Febbraio 2023

CfP: ‘Negative solidarities’. The age of anger and hate speech in the Anglophone globalized public sphere  International Conference, 9-10 November 2023, Palazzo Du Mesnil, University of Naples ‘L’Orientale’ 

‘Negative solidarities’. The age of anger and hate speech in the Anglophone globalized public sphere  International Conference, November 9-10, palazzo Du Mesnil, University of Naples L’Orientale  When in 2017 Pankaj Mishra published Age of Anger: A History of the Present, he devised an iconic title for a shared contemporary condition. In articulating a widespread sense of general angst and resentment, Mishra reconsidered notions of traditional political theory to compare the “unprecedented political, economic and social disorder that accompanied the rise of the industrial capitalist economy” to the perplexing present of new holy wars and ideological crusades which have left few democracies untouched. Rejuvenated forms of nihilistic political violence and parochial chauvinism are arguably infecting much vaster geopolitical realities and wider strata of the population, thereby propelling local and global waves of loathing and fear, shaping national and international forms of right-wing extremism and/or religious fundamentalism and terrorism.  Although they travel transnationally, all over the world, forms of ‘negative solidarity’ (Arendt, Men in Dark Times, 1968) manifest themselves in local adaptations. They prosper due to the weakening and severe limits of the impoverished welfare state which is unable to dispel a generalized perception of insecurity and disposability and produces systemic mistrust in personal agency and a correlated thirst for ‘problem-solving’ authoritarianism. Such insecurity and sense of disposability makes some individuals more prone to inventing scapegoats (e.g., intellectuals, elites, minorities such as Muslims, women, Blacks, Jews, and even mainstream politicians) for their real or imagined problems. Even the threat of global climate change tends to generate blind forms of social anxiety, pessimism and anti scientific conspiracy theories instead of inspiring cooperative action. Moreover, neoliberal schemes of ruthless economic competition and free enterprise rhetoric create exasperated expectancies of individual self-distinction and economic realization fostering bitter feelings of resentment, disappointment, and frustration. The universalization of the culture of individualism has led to a frenetic pace of ever-accelerating rugged competition, and a clamorous, vociferous public sphere where social media accentuate social hierarchies thus catalyzing a toxic mix of anomie and sectarianism.  In this scenario, negative affects and solidarities become key terms to capture the fluid dynamics of communication and everyday human behaviour. The vernacular and pervasive circulation of negative affects such as anger, loathing and fear is perhaps most visible in hate speech, fiercely expressed from a protected and sometimes anonymous position in digitally networked communication technologies. Overt or covert hate speech towards specific social groups who are viewed as minorities and/or vulnerable based on their religion, ethnicity, gender or sexual orientation have seeped in everyday online and offline conversation yet hate speech should also be analysed in terms of a wider and new understanding of the politics and culture of anger and hate. In this light, the interdisciplinary analysis of contemporary literary and artistic expression, media and social media communication may illuminate the logics by which new forms of expression emerge, for example, in moments of crisis and conflict in search for solidarity or joint action.  The present call for papers invites proposals focusing on the socio-political and cultural significance of manifestations of negative solidarities in the ‘Age of Anger’ and ‘Hate Speech’ and their representations in literature, film, tv, the performing and visual arts, as well as in news media and social media communication, and historical and political discourse.  We invite proposals on topics including, but not limited to:  – Religion and anger  – Gender and anger – Ethnicity, marginalization and anger  – Communalism Vs Community  – Isolation and competition  – Entrepreneurialism, social greed  – Geo-political fields of tension  – Post-imperial melancholies, global fears  – Hate speech, xenophobia and racism  – Hate speech and disability  – Hate speech and sexism  – Visualizing terror, representing angst  – Storytelling and trauma  – Narration as antidote against poisonous socialization  – Literary/artistic forms of activism  Please, send an abstract (either in English or Italian) of about 300 words, including title and bibliography, and a short bio with affiliation to dvitolo@unior.it and gscottodicarlo@unior.it (in Cc to rciocca@unior.it )  Deadline for abstracts: May 15, 2023  Notification of acceptance: June 5, 2023  Scientific Committee:  Giuseppe Balirano, Rossella Ciocca, Katherine E. Russo, Tiziana Terranova  Organising Committee:  Vincenzo Bavaro, Anna Maria Cimitile, Mara De Chiara, Giuseppe De Riso, Alberto Manco, Stamatia Portanova, Giuseppina Scotto di Carlo, Anna Mongibello, Daniela Vitolo

