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  • 13 Jul 2021 11:56 PM | Anonymous

    See file attached below for full Call for Papers:

    Appel Représentations et réceptions médiatiques d’écrivaines de langue française (19e-21e siècles).docx

    ___________________________________________

    Nous sollicitons la participation de chercheur.e.s internationaux pour cette journée d’étude, qui aura lieu le 12 novembre 2021 sur Zoom. Les propositions (environ 300 mots) devront être accompagnées d’une brève notice bio-bibliographique et sont à envoyer avant le 15 août 2021 au comité organisateur (Mercédès Baillargeon, Maria Beliaeva Solomon et Elsa Courant-Bares) à l’adresse suivante: autricesetmedias@gmail.com. Les communications pourront être effectuées en français ou en anglais.  

    Les propositions seront examinées par un comité de lecture qui inclut Mercédès Baillargeon (University of Maryland), Maria Beliaeva Solomon (University of Maryland), Elsa Courant-Bares (CNRS), Marie-Ève Thérenty (Université Montpellier 3) et Michèle Schaal (Iowa State University). Les réponses seront envoyées début septembre au plus tard.

    ____________________________________________

    We are seeking the participation of international researchers for this study day, which will take place on November 12,  2021 via Zoom. Proposals (approximately 300 words) as well as a brief bio-bibliography,  must be sent to the organizing committee (Mercédès Baillargeon, Maria Beliaeva Solomon et Elsa Courant-Bares) before August 15, 2021 at the following email address: autricesetmedias@gmail.com. Papers may be presented in French or in English. 

    The proposals will be reviewed by a scientific committee, which includes Mercédès Baillargeon (University of Maryland), Maria Beliaeva Solomon (University of Maryland), Elsa Courant-Bares (CNRS), Marie-Ève Thérenty (Université Montpellier 3) and Michèle Schaal (Iowa State University). Selected participants will be notified by early September at the latest.

  • 13 Jul 2021 11:49 PM | Anonymous

    For Whose Own Good?: French (Post-)Colonialism and Interdependence
    (Baltimore, MD March 10-13)
    Chair: Bethany Schiffman (University of California, Los Angeles)

    Panel Abstract:

    “C’est avec 76.900 hommes que la France assure la paix et les bienfaits de la civilisation à ses 60 millions d’Indigènes. ”

    So reads a French colonial propaganda poster from the 1931 Exposition Coloniale. Indeed, throughout its long colonial history, France painted itself as bringer of good, enlightenment, health, and happiness to those “less fortunate” around the world. This is the essence of the mission civilisatrice. Of course, the lived reality of French colonial rule was far from caring. Rather, it was exploitative, essentializing, and violent. But it also undeniably created systems of interdependence that endure, not least of which is the lasting hegemony of the colonizer’s language. These systems affect everything from representation to (im)migration to questions of individual and national identity. Better understanding colonialism’s role in shaping our past and our present will help illuminate the complicated, ongoing power dynamics it created and the lasting ways in which it both facilitated and hindered caring and interdependency.

    A range of topics facilitate a better understanding of these issues. What moments of caring, if any, were able to exist within the colonial system? How did it create networks of (inter)dependency? How do those networks continue to exist and evolve today? How do these relationships play out in cultural texts? How is cultural production used as a way to promote caring in this system, either retroactively through memory or by addressing remaining power differentials? What is the impact of (post)colonialism and systems of interdependency on the environment? This panel invites papers, in English or French, that unpack the historical and contemporary influences and impacts of colonialism on caring in the francophone world.

    Description:

    This panel invites papers in English or French that explore the past and present of the entanglement of French colonialism and caring, broadly defined. Possible topics include (but are not limited to) its presentation as a project of nurturing (la mission civilisatrice) to its creation of systems of interdependence that have lasting influences on questions of (im)migration, identity, and representation to its impact on the environment.

    Please upload your proposed abstract (~250 words) to the NeMLA portal by September 30, 2021


  • 19 Jun 2021 10:36 PM | Anonymous

    New deadline: 30th of September 2021.

    See attached file for full CFP: The Immersive Potential of Literature and Hybrid Media in the 20th and 21st Centuries Women in French Postgraduate_ECR International Symposium .docx

    Proposals are welcome in both English and French.

    Please send abstracts to wif.ecr.symposium@gmail.com. Individual papers will be 15-minutes long. All submissions should be accompanied by a short (100-word) biography of the presenter(s). Please ensure that your abstracts and biographies are included in the same document, that the title of this document includes your name, and that you specify the time zone that you will be presenting from:

    - Individual proposals should be no more than 250 words

    - Panel proposals should not exceed 1,000 words, and should include a brief description of the panel and of the individual papers included in the panel.

