Kobus Marais
Professor and Head of Department: Linguistics and Language Practice
Faculty: The Humanities
PO Box 339, Bloemfontein 9300, Republic of South Africa
JMarais@ufs.ac.za
Kobus Marais
Professor and Head of Department: Linguistics and Language Practice
Faculty: The Humanities
PO Box 339, Bloemfontein 9300, Republic of South Africa
JMarais@ufs.ac.za
The Routledge Research Companion to Toni Morrison
Editor: Maureen E. Ruprecht Fadem, CUNY
Call for Chapters:
This is the final draft of the call for chapter proposals for a volume I was commissioned to edit, The Routledge Research Companion to Toni Morrison. (I posted an earlier draft; it is now, here, finalized.) This companion text is intended for a scholarly audience and as support for newer Morrison scholars as they approach their research.
Different from some companions, the Routledge Research Companion series publishes cutting-edge research rather than mostly or entirely secondary material. The secondary nature of a companion—that it informs readers about scholarly trends and history or generally accepted understandings of an author and her work—is to be built into each chapter. Each chapter is to point the way forward in terms of new directions in the study, interpretation, and theorization of Morrison’s oeuvre and they are to review, in a thoroughgoing manner, existing scholarship on their topic area or theme, to fill out the picture in terms of where and what Morrison studies has been, what scholars have been thinking, writing, and arguing for since she started publishing.
Largely what we want to accomplish here is to tell the history of Morrison studies, through those reviews, and importantly to create a vision for it going forward or for the 21st Century. That is, to think beyond some of the more or less entrenched, perhaps restrictive, borders surrounding the reception and interpretation of Morrison, some of the givens that “live” in the knowledge produced to date on this oeuvre. The research on Morrison has, to a certain extent, been controlled, one might say, or too much “owned” by too few voices and perspectives. Going forward, how do we think beyond those limits or outside accustomed responses to Morrison? How create new and fruitful passages, meanings, readings, interpretive leaps and new knowledges inspired by the work of this Black woman writer and thinker, this universally celebrated Nobel Laureate?
If this is helpful to know in developing your proposal, I’ve already received excellent proposals on the following general topics:
--(homoerotic) colonial desire and carcerality
--queerness, fugitivity, and futurity
--a study in the recently opened archive, The Toni Morrison Papers, and projected impacts
--a chapter taking on the gargantuan area of mothers and mothering
--and, a chapter on the figure of the daughter
--I’m likely to have a chapter on the character “Beloved” in multiple guises across multiple novels
I hope to see several additional responses, mostly from today’s Morrison scholars—that is, for the book to be comprised of their work, though not entirely. I say “not entirely” in that this call is open to junior scholars, perhaps “dissertators” working on Morrison and doing excellent, innovative thinking. Importantly, too, the volume is to feature work from a diverse group of scholars around the world, to be international and varied both in terms of approach and in terms of contributor-authors. Routledge is known for its strength as a scholarly publisher with a remarkably (race, gender, geographic, and otherwise) ranging global authorship; this collection continues that legacy within the context of Toni Morrison studies.
Lastly, any chapter of this collection will be eligible for Open Access, for those interested in that or whose universities encourage it. Open Access can mean greater exposure, both for the book and for the individual scholar's contribution.
A one- or two-page proposal, including clear direction re: methodology and a bio, is due by 4/30/22. Email it to: mfadem@kbcc.cuny.edu (In terms of methodology: where, how, in what ways your chapter enters or fits into the conversation in progress, what you are innovating or primarily responding to, these should be clear as well as the theoretical scaffolding for the analysis. This can be achieved either through a separate statement, a working bibliography, or simply across/through the content of your proposal.)
In the meantime, questions or suggestions, if there is anything you would like to discuss, please don’t hesitate to reach out: mfadem@kbcc.cuny.edu (My own bio is copied, below, if helpful.)
Bio: Maureen E. Ruprecht Fadem (she/her) completed a Ph.D. in English at The Graduate Center-CUNY under the mentorship of Wayne Koestenbaum. She is Professor of English at Kingsborough-CUNY and has taught at The Graduate Center-CUNY, Drew University, Hunter College-CUNY, and Eugene Lang. She is a postcolonial scholar working on Anglophone writing of the late twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Maureen specializes in historical literature, particularly that of Ireland and African America, as well as the wider literatures of partition. Her research looks at imperial borders, like those imposed through partition schemes, at political justice, especially reparations, at social justice of race, class, and gender, and at the poetics, in poetry and prose, of conflict, trauma, and silence. Maureen’s first book The Literature of Northern Ireland appeared from Palgrave in 2015. In 2019, a second book-length study titled Silence and Articulacy in the Poetry of Medbh McGuckian was brought out by Rowman and Littlefield. In 2020, Routledge published Maureen’s third monograph, Objects and Intertexts in Toni Morrison’s ‘Beloved’: The Case for Reparations, and a collection she co-edited and for which she wrote the introduction, The Economics of Empire. The article “Architecting the Carceral State: The Fragment in Medbh McGuckian’s Diaries and Walter Benjamin’s ‘Theses’” appeared in a special issue of Review of Irish Studies in Europe (RISE), Vol. 4, no. 2 (Dec. 2021), along with an interview with McGuckian. Other recent articles include “A Consciousness of Streets: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Partition” (Synthesis, 2016) and “Drawing the Border, Queering the Nation: Nation Trouble in Breakfast on Pluto and The Crying Game” (Gender Forum, 2016). Maureen is at work on three monographs: the collection Imperial Debt, on reparations for empire; she was commissioned to edit The Routledge Research Companion to Toni Morrison; and, she’s writing a single-author volume, Poetics of the Fragment. Also under development is a chapter on Joyce’s “The Dead” and other postcolonial fiction (Coetzee, Pamuk, Naipaul, Beckett) that uses the triptych: snow, silence, and sleep as central allegory. Maureen is now serving a three-year term on the MLA Committee on Academic Freedom and Professional Rights and Responsibilities (CAFPRR).
