Call for papers: The Libraries, Archives, Museums, and Popular Culture area of The Popular Culture Association and the American Culture Association

The Popular Culture Association and the American Culture Association annual conference will be held March 27 – March 30, 2013 at the Wardman Park Marriott in Washington, DC. Scholars from a wide variety of disciplines will meet to share their Popular Culture research and interests.

The Libraries, Archives, Museums, and Popular Culture area is soliciting papers dealing with any aspect of Popular Culture as it pertains to libraries, archives, museums, or research. Possible topics include descriptions of research collections or exhibits, studies of popular images of libraries or librarians, relevant analyses of social networking or web resources, Popular Culture in library education, the future of libraries and librarians, or reports on developments in technical services for collecting/preserving Popular Culture materials. Papers from graduate students are welcome.

Prospective presenters should enter their proposals in the PCA/ACA 2013 Event Management database at http://ncp.pcaaca.org. The deadline is November 30, 2012. Please direct any queries to the Libraries, Archives, Museums, and Popular Culture area chair, Allen Ellis.

 

Allen Ellis
Professor of Library Services
W. Frank Steely Library
Northern Kentucky University
Highland Heights, KY 41099-6101
USA
859-572-5527

Email: ellisa@nku.edu
Visit the website at http://pcaaca.org/national-conference-2/

Call for papers: Freedom, Rights and Power: Recasting Women’s struggles across the Americas since 1900

Freedom, Rights and Power: Recasting Women’s struggles across the Americas since 1900.
26th-27th April 2013
St Mary’s University College, Twickenham,
London, UK.

This two-day multidisciplinary conference seeks to explore the intersection between gender, revolt
and power across the Americas. Women have been central in stretching the definitions of legal rights,
challenging old concepts of power, and establishing new parameters of freedom across the Americas
throughout the twentieth century. Not all of these struggles have been exclusively for the rights of
women; feminist and womanist interpretations of power structures have in turn encouraged dynamic
protest among many subaltern groups. Our conference seeks to create links between historical,
regional and current movements for change, and to capitalize on a new momentum that has emerged
in relation to discourses of gender and power. We encourage scholars and delegates to think anew
about the ways that women have challenged prevailing systems, to examine women’s efforts to
renegotiate power paradigms and to consider how the past informs the future as we extend our
concepts of freedom within the context of the whole continent. The conference aims to address two
areas which merit further scholarly development. Firstly, we want to challenge the tendency to see the
struggles of women in North America as separate from those struggles in Central and Latin America,
and we aim to encourage comparative transcontinental discussions. Secondly, we wish to encourage
new and interdisciplinary approaches to the issue of women’s agency. This conference will bring
together complementary strands of research on the experiences of women in the Americas, and
include the voices of activists, and will contribute to our understanding of gender, rights and power in
a broad American context.

Potential themes for papers include but are not limited to: labour activism, civil rights,
suffrage, environmental activism, approaches to feminism, developments in feminist theory,
women in government and foreign policy, women in protest organizations, environmental
activism, legal rights, LGBTQ activism, religious and spiritual interests, reproductive rights,
anti-war activity or pacifism, and the development of gendered strategies against sexualized
and racialized violence.

Proposals for papers should not exceed 500 words and must be accompanied by a working
title and CV. Abstracts should be submitted to the organizers by Friday 4th January 2013. A
selection of papers from the conference will be published in an edited volume. We ask
potential contributors to indicate with their abstract as to whether they wish for their
submission to be considered for the edited volume. Complete papers for the edited volume
must be submitted by 30th June 2013.

Submissions should be emailed to the organizers at: freedomrightspower2013@gmail.com
Sinead McEneaney
Imaobong Umoren
Dawn-Marie Gibson
Althea Legal-Miller

CFP — Hysteria Manifest: Cultural Lives of a Great Disorder / Deadline 15 March 2013

CFP — Hysteria Manifest: Cultural Lives of a Great Disorder / Deadline 15 March 2013

English Studies in Canada (ESC) invites submissions for a special issue entitled “Hysteria Manifest: Cultural Lives of a Great Disorder,” guest edited by Ela Przybylo and Derritt Mason.

