DATE: Wed, 10 Aug 1994 14:13:48 CDT From: JHODGS~ol.com Subject: ICFA 16 CALL FOR PAPERS
Please feel free to post this call for papers to other discussion groups.
_________________________________________________________CALL FOR PAPERS The Sixteenth International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts
March 22-26, 1995 (3:00 PM Wednesday to noon Sunday) Fort Lauderdale Airport Hilton, Dania, Florida
Guest of Honor: Joe Haldeman Guest Scholar: Peter Hunt Guest Author: Pat Cadigan Permanent Special Guest: Brian Aldiss And Many Other Special Guests To Be Announced
Sponsored by the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts, with support from Broward Community College, Florida Atlantic University, and the University of South Florida.
The Deadline for Proposing Papers is October 15, 1994.
Seeking proposals for papers and other presentations on ALL ASPECTS* of the fantastic in English, American, and Commonwealth literature, comparative and other national literatures, drama, art, cinema, television, science fiction, fantasy, horror, music, philosophy, sociology, political science, the sciences, psychology, religion, and interdisciplinary areas. *PROPOSALS FOR PAPERS ON THE FANTASTIC IN CHILDREN'S LITERATURE ARE ESPECIALLY WELCOMED BY ALL DIVISIONS IN 1995.
Concerning all submissions: In order to be considered for the 1995 program, your proposal to (1) read a paper, (2) recruit and chair a paper session, or (3) organize and chair a panel discussion must be postmarked no later than October 15, 1994. Proposals must be sent to an appropriate Division Head (addresses below). Any audio-visual equipment requirements must be specified in this initial proposal.
Papers: Paper-reading sessions consist of 2 or 3 papers. Each paper should be approximately 2,000-2,500 words in length and require no more than twenty minutes' reading time. Paper proposals must be at least 250 words in length and must demonstrate a clear thesis or analytical statement, a coherent argument, a knowledge of scholarship in the fantastic, and relevance to current study of the fantastic. Any proposal judged weak or unclear will be returned with suggestions for revision; abstracts revised and resubmitted by October 15 will be reconsidered.
Panel Discussions: Panels are organized around a specific theme and may contain three to six participants. A formal introduction by the panel chair and closing remarks by the chair are encouraged. Panels will be scheduled in ninety-minute sessions to allow time for discussion. Panel proposals should follow the same format as paper proposals (see above) and should include a list of proposed panelists, including addresses and telephone numbers.
Chairing Sessions: Anyone wishing to organize and chair a paper session or panel discussion must recruit participants by the October 15 deadline. Those who have already proposed sessions should maintain contact with the appropriate Division Head. All complete sessions must be proposed to the appropriate Division Head on the conference session form. If you wish to organize and chair a session and do not have a copy of the form, please request one from a Division Head (addresses below) or from IAFA Vice-President and Academic Program Coordinator Nicholas Ruddick, Department of English, University of Regina, Regina, Sask., Canada S4S OA2; (E-Mail) ruddi~ax.cc.uregina.ca; (Phone) 306-585-4304; (Fax) 306-585-4780. You may also volunteer to chair an already-organized paper session by writing to a Division Head or to Nicholas Ruddick.
Guidelines for Participants: No conference participant may present more than one paper, nor may a session chair read a paper in his or her own session. In addition to presenting a paper, a participant may also serve either as a session chair or a panelist. To be listed in the conference program, participants must join IAFA by December 31, 1994. All participants must also preregister for the conference by March 1, 1995. Send IAFA membership dues to IAFA Treasurer Mary Pharr, English Department, Florida Southern College, Lakeland, FL 33801. Conference preregistration forms will be sent to all paid-up IAFA members.
Graduate Student Award: IAFA annually awards a $250.00 prize to the outstanding paper presented at the conference by a graduate student. For further information, contact IAFA Graduate Student Award Coordinator Roger Schlobin, (till Dec. 1994) 1149 Mulberry Lane, Apt. 36-A, Greenville, NC 27858-5818; (Phone) 919-321-2640; (After Jan. 1995) 1915 David Drive, Chesterton, IN 46304-3011 (Phone): 219-926-7368.
Attending Artist Presentations: Artists are invited to submit appropriate work to be displayed at the conference's Fantastic Art Exhibit and to propose 30-minute slide or video presentations on their own work and techniques. Send representative slides or other materials by October 15, 1994 to IAFA President C. W. Sullivan III, English Department, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC 27858-4353. You must attend the conference to exhibit your work.
Queries: Direct queries concerning policies, scheduling, and non-academic program participation to C. W. Sullivan, address above. Direct queries concerning academic paper and panel proposals to Nicholas Ruddick, address above.
Publication Opportunities: All papers presented at the conference are considered for publication in Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts, the IAFA's interdisciplinary quarterly, and in the annual conference proceedings volume, a critically-acclaimed hardbound anthology edited by a member of IAFA and published each year by Greenwood Press.