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Ambedkar: A Journal on Theory and Praxis
Call For Papers :
All About Ambedkar: A Journal on Theory and Praxis invites original and previously unpublished articles for its upcoming general issue to be published in 2022.
The suggested topics are follows:
Critical reading of Ambedkar’s texts
Reviews of recent books on Ambedkar and Caste Studies
Analysis of caste-related discrimination and violence
Exploration of the theme of caste in literature, cinema, music, painting, photography and social media
Reflections on caste and contemporary Indian politics
Exploring the intersectionality of caste, class, gender, race, and religion
Rethinking leftist politics
Interviews with anti-caste activists and intellectuals
Reviews of books and films
Any other relevant topics.
Basic information for prospective authors:
Abstract (with a title & four keywords): 150-200 words
Word limit of full papers: 5000-7000 words
Style of citation: MLA 9th Edition (Sample citation instructions are available at Purdue Online Writing Lab.)
All submissions have to be drafted as per the Formatting Rules of AAA.
Deadline of submission: 30 March 2022
Email your submissions at ambedkarintouch@gmail.com.
Hooks’ subsequent collections—Teaching Community: A Pedagogy of Hope (2003) and Teaching Critical Thinking: Practical Wisdom (2010)—shift the mode to personal reflections on teaching outside of academia and brief “teachings” that center action and activity. By urging us to (re)commit to making revolutionary ideas accessible and “expand our communities of resistance,” hooks reminds us of our imperative to engage with and in public narratives concerning the development of critical ethnic and cultural studies programs that promote justice in education. Framing the exigent need for practical wisdom in our time, hooks’ recollections of her own foray into college education during the civil rights struggle remind us that, even in moments that foment equality in education, old hierarchies of race, class, and gender remain. We recognize this continuing paradox, particularly as our universities scramble to respond to student demands for access, equity, and justice. hooks’ recognition of teaching as a fundamentally political act, and her call for the creation of transformative learning spaces that center counter-hegemonic and anticolonial praxis provides educators with the roadmaps to co-create participatory spaces of self-recovery and collective liberation.
Transgressive Teaching & Learning: Critical Essays on bell hooks’ Engaged Pedagogy is the first sustained collection of critical essays to engage hooks’ teaching trilogy. This volume seeks to explore how teachers and learners across all educational levels and disciplines, in locations inside and outside of the university, employ hooks’ engaged pedagogical praxes. We seek contributions from both learners and practitioners who actively resist antiblack, imperialist, white supremacist, capitalist, abled, cisheteronorative patriarchal pedagogical praxes, and who remain deeply committed to the work of “educat[ing] people to heal this world into what it might become.” In the spirit of hooks’ trilogy, crafted in community across decades with people who inhabit various positionalities within both academic and public learning communities, we invite learner-scholars and teacher-scholars alike to submit proposals for critical chapters on educational praxes (3000-5500 words), personal reflections on pedagogy from learners and practitioners (1500-3000 words), and “teachings” describing pedagogical activities designed to facilitate dialogue following hooks’ idiom in Teaching Critical Thinking and Teaching Community (1000-2000 words).
We especially welcome submissions from emerging and multiply-marginalized learners and scholars; work from community educators and learners in underserved communities; and co-authored essays with students and/or community education justice collectives.
Possible topics include:
Please send abstract (300 words) and a short author bio (150 words) by May 2nd, 2022 to: bhookscollection@gmail.com. Notification of accepted essays by June 3rd, 2022. Completed pieces due by January 15th, 2023.
Maia L. Butler, Assistant Professor of African American Literature at University of North Carolina Wilmington in the Department of English
Joanna Davis-McElligatt, Assistant Professor of Black Literary and Cultural Studies at the University of North Texas, where she is also affiliate faculty in Women’s and Gender Studies
Megan Feifer, Teacher-Scholar in Residence at the bell hooks center at Berea College
Advances in the Study of Islam
Editors: Abbas Aghdassi & Aaron W. Hughes
Edinburgh University Press
CALL FOR MANUSCRIPTS
Advances in the Study of Islam welcomes book proposals (scholarly monographs and edited volumes) that focus explicitly on new, original and creative approaches to understand, analyse and critically revisit Islamic studies. The series,
Advances in the Study of Islam will publish cutting-edge research that reflects the long history and geographic breadth of Islam. It seeks to rethink traditional literary canons while simultaneously offering innovative and alternative approaches to push beyond traditional understandings of Islam. The series provides a platform for creative studies spanning:
WRITE FOR THE SERIES
If you have a proposal suitable for this series, we would love to hear from you. If you have any questions before submitting, or would like to discuss your ideas, please contact the series editors Abbas Aghdassi (aghdassi@um.ac.ir) & Aaron W. Hughes (aaron.hughes@rochester.edu).
Once you’re ready to submit, email your book proposal to Emma House, Commissioning Editor for Islamic & Middle Eastern Studies (emma.house@eup.ed.ac.uk).
For more information, please, visit: https://edinburghuniversitypress.com/series-advances-in-the-study-of-islam
Abbas Aghdassi, PhD