Hysteria, a largely feminized disorder of great cultural invention and investment, continues to hold the contemporary imaginary. Although repeatedly declared “dead” and removed from the DSM-III in 1980, hysteria persists in the folds of medicalization and in the soon-to-be-released DSM-V (2013) as “conversion disorder” or “functional neurological symptom disorder,” buttressing Elaine Showalter’s (1997) claim that “hysteria has not died, it has simply been relabeled for a new era.” Markedly, hysteria has recently surfaced on the big screen in three films (Alice Winocour’s Augustine (2012), David Cronenberg’s A Dangerous Method (2011) and Tanya Wexler’s Hysteria (2011)), onstage in Sarah Ruhl’s 2009 Pulitzer-nominated In the Next Room (or The Vibrator Play), and in the widespread media coverage of a winter 2012 outbreak of mass conversion disorder amongst female high school students in upstate New York. Despite this ongoingness of hysteria’s manifestations and the vast academic interest in hysteria, there is a real dearth of considerations of hysteria that map not only its histories, but also its presents, not only its death, but also its enduring afterlife as a compelling cultural and diagnostic trope.

“Hysteria Manifest: Cultural Lives of a Great Disorder” aims to read hysteria’s present—its current representations, manifestations, embodiments, deployments, and iterations—while drawing on its diverse genealogies and violent, tangled past: a past that weaves its way through Jean-Martin Charcot’s spectacular theatre of hysteria at the Salpêtrière hospital, the birth and fruition of Freudian psychoanalysis, and more recently, feminism’s reclamation of the disorder as an index of female oppression under patriarchy. Such a “history of the present” looks at hysteria’s past in an effort to understand its present, traces its transformations and mutations, and maps its circulations as a provocative and critically salient trope for considering issues of gender, sexuality, psychoanalysis, performance, visuality, illness, dis/ability, biopolitics, colonialism, and mass media. “Hysteria Manifest,” then, will challenge hysteria’s grand histories and unearth its minor ones, defy myths of hysteria’s origins, teleology, progress, and its ties to medico-scientific objectivity, while emphasizing its present-day potency.

For this special issue of ESC, we are seeking an array of contributions which will engage contemporary manifestations and representations of hysteria. Specifically, we invite submissions of academic papers, art-based work, cultural commentaries, and creative pieces (short stories, poetry, photo essays) from scholars, writers, and artists. We also welcome interdisciplinary approaches informed by (but not limited to) literary theory, feminist theory, film studies, cultural studies, critical race and postcolonial studies, queer and critical sexuality theories, psychoanalysis, critical disability studies, medical sociology, and performance studies.

Submissions should, in some way, draw on hysteria’s past to convey a sense of hysteria’s haunting and persistent presence in the cultural imaginary. Topics of inquiry may include:

>Representations of hysteria in contemporary film, literature, and art

>Hysteria and literary criticism (e.g., James Wood’s concept of “hysterical realism”)

>Hysteria and the image

>Transnational and transcultural approaches to hysteria

>The body, trauma, medicalization, and biopolitics

>Hysteria and fan culture; the image of the hysterical teenage fan

>Mass hysteria and vampires, zombies, dystopias

>Hysteria and consumer culture

>The legacies of hysteria’s feminization

>Feminist approaches to hysteria

>Masculinity and hysteria

>Hysteria and sexuality; sexual excess and lack

>Hysteria and the child

>The spectre of hysteria in psychoanalysis

>Hysteria as performative illness; the theatre/spectacle of hysteria

Deadline for submissions (maximum of 8500 words) is 15 March 2013. Creative pieces or cultural commentaries—i.e., critical responses to cultural representations of hysteria—should be between 500-2500 words, with the exception of short poems.