DIVISION HEADS & PROPOSED TOPICS The proposed topics listed below are meant to be suggestive but not restrictive. Paper proposals on any aspect of the fantastic are welcome and should be submitted to an appropriate Division Head. Also, all Divisions are seeking papers in the following general areas: Fantastic Children's Literature, Fantastic Drama, Theoretical and Critical Approaches to the Fantastic, The Fantastic in Religion and Mythology, The Fantastic As It Relates to Gender Issues and Women's Studies, and Humor and the Fantastic. Paper proposals in the form of a 250-word abstract must be submitted to an appropriate Division Head by October 15, 1994.
Fantastic Literature in English Division (EN) [Papers on the fantastic in British, American and Commonwealth literature]. Division Head: Charles W. Nelson, Humanities Dept., Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI 49931. Suggested Topics: Children's Fantasy; The Comedic in Fantasy; Fantasy in Shakespeare's Plays; The Literature of the Inklings; Medieval Fantasy; The Fantasy of Oz; Fantasy in British Classics; Fantasy in Fairy Tale; Arthurian Fantasy; Fantasy of the Supernatural; High Tech Fantasy; 19th Century Horror Fantasy.
Film, Fine Arts, and Popular Culture Division (FP) [Papers attentive to the diversity of images and themes of the fantastic in high and low art and culture]. Division Head: Michael J. Collins, 12 Hansen Ave., Dover, NH 03820. Suggested Topics: Goya and the Grotesque; Horror Film in Cultural Context; Children's TV; The Fantastic in Architecture; Pervasive Tropes of the Fantastic in Popular Culture; The Death/Endurance of Genre; MTV; The Evolution of SF Illustration; Video Games; Archetypal Approaches to Contemporary Comics; The Art of Adaptation: The Film/Comics Connection; Music in the Cinema of the Fantastic; Death and the Afterlife in Painting; Transgressive Art; Supernatural Themes in Non-Supernatural Horror.
Horror Literature Division (HO) [Papers on all aspects of horror in mainstream and popular literature, including its literary traditions, aesthetics, psychological constructs, and comparative influences]. Division Head: Tony Magistrate, English Dept., 315 Old Mill, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT 05405-0115. (Fax) 802-656-3055. Suggested Topics: Children's and Young Adult Horror; Horror and Gender; Intersections Between Horror and Detective Literatures; Comparing Stephen King and Clive Barker; Sociopolitical Subtexts in Horror Literature; The Legacy of Stoker's Dracula; Contemporary Vampire Literature; Conceptions of Otherness in Horror Literature; Reading Horror-Psychoanalytical Perspectives; Horror as Transformative Genre; Popular Culture as Reflected in Contemporary Horror Literature.
Interdisciplinary Approaches to the Fantastic Division (ID) [Papers on topics that cross boundaries of genre and language]. Division Head: Joseph Sanders, 6354 Brooks Blvd., Mentor, OH 44060. Suggested Topics: The Fantastic as it Relates to: Childhood; Computers; Renaissance Thought; Bible/Talmud; Philosophy; Music; Role-Playing; Computer Games; Illustrations vs. Text; Prosthetics; Architecture; Landscapes; Vietnam War; AIDS; Hypertext.
International Fantastic Literature Division (IF) [Papers on all foreign and comparative literature]. Division Head: Allienne Becker, P.O. Box 152, Lock Haven, PA 17745-0152. (Email) abeck~agle.lhup.edu. Suggested Topics: International Children's Fantasy; Romantic Fantasy; Postmodern Fantasy; Myth, Theme, and archetype; Fantastic Transformations; German, French, Italian, Spanish, Latin-American Fantasy; Magic Realism; Kafka; Fantasy in Eastern European Literature; Fantasy in Medieval Literature; Borges; Russian Fantasists; Fantastic Foreign Cinema.
Science Fiction Literature Division (SF) [Papers on all aspects of science fiction literature, history, and theory]. Division Head: Len Hatfield, Dept, of English, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24060; (E-mail) ha~tvml.cc.vt.edu. Suggested Topics: Joe Haldeman; Pat Cadigan; Brian Aldiss; Children's SF; Theoretical Directions and issues in Current SF Studies; Teaching SF & F in the 1990s; Is Science Fiction Finished?; The Internet; Computers and SF Scholarship; SF and Postmodernism-After Cyberpunk; SF and Social Speculation; Feminist Renewals of SF & F; Signs of the Other in SF-Class, Gender and Race.
ALL CONFERENCE REGISTRANTS MUST JOIN IAFA. 1995 IAFA Membership (per person): Within U.S.A..................... $45 Outside U.S.A.................... $50
Please make checks payable to IAFA.
ALL FEES MUST BE PAID IN U.S. DOLLARS. NON-U.S. DOLLAR CHECKS OR MONEY ORDERS WILL BE RETURNED TO SENDER. Foreign checks must have a computerized routing number encoded on the instrument and must indicate the name of the American bank that will serve as a clearinghouse for the instrument. Checks or money orders that do not meet these requirements will be returned to the sender.
Mail to: Mary Pharr, IAFA Treasurer Department of English Florida Southern College Lakeland, FL 33801
Please include your name, academic or professional affiliation, preferred mailing address, telephone number, and areas of interest.