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Other Conferences, Announcements, CFPs, and Job Listings A service provided by the Western Literature Association. Please send your announcements in electronic format to wal@cc.usu.edu. CALL FOR PAPERS/ABSTRACTS/SUBMISSIONS CALL FOR PROPOSALS EIGHTH BIENNIAL ASLE CONFERENCE "Island Time: The Fate of Place in a Wired, Warming World" FEATURING PLENARY SESSIONS WITH AND PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOPS AND SEMINARS ON The Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE) invites proposals for its Eighth Biennial Conference, to be held June 3–6, 2009, at the University of Victoria in British Columbia, Canada, on the theme of "Island Time: The Fate of Place in a Wired, Warming World." We seek proposals for papers, panels, roundtables, workshops, and other public presentations connecting language, nature, and culture. As always, we welcome interdisciplinary approaches; readings of environmentally inflected fiction, poetry, and creative nonfiction; and proposals from outside the academic humanities, including submissions from artists, writers, practitioners, activists, and colleagues in the social and natural sciences. We are also interested in receiving proposals on the following related topics: MAKE IT COUNT: ASLE RESPONDS TO THE CLIMATE CRISIS PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOPS AND SEMINARS ON JUNE 2 CONFERENCE SITE FIELD SESSIONS AND POST-CONFERENCE FIELD TRIPS FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AND SUBMISSION GUIDELINES Questions about the program? E-mail Dan Philippon at danp@umn.edu ALL PROPOSALS MUST BE SUBMITTED BY NOVEMBER 15, 2008 CALL FOR CONTRIBUTORS Routledge is proud to announce the launch of the Routledge Annotated Bibliography of English Studies (ABES), a unique reference tool for those working in the field of English Literary Studies. Routledge ABES is a specialised online bibliography providing annotated entries on all of the most significant research in literary studies published each year. It contains scholarly annotations on all the best new criticism, from which users can find out about a publication, how it might be of use to them, and whether it would be relevant to their work. The database is organised around eight key sections: Medieval; Renaissance and Early Modern; Eighteenth Century; Romanticism; Nineteenth Century; Modernism; Postcolonial; Contemporary Literature. Routledge is currently inviting applications to contribute to the Contemporary Literature section. In order to maintain the distinction between ABES's postcolonial and contemporary coverage, this section deals mainly with writing from The United Kingdom and Ireland, Canada and the USA—though the critical studies represented can originate from anywhere in the world. The section includes work on both established and up-and-coming authors, and covers all the major genres of contemporary writing including fiction, poetry, drama, non-fictional prose, travel writing, literary theory, and life writing. As a contributor to Routledge ABES you would be called upon to create annotations to some of the best new research in literary studies, helping to provide an indispensable guide for the rest of the literary studies community. Your work would be fully acknowledged, with contributors able to provide a short biography and a link back to their own website or profile. Each section is headed by a dedicated section editor, who edits and oversees the records in that section. If you are interested in becoming a contributor to Routledge ABES, then please contact the Contemporary Literature section editor: Dr. Christopher RingroseThe Centre for Contemporary Fiction and Narrative The University of Northampton St George's Avenue Northampton NN3 3AW E-mail to: chris.ringrose@northampton.ac.uk For information about ABES itself, contact Sophia Blackwell at Routledge: Sophia.Blackwell@tandf.co.uk Western authors are featured in a new online literary magazine, THE WRITER'S WORKSHOP REVIEW. The first issue contains an excerpt from David Guterson's new novel The Other and an interview with him, and pieces from WLA members Peter Donahue and Nicholas O'Connell, among other works of fiction and nonfiction. For more information or to find out how to submit your own work: http://thewritersworkshopreview.net/issue.cgi CALL FOR PAPERS THE AMERICAN STUDIES ASSOCIATION OF TEXAS ANNUAL CONFERENCE November 13–15, 2008 Texas State University–San Marcos (San Marcos, Texas, is 25 miles south of Austin and 45 miles north of San Antonio) Conference Theme—From Region to the World: The Importance of Place in American Studies Papers dealing with any aspect of American Studies are welcome. ASAT especially welcomes those papers that reflect the conference theme of the importance of place in American Studies. $50 travel stipend for graduate student presenters Papers, abstracts, or panel information due by September 1, 2008 Or electronic copies to mb13@txstate.edu For more information see the ASAT website CALL FOR PROPOSALS ARTIFACTS AND ILLUMINATIONS: to be edited by Loren Eiseley is generally acknowledged as one of the most important 20th-century American nature writers and is a widely admired practitioner of creative non-fiction, a genre that, in part due to his example, has flourished in recent decades. His work is regularly praised and cited as an influence by contemporary writers. Furthermore, the past few decades have witnessed a burgeoning of scholarly interest in a variety of fields that are especially amenable to the interpretation of Eiseley, including both the serious consideration of creative non-fiction as an important genre of American literature as well as the related scholarly analysis of science and nature writing. The study and teaching of writers such as Eiseley is a growing trend in academic institutions in both the U.S. and around the world. Recent articles in the Chronicle of Higher Education and other publications dedicated to trends in academe have called for new emphases on interdisciplinary research and pedagogy. As a writer who bridged the sciences and the humanities, Eiseley has proved a challenge for scholars often locked in firm disciplinary boundaries. Now that scholars are seriously exploring knowledge at the intersections of disciplines, Eiseley studies are positioned to flourish in a way that they have not up to now. We are soliciting abstracts of articles that apply a variety of critical approaches, incuding interdisciplinary approaches, to an examination of the prose and poetry of Loren Eiseley. We are not seeking "appreciations" of Eiseley's work, but solid critical examinations. We seek essays that:
We have received an expression of strong interest in this project from the University of Nebraska Press but do not yet have a contract. Submit abstracts of not more than 500 words and a short vita by August 1, 2008 to Susan Maher: smaher@mail.unomaha.edu Tom Lynch: tlynch2@unl.edu Email your submission both as a Microsoft Word attachment and within the body of your email. (If using Windows Vista, please convert from .docx to .doc format.) NATIVE AMERICAN LITERATURE TEACHING POSITION Full-time, tenure-track faculty member with a specialization in oral and written Native American literature. 4/4 teaching load. PhD required. POSTDOCTORAL APPPOINTMENT IN THE LITERATURE OF THE AMERICAN WEST The Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West and the Department of English at the University of Southern California together seek applications from recent PhDs whose work explores the literature of the American West for a new two-year postdoctoral appointment beginning in the fall of 2008. The Institute on California and the West is a collaborative research and teaching initiative established between the Huntington Library and the University of Southern California (www.usc.edu/icw). The postdoctoral position is to be split between a research appointment at the Huntington Library and a half-time teaching position (two courses per year) in the English department at USC. Candidates must have completed their PhD by June 2008. To apply, please send a letter of application, c.v., thesis abstract, no more than two thesis chapters, and two letters of reference by April 1 to William Deverell, Director, Institute on California and the West, The Huntington Library, 1151 Oxford Road, San Marino, CA 91108. Inquiries may be sent to deverell@usc.edu. USC values diversity and is committed to equal opportunity in employment. Women and men, and members of all racial and ethnic groups, are encouraged to apply. THE SOUTHWESTERN WRITERS COLLECTION The Southwestern Writers Collection (SWWC), a part of The Wittliff Collections at the Alkek Library, Texas State University-San Marcos, has acquired the papers of author Cormac McCarthy. McCarthy’s body of work includes some of the finest novels of our times. In 1992, McCarthy won the National Book Award for the New York Times bestseller All the Pretty Horses, and in 2006 he was given the Pulitzer Prize for his most recent novel, The Road. The recipient of numerous other awards, including a Rockefeller Foundation Grant, Guggenheim Fellowship and MacArthur Fellowship (the so-called “genius” grant), Cormac McCarthy has been highly praised from the very start of his career. James A. Michener said of McCarthy’s first novel, The Orchard Keeper, published by Random House in 1965, “His use of words is remarkable, for he lures from them a very special music…. But what is best, I think, is his acute observation and his ability to describe things in new ways. The specific gravity of his writing is high indeed….” No Country for Old Men, on which the recent film by Joel and Ethan Coen is based, was touted by Sam Shepard as “a monster of a book." In December, the movie was named best film of 2007 by the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures. THE ARCHIVES The complete collection of McCarthy’s literary papers documents his entire writing career. At the core is correspondence, notes, hand-written and typed drafts, setting copies, and proofs of each of his eleven novels, from The Road (2006) back to The Orchard Keeper; also included is the draft of an earlier unfinished novel. Additionally, the archive contains similar materials related to his work on the 1994 play, The Stonemason, as well as four screenplays, including “No Country for Old Men,” which McCarthy began as a screenplay in 1984 then adapted twenty years later as a novel. In order to maintain the integrity of the Cormac McCarthy Papers, the Southwestern Writers Collection has contracted right of first refusal to purchase all future materials relating to work by the author, who is in the process of writing three new novels. Typescripts of one play and two screenplays by McCarthy were previously donated by Bill Wittliff and McCarthy. These are photocopies of originals, signed by the author on the title page, and do not include annotations or edits. The play, The Stonemason, was published in 1994. The first screenplay, "Cities of the Plain" (1984), predates the publication of the novel by the same name by fourteen years. Both screenplays in this collection, "Cities of the Plain" (1984) and "Whales and Men" (n.d.) are unpublished. Lead Archivist Katie Salzmann is currently creating the initial inventory for the Cormac McCarthy Papers and transferring materials into archival folders and boxes for permanent housing. She will then arrange and describe the McCarthy collection according to archival standards, in a manner most effective for research. The number of requests to access the collection is expected to be high once the processing is finished and the complete inventory (finding