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  • 15 Feb 2021 2:25 PM | Anonymous

    SCMLA Annual Conference
    The Whitehall Hotel, Houston, Texas, October 7-9, 2021
     

    The CFP for SCMLA 2021 is now open.

    We are pleased to announce that after last year's postponement, SCMLA 2021 has been rescheduled and will take place in Houston, TX at the historic Whitehall Hotel (as previously planned) from October 7-9, 2021. We are planning for an in-person conference this fall, but we 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 April 10, 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). 


    WIF members may also propose a special session. More information may be found on the website (see link below). The deadline for special sessions is also April 10, 2021. Please let me know if you have an idea for a special session. 

     

    If your proposal for the WIF open panel is accepted, you will be notified before April 30, 2020. 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/

  • 15 Feb 2021 2:21 PM | Anonymous

    MLA 2022: Women in French Session. January 6-9th, 2022, Washington DC

    “When day comes, we ask ourselves, where can we find light in this never-ending shade?” Youth poet laureate Amanda Gorman, 2021

    While written for the January 2021 inauguration of a US president, the incipit to Amanda Gorman’s poem speaks to a larger global moment and ethos.  Her lyrical call demands a cooperative and coalitional vision of humanity that looks to the past for reparative force and perspective; that acknowledges the challenges of the present without shuddering at their expansiveness; and that eyes, without naiveté of the difficulties of achieving, a more just and inclusive future.  At a time when violent and extremist, white-supremacist social movements, epidemiological crises, and fragile neoliberal economies challenge our individual and global understandings of our present and future, Gorman empowers us to focus on her voice.

     This WIF Call for papers centers the power of voice (understood broadly), indeed, the potential and impact of diverse and/or multilingual perspectives to (re)think our pasts, (re)contextualize our presents, and (re)imagine our futures.  We invite papers that celebrate memorial, remembrance, and testimony through the presentation and amplification of lost, erased, forgotten, or silenced (broadly conceived) voices throughout the Francophone world.  We are especially interested in proposals that complicate and/or dialogue notions of empowerment, aesthetics, memory, identity, bodies, language(s) and multilingualism, space, and borders.  

    Please submit abstracts of 200-350 words to both co-organizers, CJ Gomolka, cjgomolka@depauw.edu and E. Nicole Meyer, nimeyer@augusta.edu by March 1, 2021.

  • 15 Feb 2021 2:13 PM | Anonymous
    Deadline extended to February 20, 2021. Please see below for details. 

     

    The 2021 South Atlantic Modern Language Association (SAMLA) conference, health and safety permitting, will convene at the Atlanta Marriott Buckhead Hotel & Conference Center in Atlanta, Georgia from Thursday, November 4 through Saturday, November 6, 2021.  

     

    If you are interested in proposing a Women in French panel for the 2021 SAMLA conference, and for organizational purposes, I ask that you please send me your call for papers by February 20, 2021 (ama0002@auburn.edu). Please provide the following information: 1) title of session; 2) contact information of panel chair; 3) a 150-200-word description of the panel; 4) details for panel applicants, such as requested abstract length, submission deadline (May 15, 2021 suggested), any other special requests for submissions (i.e. brief bios, CVs, academic affiliation, etc.). 

       

    The theme of the 2021 SAMLA conference is “Social Networks, Social Distances.” Feel free to interpret that theme as broadly as possible, and you are also invited to propose a panel on another topic, too.

  • 15 Feb 2021 1:53 PM | Anonymous

    Call for Papers for Women in French

    2021 Midwest Modern Language Association Convention

    Milwaukee, Wisconsin

    November 4-7, 2021

    Since the 2020 MMLA Convention was cancelled due to the ongoing pandemic, the organizers have retained the 2020 theme for 2021: “Cultures of Collectivity.”

