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2024 NEH Institute on Born-Digital Scholarly Publishing
Brown University Library is pleased to announce a call for applications for the 2024 NEH Institute on Born-Digital Scholarly Publishing which will occur this July. Thank you in advance for sharing the following call for applications widely with your networks. It is much appreciated.
Call for Applications
Brown University Digital Publications invites applications for participation in an NEH Institute on Advanced Topics in the Digital Humanities, Born-Digital Scholarly Publishing: Resources and Roadmaps. The three-week hybrid Institute will take place virtually July 8–19 and in person at Brown University July 22–26, 2024. Participant travel, lodging, and per diem expenses will be covered for the in-person component.*
Purpose and Structure
Born-Digital Scholarly Publishing: Resources and Roadmaps supports scholars who wish to pursue interpretive projects that require digital expression and are intended for publication by a scholarly press, but who may lack resources and capacity at their home institutions.
Projects must be conceived of as born-digital, or digital-first. The institute does not support digitization projects or the development of supplemental websites for print books, but rather digital monographs, or digital publication projects anchored by an original, long-form narrative. The institute will train a cohort of 15 scholars—including unaffiliated scholars, adjunct professors, and part-time faculty from a range of disciplines, institution type, and geographical location—in best practices unique to the development of digital scholarly publications. The cohort will be supported by a faculty composed of authors of published or in-progress enhanced digital monographs and digital publishing experts from university presses and Brown University Digital Publications.
The institute has been organized as a hybrid, multi-phased training and mentoring program:
- A two-week virtual course will introduce participants to resources, considerations, and strategies for digital publishing (July 8–19, 2024).
- A one-week in-person workshop will yield individualized roadmaps for cohort projects (July 22–26, 2024).
- Two two-day virtual check-ins will extend individualized project support (Oct. 2024 and Jan. 2025).
Eligibility
The application is open to scholars of all ranks, including university faculty and adjuncts, postdoctoral researchers, and independent scholars. Applicants must have a Ph.D.
Brown University Library is a member of the HBCU Library Alliance. Based on this affiliation, some slots will be reserved for participants from member institutions.
International applicants are welcome, though the NEH Institutes for Advanced Topics in the Digital Humanities (IATDH) program focuses on scholars currently studying or employed at institutions in the United States. Thus, U.S. citizens and/or U.S.-based scholars will be given priority. International applicants and/or persons without a current U.S. visa should note that, if selected and if an in-person meeting is possible, a visa cannot be guaranteed.
How to Apply
The following materials should be sent to digitalpublishing@brown.edu, no later than April 1, 2024:
- A statement (maximum 3 pages) that directly addresses the following questions:
- Describe your digital monograph project. Why is the digital format necessary for advancing your argument? What is the current state of the project?
- How would your project benefit from and contribute to a collaborative Institute experience?
- How will your participation in the Institute contribute to expanding digital scholarship at your institution or in your field?
- A current C.V.
Notification of Acceptance: May 1, 2024
JADT Calls for Editors and Submissions
Call for JADT Performance Review Editor (2024-2026)
The Journal of American Drama and Theatre is now accepting applications for the position of Performance Review Editor. Responsibilities include: commissioning reviews of theatre and performance in the Americas, broadly defined; answering queries about conducting reviews; and editing reviews for publication. The Performance Review Editor will serve a two-year term (with the possibility of renewal for two more years) beginning June 1, 2024 and ending May 31, 2026.
To apply, please email a letter of interest outlining your qualifications along with a current CV to jadtjournal@gmail.com. Applications are due by April 15, 2024.
Call for JADT Book Review Editor (2024-2026)
The Journal of American Drama and Theatre (JADT) is also accepting applications for the position of Book Review Editor. Responsibilities include: commissioning reviews of books relating to theatre and performance in/of the Americas, broadly defined; editing reviews; and establishing and maintaining relationships with book publishers. The Book Review Editor will serve a two-year term (with the possibility of renewal for two more years) beginning in June 1, 2024 and ending May 31, 2026.
JADT is peer-reviewed and published twice a year and affiliated with the American Theatre and Drama Society and The Martin E. Segal Theatre Center.
To apply, please email a letter of interest outlining your qualifications along with a current CV to jadtjournal@gmail.com. Applications are due by April 15, 2024.
Call for Papers, Book Reviews, and Performance Reviews
The editors of the Journal of American Drama and Theatre are now accepting submissions for essays on any topics relating to theatre, drama, and popular entertainments of the Americas for consideration. Please submit completed articles to jadtjournal@gmail.com by May 15, 2024 for consideration in the Fall 2024/Spring 2025 issues.
