Octavia E. Butler, 1947-2006 |
The submission deadline for panel and individual presentation abstracts for the 2015 Humanities Conference is Sunday, January 18, 2015. Please email abstracts (250-300 words) to both of the conference co-chairs: Prof. Jennifer Wager (jwager@essex.edu) and Prof.
Rebecca Williams (wrebecca@essex.edu) by Sunday, January
18, 2015.
On March 11-12, 2015, the Humanities Division at Essex County College will host its Spring 2015 Conference, “Speculative Humanities: Steampunk to Afrofuturism.” This two-day conference offers space for writers, musicians, artists, and academicians to explore, expand upon, and rethink the implications of speculative humanities. This year's conference will feature a special emphasis on the life, work, and influence of Octavia E. Butler.
Speculative
humanities encompasses a diverse array of works, from the 18th century
mysticism of Swedenborg to the 20th century spiritual teachings of
Gurdjieff, along with the 19th century texts of authors such as Mary
Shelley, Samuel Butler, and Jules Verne to the 20th and 21st
century works of H.G. Wells, Octavia E. Butler, Margaret Atwood, Samuel
Delany,
Cormac McCarthy, and L.A. Banks. The revolutionary wave sweeping across
Europe during the 19th century along with the publication of texts such
as The Communist Manifesto influenced generations of writers to
produce works featuring both urban utopias and dystopian metropolises.
Historical and fictional texts include post-apocalyptic narratives,
invasion literature, steampunk, Afrofuturism, fantasy, fan fiction,
fabulist, anime, horror, and what was once categorized as science
fiction.
Von Holst illustration from 1831 edition of Frankenstein. |
Please email (abstracts of 250-300 words) for panels and individual presentations
to both of the conference co-chairs: Prof. Jennifer Wager (jwager@essex.edu) and Prof.
Rebecca Williams (wrebecca@essex.edu) by Sunday, January
16, 2015.
No comments:
Post a Comment