CALL FOR PAPERS: The 10th ESSE Conference
Thursday, October 22nd, 2009The 10th ESSE conference will be held at the University of Turin from 24 to 28 August, 2010. Please see this PDF file for more details.
The 10th ESSE conference will be held at the University of Turin from 24 to 28 August, 2010. Please see this PDF file for more details.
The Department of English Studies at Károli Gáspár University hosts an international conference from September 4–7, 2008 in Budapest to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the birth of John Milton. Papers on any aspects of Milton Studies are invited. Possible panels will include (but are not limited to) Milton and the classics, Milton’s theology, Milton’s politics, the critical reception of Milton’s works in the 18th and 19th centuries, Milton controversies of the 20th century, prospects and possibilities of Milton studies in the 21st century, etc. For more information please visit the http://www.milton.extra.hu website.
The Hungarian Academy of Sciences in Szeged, the Institute of English and American Studies, and the Cultural Iconology and Semiography Research Group (University of Szeged) organize the fourth conference on EASTERN & WESTERN TRADITIONS OF EUROPEAN ICONOGRAPHY highlighting the theme The Iconology of Law and Order.
The conference is to take place on July 6-10, 2008 in Szeged, Hungary. For details download the Ew4-call.pdf leaflet.
The Canadian Studies Centre at Masaryk University is pleased to announce a conference on “Images of National, Ethnic and Individual Identity in Canada”, to be held, in cooperation with the Embassy of Canada in the Czech Republic and the Association Gallica, from 25 to 27 October 2007 at Masaryk University, Brno (Czech Republic).
Conference topic
Multicultural settings provide a good source of different materials and approaches for studying questions of identity. The individual – be it as author, filmmaker, painter or philosopher – is located at the axiological intersection where identity is created through the interaction of or contact between various ethnic, language, cultural and national identities. Images of the self enter into opposition to the image of the other. Social norms and their codes create stereotypes that may be confirmed, rejected or transformed through individual creativity.
The cultural space of Canada provides a diversity of possible interactions ranging from those between the Anglophone and Francophone spheres to those between these two cultural spheres and the identities of immigrants, aboriginal peoples and other socially marginalized groups. This may be seen very clearly in literature as well as in the fine arts and in the general cultural and social consciousnesses.
The primary aim of this conference is to sketch the development of identity in Canadian culture during the past half century in four fields: literature, film, the fine arts and historical discourse. Emphasis should be placed on the creative potential of the question of identity as a source of new approaches and experiments in scholarly research.
Languages: English, French
The conference registration form along with abstracts of papers (250 words) and a one-paragraph CV should be submitted by e-mail to the organizers by 31 March 2007.
Registration fee: 30 euros (to be paid upon arrival at the conference itself)
Reduced fees for members of the Central European Association for Canadian Studies and for students.
See the Brno_Konference2007_AJ1.rtf document for more information and registration form.
The Canadian Studies Centre at Masaryk University is pleased to announce a conference on “Images of National, Ethnic and Individual Identity in Canada”, to be held, in cooperation with the Embassy of Canada in the Czech Republic and the Association Gallica, from 25 to 27 October 2007 at Masaryk University, Brno (Czech Republic).
Conference topic
Multicultural settings provide a good source of different materials and approaches for studying questions of identity. The individual – be it as author, filmmaker, painter or philosopher – is located at the axiological intersection where identity is created through the interaction of or contact between various ethnic, language, cultural and national identities. Images of the self enter into opposition to the image of the other. Social norms and their codes create stereotypes that may be confirmed, rejected or transformed through individual creativity.
The cultural space of Canada provides a diversity of possible interactions ranging from those between the Anglophone and Francophone spheres to those between these two cultural spheres and the identities of immigrants, aboriginal peoples and other socially marginalized groups. This may be seen very clearly in literature as well as in the fine arts and in the general cultural and social consciousnesses.
The primary aim of this conference is to sketch the development of identity in Canadian culture during the past half century in four fields: literature, film, the fine arts and historical discourse. Emphasis should be placed on the creative potential of the question of identity as a source of new approaches and experiments in scholarly research.
Languages: English, French
The conference registration form along with abstracts of papers (250 words) and a one-paragraph CV should be submitted by e-mail (vurm@phil.muni.cz) to the organizers by 31 March 2007.
Registration fee: 30 euros (to be paid upon arrival at the conference itself)
Reduced fees for members of the Central European Association for Canadian Studies and for students