------ Forwarded Message From: CODY B REIS <[log in to unmask]> Date: Sat, 04 Mar 2006 13:50:06 -0600 To: <[log in to unmask]> Subject: CFP: "Post"-Literature: Literacy, Technology, and Pop/ Literary Cultures (5/15/06; 10/20/06-10/21/06) The Peter Straub Symposium on Literature and Culture at the University of Wisconsin-Madison: „Post‰-Literature: Literacy, Technology, and Culture We are pleased to announce our annual symposium with keynote speaker Carl Freedman. We have been poststructuralist, postmodern, post-Petrarchan, and posthuman. Will we ever be post-literary? The organizers of the 2006 Peter Straub Symposium on Literature and Popular Culture at the University of Wisconsin-Madison invite papers making readings of (and theorizing approaches to) the relationships between literary and popular culture; our theme is „Post‰-Literature: Literacy, Technology, and Culture. The broad project of the conference, which is to be held on October 20- 21, 2006, is to draw attention to and put pressure on the limits and possibilities of the „literary‰ and „pop.‰ What is the literary? What is popular? In what ways do literary and popular cultures flow in and out of each other? In what ways do they flow from one another? What are (or might be) the status and effects of the popular in traditional humanities departments, and, alternately, the status and effects of literary materials and approaches in popular cultures? We are especially interested in work that reads or theorizes how these broader issues in the making of literary and popular cultures are complicated by form, media, technology, and the problem of becoming „post.‰ How does the emergence of various technologies and media (across historical periods and moments) shape what and the ways people read? What have been the status, divisions, and relations of literary and popular cultures (at any and all historical moments and periods)? How does the recasting of early literary material into new or contemporary modes or scenarios complicate literacy and the relationship between literary and popular cultures? What relevance and bearing do literary theory and criticism have for popular culture? What relevance and bearing do popular cultures have for literary theory and criticism? What are the present, past, and future implications of calling anything „post?‰ Possible topics could include: -Theorizing unconventional, emerging, or „non-literary‰ media -Theoretical or literary approaches to graphic art, comic books, and video games -Recognizing, transporting, or embedding the literary in popular -Recognizing, transporting, or embedding popular in the literary -The „new‰ in various social, historical, and cultural contexts -The effects and affects of technologies, literacy, and literature -The (non)senses of the prefix „post‰ Carl Freedman is professor of English Literature at Louisiana State University. His general areas of interests are in the fields of critical theory, modern literature, science fiction, film and television, and Twentieth-century American politics. Some of his current projects include work on Nixon and cultural power, novels of Samuel Delany, and the film Double Indemnity. Among his numerous articles, he has also published The Incomplete Projects: Marxism, Modernity, and the Politics of Culture (2002), Critical Theory and Science Fiction (2000), and George Orwell: A Study in Ideology and Literary Form (1988). Panels will include two graduate students and one professor. Travel assistance and lodging may be available for some students. Please also specify if you require any A/V equipment. For more details and information, please visit our website: http://mendota.english.wisc.edu/~straub. Submission Guidelines: Abstracts should be roughly 250 words and be submitted by May 15. Papers should be 15-20 minutes in length. Please send abstracts to Emily Yu at [log in to unmask] with „Straub Symposium Abstract‰ as the subject line. ========================================================== From the Literary Calls for Papers Mailing List [log in to unmask] Full Information at http://cfp.english.upenn.edu or write Jennifer Higginbotham: [log in to unmask] ========================================================== ------ End of Forwarded Message ********** * Visit the Writing and the Digital Life blog http://writing.typepad.com * To alter your subscription settings on this list, log on to Subscriber's Corner at http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/writing-and-the-digital-life.html * To unsubscribe from the list, email [log in to unmask] with a blank subject line and the following text in the body of the message: SIGNOFF WRITING-AND-THE-DIGITAL-LIFE