CFP: Crossing Over: Academics Writing Journalism and Nonfiction (3/20/01; MLA '01)

From: Heather Hewett (h.hewett@worldnet.att.net)
Date: Tue Feb 27 2001 - 19:27:06 EST

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    Call for Papers:

    2001 Modern Language Association
    December 27-30, 2001
    New Orleans

    Session Name: Crossing Over: Academics Writing Journalism and Nonfiction

    A survey of the current literary landscape reveals a great deal of
    "crossover" writing: many academics write newspaper and magazine articles,
    memoirs, reviews, and essays; and increasing numbers of full-time
    journalists and writers have doctoral degrees in the Humanities. This panel
    is interested in the areas of interface, overlap, and creative tension
    between academic and "nonacademic" genres and the different roles that their
    writers take on -- journalist, professor, independent scholar, creative
    writer, and critic.

    How might academic writing be related to nonacademic writing? How do
    writers write in ways that question and probe existing paradigms of
    "criticism," "theory," "literary" and "cultural journalism," "creative
    nonfiction," and "journalism"? In what ways might these different kinds of
    writing inform and overlap one another? How might they conflict or produce
    creative tension?

    Other questions might include: How do academics negotiate the roles of
    professor and "public intellectual"? How might doctoral programs in the
    humanities interact or interface with nonfiction creative writing programs?
    Can the charge that "theory is elitist" be reversed by the clear and
    straightforward prose of nonfiction writing? Why are journalists and
    academics, or critics and creative writers, considered antithetical to one
    another? Other topics could include differences in writing processes; the
    writer's negotiation of voice; travels between genres; the choice of subject
    and method; where to nest (academia or the media) and where to publish
    (university or trade press).

    I welcome submissions from both faculty members and graduate students who
    write journalism and nonfiction, as well as writers with an academic
    background who write full time.

    Please send abstracts (250-500 words) by March 20 to: Heather Hewett, 250 W.
    22nd, Apt. #5C, NY, NY, 10011. Please include your home mailing addresss,
    home phone number, and email. Email submissions are also welcome; please
    send to h.hewett@worldnet.att.net.

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