Call for Papers
EXTENDED DEADLINE: January 29
New Directions in Critical Theory Graduate Conference 2017:
Transgressions: Performance, Practice & Code
The University of Arizona’s Department of English
April 21-22, 2017
Tucson, Arizona
“[T]here are times when even the most potent governor must wink at
transgression in order to preserve the laws inviolate for the
future.”—Herman Melville, Mardi
The graduate students of the University of Arizona’s Department of
English invite proposals for the annual New Directions in Critical
Theory Graduate Conference. Held every spring, New Directions is an
interdisciplinary conference organized for and by graduate students as a
way of drawing together student scholars across diverse fields.
This year’s conference, entitled “Transgressions: Performance,
Practice & Code,” will concern itself with interrogating the idea of
“transgressions” in and around performances, practices, and codes—all
broadly defined. These inquiries may take the form of critical theory,
creative writing, or that which falls in-between. We are interested in
pieces that investigate the consequences, both generative and
regressive, of intellectual and creative thought that rejects what is
permitted.
We are privileged to announce our keynote speakers, who perform and
interrogate transgressions across disciplinary boundaries: Dr. Nancy
Koppelman of the Evergreen State College and Dr. David Hawkes of Arizona
State University.
Dr. Koppelman, a professor of American Studies and Humanities, will
give a talk entitled “Performing Mastery: The Significance of the
American Velocipede, 1868-1869.” Nancy Koppelman creates and
team-teaches interdisciplinary undergraduate programs that combine the
humanities, the physical sciences, and the social sciences. She consults
with U.S. colleges to bridge disciplinary boundaries and strengthen
faculty colleagueship. For four years, she was Lead Faculty for the
Teaching American History Project in western Washington state, and for
two years she was a member of the Speakers Bureau for Humanities
Washington. Dr. Koppelman also helped to found the Evergreen Student
Civic Engagement Institute, now in its fourth year. Her scholarship
focuses on historical intersections of everyday technologies, living
energy, and ethical questions in American life, and on the challenges
and aims of liberal education.
Dr. Hawkes, a professor of English, will give a talk entitled
“Shakespeare, T. S. Eliot and Financial Derivatives.” Professor Hawkes
is the author of six monographs, most recently Shakespeare and Economic
Theory (2015). His work has appeared in a wide range of scholarly and
popular journals, including The Nation, the Times Literary Supplement,
Studies in English Literature, and English Literary History. Dr. Hawkes
is currently researching a book entitled A Pocketful of Currencies: T.
S. Eliot in the Bank.
The New Directions academic conference aims to give graduate
students the opportunity to develop papers that theorize about or
demonstrate transgressive literary practices, performances, or the codes
that are either obeyed or defied in doing so.
Possible topics for critical and creative presentations include but are not limited to:
(Anti)Social Media
Artistic Representations of the Self/Other
Bodies and Corporeality
Borderlands and Frontiers
Climate and the Environment
Community Engagement
Competence, Intercultural and/or Linguistic
Curriculum/Program Development and Design
(De)/(re)constructing Identities
(Dis)abilities
Dystopia, Utopia, Apocalypse
Economics and Language
Epigenetics and Coding
Fairy and/or Morality Tales
Gender/Sex(uality)
Genre Theories
Horror
Ideologies
Indigeneity
Intersectionality and Assemblage
Language Policy
Makers and Making
Mythologies, Ancient Texts, and Folklore
Narrative/Lyric
National and Transnational Identities
Paganism
Pedagogies
Politics
Positionality and Perspectives
Prophetic Speech in Narrative and/or Verse
Purity and Sin
Queer Space
Racial Formations
Rhetoric of Resistance
Semiotics/Symbolism
Translation(s)
Truth in Nonfiction
Visual and Digital Culture and Media
Submission Guidelines
All proposals must be submitted by email to
arizonanewdirections@gmail.com before 12 midnight MST on January 29,
2017. Please use the following format for the subject line of your
email: “Proposal Last Name First Name” (e.g., Proposal Sims Rachel).
Please attach a single document in .DOC(X) format with the following
information in exactly the order listed below:
1. Paper title; name; institutional affiliation; any degrees and granting institutions; email address; and phone number
2. Abstract of the content and rationale for the paper, up to 300 words (presentation time for papers is 20 minutes maximum)
3. Two to three-sentence scholarly biography of presenter
4. Indicate any audio/visual needs or special accommodations