In the Shadows: Illuminating Monstrosity in Children’s and Young Adult Literature
and Culture
A peer-reviewed graduate
student conference on children’s literature, media, and culture
Deadline for submission: February 28th, 2018
Location: University of British Columbia
When: Friday May 11th - Saturday
May 12th, 2018
Graduate students, upper-class undergraduate students, or professional academics are invited to submit a proposal
for an academic paper that contributes to research in the area of children’s
and young adult literature, media, or cultural studies. Submissions of creative
writing for children and young adults are also welcome. We are particularly
interested in research and creative work that draw on the broadly interpreted
theme of monstrosity--including research on narratives that feature monstrous
figures and the monstrous side of humanity.
Topics may include, but are not limited
to:
- · Literature from the genres of horror, gothic, mystery, or science fiction
- · Post-humanism/trans-humanism
- · Narratives of physical or emotional trauma, scars, disfigurement, etc.
- · Themes of fear, captivity, empathy/apathy
- · The uncanny and the sublime
- · Narratives focusing on the duality of human nature
- · Themes of survival, lost innocence, or childhood innocence
- · Experiences of marginalized groups, otherness, and social outcasts
- · (Mis)representations of people as “monsters”
- · Government atrocities, tragedies, and other perspectives on historical events
- · Analyses of monstrosity from critical or theoretical perspectives (e.g. psychoanalysis, post colonialism, feminism, etc.)
- · Adaptations, bringing a narrative to life in a new story or medium
- · Stories of real-world monsters, such as bullies or personal, inner demons
- · Narratives featuring monsters, vampires, werewolves, zombies, ogres etc.
- · Villains and beasts from fairy tales, folktales, or mythology
- · Friendly monsters or imaginary friends (e.g. Pokémon, The BFG, Monsters Inc.)
- · The allure and romanticism of monsters (e.g. Twilight)
- · Papers related to Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, in honour of the 200th anniversary of publication
The topics above are a guideline for the proposals we would like
to see, but we are eager to receive paper proposals on any facet of monstrosity
in children’s and young adult texts.
Academic Paper Proposals:
Please send a 250-word abstract that
includes the title of your paper, a list of references in MLA format, a 50-word
biography, your name, your university affiliation, email address, and phone
number to the review committee at submit.ubc.conference@gmail.com.
Please include “Conference Proposal Submission” in the subject line of your
email.
Creative Writing Proposals:
Submissions of creative writing for
children and young adults in any genre are welcome, including novel chapters,
poetry, picture books, graphic novels, scripts, etc. Please send a piece of
work no longer than 12 pages double-spaced. (Anything shorter is welcome--
poetry, for example, might only be a page). The submission should include the
title of your piece, a 150-word overview of your piece (describe age group,
genre, and links to the conference theme), a list of references in MLA format
(if you have any), a 50-word biography, your name, your university affiliation,
email address, and phone number. Please send your submission to the review
committee at submit.ubc.conference@gmail.com. Please put
“Creative Conference Proposal Submission” in the subject line of your email.
Out of Province/Country Submissions:
For those who may need extra time to
plan their travels please put “Travel” in the email subject line and we will
get back to you as soon as possible.
For more info, please contact ubc.conference.2018@gmail.com
or visit https://blogs.ubc.ca/intheshadows/.
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