EVENT Nov 20
ABSTRACT May 15
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Comparative Literature (PAMLA 2025)

San Francisco
Organization: PAMLA
Event: PAMLA 2025
Categories: Postcolonial, Graduate Conference, American, Hispanic & Latino, Comparative, Interdisciplinary, British, Popular Culture, World Literatures, African-American, Colonial, Revolution & Early National, Transcendentalists, 1865-1914, 20th & 21st Century, Medieval, Early Modern & Renaissance, Long 18th Century, Romantics, Victorian, 20th & 21st Century, Aesthetics, Anthropology/Sociology, Classical Studies, Cultural Studies, Environmental Studies, Film, TV, & Media, Food Studies, History, Philosophy, African & African Diasporas, Asian & Asian Diasporas, Australian Literature, Canadian Literature, Caribbean & Caribbean Diasporas, Indian Subcontinent, Eastern European, Mediterranean, Middle East, Native American, Scandinavian, Pacific Literature
Event Date: 2025-11-20 to 2025-11-23 Abstract Due: 2025-05-15

This Comparative Literature session, like its namesake discipline, strives to be broad, inclusive, and interdisciplinary. We therefore welcome proposals that touch on multiple works of literature and strive to make use of more than traditional comparative studies, borrowing analytic or interpretive practices from other disciplines such as philosophy, film and media studies, digital humanities, cultural or art history, etc.

Proposals that explore the conference theme, "Palimpsests: Memory and Oblivion," are welcome. Some topics of interest include:· Multivalent cityscapes and memory

· Visions of the metropolis (for example– postmodernism and the city or lost cities in literature)

· Streets, Neighborhoods, and Forgotten Spaces in Literature

· Flâneurs and modern flânerie

· Cataclysms, scarification, and healing

· Memory, forgetting, memorialization, misprision, misreading, and revision

· Censorship and attempts at erasing, hiding, revising, contesting, forgetting, and reviving texts and narratives of the past

· Speculative history, speculative fiction, and aesthetic anachronism

· Postmodern, transtextual or intertextual works, like Wide Sargasso Sea, Wicked, and Midnight’s Children

· Historical narratives and appropriations of memory

· Fragmentation and reconstruction; Inventions and reinventions

· Enigmas and traces in detective fiction and beyond

· Mentors and Disciples in writing

https://pamla.ballastacademic.com/Home/S/19576

amhenderson@ucsb.edu

Andrew Henderson