*NEW: Starting with our Spring 2024 issue, JADT will now be publishing performance reviews. If you are interested in publishing a performance review, please send a query email to the editors at jadtjournal@gmail.com.
To propose a book review, please email Book Review Editor Maya Roth at jadtbookreviews@gmail.com.
JADT’s aim is to promote research on theatre of the Americas and to encourage historical and theoretical approaches to plays, playwrights, performances, and popular theatre traditions. Studies of dramatic texts from a purely literary perspective are outside the scope of the journal. Manuscripts should be 6,000 to 8,000 words in length and prepared in conformity with the Chicago Manual of Style, using footnotes. Completed manuscripts should be submitted as Microsoft Word attachments via e-mail to jadtjournal@gmail.com using Microsoft Word. Articles will be peer reviewed, so please allow 3 to 4 months for a decision. If you are using images, please provide the images and captions with your submission. (Please Note: images should be at least 300dpi and authors are responsible for securing permissions before submission)
ABOUT JADT
Founded in 1989, JADT is a widely acclaimed peer-reviewed journal publishing thoughtful and innovative work by leading scholars on theatre, drama, and performance in the Americas—past and present. The journal’s provocative articles provide valuable insight and information on the heritage of American theatre, as well as its continuing contribution to world literature and the performing arts. JADT is fully online and freely accessible. https://www.thesegalcenter.org/jadt
Transnational Theatre Histories Book Series
Transnational Theatre Histories (Palgrave) illuminates vectors of cultural exchange, migration, appropriation, and circulation that long predate the more recent trends of neoliberal globalization. Books in the series document and theorize the emergence of theatre, opera, dance, and performance against backgrounds such as imperial expansion, technological development, modernity, industrialization, colonization, diplomacy, and cultural self-determination. Proposals are invited on topics such as: theatrical trade routes; public spheres through cross-cultural contact; the role of multi-ethnic metropolitan centers and port cities; modernization and modernity experienced in transnational contexts; new materialism: objects moving across borders and regions; migration and recombination of aesthetics and forms; colonization and decolonization as transnational projects; performance histories of cross- or inter-cultural contact; festivals, exchanges, partnerships, collaborations, and co-productions; diplomacy, state and extra-governmental involvement, support, or subversion; historical perspectives on capital, finance, and administration; processes of linguistic and institutional translation; translocality, glocality, transregional and omnilocal vectors; developing new forms of collaborative authorship.
Prospective authors are encouraged to reach out to any of the editors: Leo Cabranes-Grant; Christopher Balme; Tracy C. Davis; Marlis Schweitzer
Philadelphia Theatre Research Symposium 2024
Philadelphia Theatre Research Symposium 2024
Theatre as Catalyst for Liberation: Creativity Within Constraints Friday, May 3, 2024
The Philadelphia Theatre Research Symposium (PTRS) is seeking abstracts for the 2024 gathering of theater scholars and practitioners. We invite proposals for panels and roundtables for our in-person conference at Villanova University this May. This year’s theme is “Theatre as Catalyst for Liberation: Creativity Within Constraints,” which asks us to think about how theatre practice and non-traditional storytelling forms are connected to liberation – (Black Liberation specifically in the case of NBT), freeing ourselves, our ideas, and others. Theatre as a form and craft teaches us how to be creative within constraints, inviting discussions of not only what our narratives are, but also how the processes by which they are created are honed and crystalized for impact. This becomes even more important when ideological, aesthetic, political, and financial limitations are continual pressures that center “traditional” western ideology (inclusive of colonialism, capitalism and co-option/appropriation) in the current global theatre landscape. These topics will be explored in a keynote address by National Black Theatre’s (NBT) Chief Executive Officer, Sade Lythcott, and Executive Artistic Director, Jonathan McCrory, as well as in their workshop on Holistic Producing: Decolonizing the Western Frame.
We invite proposals for individual papers or roundtables on topics that could include, but are not limited to:
- Artivism: Artists & Art making and fighting for social change
- Applied Indigenous practices in theatre making
- Applied theatre
- Community theatre (as in theatre for community-building)
- Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility models
- Experimental / Avant Garde theatre and/or producing
- Liberatory theatre making (playwrights, companies, productions that liberate)
- Storytelling for new audiences
- Teaching methods for liberation
- Theatre of and for the Global Majority
- Theatre of the Oppressed (as a tool for teaching, making performance, community organizing)
How to Submit:
Please submit a 250-word abstract for a 15-minute presentation to Bess Rowen at bess.rowen@villanova.edu along with a 100-word biography, including your current affiliation, by March 3, 2024. Please also include: the paper’s title, the presenter’s name, affiliation, and email address.
