Resourcing Love: Land Management in North American Literature and Culture seeks to explore the ongoing histories of human-centered ecosystem management in the lands and waters that comprise what is now known as North America by tracking the divergent ways in which human-environmental relations have been articulated, experienced, understood, represented, and/or regulated.
Tag: Black Studies
EJAS is the official, peer-reviewed academic journal of the European Association for American Studies, a federation of 21 national and joint-national associations of specialists of the United States gathering approximately 4,000 scholars from 27 European countries (<http://www.eaas.eu>).
We seek essays that identify both the successes and failures of American Regionalism in this regard and expand on notions of critical regionalism with an implicit link to the indigenous (Susan Bernardin, 2014).
Read More “01/05/2023 (CFP) – Special issue of American Literary Realism” »
This special issue of AmLit invites papers that analyze queer literary works within the digital sphere, specifically pertaining to queer Indigenous and Black peoples residing in the Americas,
i.e., Turtle Island, Mesoamerica, Abya Yala, etc.
Call for Panels XXVII AISNA Biennial Conference
Vulnerabilities:
Weaknesses, Threats, Resilience in the U.S.A. and in Global Perspective
21-23 September 2023
Department of Philosophy, Social Sciences and Education
University of Perugia
Polo scientifico-didattico di Narni, Centro di Ricerca sulla Sicurezza Umana
(CRISU)
Read More “27/02/2023 (CFP) – Call for Panels XXVII AISNA Biennial Conference” »
Atlantis, pre-Columbian “Mound Builders,” cave men locked in combat with T. Rex — visions of ancient, ruined, or “lost” worlds on a spectrum between fact and fantasy have long fascinated American artists and producers of visual culture.