Note to contributors: ESC normally accepts black and white images, up to a limit of six per article. Contributors are responsible for securing permissions.

Please forward completed essays, in MLA format, along with a 100-word abstract and a 50-word bio to przybylo@yorku.ca and derritt@ualberta.ca. The journal’s style sheet is available at http://www.arts.ualberta.ca/~esc/submit.php.

ESC: English Studies in Canada is a quarterly journal of scholarship and criticism concerned with the study of literature and culture. Recent special issues include “Traffic” (Eds. Cecily Devereux and Mark Simpson), “Guilt” (Ed. J. Faflak), “Sound/Poetry/Event” (Eds. L. Cabri, A. Levy, P. Quartermain), and “Skin” (Ed. J. Emberley). For more information visit ESC Digital at www.arts.ualberta.ca/~esc.

 

Ela Przybylo
Gender, Feminist & Women’s Studies
York University
Email: przybylo@yorku.ca
Visit the website at http://www.facebook.com/events/448266485217246/?notif_t=plan_user_joined

Call for Papers: Black Sexual Economies: Transforming Black Sexualities Research

Call for Papers: Black Sexual Economies: Transforming Black Sexualities Research

Black sexualities have been constructed as a site of sexual panic and pathology in U.S. culture. Viewed as a threat to normative ideas about sexuality, the family, and the nation, Black sexualities are intimately linked to and regulated by political and socioeconomic discourses and institutions. Slavery rendered Black sexuality irrevocably deviant, and at the same time produced economies of desire and flesh that made Black sexual deviance desirable,
accessible, and even profitable. In light of the historical and continuing forces of commodification, exploitation, and appropriation of Black sexuality and Black bodies, Black people have struggled to represent, recuperate, and re-imagine their own sexualities.

Despite the dynamic ways that Black people attempt to define and negotiate their own gender and sexual identities, practices, and communities, there has been a paucity of scholarship examining Black sexual economies. While research on Black sexuality has interrogated the powerful traumas, silences, and invisibilities that influence sexuality within the Black community, Black Sexualities scholarship still has work to do to untangle the complex mechanisms of dominance and subordination as they are attached to political and socioeconomic forces, cultural productions, and our own academic lenses.

The Black Sexual Economies Project and The Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Work and Social Capital at Washington University invites papers that advance cutting edge scholarship in the field for its international conference Black Sexual Economies:
Transforming Black Sexualities Research, September 27-28, 2013 at Washington University School of Law in Saint Louis, Missouri.

Topics and Themes may include:

  • Queer of Color critique
  • Black Feminisms and Black Sexualities
  • Critical Race studies and Black sexuality
  • Critical Legal studies and Black sexuality
  • Gender Theory and Sexuality
  • Black Sexuality and Performance
  • Black Sexual Historiography
  • Black Sexual Genealogies
  • Black Sexuality and Eroticism in film, art, literature, music,
  • television, gaming, or digital/online technologies
  • Black Sexuality in Popular Culture
  • Black Sexual Icons
  • Black Bodies and Aesthetics
  • Black Sexual Revolution
  • Black/White/Latino/Asian Inter(sex)zones
  • Black Love and Intimacy
  • Black Sexual Labors and Sex Work
  • Black Sexual Undergrounds
  • Pornography, Erotica, or Obscenity
  • African Diasporic/Transnational frameworks
  • Neoliberalism and Black Sexuality
  • Black Sexual Cartographies and Space
  • Black Sexuality and Class
  • Black Sexual Social Movements
  • Black Sexuality and the Environment
  • Sexuality and the Black church or Religion
  • Black Sexuality and the Prison Industrial Complex

Submit individual paper abstracts (350 words max), bio (150 words max), and 1-2 page CV to blacksexualeconomies@gmail.com

Deadline: December 15, 2012.
Website: http://law.wustl.edu/centeris/pages.aspx?id=7848

Call For Papers: “Intersections of Sexuality, Gender, Race and Ethnicity

Call For Papers: “Intersections of Sexuality, Gender, Race and Ethnicity” a one-day  symposium sponsored by the Women’s and Gender Studies Program at Morgan State University, Baltimore,  MD

March 9, 2013

Location: Maryland
Date: 2013-03-09

Description:  The Women and Gender Studies program at Morgan State University  announces a one-day conference on “Intersections of Sexuality, Gender, Race and Ethnicity” on March 9, 2013.

