Call for Book Proposals: Studies in the Global Nineteenth Century
Studies in the Global Nineteenth Century
Studies in the Global Nineteenth Century
Please join British, Irish and Empire Studies at the University of Texas at Austin at noon next Thursday, March 31, for our next Brexit One Year On VIRTUAL session, "The Role of 'Race' in Motivations to Leave: A Pre- and Post-Brexit Consideration." Criminologist Tina Patel explores the ways in
which considerations of race, whether overtly or covertly, played into the Brexit campaign and the 2016 vote to leave the EU. UT-Austin's Richard J.
Reddick will chair.
A Zoom meeting:
Mar 31, 2022 12:00 PM Central Time (US and Canada), 6 p.m. GMT
Anglo Saxonica is an open access multidisciplinary journal, with a long-standing reputation in the field that publishes original and innovative research and promotes dialogue on a variety of issues relevant to the study of English language, literatures and cultures of the English-speaking world and geocultural areas. Its editorial policy embraces different academic approaches on current issues in English and American studies, includes original research articles, reviews, interviews and selections of creative writing.
The British, Irish and Empire Studies program at the University of Texas at Austin (BIES) is pleased to announce the next session in our virtual speaker series, "Brexit One Year On," Thursday, March 24, at 12 noon CDT.
Adapting Bridgerton
CFP: Classics Illustrated: Adaptation and Appropriation in the Comics and Other Graphic Narratives
CFP Fair Unknowns: Extending the Corpus of Arthurian Texts
Sponsored by the Alliance for the Promotion of Research on the Matter of Britain
In this conference, we invite potential participants to look at how pandemics have shaped our language through metaphors, what metaphors people have used during pandemics, how they address our fears, worries and anxieties, what new mentalities, perspectives and attitudes they produce during the times of pandemic and how they are reflected in language, literature and culture, and how they contribute to the politics of the text.
Editors:
Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns
Matthew Edwards
West of England and South Wales Women’s History Network 29th Annual Conference