  • 19 Jun 2021 10:31 PM | Anonymous

    Australian Society for French Studies Conference 2021
    8-10 December 2021

    Un.sited: “Sites” in French Studies

    Online conference

    Hosted by the French Discipline, School of Language and Cultures
    University of Queensland

    We invite proposals - in French or in English - for:

    • Individual research papers: presentations of 15 minutes, followed by 10 / 15 minutes of discussion.
    • Panels: three x 15-minute papers, followed by discussion.
    • Roundtable discussions: these might relate to research practice, to teaching practice, to language policy (for example).
    As is the usual ASFS practice, we will consider proposals on topics other than the conference theme, within the constraints of the programme.

    Proposals to be sent to https://forms.gle/7w3KejQN3J4FSwfP9 by 30 July 2021

    See attached file for CFP: Australian Society for French Studies Conference 2021.docx

  • 19 Jun 2021 9:40 PM | Anonymous

    Proposals are still being accepted for the following Women in French sessions at the 2021 South Atlantic Modern Language Association (SAMLA) annual conference which will be held this year in Atlanta, Georgia from November 4-6. At this time SAMLA is proceeding optimistically with its plan to return to its traditional in-person format but is prepared to transition to an online forum in the event of updated travel and/or social gathering restrictions.   

    Please consider sending a proposal in French or English to one of the panel chairs listed below by June 30, 2021

    For more information on SAMLA and the annual conference, please visit the conference website:  https://samla.memberclicks.net/ 

    In addition to registering as a member of SAMLA and also for the SAMLA conference, presenters must also be current on their membership in Women in French.

    1. Francophone Womxn Creating Apart and Connecting Together 

    The theme of this year’s SAMLA conference, “Social Networks, Social Distances,” invites us to reflect on the contradictory challenges that we have faced in these pandemic times. How do we connect with others in solitude? How might isolation foster a sense of connection or community? As a Women in French panel, this session will explore these questions in the context of French and Francophone womxn artists and writers. Proposals on examples of womxn who create apart and connect together in literature, film, theatre, and other modes of creation from all time periods and all areas of Francophone culture are welcome. Possible topics might include but are not limited to illness, disability, incarceration, injustice, difference, trauma, family, and exile. Please send 250-word proposals in English or French along with presenter’s name, academic affiliation, and email to Adrienne Angelo (ama0002@auburn.edu) by June 30, 2021. 

    Chair: Adrienne Angelo, Auburn University, <ama0002@auburn.edu

    2.Women/Mapping/Other: Womanist/Feminist Map-making and Cartographies of Change 

    The aim of the session is to explore women’s and/or feminist map-making and its effects on social networks through various facets including, but not limited to, the geographic, literary, philosophical, political, artistic, pedagogical, architectural, and the every-day. Possible questions of interrogation could be the following: What do feminist or woman-made maps look like? In what spaces do they emerge? How do women’s or feminist perspectives in mapping “intersect, parallel, or diverge,” as cartographers Meghan Kelly and Britta Ricker hypothesize, from conventional cartographic practices? What risks do they entail? What is seen and what is not seen, and why? What are their effects on social networks, social distances, and society at large? Since this session is part of the Women in French panels, papers that focus on French-speaking peoples and spaces (i.e., cities, texts, artworks, classrooms, etc.) are invited; those from diverse approaches, perspectives and disciplines are especially welcome. Please send an abstract of approximately 150 words in either French or English and a brief bio to Jodie Barker (jodiebarker@unr.edu) by 30 June 2021. 

    Chair: Jodie Barker, University of Nevada, Reno, <jodiebarker@unr.edu> 

    3.  Complicated French and Francophone Women 

    This panel welcomes papers focused on the exploration of the ways in which French and Francophone women’s writing, film, and other art forms initiate, navigate, and complicate notions of distance and network.  How do these women create new understandings of social order and contest inequities?  Examinations of the liminal spaces between tradition and new order and the ways in which these texts challenge perceptions of identity, privilege, nationality, class, race, sex, gender, and language are particularly welcome. Papers may be in French or English and may not exceed 20 minutes.  Please send a 250-word abstract, brief bio and A/V requests to Susan Crampton-Frenchik, scramptonfrenchik@washjeff.edu, by June 30, 2021. 

