The CLCS Global Arab and Arab American forum is interested in works of the Arab diaspora, including the cultural production of Arab American and global Arab writers. The category “Global Arab” allows for a broad conceptualization of diasporic and multilingual work situated within the various national, ethnic, religious, and cultural contexts of the Arab world and the Middle East. The designation “Arab American” is linked to the category “Global Arab” yet deserves special attention as a distinct subfield within American literature that engages with the discourses of race and ethnicity in the United States as well as with the history of Arab and Middle Eastern migrations to the Americas.

FYI: CFP Society for the Study of American Women Writers 2015 Conference

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    Reminder of deadline for all proposals: February 13, 2015

     For the 2015 Triennial Conference of the Society for the Study of American Women Writers, Nov. 4-8, 2015, Sheraton Society Hill, Philadelphia, PA., the conference organizers welcome proposals on any topic related to the study of American women writers, broadly conceived. The strength of the society is rooted in the dynamic ideas and research accomplishments of its members, which the 2015 conference continues to facilitate and honor. As in the past, however, we would also like to take the opportunity that the conference affords to create discussions and conversations around a shared theme, which we have designated as

    Liminal Spaces, Hybrid Lives.

    The terms liminality and hybridity are most familiar in post-colonial contexts; however, they suggest critical concepts that draw on multiple disciplines and privilege inclusion. Often informed by notions of crossing, intersectionality, transition, and transformation, these terms contest exclusionary practices involving class, ethnicity, gender, race, religion, and sex, among other variables. The word “limen,” from which liminality derives, designates threshold. The threshold functions simultaneously as both an obstructive barrier and an enticing opening for the entry into unknown, perhaps unknowable states that invite exploration. Both spatial and temporal, the liminal is a site of in-betweenness enabling non-normative perspectives. It is a site where difference becomes encounter as well as a location that resists assimilation while simultaneously allowing for the dynamic possibilities of fusion that hybridity embraces and articulates.

    With the theme of “Liminal Spaces, Hybrid Lives,” the 2015 Triennial SSAWW Conference aims to celebrate the multiplicity of American women’s writing across a longstanding literary tradition that continues to be dynamic in contemporary times. The conference theme of liminality and hybridity, and the wide range of implications and meanings that these expansive concepts imply, will facilitate a process of encounters, engagements, and conversations within, between, among, and across the rich polyphony that constitutes the creative acts of American women.  Thus, through a focus on liminality and hybridity, the 2015 SSAWW conference hopes to present the varied ways in which women, as critics, dramatists, educators, essayists, journalists, oral storytellers, poets, novelists, short story writers, and practitioners of both older and emerging forms, invent and reinvent the American literary and cultural landscape.

    Possible topics involving the conference themes may include but are not limited to such keywords and ideas as:

    Alienation and/or disillusionment as states of in-betweenness

    Borders and peripheries

    Boundaries between/within the built environment and/or the natural environment

    Child, adult and blurring boundaries

    Collaboration

    Crossings

    Cross-species encounters: human and animal relationships

    Horizontal and/or vertical paradigms of social constructs

    The hyphen

    In between public and private or the semi-private, the semi-public

    In between resilience and vulnerability

    Historical constructions of space, place, home

    Liminal spaces in the home

    Immigration and/or citizenship

    Inside and outside—the academy, the canon, etc.

    Leadership from, on, within the margins

    The mainstream and/or the subversive

    The margin and/or the center

    Mutations

    Obscurity and celebrity

    Outliers

    Porosity

    Pressures of normalization

    Technology and the human

    Transatlantic

    Transcontinental

    Transgender

    Transgressions

    The conference organizers welcome and encourage complete session submissions as well as individual paper abstract submissions. The cfp for complete panel submissions can be posted on the SSAWW website in addition to other venues of your choice. For posting on the SSAWW website, please send cfp to: ssaww2015.web@gmail.com.

    Please direct questions about the conference to: ssaww2015.query@gmail.com

    Submissions are electronic: ssaww2015.submit@gmail.com

    Please see full submission guidelines and panel cfps on the SSAWW website: http://ssawwnew.wordpress.com/2015-conference/

    We look to the 2015 conference to carry forward past achievements, and to create present and future opportunities for the growth of the Society and all its members with the understanding that  inclusivity, in all its forms, intellectual rigor, and supportive outlooks are the responsibility of the entire membership. We look forward to hearing from you and receiving your submissions.

    Conference Organizers:

    Rita Bode (rbode@trentu.ca), VP of Organizational Matters and Conference Director

    Dick Ellis (r.j.ellis@birmingham.ac.uk), President

    Beth L. Lueck (lueckb@uww.edu), Associate Conference Director

    Miranda Green-Barteet (mgreenb6@uwo.ca), Conference Program Coordinator

    Leslie Allison (leslie.allison@temple.edu), Conference Grad Assistant

    Rickie-Ann Legleitner (rickie.legleitner@bhsu.edu), Conference Grad Assistant

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