Send one-page abstracts via e-mail to intersectionssymposium@gmail.com with the following information:

Author’s name,

Title of paper

Contact: Mary.Fay@morgan.edu
Announcement ID: 197357
http://www.h-net.org/announce/show.cgi?ID=197357

We are live! Announcing the launch of The Albert M. Greenfield Digital Center for the History of Women’s Education

The Albert M. Greenfield Digital Center for the History of Women’s Education is proud to announce the official launch of its website! We’ve been in beta for some time now, and while the site continues to grow, we can now proclaim to you all that we are live and ready to receive your comments….

The past year has been one of exciting growth for The Albert M. Greenfield Digital Center and we are delighted to finally share the fruits of our hard work with you. The website will serve scholars in the US and across the world by providing free, open access to materials on the web related to the history of women’s education. We have digitized a variety of our own resources and built partnerships with other colleges to feature related original sources in their possession. An example of this is our collaboration with Dr. Anne Bruder’s class at Berea College. Dr. Bruder (editor of Offerings to Athena and Advisory Board Member) challenged her class to create a digital exhibit reflecting on the gendered histories of Berea College (the exhibit can be found here).

The website also features thematic exhibits on past alums, such as Margaret Bailey Speer, lesson plans created by Temple University students as part of the Cultural Collaboration Fieldwork Initiative, and current Bryn Mawr undergraduates’ work on the scrapbooks created by students in the early years of the college. We are focusing on digitizing prominent or unique items in our collections which will be freely available for teaching, research or general interest to users across the world.

The Center’s team has been led by Jennifer Redmond, and consists of a number of key members focusing on both the digital and research components of the Center:

  • Cheryl Klimaszewski, Digital Collections Specialist in Canaday Library, has continued as the technical lead on the project
  • Jessy Brody (BMC ’10), a Digital Assistant on the project, has been heavily involved in the digitization of scrapbooks and research on athletics at Bryn Mawr
  • Jen Rajchel (BMC ’11) recently finished her role as Digital Initiatives Intern and is currently the Assistant Director of the Tri-Co Digital Humanities Initiative
  • Evan McGonagill (BMC ’10) is a Research Assistant working at the Center, focusing on researching the collections and is in charge of the social media presence of the Center. (Click here to see the Center’s team and click here to see the Advisory Board members).

The work of the Center continues to be overseen by Eric Pumroy, Director of Library Collections and Seymour Adelman Head of Special Collections; and Elliott Shore, Chief Information Officer and Constance A. Jones Director of Libraries and Professor of History.

As part of the launch of the site, we are announcing the second annual essay competition, again kindly sponsored by the Friends of the Library. The theme is ‘Transformations: How has the Bryn Mawr College experience made you the person you are today?’  Further details on the competition can be found here.

Our first exhibition, Taking Her Place, will be hosted in the Rare Book Room gallery in Canaday Library, Bryn Mawr College, from January to June 2013. Given the intense scholarly interest in the lively field of women’s educational history, we feel the exhibition will be a welcome addition to exploring the history of women’s reading, learning, scholarship and their battle to take their education and expertise from the private to the public sphere. It will also be a way to visually narrate the journey many women traveled to achieve their ambitions of becoming learned women.This show will explore women’s worlds of reading, learning, educational attainment and entry into the world of work and the public sphere. The exhibition will be launched by Professor Helen Horowitz, renowned historian of women’s education, biographer of M. Carey Thomas and one of the keynote speakers at the ‘Heritage and Hope’ conference in 2010 which celebrated the 125th anniversary of the founding of the college. Her talk on January 28th 2013 will be on “Reading, Writing, Arithmetic…and Power: Education as Entry to the World”. On Thursday April 18th 2013 Professor Elaine Showalter, Bryn Mawr College class of 1962 and Avalon Foundation Professor Emerita at Princeton University, will also be coming to give a speech as part of the exhibition program. Please check back here for further details on these exciting events. A digital version of the exhibition will be made available online after it closes.