    Chair: Susan Crampton-Frenchik, Washington & Jefferson College, <scramptonfrenchik@washjeff.edu

    4. From Socially Marginalized Women to Thriving Writers: Overcoming Class- and Gender Barriers through Literary Networking-Success Stories from Nineteenth-Century French Actresses 

    Zola’s novel Nana presents in typical naturalist manner a rather misogynist portrayal of a nineteenth-century variété theatre actress, who ascends from streetwalker to high-class courtesan, yet, remains destined to fail, because of hereditary and social determinants. The novel mirrors, to an extent, late nineteenth-century French society’s perception of actresses, whose amorous affairs were seen as a professional attribute that enabled these women to support their lifestyle, providing them with financial support and beneficial social relationships. Several contemporary actresses, who eventually embraced a journalistic or literary career, played with this cliché and used it for their own benefit, and that of other female stage performers, artists and writers. They parodied the existing gender-bias, frequently pursued a feminist agenda, all the while drawing on their seduction techniques acquired on and off stage. Roberts illustrated this convincingly in Disruptive Acts, her book about the former actress and future journalist Marguerite Durand, founder of the feminist newspaper La Fronde. Other examples might be Séverine or Marie Colombier; but they certainly were not the only ones. This panel seeks to look at (former) nineteenth-century actresses turned journalist/writers who were able to network successfully with female colleagues to strengthen each other’s careers, preventing a naturalist “fail.” Please send your 150-200 words paper proposal, contact information, and a 50-word biographical statement to Elisabeth-Christine Muelsch (emuelsch@angelo.edu)  by June 30, 2021. 

    Chair: Elisabeth-Christine Muelsch, Angelo State University emuelsch@angelo.edu 

    5. Revisioning Narrative (Identities) and Space 

    The current pandemic offers us the possibility of (re)viewing identity, disidentification, and, most importantly, new ways of articulating becoming. As we physically distance and redefine ourselves as well as our relationships with others, we discover new angles. Social distancing risks dislocation. It may, however, bring intimacy within ourselves as well as connection to others in new ways. We seek to explore how this plays out. No limits apply. These questions resonate through narrative (literary, film, etc.) and in our classrooms. We welcome examining identity, disidentity, or other positionings within and through everyday life and narrative in the broadest sense. Like our experience of time during the pandemic, such concepts expand, contract, in a continual (de)centering of text and existence. Perhaps this means the current actuality of a Zoomified world that ruptures our contact with the physical object, such as book and paper, as we engage with the keyboard and bright light of the screen.  How is the contemporary moment represented in text or classroom, past or present? We look forward to adding your voice to the discussion. By June 30, 2021 please send an abstract of 200-250 words to both E. Nicole Meyer nimeyer@augusta.edu and Kiki Kosnick kikikosnick@augustana.edu. 

    Co-Chairs: E. Nicole Meyer, Augusta University, <nimeyer@augusta.edu>, and Kiki Kosnick, Augustana College, <kikikosnick@augustana.edu>

  • 19 Jun 2021 12:33 PM | Anonymous

    English version follows

    La conférence sera tenue du 12-14 mai 2022.

    Pour les détails complets, veuillez consulter le document suivant : 10e conférence internationale WIF.docx

    Contributions :

    Les propositions de communications ne doivent pas dépasser les 250 mots et doivent comprendre les coordonnées des intervenant.e.s ainsi qu’une notice bio-bibliographique (100 mots au maximum).

    Les organisatrices encouragent la soumission de panels (3 intervant.e.s au minimum, 4 au maximum). Les propositions de panels doivent comprendre une explication de 250 mots ainsi que toutes les propositions individuelles.

     Soumission :

    Les propositions individuelles ou de panels peuvent être soumises au plus tard le 1er septembre 2021 via le site Internet de la conférence : http://www.wif2022.org.

    Report de la conférence WIF 2020 :

    Les présentations qui figuraient au programme de la conférence WIF 2020 seront automatiquement acceptées, à condition d’être resoumises à l’identique via le site de la conférence. Toute nouvelle contribution sera, en revanche, sujette à une évaluation par le comité scientifique. De même, les bourses WIF attribuées pour la conférence de 2020 seront automatiquement versées aux bénéficiaires, sous condition que leurs contributions soient identiques à celles sélectionnées pour l’édition de 2020. Toute nouvelle proposition de présentation devra faire l’objet d’une autre demande de bourse WIF.


    The conference will be held from the 12th-14th of May 2022.

    For complete details, you may refer to the following document: 10e conférence internationale WIF.docx

    Proposals:

    Individual abstracts should not exceed 250 words and should include the presenter’s contact information as well as a short biography (100 words maximum). Proposals for three- or four-paper panels are also encouraged. Panel proposals should include a 250-word rationale for the proposed topic as well as individual abstracts.

     

    Submissions:

    Individual abstracts or panel proposals must be submitted no later than September 1, 2021 via the conference website http://www.wif2022.org.

     

    Postponement of the WIF 2020 conference:

    Papers included in the WIF 2020 conference program will be automatically accepted, provided they are submitted identically through the conference website. Any new contribution will, however, be evaluated by the scientific committee. Likewise, the WIF grants awarded for the 2020 conference will be automatically paid to the beneficiaries, under the condition that their contributions are identical to those selected for the 2020 edition. Any new presentation proposal would require an new application for a WIF conference grant.