    At heart, the conference theme seeks to address a set of questions about how meaning is forged in connection with collective acts. How, for example, are cultures created by the gathering together of human subjects? What modes of collectivity, be they formal or informal, arise from culture, or have arisen historically? How might we meet and answer the salient political and social challenges of our time through collective response and collaboration—as artists, as academics, as teachers and students, and as laborers? We seek proposals that wrestle with these (or related) transhistorical questions about what it means to work, think, and join together under the auspices of language, literature, and culture.

     Perhaps of interest are the nascent Cultures of Collectivity that have formed in the virtual sphere over the past year.

    Please send a 250-word abstract in French or English along with your academic affiliation, brief bio, and A/V requirements to Jennifer Howell, Illinois State University, jthowel@ilstu.edu by May 1, 2021. Proposals for complete panels and/or roundtables are also welcome.

     Notifications will be sent by May 15, 2021. All presenters must be current members of both the Midwest Modern Language Association and Women in French by July 1, 2021 in order to participate. If your submission for 2020 was accepted, you need not resubmit. I will be in contact with those individuals in May to confirm their participation.Additional information can be found on the conference website:

     https://www.luc.edu/mmla/convention/

    All those interested in Women in French are encouraged to attend. I will also organize a dinner out for all WIF panelists and WIF members who would like to join us. Please don’t hesitate to contact me if you have any questions. We look forward to seeing you in Milwaukee!

  • 1 Oct 2020 2:50 PM | Anonymous

    Call for papers for the virtual Twentieth and Twenty-First-Century French and Francophone Studies International Colloquium taking place this coming March. 

    The panel is entitled “Covid 19 and the new normal in France and beyond.” The format is “tables rondes” (12-15 minutes presentations each) followed by Q&A.

    Please send your 5-10 lines proposal with title to Prof. Eric Touya (etouya@clemson.edu) by Monday October 12.

    Topics may include social and physical distancing, self-quarantine, women, LGBTQ, face mask, stress (relief), children, classroom, workplace, university life, home, contagion, politics, inequality, isolation, grief, caregiving, community, solidarity, and others.


  • 14 Sep 2020 3:02 PM | Anonymous

    Congrès 2021, Université de l’Alberta Edmonton, Canada, 29 mai au 1er juin 2021 

    "La femme insulaire : du nord au sud, histoire de permanence et de renouvellement"

    Appel ci-joint : APFUCC 2021 La femme insulaire.pdf 


  • 13 Aug 2020 2:18 PM | Anonymous

    6th International Conference on the Teaching of French as a Foreign Language: “Colloque FLE 2021”

    University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras Campus

    February 25-27, 2021

    Organized by:

    • College of Humanities, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras Campus
    • Department of Letters and Social Communication, Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières
    • Department of Modern and Classical Languages, George Mason University
    • Puerto Rican Association of Teachers of French (APPF)

    Theme : EMOTIONS, AFFECTS AND THEIR IMPACT ON THE DIDACTICS OF FRENCH

    The organizing committee of the “Colloque FLE 2021” conference invites researchers and professors to submit proposals for papers presenting structured research results. This conference is aimed at researchers in French as a second/foreign language, but also at teachers of French. The conference will provide an opportunity to examine current research and methodologies that include varied and complementary approaches.

    The conference will be organized in a face-to-face format, but also by teleconference.

    Keynote speakers

    Natallia Liakina (McGill University, Montreal, Canada)

    Denis Liakin (Concordia University, Montreal, Canada)

    Proposal details

    Proposals for presentations and round tables will be considered on the following topics, but not limited to:

    • The contribution of neuroscience: new avenues in French as a foreign language
    • Plurality of cultures in the classroom: winning solutions for pedagogy
    • Status of the target language and status of the source languages: pedagogical implications
    • Scientific research and hands-on pedagogy
    • Current issues in FSL-FLE didactics
    • Face-to-face versus distance learning: lessons learned in crisis situations

    Proposals for a paper or round table should contain the following elements:

    • title of 100 characters maximum (spaces included);
    • abstract of 1500 to 2000 characters (including spaces) and the bibliography;
    • list of authors and co-authors with first name, surname, and affiliation;
    • authors' contact information (address, e-mail, telephone);
    • entire document must be a maximum of 1 page

    E-mail: colloquefle@yahoo.com

    Deadline: September 15, 2020

    Proposals will be reviewed anonymously. Answers will be given in October 2020. Proposals for round-table discussions must describe the theme, objectives, relevance to conference themes, the types of information that will be presented or any other relevant information for the review committee. We will take into account the scientific quality of proposals, including supporting data, the appropriateness with conference themes, and originality.