The exhibition is jointly curated by Jennifer Redmond and Evan McGonagill. We are creating ‘Taking her Place’ with the assistance of our colleagues in Special Collections, Eric Pumroy, Brian Wallace, Marianne Hansen, Lorett Treese and Marianne Weldon, with the digital expertise of Cheryl Klimaszewski and Jessy Brody.

Finally, we are also announcing the first Call for Papers ‘Women’s History in the Digital World’, to be held at Bryn Mawr College, Friday 22nd and Saturday 23rd March 2013. We are honored to have as our keynote speaker Professor Laura Mandell, Director of the Initiative for Digital Humanities, Media, and Culture and a Professor in the Department of English at Texas A&M. The conference will bring together scholars working on women’s history projects with a digital component, exploring the complexities of creating, managing, researching and teaching with digital resources. We will explore the exciting vistas of scholarship in women’s histories and welcome contributors from across the globe. This will be the first conference held by us, but hopefully this will become an annual event. We wish to bring together both experienced and newer scholars in the world of digital projects on women. Watch this space for further details!

There will be other public events throughout the Spring so please check back regularly at http://greenfield.brynmawr.edu/ and follow us on Twitter (@GreenfieldHWE). Announcements will be made also through the Friends of the Library Facebook page. 

We welcome your feedback on the new site, please leave comments here or else get in touch directly with the Director (jredmond@brynmawr.edu or via Twitter @RedmondJennifer)

 

Call for Papers: Women’s Studies Area of the Popular Culture Association and American Culture Association Joint Conference

Call for Papers: Women’s Studies Area of the Popular Culture Association
and American Culture Association Joint Conference

The Popular Culture Association and American Culture Association invites
submissions for individual papers, and for complete panels, for its
Women’s Studies area for its forthcoming national conference, to be held
in Washington, D.C. 2013.

We welcome papers and panels on any facet of popular culture relating to
the study of women and gender, including, not by no means limited to:

*   Women’s participation in, and creation of, literary works and print
culture
*   Women’s involvement as consumers and producers of film and
television culture, and representations of women within television and
film
*   Women as the subjects of, audiences for, and responders to advertising
*   Women’s engagement with popular music, as artists, consumers, and fans
*   Women’s engagement with social media and their work as bloggers and
cultural critics

ALL PROPOSALS AND ABSTRACTS MUST BE SUBMITTED TO THE PCA
DATABASE<http://ncp.pcaaca.org/> FOR CONSIDERATION.

The deadline for paper and panel proposals is 30 November 2012.

Please send all queries to Holly Kent, at
hkent3@uis.edu


Holly M. Kent, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of History
University of Illinois-Springfield
hkent3@uis.edu<mailto:hkent3@uis.edu>
(217)-206-8497
UHB 3056

Robert and Vineta Colby Scholarly Book Prize of the Research Society for Victorian Periodicals

The Research Society for Victorian Periodicals is pleased to announce this year’s call for submissions for the Robert and Vineta Colby
Scholarly Book Prize, awarded to the scholarly book that most advances the understanding of the nineteenth-century British newspaper or
periodical press.

All books exploring the British press of the period
are eligible (including single-author monographs, edited collections, and editions) so long as they have an official publication date of 2012.
The winner will receive a monetary award of up to $2,000, and will be invited to speak at the RSVP conference in Manchester (July 12-13, 2013). The prize was first made possible by a generous gift from the late Vineta Colby in memory of her husband, Robert, and now honors both Colbys for their pioneering scholarship in the field of Victorian periodicals and their dedicated service to RSVP.

