous and ready for immediate publication. Complete instructions for submissions can be found at www.dandelionjournal.org under ‘About’.

Categories
Call for submissions Uncategorized

CFP: Special Issue of ‘The Journal of Wyndham Lewis Studies’

CFP for a special issue (2017) of The Journal of Wyndham Lewis Studies (JWLS) devoted to Lewis and periodical culture. Deadline 15th January 2017.

Wyndham Lewis’s centrality in the ‘little magazine’ and periodical cultures of the early twentieth century is well established. In addition to editing several journals himself – BLASTThe Tyro, and The Enemy – Lewis contributed to The English Review, The New Age, The Tramp, The Egoist, The Little Review, Art and Letters,The Athenaeum, and The Criterion, among many others. This volume of JWLSseeks 7-10,000-word essays that will expand our understanding of Lewis’s contributions to these publications and the social, artistic, bibliographic, and economic networks from which they are inseparable. All submissions should try to engage with the most recent relevant scholarship. Suggested topics include:

– Lewis’s role as editor / facilitator of the careers of others

– the relationships between Lewis and his editors

– Lewis’s place in the histories of periodicals and ‘little magazines’

– serialization, and its shaping influence on Lewis’s work

– Lewis and the economics of serial publication

– the aesthetics of magazines in relation to Lewis as a painter

– Lewis in relation to online repositories (e.g. the Modernist Journals Project)

– modernism from magazines – how does Lewis fit into this context?

– the politics of publishing Lewisian scholarship in journals today

To submit, or to discuss an idea for, an article, please contact the JWLS Editor, Nathan Waddell (nathan.waddell@nottingham.ac.uk)

Deadline = 15th January 2017

Categories
Call for submissions

CFP: Special Issue of Symbiosis DEADLINE July 1st 2016

CFP: Special Issue of Symbiosis: A Journal of Transatlantic Literary and Cultural Relations

Transatlanticism’s Influence on British Literary Study

Transatlanticism is often credited with enriching, and sometimes even correcting, the study of American literature. By de-emphasising the nation and its perceived coherence and uncovering crosscurrents from the British Isles, Europe, and Africa, transatlanticism seems the opposite of American exceptionalism. How, though, has transatlanticism enriched or challenged the study of British literature? The journal Symbiosis invites articles of 5,000 to 7,000 words for a special issue on this topic, to appear in April 2017. Articles may, for example, analyse new authors, texts, genres, readings, or movements highlighted by the transatlantic context; study the influence of American writing on British writing; study how an encounter with American peoples gives shape to British literary styles or forms; analyse the cultural transmission of American discourses in the British Isles; disentangle (or entangle) the impact on ideas of Englishness of postcolonialism, Irish and Scottish studies, and transatlanticism; assess strategies for teaching transatlanticism; or discuss how the transatlantic puts pressure on period or genre designations within British literary study (like ‘Romantic’ or ‘Victorian’). Regardless of the focus, articles should articulate the ramifications of transatlanticism for future studies of British literature. Submissions should be double spaced throughout, prepared (initially) to any recognised humanities style sheet, and addressed or sent as email attachments to both the guest editors (contact information listed below) by July 1st 2016. Please contact the guest editors with queries pertaining to the special issue.

Stephanie Palmer, Senior Lecturer of English, Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham, UK.stephanie.palmer@ntu.ac.uk

Erin Atchison, University of Auckland. erin.j.atchison@gmail.com

Categories
Call for submissions

CFP – prospective special issue of Modernism/modernity

Avant-Gardes and Avatars: Modernism and Performance

A Prospective Special Issue of Modernism/modernity

Proposed Publication in 2018

Abstracts by 1 April 2016

Completed essay submissions by 1 September 2016

Questions: sbaycheng@bowdoin.edu

As any science fiction reader can attest, visions about possible futures often precede, if not necessarily predict, the technologies to come. This may be particularly true of modernism and its fantasies of the future on stage. In 1907 Edward Gordon Craig dreamed of a Übermarrionette, an autonomous, synthetic performer who would liberate the theatre from the whims and flaws of human actors. Playwright Karel Čapek wrote the first robot as drama in R.U.R. 1920, and Antonin Artaud was the first to describe a theatre of réalité virtuel in The Theatre and Its Double (1938). Both modernist theater and cinema often served as a space for imaginings of the future.

Not surprisingly then, contemporary scholars have looked often to modernist performances as the foundation for relations among media, performance, and new forms of writing. Lev Manovich, for instance, locates the origins of new media in avant-garde formalist cinema, and historian Tom Scheinfeldt has referred to emerging digital humanities as the “performative humanities,” noting the ways that new technologically enhanced approaches not only analyze but also transform text into performance.

Amid the ongoing discussions of cultural and technological transformation, this issue of Modernism/modernity considers the role of modernist theater and performance and their legacies. Looking critically at the relations among modernism, technology, and contemporary performance, this special issue of Modernism/modernity gathers new work from critical avant-garde studies, media archaeology, and intermediality to consider how modernism across genre—texts, media, and performance—shapes our understanding of a technologically infused present and how emerging critical practices reevaluate writing, film, and performances of the past.