CFP - Children's Literature as a Territory of Conflicts: Texts, Personalities, and Institutions
CALL FOR PROPOSALS
RESEARCH CENTER FOR RUSSIAN CHILDREN'S LITERATURE
INSTITUTE OF RUSSIAN LITERATURE (THE PUSHKIN HOUSE)
ILLINOIS WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY
URAL FEDERAL UNIVERSITY
CHILDREN'S LITERATURE AS A TERRITORY OF CONFLICTS: TEXTS, PERSONALITIES, AND INSTITUTIONS
June 1-3, 2014
Institute of Russian Literature (The Pushkin House)
St. Petersburg, Russia
This international conference will discuss children's literature as a territory of conflicts: institutional, personal, and textual. Presentations might address issues such as:
Antagonisms between the state and the writer/reader, problems of religious and political censorship, tension between traditional and innovative forms of children’s literature, previously silenced and taboo subjects (gender, disability, race, ethnicity, sexuality, criminality, death, etc.), generational differences and conflicts, shifts in aesthetic norms and values, construction of the canon and mechanisms of canonization of children’s literature, multiple adaptations and translations of foreign texts, historical conceptions of plurality within children’s literature, children’s literature in the school curriculum, etc.
Proposals may also address:
- Innovative authors of children’s books and their careers
- Professional, regional, and informal societies of writers
- History of different generations of children’s writers
- Problems and conflicts in national children’s literatures
- Theoretical and critical approaches to children’s literature
Please send us your 300-word proposal and a short bio by September 1, 2013. You will be notified by October 1, 2013, if your abstract has been selected for the conference.
Working languages: Russian and English
Contact information: detlit2014@gmail.com
Organizational committee:
Marina Balina, Illinois Wesleyan U (USA)
Valentin Golovin, Institute of Russian Literature, St. Petersburg
Mariia Litovskaia, Ural Federal U
Svetlana Maslinskaia, Institute of Russian Literature, St. Petersburg
Larissa Rudova, Pomona College (USA)
Inna Sergienko, Institute of Russian Literature, St. Petersburg
Valerii Viugin, Institute of Russian Literature, St. Petersburg