Revenge is Mad Hard: Fat Ham and the Question of Cultural Reclamation
Revenge is Mad Hard:
Fat Ham and the Question of Cultural Reclamation
Since its digital debut in April of 2021, subsequent Pulitzer win, off-Broadway run, Broadway run, and recent flurry of regional productions, Fat Ham has taken North America by storm. In re-framing the story of Hamlet from within a Black, southern family barbeque, playwright James Ijames has opened the door for questions about cultural authority, the exchange of cultural capital, mediation, storytelling and adaptation methods, the need for increased representation in canonical stories, the methods through which marginalized voices might reclaim cultural capital, and more.
This essay collection will explore these timely questions. We seek short, thesis-driven essays that consider Fat Ham’s early life (from its Spring 2021 digital debut at the Wilma, to its present regional run). Essays may address a broad range of topics including, but not limited to: Fat Ham as a performance phenomenon, adaptation/appropriation, language, Black storytelling, queerness, mediation, cultural capital, canon, contemporary Shakespeare studies, etc.
To submit, please send a 250-word abstract and your bio to the editors by March 1. Because the topic of this collection is timely, we will be working on a collapsed timeline. We hope that authors will consider this when submitting. Chapters will be 5,000 – 6,000 words in length, with first drafts due by June 1. The editors welcome any questions or queries authors might have; please contact us: Valerie.Pye@liu.edu , drosvall@buffalo.edu
Valerie Clayman Pye is an Associate Professor of Theatre and Chair of the Department of Theatre, Dance, and Arts Management at Long Island University, Post. Valerie’s research focuses on actor training pedagogy, Shakespeare’s Globe, Shakespeare tourism, and on practice-as-research (PaR). Her book, Unearthing Shakespeare: Embodied Performance and the Globe (Routledge) considers how the reconstruction of Shakespeare’s theatre contributes to actor training and the performances of Shakespeare’s plays. She is the co-editor of Objectives, Obstacles, and Tactics in Practice: Perspectives on Activating the Actor (with Hillary Haft Bucs), and Shakespeare and Tourism (with Robert Ormsby). Her essays have appeared in Shakespeare, Teaching Shakespeare, PARtake: The Journal of Performance as Research, New England Theatre Journal, Theatre Topics, and several essay collections. Her latest book is Innovation & Digital Theatremaking: Rethinking Theatre with ‘The Show Must Go Online’ (with co-author Robert Myles) (Routledge 2023).
Danielle Rosvally is an assistant professor of theatre at the University at Buffalo. Her forthcoming monograph (Theatres of Value: Buying and Selling Shakespeare in Nineteenth-Century New York City, State University of New York Press, 2024) considers the commodification and economization of Shakespeare’s work in America’s nineteenth century. Danielle’s interest in the digital has fueled past work on database methodologies in humanist text, social media, and the personification of Shakespeare by performers/users. Her next project, Yassified Shakespeare (co-authored with Trevor Boffone), is a multimedia exploration of how iterations of Shakespearean performance and Shakespeare’s cultural capital critically intersect with drag and drag aesthetics. She is a dramaturge, actor, director, and fight director.
Black Theatre Review Submissions for July 2024
“They didn’t bring the hum; they didn’t bring the leader-call, they didn’t bring the field hollers, because they didn’t know them…. the hum, the holler, the leader-call are women things.” Nikki Giovanni,, Black Women Writers at Work
tBTR is pleased to accept submissions for its fifth publication, Vol. 3 No. 1, to be published July 2024 online. We invite authors to reflect on the theme of nurturing.
On January 11th I learned of the tragic death of Dr. Antoinette “Bonnie” Candia-Bailey on January 8, 2024, nine months after assuming the role of VP of Student Affairs at Lincoln University of Missouri. The self-reported causes of her death were employment-related “harm and mental damage” and being “intentionally harassed and bullied”. News of her loss comes days after Dr. Claudine Gay resigned from Harvard University on January 2, 2024. In her resignation letter Dr. Gay writes, “These last weeks have helped make clear the work we need to do to build that future — to combat bias and hate in all its forms, to create a learning environment in which we respect each other’s dignity and treat one another with compassion, and to affirm our enduring commitment to open inquiry and free expression in the pursuit of truth.”