  • 17 May 2021 11:53 AM | Anonymous

    Hosted online by the Institute of Modern Languages Research (IMLR), the symposium (October 1-2, 2021) will focus on “Narratives of Selfhood and Ambivalence” in contemporary works of literature, film, visual art and hybrid media (artist books, photo-texts, bande dessinée, internet-based media, etc.), from 1980 to the present. This online event is aimed at an international audience, welcoming presentations from postgraduate students and early career researchers (ECRs) working across the Modern Languages.

     Possible topics include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • Postcolonial narratives of exile and identity fragmentation
    • Multilingualism and identification through language 
    • Representations of gender-fluid experiences 
    • Transgressive portrayals of the self or resistance to normative notions of identity (in relation to culture, class, sex, gender)
    • Corporeal alienation (triggered by traumatic experiences and/or memories, sexual violence, etc.)
    • Self-representation through hybrid media and/or genre
    • Autofictions and/as formal ambivalence
    • Authorial posturing and rhetorical ambivalence
    • Ambivalence as a trope in character development 
    • Resistance to hermeneutic stability and resolution in genre or narrative 

    For individual proposals of 15 minutes, please send a 250-word abstract prior to 31 May, with a short author bio, to Françoise Campbell (francoise.l.a.campbell@gmail.com) and Beth Kearney (b.kearney@uq.edu.au). For panel proposals of 45 minutes (three speakers), please send a 500-word summary outlining all papers.

    See attached file for more information:Call for Papers Narratives of Selfhood and Ambivalence Postgraduate and ECR Symposium at the IMLR .docx



  • 17 May 2021 11:44 AM | Anonymous

    FOR A MULTICULTURAL HISTORY OF FRANCE: REPRESENTATIONS OF DIVERSITY IN FRANCE FROM WWI TO TODAY

    https://samla.memberclicks.net/samla-93-calls-for-papers

    In A Different Mirror: A History of Multicultural America, historian Ronald Takaki presents a new and inclusive view of American history that establishes new networks and reconsiders certain distances between groups: “[r]ace…has been a social construction that has historically set apart racial minorities from European immigrant groups” (10). In the spirit of this book, this session wishes to contribute to a multicultural history of France by accepting papers on the literary and cinematic representations of diversity in France (including beyond the Hexagon) about the multiple groups making up the French mosaic and participating in its history, from World War I to today: (post)colonial, European, Latin American, North American or other groups.

    Please submit a 250-word abstract and a brief bio in French or English to Martine Fernandes Wagner at martinef@usf.edu until June 15, 2021.

  • 10 May 2021 4:47 PM | Anonymous

    We are extending the submission deadline for proposals to the following Women in French sessions at the 2021 South Atlantic Modern Language Association (SAMLA) annual conference which will be held this year in Atlanta, Georgia from November 4-6. At this time SAMLA is proceeding optimistically with its plan to return to its traditional in-person format but is prepared to transition to an online forum in the event of updated travel and/or social gathering restrictions.   

    Please consider sending a proposal in French or English to one of the panel chairs listed below by June 30, 2021

    For more information on SAMLA and the annual conference, please visit the conference website:  https://samla.memberclicks.net/

    In addition to registering as a member of SAMLA and also for the SAMLA conference, presenters must also be current on their membership in Women in French. You may visit (https://womeninfrench.org/join) to become a member or to renew your membership. 

  • 23 Apr 2021 9:59 PM | Anonymous

    2nd Call for Papers for Women in French Open Panel
    SCMLA Annual Conference
    The Whitehall Hotel, Houston, Texas, October 7-9, 2021 (Hybrid Conference)


    The CFP for SCMLA 2021 has been extended to May 14

    We are pleased to announce that after last year's postponement, SCMLA 2021 has been rescheduled as a Hybrid Conference and will take place in Houston, TX at the historic Whitehall Hotel (as previously planned) from October 7-9, 2021. SCMLA will provide a virtual platform for those who are unable to attend in person and still wish to participate. Details about the 2021 SCMLA conference and membership are listed on our website. 

    This year's theme is "Politics of Protest," but you may propose a paper on any topic related to the study of French and Francophone women authors, the study of women's place in French and Francophone cultures or literature, and/or feminist literary criticism. As an Allied/Regular Affiliation, SCMLA will allow us one guaranteed session. All submissions from the 2020 conference have been carried over, but If there is sufficient interest, SCMLA will allow us to have a split-session. 

    For the WIF open panel, please send a 250-300 word abstract in French or English on any topic by May 14, 2021 to me, the Chair: Theresa Kennedy, Baylor University, (Theresa_Kennedy@baylor.edu) and to the Secretary, South Central Regional Representative: Siham Bouamer, Sam Houston State University (sbouamer@shsu.edu). 

    Presenters must become SCMLA members by the time of the conference. More info may be found on the conference website:

    https://www.southcentralmla.org/conference/


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