Read More “31/01/2019 – CFP: The Migration Conference 2019” »
Tag: transatlantic studies
This year the Irish Association for American Studies Postgraduate Symposium invites papers that investigate the myriad ways in which American history and culture has been recorded and rerecorded, across all media. Organizers welcome proposals for papers that consider how America is engaging continuously in a dialogue with its own history and culture.
Nationalism as a distinct political ideology can be said to have characterized the first half of the twentieth century, at least as regards the western hemisphere.
The short story can be regarded as a site of resistance with its particular ability to inscribe places, but also a space in-between where language relates place through the specialization of a common, international language.
Read More “01/09/2018 – CFP: Place and Placelessness in Postcolonial Short Fiction” »
The Biennial ASLE Conference “Paradise on Fire” explores the connections among storytelling, real and imagined landscapes, future-making, activism, environed spaces, differential exclusions, long histories, and the disaster-prone terrains of the Anthropocene.
Read More “01/09/2018 – CFPanels: “Paradise on Fire” – 13th ASLE Biennial Conference” »
The third issue of “Novecento Transnazionale” will present a selection of articles focusing on “Transnational perspectives and art history.”
Read More “30/09/2018 – CFP: Transnational perspectives and art history” »
The graduate students in Hispanic, German, Italian and Russian Studies at the Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures/McGill University present a conference on the topics of violence and alterity.
Read More “01/08/2018 – CFP: “Violence and Alterity” – Graduate Student Conference” »
This interdisciplinary and transregional workshop explores slavery, past and present from the perspective of authorship, textuality and literary culture.
Read More “01/09/2018 – CFP: Workshop Slavery, Authorship and Literary Culture” »
Graduate Student Conference @ The Graduate Center – CUNY on the idea of “displacement” in literary and cultural studies.