Irish Caribbean Connections: An Interdisciplinary Conference

University College Cork, 22-23 July 2016

Call For Papers

Irish Caribbean Connections is an interdisciplinary conference that seeks to explore synergies between Ireland and the Caribbean islands. This event follows the vibrant Caribbean Irish Connections conference held at the University of the West Indies, Barbados, in 2012.

KEYNOTE SPEAKER: LORNA GOODISON

INTRODUCED BY JAHAN RAMAZANI

Proposals are welcomed for papers across the range of disciplines, including but not confined to the following areas:

  • the performing arts, drama, music, literature, and the visual arts
  • cultural studies, postcolonial and transnational studies
  • the Black and Green Atlantic
  • diaspora, exile, migration, slavery, colonialism
  • antislavery movements, revolution
  • the Irish in the Caribbean
  • travel writing
  • Ireland and the Francophone and Hispanophone Caribbean
  • history, geography, politics, archaeology, sociology, sociolinguistics, religion
  • digital humanities, international digitization projects

Organisers: Lee Jenkins (University College Cork), Melanie Otto (Trinity College Dublin)

Abstracts (250 words) for 20 minute papers should be emailed to Lee Jenkins at l.jenkins@ucc.ie by 31st March 2016. Irish Caribbean Connections takes place just before the 2016 conference of IASIL (International Association for the Study of Irish Literature), to be held at University College Cork on 25-29 July

 

Irish Caribbean Connections is supported by the University College Cork Strategic Research Fund

2016 Emmerson Lecture NSFW PinkIs he Dead? America’s Romance with Mark Twain

 

The 2016 W. A. Emmerson Lecture, named in honour of our former Treasurer Tony Emmerson, will be given by Prof. Stephen Matterson (Trinity College Dublin) at 7pm on Wednesday, 9th March, in TR6 at the Graduate School, Queen’s University Belfast. Wine reception to follow.

Attendance is free and open to all. Click here to register.

For more information about the W. A. Emmerson Lecture, and to listen to past lectures, click here.

The British Library are running a series of 3-month (or PT equivalent) PhD Placements, hosted by our specialist curatorial teams and other Library experts. Of the 17 placements currently on offer, this one may be of particular interest:

 

Exploring American Foreign Policy Resources at the British Library

This 3-month PhD placement offers an exciting opportunity to work with the Eccles Centre and the Americas curatorial team to explore the British Library’s North American collections and develop a new research resource.

 

Details about the scheme and application guidelines:

http://www.bl.uk/aboutus/highered/phd-placement-scheme

Application deadline: 19 February 2016

 

Open to all doctoral students (as long as they have the support of their supervisor or graduate tutor) the placement scheme includes a dedicated workplan, plus full supervision and training. All placement students are allocated their own desk and/or workspace, and are fully integrated into the working environment of the team/department in which they are based.

 

Placements will be held between June 2016 – May 2017. Exact start dates to be pre-agreed with successful candidates.

 

Contact Research.Development@bl.uk for all queries regarding this position.

Call for Articles:

New Voices in Jewish-American Literature

The retirement of Philip Roth in 2012 signifies a definite break with the past, the silencing of one of the last living links with the Jewish generation that dominated post-war American literary culture (Saul Bellow, Bernard Malamud, Isaac Bashevis Singer et al.). This does not, however, mean the end of Jewish-American literature. Recent years have rather shown the remarkable tenacity of Jewish-American writing: its enduring ability to grapple with contemporary society’s pivotal issues along with its power to initiate new critical debates.

Now is the perfect moment to start talking about younger Jewish writers as they emerge from the shadow of the “kibitzing giants” of their literary adolescence. From Michael Chabon’s cheerfully ad-hoc appropriation of popular culture to the historical consciousness of writers like Nicole Krauss and Jonathan Safran Foer, Jewish-American literature continues to prove its inventiveness and range. In exploring themes as varied as queer sexualities, Israeli relations and the experiences of specific religious communities, today’s writers force critics to constantly adapt their conception of the nature of Jewish writing in, and of, America.

This collection follows in the footsteps of Derek Parker Royal’s Unfinalized Moments: Essays in Development of Contemporary Jewish Narrative (2011) and special issues such as Studies in American Jewish Literature’s “Contemporary Jewish Writers Respond to Judaism” (2006), by asking how twenty-first century writers contend with the unique challenges of writing in a modern Jewish-American milieu—one, as ever, marked by the competing factors of rapid change and weighty tradition. We invite submission of either thematic or author-focused essays that share a fascination with the ceaseless dynamism of the field, and that offer original perspectives on contemporary writers and works that have yet to receive significant critical attention.

Topics could include (but are not limited to):

• The return of the religious in Jewish-American Literature

• Shalom Auslander and Jewish Irreverence

• Queer/LGTBQ+ perspectives in Jewish-American Literature

• Depictions of American-Israeli Relations

• Third generation Holocaust narratives

• New Developments in Jewish-American poetry

• New Developments in Jewish-American playwriting

• New Developments in Jewish-American graphic novels

• The novels of Allegra Goodman

• The novels of Nicole Krauss

• The novels of Gary Shteyngart

• The novels of Joshua Cohen

• The writings of Michael Chabon

 

Research articles should be approximately 8000 words in length, including references and a short bibliography. Submissions should comprise of:

• Abstract (250 words)

• Full-length article (8000 words)

• Author information (short biographical statement of 200 words)

The deadline for submission is 30th July 2016.

The special collection, edited by Dan O’Brien and Mike Witcombe, is to be published in the Open Library of Humanities (OLH) (ISSN 2056-6700). The OLH is an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation-funded open-access journal with a strong emphasis on quality peer review and a prestigious academic steering board. Unlike some open-access publications, the OLH has no author-facing charges and is instead financially supported by an international consortium of libraries.

Please contact newvoicescollection@gmail.com with any queries.

Submissions should be made online at: https://submit.openlibhums.org/ in accordance with the author guidelines and clearly marking the entry as [JEWISH-AMERICAN LITERATURE SPECIAL COLLECTION]. Submissions will then undergo a double-blind peer-review process. Authors will be notified of the outcome as soon as reports are received.

To learn more about the Open Library of Humanities please visit: https://www.openlibhums.org/site/about/