    The languages of the Conference are French, English and Spanish.

    Organizing Committee

    • Patrick-André Mather, Universidad de Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras
    • Françoise Ghillebaert, Universidad de Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras
    • Linda de Serres, Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières, Canada
    • Vincent Chanethom, George Mason University, États-Unis
    • Maritsu Fleury, Asociación Puertorriqueña de Profesores de Francés


  • 22 Jul 2020 3:00 PM | Anonymous

    NeMLA 2021: 52nd Northeast Modern Language Association Convention

    Philadelphia, PA 

    March 11-14, 2021

     

    18582: Francophone African Women Writers Embracing Eco-Feminism (WIF session) (Panel) Chair: Anna Rocca (Salem State University)

    This panel welcomes papers exploring francophone African women writers’ narratives that approach human life as deeply embedded in both nature and culture. Some themes of consideration should include, among others: how literary accounts expose the intersectional ties among environmentalism, anti-colonial struggle, and social justice; in what ways African female writers challenge unjust, ecologically destructive forms of imperial development and engage in alternative forms of ecofeminist environmental ethics; how they represent the double oppressions of women and nature; and finally, how do women writers depict communitarian and relational living, and interdependence between humans and nature.

    DEADLINE for Abstract Submission: September 30, 2020

    SUBMIT HERE: https://www.cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/18582

     

    18583. Visual Africa: Francophone Women's Aesthetic Representations of Africa (WIF session) (Roundtable) Chair: Anna Rocca (Salem State University)

    This panel invites papers on francophone African women's artistic and cinematic representations of contemporary Africa. How do African women artists relate with stereotypes and essential notions and visual representations of Africa, the latter created for Westerners' consumption? How do female artists appropriate and imagine cultural heritage? Are they defining new aesthetics and perspectives of belonging and (national) identity? Do women artist posit a multiplicity of shifting ranging from static binary categories such as North/South, black/white, African/European, foreign /national, to overlapping identity formation as well as localized, situational, and/or hyphenated identities?

    DEADLINE for Abstract Submission: September 30, 2020

    SUBMIT HERE: https://www.cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/18583

     ***

    Currently, and provided that city and state officials sanction meetings of groups of 250 or more in March, NeMLA is planning for an in-person conference. NeMLA will of course take all steps to ensure participants’ safety (adjusting seating capacity, following social distancing rules, using masks and working with the hotel to respect health guidelines). In October, Chairs will assess where presenters stand as well.


  • 10 Jul 2020 3:03 PM | Anonymous

    Femmes dérangées, femmes dérangeantes / Disturbed and Disruptive Women

    Women in French UK-Ireland Biennial Conference

    7th-9th May 2021, Maynooth University, Ireland

     

    Confirmed Keynotes:

    Naomi Fontaine

    Innu First Nation Writer from Uashat, Québec.

    Giovanna Murillo Rincon

    Paris-based activist committed to supporting the most vulnerable of QTIPOC subjects (Queer, Transgender and Intersex People of Colour).

     

    The labels ‘dérangées’ and ‘dérangeantes’, which we might loosely translate as ‘disturbed’ and ‘disruptive’, have long been applied to women throughout the course of history. Once a woman does not correspond to the societal expectations and norms that supposedly define ‘proper womanhood’, be that in terms of appearance, behaviour, beliefs or situation, she is cast aside and held in contempt. ‘Good’ women are those who do not disturb and disrupt the patriarchy, but, rather, conform to and uphold systems of male privilege.

