CFP: Futures of World Literatures and Literacies (11/30/01; 4/25/02-4/28/02)

From: Kevin Brooks (Kevin_Brooks@ndsu.nodak.edu)
Date: Tue Aug 21 2001 - 11:30:17 EDT

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    CALL FOR PAPERS: Futures of World Literatures and Literacies

    The Fifth Annual International Red River Conference on World
    Literature and the Fifth Annual Great Plains Alliance for Computers
    and Writing invite proposals for a joint conference, "Futures of
    World Literatures and Literacies:"

    April 25-28, 2002
    North Dakota State University
    Fargo ND, USA

    Deadline for submission of proposals: November 30, 2001.

    The conference is being sponsored by the Department of English, North
    Dakota State University, Fargo ND, 58105. Proposals (300 words) for
    RRCWL should be directed to Kevin Brooks; proposals for GPACW should
    be directed to Elizabeth Birmingham. Please include your name,
    complete mailing address, and e-mail address. Proposals for panels
    must include an abstract for each presenter, as well as names,
    addresses, and e-mail addresses of all participants. Email and online
    submissions are welcome, but please include postal addresses. Send
    inquiries to: Kevin_Brooks@ndsu.nodak.edu or
    Elizabeth_Birmingham@ndsu.nodak.edu.

    The RRCWL and GPACW conferences will run concurrently; sessions
    within each conference will run consecutively. Featured speakers will
    be shared by both conferences. While we are particularly interested
    in proposals that address the conference theme, papers on all aspects
    of world literature and computers
    and writing will be considered. Possible topics include, but are not
    limited to:

    * New writers, new readers, re-readings, and new interests in
    literary and literacy studies.
    * Globalization and its impact on literature and literacy.
    * The future of oral and literate traditions.
    * The future (of the) human/body/text.
    * Neocolonialism, postcolonialism, and the shaping of world
    literatures and literacy practices.
    * Hybridity, difference, and commonality in global culture and online.
    * Curricular changes and innovations-world literature and electronic
    literacy courses in institutional contexts.
    * Hypertext, film, new media-what will literature and literacy become
    in the future?
    * Teaching in the 21st century: pedagogy and practice in world
    literature and e-literacies.
    * Access to and accessibility of world literatures and technologies
    of literacy.

    Featured Speakers

    Carolyn Guyer is author of the hypertext Quibbling, essays on writing
    in the new millennium, co-author with Michael Joyce of Lasting Image,
    and co-ordinator of the Mother Millennia Project-an online collection
    of stories about mothers from around the world.

    Cass Dalglish, Professor of English, Augsburg College, Minneapolis,
    and author of Nin, a novel which uncovers and recovers the writings
    of women from Sumerian tablets to the World Wide Web.

    Geoffrey Sirc, Horace T. Morse Distinguished Teaching Professor in
    Composition, University of Minnesota, is author of "Never Mind the
    Tagmemics, Where's the Sex Pistols" and many other essays. He works
    in composition, broadly defined, especially where art, technology,
    voice, and writing intersect. His book, _Composition as a Happening
    II_, will be published by NCTE.

    International scholars, including Canadians, are invited to apply for
    travel funds generously donated by the President of North Dakota
    State University.

    Go to http://www.ndsu.edu/RRCWL for further details about the conference.

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