The day following the news of Dr. Candia-Bailey, like many mornings before, I heard the reveille heralding from the nearby air base as I worked. Work is often how I navigate grief and I was grieving for her family and for those in the world who would never get to hear her, metaphorical, finished song. I did not know her personally, but I recognized her disregarded cries for help in addressing workplace discrimination. In the middle of this work-grief continuum, I am reflecting on what Black women often experience in Higher Education in terms of the lack of compassion and respect, and bias and hate from the classroom to the boardroom. How do we stay on our respective paths forward in the academy (or carve new paths) with joy in the face of these circumstances? In When Will the Joy Come: Black Women in the Ivory Tower (2023) editors Chapdelaine, Thompson, and Asare argue that it is through the potential of joy, writing that:
“Joy is a matter of autonomy, agency, and community…found in moments of connection, and reclamation that each scholar seeks, still, despite the alienating systems through which [Black women] journey…it is [our] well-being and thriving…and it is not something we are willing to relinquish despite the context of our lives and labor” (14-15).
- Theory and practice-based approaches to theatre making, artistic leadership, theatre pedagogy, and theatrical developments by, for, and about Black women that reflect an ethic of care and engender joy.
- Elements and rituals within Black theatre and Black expressivity that can nourish, sustain, buoy, and uplift Black women.
- Strategies and practices for monitoring and navigating emotional wellbeing, maintaining agency and authenticity, and emboldening and supporting Black women theatre artists, faculty, and administrators in maneuvering difficult matters in learning environments.
- Contemporary profiles of Black women leaders and art makers in the field of Black theatre or Black expressivity that hear the Reveille and through their work inspire us to exist with joy and give us life for the work ahead.
- Digital art and/or performance about how Black women nurture themselves and others.
- Africana womanism, Black feminism, and/or epistemologies of Black womanness in Black theatre or Black expressivity.
The last date for submissions is March 1, 2024. Early submissions will, however, receive preference in the review and publication process. Revision or Acceptance Notification is April 5, 2024 (with any subsequent revisions due by May 3, 2024). Please upload your full manuscript on our website.
Omiyẹmi (Artisia) Green, MFAJournal of Consent-Based Performance Special Issue
TDR Special Issue – Performance, Possession and Automation
Call for Papers: Performance, Possession and Automation
Deadline: Wednesday, February 1, 2024
Proposals for articles should be no more than 300 words
For a special issue of TDR: The Drama Review, co-editors Rebecca Schneider, Dhanveer Singh Brar and Nicholas Ridout seek submissions which consider performances as social and aesthetic practices that potentially work in opposition to the order imposed on human subjects by capitalist automation, and which might thereby open up spaces for experiences of ecstasy, personhood, possession, or gathering not legible within colonial-capitalist aesthetic regimes.
Today we are used to historicising automation through both the Fordist assembly line and the deindustrialisation of European and North American economies from the 1970s onwards. As a result of this received history of automation, in contemporary discourse it appears in three contrasting registers: as the harbinger of a capitalist utopia in the rhetoric of Silicon Valley; as an historic challenge to working class solidarity and left political struggle; and as a process that can be seized upon by the left to rethink political futurity by embracing an egalitarian capture of automation.
With this call for papers, we seek submissions which embrace a different perspective. We propose that the historical account of automation needs to go back at least 500 years, and take as its units of analysis not state, factory and worker, but empire, plantation and slave. As a result, we also consider automation not just as a process in which humans are replaced, but as something that happens to human subjects, in their entanglement with machines and systems. In other words, under capitalism human subjects always risk becoming automated, and are constantly involved in resistance to the threat of automation. This was as true in the plantation as it is today in the Amazon fulfilment warehouse. These situations are different, but they participate in the same logic of production, of goods, services and subjectivities, alongside the refusal to allow this logic to run efficiently.
Our sense that performance might contribute to such a refusal draws inspiration from the thought of Sylvia Wynter, who articulated the historical continuity of its political charge in a 1977 essay:
While if in the rituals it was the techniques of possession which breached the iron walls of the prison of their everyday slave plantation existence, black music, from the spirituals to the blues to jazz and all its variants, and now to Marley and Reggae, secularized the formerly spiritual religious ecstasy, displaced it into an aesthetic space, where it made the ultimate revolutionary demand, the demand for happiness/fulfilment now.
Sylvia Wynter ‘”We Know Where We Are From”: The Politics of Black Culture from Myal to Marley’
This ecstasy is, literally, the condition of being beside oneself, an experience of self-displacement that might open up, through the practice of performance, a sociality grounded in an altered self-consciousness and in which flight from automation becomes possible. In this ecstasy is secreted a potential to exceed the categories under which normal (automated) life is supposed to be lived.