CfP: ‘Negative solidarities’. The age of anger and hate speech in the Anglophone globalized public sphere  International Conference, 9-10 November 2023, Palazzo Du Mesnil, University of Naples ‘L’Orientale’  Read More »

CfP: ‘Negative solidarities’. The age of anger and hate speech in the Anglophone globalized public sphere  International Conference, 9-10 November 2023, Palazzo Du Mesnil, University of Naples ‘L’Orientale’ 

‘Negative solidarities’. The age of anger and hate speech in the Anglophone globalized public sphere  International Conference, November 9-10, palazzo Du Mesnil, University of Naples L’Orientale  When in 2017 Pankaj Mishra published Age of Anger: A History of the Present, he devised an iconic title for a shared contemporary condition. In articulating a widespread sense of general angst and resentment, Mishra reconsidered notions of traditional political theory to compare the “unprecedented political, economic and social disorder that accompanied the rise of the industrial capitalist economy” to the perplexing present of new holy wars and ideological crusades which have left few democracies untouched. Rejuvenated forms of nihilistic political violence and parochial chauvinism are arguably infecting much vaster geopolitical realities and wider strata of the population, thereby propelling local and global waves of loathing and fear, shaping national and international forms of right-wing extremism and/or religious fundamentalism and terrorism.  Although they travel transnationally, all over the world, forms of ‘negative solidarity’ (Arendt, Men in Dark Times, 1968) manifest themselves in local adaptations. They prosper due to the weakening and severe limits of the impoverished welfare state which is unable to dispel a generalized perception of insecurity and disposability and produces systemic mistrust in personal agency and a correlated thirst for ‘problem-solving’ authoritarianism. Such insecurity and sense of disposability makes some individuals more prone to inventing scapegoats (e.g., intellectuals, elites, minorities such as Muslims, women, Blacks, Jews, and even mainstream politicians) for their real or imagined problems. Even the threat of global climate change tends to generate blind forms of social anxiety, pessimism and anti scientific conspiracy theories instead of inspiring cooperative action. Moreover, neoliberal schemes of ruthless economic competition and free enterprise rhetoric create exasperated expectancies of individual self-distinction and economic realization fostering bitter feelings of resentment, disappointment, and frustration. The universalization of the culture of individualism has led to a frenetic pace of ever-accelerating rugged competition, and a clamorous, vociferous public sphere where social media accentuate social hierarchies thus catalyzing a toxic mix of anomie and sectarianism.  In this scenario, negative affects and solidarities become key terms to capture the fluid dynamics of communication and everyday human behaviour. The vernacular and pervasive circulation of negative affects such as anger, loathing and fear is perhaps most visible in hate speech, fiercely expressed from a protected and sometimes anonymous position in digitally networked communication technologies. Overt or covert hate speech towards specific social groups who are viewed as minorities and/or vulnerable based on their religion, ethnicity, gender or sexual orientation have seeped in everyday online and offline conversation yet hate speech should also be analysed in terms of a wider and new understanding of the politics and culture of anger and hate. In this light, the interdisciplinary analysis of contemporary literary and artistic expression, media and social media communication may illuminate the logics by which new forms of expression emerge, for example, in moments of crisis and conflict in search for solidarity or joint action.  The present call for papers invites proposals focusing on the socio-political and cultural significance of manifestations of negative solidarities in the ‘Age of Anger’ and ‘Hate Speech’ and their representations in literature, film, tv, the performing and visual arts, as well as in news media and social media communication, and historical and political discourse.  We invite proposals on topics including, but not limited to:  – Religion and anger  – Gender and anger – Ethnicity, marginalization and anger  – Communalism Vs Community  – Isolation and competition  – Entrepreneurialism, social greed  – Geo-political fields of tension  – Post-imperial melancholies, global fears  – Hate speech, xenophobia and racism  – Hate speech and disability  – Hate speech and sexism  – Visualizing terror, representing angst  – Storytelling and trauma  – Narration as antidote against poisonous socialization  – Literary/artistic forms of activism  Please, send an abstract (either in English or Italian) of about 300 words, including title and bibliography, and a short bio with affiliation to dvitolo@unior.it and gscottodicarlo@unior.it (in Cc to rciocca@unior.it )  Deadline for abstracts: May 15, 2023  Notification of acceptance: June 5, 2023  Scientific Committee:  Giuseppe Balirano, Rossella Ciocca, Katherine E. Russo, Tiziana Terranova  Organising Committee:  Vincenzo Bavaro, Anna Maria Cimitile, Mara De Chiara, Giuseppe De Riso, Alberto Manco, Stamatia Portanova, Giuseppina Scotto di Carlo, Anna Mongibello, Daniela Vitolo