    On the flipside, disturbance and disruption by women can often allow for the destabilisation of such androcentric systems. Women who have challenged the status quo in extraordinarily productive ways have often been the most ‘disturbed’ or ‘disruptive’, from the suffragettes to Cixous’ laughing Medusa, from Colette the author to Despente’s murderous heroines. Feminist action has literally made waves to see effective change take place. This is particularly apparent in the creative expression of women, typified in the 70s by the theorisation of écriture féminine: women have historically deployed experimental narrative forms to develop a way of writing that they could truly call their own, that was noticeably different from a male-dominated literary tradition. Content as well as form has also been of fundamental importance. By talking about their own, feminine experiences and desires in literature or art, women have been committing a de facto subversive act. ‘Women’s issues’ ̶ be that menstruation, the menopause, or women’s sexual desire ̶ have been historically absent from cultural representation, as demonstrably taboo subject material. This explains in part the popularity of autofiction as a genre across contemporary women’s writing in French.

    Disruptive action also involves a dissolution of the singular category of ‘woman’ itself, that all too frequently equates the experience of cis-gendered, white, middle-class women with that of all womxn. This monolithic and binary reading of feminine identity not only silences marginal members of our societies further, but also overlooks the transformative power which they can bring to the feminist cause. Trans women in particular have all too often been deemed ‘disturbed’ by transphobic voices in the media (not least from a certain subsection of the feminist community), yet are arguably the most proactive as a group when it comes to dismantling sexist and misogynist ideology. 

    Interestingly and distressingly, then, what constitutes a form of disturbance or disruption on the part of women is often defined by other women. Disturbed or disruptive women are frequently policed by ‘good’ women. Some notoriously disruptive women have also caused disruption that has worked both in the favour of feminist action, and against it. We have only to think of Germaine Greer’s controversial comments on trans women, or Catherine Deneuve’s derisory reaction to the #MeToo campaign in Le Monde. A re-evaluation of the selected terms and of their application can thus enable us to identify (and hopefully reduce) the less obvious reaches of patriarchal power.

    The theme that we have selected for WIF 2021 is evidently one that is rich in interpretation. We encourage our participants to reflect on the different ways in which women in French and Francophone literature, culture, cinema and politics partake in interrupting traditional definitions of femininity and, furthermore, how such transgressions are received and judged. We are, however, particularly interested in papers that consider one or more of the following sub-headings as well as proposals related to our keynote speakers:

    • Women and Mental Health
    • ‘Bad’ Mothers/Transgressive Mothering
    • Women and Sexual Deviance
    • ‘Disgusting’ Women
    • Women and Anger
    • Female Violence and Crime
    • Dangerous Women
    • Selfish Women
    • Disorderly and Misbehaving Women
    • Eco-Feminism and Eco-Feminist Warriors
    • Migrant and Marginalised Women
    • Women and Ageing
    • Female Intellectuals
    • Women and Revolt

       

    One Book, One WiF

    In partnership with our colleagues in WiF North America, WiF UK is furthering the 'One Book, One WiF' project that began in 2017. The aim of this initiative is to help promote critical interest in less known French and francophone women writers and thus to increase the readership of their corpus. The author for the 2021 conference is Naomi Fontaine and the text is Kuessipan (2011). Proposals for papers or a panel on this book or the author in general are welcomed.

    Proposals are welcome in both English and French.

    Please send abstracts of no more than 250 words and a brief bio to the following email address: wifmaynooth@gmail.com 

    Deadline: 15/09/20

    For general queries, please contact Julie Rodgers or Polly Galis.

    julie.rodgers@mu.ie

    p.galis@bristol.ac.uk  


  • 10 Jul 2020 2:39 PM | Anonymous

    Please find attached the call for papers for the ACSUS (Association for Canadian Studies in the United States) conference, to take place in October 2021 in Washington DC--if all goes well. The theme of the proposed meeting, "Canada: Far and Near," seems particularly apt in this summer of isolation.

    Announcement: ACSUS 2021 Call for Papers - FINAL.pdf 



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