We are especially concerned with styles of performance and cultural assemblages from across this 500-year history which animate this potential so as to reorder, confuse, and dissolve the terms of automation and the cultures in which it operates. We imagine that many examples of such performance will emphasise spontaneity, sociality and the expansion of human bodily and spiritual capacities. We are particularly interested in submissions which explore performances that take on external appearances of disorder and mismanagement in order to mask internally composed modalities of value and intention, or that propose alternate logics of organisation.
For further information, please contact:
Professor Rebecca Schneider rebecca.schneider@brown.edu
Dr Dhanveer Singh Brar d.s.brar@leeds.ac.uk
Professor Nicholas Ridout n.p.ridout@qmul.ac.uk
Please send proposals (maximum 300 words) for articles by Wednesday, February 1, 2024, to: possession.automation@gmail.com
The Legacy of Robert Wilson
CALL FOR PAPERS
Conference “The Legacy of Robert Wilson”
August 5–9, 2024
The Martin E. Segal Theatre Center, The Watermill Center
We are pleased to announce an upcoming conference exploring the work of
renowned American theatre director and visual artist, Robert Wilson, and its
legacy for contemporary visual and performing arts and future artistic
production. In celebration of Wilson’s extraordinary career, we invite
scholars, critics, and practitioners to contribute to a conference exploring
the diverse aspects of his transformative vision and artistic practice. The
conference will take place on August 5, 6, 7, and 9, 2024 at The Martin E.
Segal Theatre Center at the Graduate Center of CUNY, and on August 8 at The Watermill Center on Long Island. The symposium will involve a hybrid
combination of in-person and virtual keynotes, paper presentations, and panel discussions.
We are seeking original research papers and presentations that critically
engage with the work and impact of Robert Wilson across various contexts,
including but not limited to:
- Aesthetic Innovations: Examining the unique visual and auditory elements in Wilson’s stagecraft, his use of light, sound, movement, and non-verbal communication to create immersive theatrical experiences.
- Dramaturgy and Collaboration: Investigating Wilson’s collaborative process with playwrights, composers, designers, and performers, and exploring the role of dramaturgy in shaping his productions.
- The Theatrical Experience: Analyzing the audience’s encounter with Wilson’s productions, the immersive nature of his staging, and its influence on the audience’s perception, engagement, and interpretation of the work.
- Design, Video, Installation, Architecture: Examining the use of form,
space, composition, color, and sound in Wilson’s non-theatrical artistic work. - Socio-political Relevance: Assessing how Wilson’s work engages with social, political, and cultural issues, exploring its potential to create dialogue, challenge norms, and inspire change, and relating it to BIPOC and LGBTQIA+ communities and concerns as well as disability studies.
- Cross-cultural and Interdisciplinary Perspectives: Exploring the cross-
cultural influences on Wilson’s work, his collaborations with artists from diverse backgrounds, and the interplay between theatre, music, visual arts, and dance within his productions. - Wilson’s Influence on Contemporary Theatre: Investigating the lasting
impact and influence of Wilson’s unique style and approach on contemporary theatre practices, aesthetics, and directorial strategies globally. - Analyzing Specific Works: Presentations focused on in-depth analysis of
specific works by Wilson, encompassing themes, techniques, historical context, and their significance within his oeuvre.
Submission Guidelines:
- Abstracts of no more than 250 words should be submitted along with a
short biographical note and institutional affiliation (if applicable). - Submissions should align with one or more of the symposium topics
outlined above. - All submissions should be in English.
- Submission Due Date: Monday, February 26, 2024
The Segal Center will award $500 each towards the best new essay from
undergraduate, MA/MFA, and PhD students. We are planning to feature selected proceedings of the symposium in the inaugural issue of the online Robert Wilson Yearbook, which will be published by the Martin E. Segal Theatre Center.
The symposium will be free and open to the public. (There may be charges,
however, for transportation to The Watermill Center and for conference snacks and refreshments.)
Details regarding the venue, format, and registration process will be shared
at a later date.
We look forward to receiving insightful and engaging contributions that shed
light on the artistic genius of Robert Wilson, his impact on the world of
theatre and the arts, and the enduring legacy of his innovative approach to
stagecraft and artistic practice.
All abstracts, biographical notes, and general inquiries should be sent
directly to the symposium organizers: Frank Hentschker (Director, Martin E.
Segal Theatre Center at the Graduate Center CUNY), Markus Wessendorf (Chair, Department of Theatre and Dance, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa), and Viola Kántor (Eötvös Loránd University, Faculty of Humanities, Doctoral School of Philosophy, Art History Program) at robertwilsonconference24@gmail.com.