aid) of the contents is online, perhaps as early as this fall. A room designated for the Cormac McCarthy Collection, will be located within the Southwestern Writers Collection on the Alkek Library’s seventh floor, and will be equipped for exhibits, study, and related activities. Public events are being planned, and will be announced. The Southwestern Writers Collection is online at www.swwc.txstate.edu. ASLE GRAND CANYON RIVER TRIP WITH AUTHOR REBECCA SOLNIT Join members of the Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment (ASLE) and acclaimed environmental writer Rebecca Solnit for a wilderness rafting expedition on the Colorado River in Grand Canyon. Solnit is author of Wanderlust: A History of Walking (2002), A Field Guide to Getting Lost (2005), Hope in the Dark: Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities (2005), Storming the Gates of Paradise: Landscapes for Politics (2008), and many other widely acclaimed works of nature writing, history, and commentary. She is a columnist for Orion and publishes regularly in Sierra and the Nation Institute’s Tomdispatch. Solnit was awarded the Lannan Literary Award, the National Book Critics Circle Award, and grants from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. The full expedition will last fourteen days and cost $3570. Two alternatives schedules are available. You can join the 6-day upper half of the trip and then hike out from Phantom Ranch at river mile 89 ($1820). Or you can hike in at Phantom Ranch for the 9-day lower half ($2690). Prices are all-inclusive (excepting gratuities and alcoholic beverages). The trip starts and ends in Las Vegas, Nevada. Trip organizer Lance Newman is a longtime ASLE member, professor of environmental literature, and Grand Canyon river guide. Outfitter Moki Mac River Expeditions (www.mokimac.com) has been running river trips in Grand Canyon for more than fifty years. For more information or to reserve your spot, e-mail lnewman@csusm.edu.
LITERATURE, SOCIAL JUSTICE, AND ENVIRONMENT INITIATIVE The Literature, Social Justice, and Environment (LSJE) initiative in the Department of English at Texas Tech University centers upon the most important developments in the study of the natural environment in literature. Students will revisit important texts in a new light—across political boundaries into bioregions—within environmental historical contexts. Students will have access to the Sowell Collection, which holds the papers of Barry Lopez, William Kittredge, Gretel Ehrlich, Annick Smith, Bill McKibben, Rick Bass, and others. Click here for more information or contact sara.spurgeon@ttu.edu.
If you have an idea for a WLA special session at the MLA Conference 2008 that YOU'd like to organize, please contact Prof. Hunt. NOTE: WLA members, please support Alex Hunt by submitting papers to the above Call for Special Session as it is the first step toward applying for affiliate status with the MLA.
CDP@BCR, formerly the Collaborative Digitization Program, which in April merged into the Bibliographical Center for Research (BCR), is nationally recognized for its digitization expertise, including training and best practices guidelines. For the Rocky Mountain Online Archive project, the Collaborative Digitization Program, then hosted at the University of Denver, provided training for regional partners in digital imaging and metadata capture and acted as the resource for EAD creation and project management for all nine Colorado libraries. The Rocky Mountain Online Archives specialized guides, called finding aids, give detailed descriptions of the unique primary source materials located at 20 different repositories from the three-state area. Students and scholars can begin their research any number of ways. In addition to browsing by state, users can easily begin exploring the Rocky Mountain Online Archive by subject area. Within minutes of accessing the site, users can find descriptions of collections related to architecture, frontier and pioneer life, land grant and water rights, wildlife conservation and more. Now that these materials are online, the regional research potential of these collections has truly been enhanced. In addition to the descriptive finding aids created for this project, three institutions in New Mexico have created new digital collections. Those collections, along with many others from Colorado and Wyoming, can be accessed via the Collaborative Digitizations Program’s Heritage West (http://cdpheritage.org) and Digital Collections hosted by UNM Libraries (http://econtent.unm.edu). Thanks to generous funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities, University of New Mexico Center for Regional Studies, and the University of New Mexico Libraries, the Rocky Mountain Online Archive is now available to the public at http://rmoa.unm.edu/.
The editor of The International Fiction Review invites essays on contemporary fiction by international writers, new and established, including minority writers. Equally welcome are essays on literary and narrative theory, comparative studies of world fiction, and surveys of contemporary national literatures or writers. Contributors are invited to explore all narrative forms in any interdisciplinary, cross-cultural, and critical context. Please send submissions to the editor via mail or e-mail. ABOUT THE JOURNAL The International Fiction Review, now in its thirty-first year, is a reviewed scholarly periodical devoted to international fiction. It publishes articles and book reviews. The journal has a world-wide circulation and a diverse readership which shares an interest in fictions of other cultures and language groups. The journal is available online to subscribers at www.lib.unb.ca/Texts/IFR RECENT PUBLICATIONS
For any further inquiries please contact the editor:
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