CfP: ‘Negative solidarities’. The age of anger and hate speech in the Anglophone globalized public sphere  International Conference, 9-10 November 2023, Palazzo Du Mesnil, University of Naples ‘L’Orientale’  Read More »

CfP: Prospero. A Journal of Foreign Literatures and Cultures University of Trieste, Italy VOL XXVIII (2023)

Prospero. A Journal of Foreign Literatures and Cultures University of Trieste, Italy VOL XXVIII (2023) “Revolutions. Changes of paradigm in British and German literatures and cultures between the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries” The forthcoming number of Prospero (XXVIII 2023) invites contributions that will focus on paradigm shifts in the literary and cultural fields of English and German literatures between the Eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Starting with the great political and social revolutions of the eighteenth century in Western civilization, many revolutions and epistemic turns have marked early modernity, both in a longue durée perspective and in the turmoil of the epochal punctum, and have seen moments of dialogic confrontation and decisive influences between national cultures. Authors could consider both the role that revolutions and epistemic turning points have played in the Anglo-German literary and cultural sphere, and also the way in which they have influenced and contributed to intensifying the relations between British and German-speaking literature and culture. Proposals may also examine forms, genres and styles that have characterized the evolution of British and German literature, starting from the innovative impulses and trends that arose in some phases of reception and cultural intersection: from the rise of the novel to the discovery of German drama, from the influences of German idealism and Sturm und Drang on English Romanticism to the links between the phenomenon of the Gothic and the age of revolutions, among the many possible examples which this issue aims to consider. An array of relevant topics may include – but are not be limited to – the following suggestions (further topics are welcome):  Political and social revolutions  Industrial revolutions  Philosophical, aesthetic and anthropological revolutions  Scientific revolutions and epistemological crises  Technology and the human: experimentations, borders, new myths  Freedom and human rights  Romanticisms  Social reforms and radicalism in national literatures  Enlightenment and protofeminism  The foundation of the liberal arts and the birth of journalism  The novel and the revolution of literary genres  The Gothic and the age of revolutions An abstract of maximum 350 words in English and a short bionote should be sent by March 30, 2023 to Roberta Gefter Wondrich (gefter@units.it) and Marilena Parlati (marilena.parlati@unipd.it) for British literature and to Federica La Manna (federica.lamanna@unical.it) and Irene Fantappiè (irene.fantappie@unicas.it) for German literature. Contributors will be notified acceptance of their abstracts by April 30, 2023, and full articles (between 6000 and 10000 words) will be due by September 1, 2023, in order to ensure publication after the peer-review process by December 2023. For queries and further information about the journal, please contact the editor in chief Roberta Gefter Wondrich at gefter@units.it and visit the website at: https://www.openstarts.units.it/dspace/handle/10077/6091.

CfP: Prospero. A Journal of Foreign Literatures and Cultures University of Trieste, Italy VOL XXVIII (2023) Read More »

CfP: Prospero. A Journal of Foreign Literatures and Cultures University of Trieste, Italy VOL XXVIII (2023)

Prospero. A Journal of Foreign Literatures and Cultures University of Trieste, Italy VOL XXVIII (2023) “Revolutions. Changes of paradigm in British and German literatures and cultures between the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries” The forthcoming number of Prospero (XXVIII 2023) invites contributions that will focus on paradigm shifts in the literary and cultural fields of English and German literatures between the Eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Starting with the great political and social revolutions of the eighteenth century in Western civilization, many revolutions and epistemic turns have marked early modernity, both in a longue durée perspective and in the turmoil of the epochal punctum, and have seen moments of dialogic confrontation and decisive influences between national cultures. Authors could consider both the role that revolutions and epistemic turning points have played in the Anglo-German literary and cultural sphere, and also the way in which they have influenced and contributed to intensifying the relations between British and German-speaking literature and culture. Proposals may also examine forms, genres and styles that have characterized the evolution of British and German literature, starting from the innovative impulses and trends that arose in some phases of reception and cultural intersection: from the rise of the novel to the discovery of German drama, from the influences of German idealism and Sturm und Drang on English Romanticism to the links between the phenomenon of the Gothic and the age of revolutions, among the many possible examples which this issue aims to consider. An array of relevant topics may include – but are not be limited to – the following suggestions (further topics are welcome):  Political and social revolutions  Industrial revolutions  Philosophical, aesthetic and anthropological revolutions  Scientific revolutions and epistemological crises  Technology and the human: experimentations, borders, new myths  Freedom and human rights  Romanticisms  Social reforms and radicalism in national literatures  Enlightenment and protofeminism  The foundation of the liberal arts and the birth of journalism  The novel and the revolution of literary genres  The Gothic and the age of revolutions An abstract of maximum 350 words in English and a short bionote should be sent by March 30, 2023 to Roberta Gefter Wondrich (gefter@units.it) and Marilena Parlati (marilena.parlati@unipd.it) for British literature and to Federica La Manna (federica.lamanna@unical.it) and Irene Fantappiè (irene.fantappie@unicas.it) for German literature. Contributors will be notified acceptance of their abstracts by April 30, 2023, and full articles (between 6000 and 10000 words) will be due by September 1, 2023, in order to ensure publication after the peer-review process by December 2023. For queries and further information about the journal, please contact the editor in chief Roberta Gefter Wondrich at gefter@units.it and visit the website at: https://www.openstarts.units.it/dspace/handle/10077/6091.

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SaM Shakespeare and the Mediterranean Summer School: Antony and Cleopatra, Verona, 24-31 August 2023 

Applications are open for the 2023 edition of the Verona SaM – International Shakespeare Summer School: Antony and Cleopatra (deadline to apply: 3 April). SaM  Shakespeare and the Mediterranean   Summer School      Antony and Cleopatra     Verona, 24-31 August 2023  For the programme and further info, please click here: https://skene.dlls.univr.it/en/sam-shakespeare-summer-school-antony-and-cleopatra/  

SaM Shakespeare and the Mediterranean Summer School: Antony and Cleopatra, Verona, 24-31 August 2023  Read More »

SaM Shakespeare and the Mediterranean Summer School: Antony and Cleopatra, Verona, 24-31 August 2023 

Applications are open for the 2023 edition of the Verona SaM – International Shakespeare Summer School: Antony and Cleopatra (deadline to apply: 3 April). SaM  Shakespeare and the Mediterranean   Summer School      Antony and Cleopatra     Verona, 24-31 August 2023  For the programme and further info, please click here: https://skene.dlls.univr.it/en/sam-shakespeare-summer-school-antony-and-cleopatra/  

SaM Shakespeare and the Mediterranean Summer School: Antony and Cleopatra, Verona, 24-31 August 2023  Read More »

Cfp: Languaging Diversity Conference (LD2023), 14-16 December 2023, University of Turin

Dear colleagues, We are pleased to announce the call for papers for the 8th edition of the Languaging Diversity Conference (LD2023), which will be held on 14th-16th December 2023 both at Università di Torino (ITALY) and online, incl. live streams of plenary sessions and online panels. The theme of this year’s conference is “Languaging identities in changing times: Challenges and opportunities”. Research which investigates traditional and digital genres in different domains, including (but not limited to) gender and sexuality, ethnicity, disability, ageism, religion, ecology, medicine and science, media, politics, the law, education, and learning is welcome. With its focus on identity, Languaging Diversity 2023 invites contributions from researchers in linguistic, literary, translation, interpreting and cultural studies, as well as from academics in n LangDiv2023_posterCFP_LD2023eighbouring disciplines with an interest in identity construction through language. We are now welcoming submissions for both individual presentations and panels. Abstracts are due by April 1st 2023. For full details visit the LD2023 conference website and social media accounts (Twitter and Facebook).

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