To nominate a book, please email the chair of the prize committee, Linda Hughes (l.hughes@tcu.edu), by December 1, 2012.  You or your press will be asked to supply the committee with five copies of the book by mid-December, 2012.  Self-nominations are welcome.

The Research Society for Victorian Periodicals (RSVP) is an interdisciplinary and international association of scholars dedicated to the exploration of the richly diverse world of the 19th-century press, both its magazines and its newspapers. More information about RSVP and its lively journal, Victorian Periodicals Review, may be found at
http://rs4vp.org

The Bibliographical Society of America: 2013 Fellowship Programs announced

The Bibliographical Society of America
2013 Fellowship Program Announcement

The BSA invites applications for its sixth annual Katharine Pantzer Senior
Fellowship in Bibliography and the British Book Trades as well as its annual short-term fellowship program, all of which support bibliographical inquiry and research in the history of the book trades and in publishing history.
Eligible topics may concentrate on books and documents in any field, but
should focus on the book or manuscript (the physical object) as historical
evidence. Such topics may include establishing a text or studying the
history of book production, publication, distribution, collecting, or
reading. Thanks to the generosity of donors, certain special fellowships
support research in particular areas of study. Applicants should therefore
read the fellowship titles and guidelines here to determine project
eligibility and fit. Please note: these fellowships do not support
enumerative bibliography (i.e. the preparation of lists). Individuals who
have not received support in the previous five years will be given
preference. All fellowships require a project report within one year of
receipt of the award, and a copy of any subsequent publications resulting
from the project, to be sent to the BSA.

I. Fellowships:

–The Senior Katharine Pantzer Fellowship ($6,000); Supports research in
topics relating to book production and distribution in Britain during the
hand-press period as well as studies of authorship, reading, and collecting
based on the examination of British books published in that period, with a
special emphasis on descriptive bibliography.

–The BSA-ASECS Fellowship for Bibliographical Studies in the Eighteenth
Century ($3,000); Recipients must be a member of the American Society for
Eighteenth-Century Studies at the time of the award.

–The BSA Fellowship in Cartographical Bibliography ($3000); Supports
projects dealing with all aspects of the history, presentation, printing,
design, distribution, and reception of cartographical documents from
Renaissance times to the present, with a special emphasis on
eighteenth-century cartography

–The BSA-Mercantile Library Fellowship in North American Bibliography
($2,000).

–The Folter Fellowship in the History of Bibliography ($2,000); Supports
projects in the history and development of bibliography and/or the book
trade before 1900.

–The Katharine Pantzer Fellowship in the British Book Trades ($2,000);
Supports bibliographical inquiry as well as research in the history of the
book trades and publishing history in Britain.

–The McCorison Fellowship for the History and Bibliography of Printing in
Canada and the United States: the Gift of Donald Oresman ($2,000).

–The Reese Fellowship for American Bibliography and the History of the Book
in the Americas ($2,000).

–BSA General Fellowships ($2,000); The Society also offers a number of
unnamed fellowships supporting bibliographical research as described above.

II. Application Guidelines:

Applications are due Dec 15 of each year. We regret that we cannot consider
late or incomplete submissions. Applications should include the following
components:

1) application form, available at http://www.bibsocamer.org/fellows.htm;

2) project proposal of no more than 1000 words;

3) applicant curriculum vitae;

4) two signed letters of recommendation on official letterhead submitted
independently by referees. Letters submitted electronically as a signed PDF
via e-mail are preferable, although postal submissions will be accepted. We
ask that recommenders use the subject line ³Recommendation for [Applicant
Name]² that is, ³Recommendation for Chris Smith.²

Complete all application components (including an attached Project
Description and curriculum vitae), save them in a recent version of
Microsoft Word, WordPerfect, or PDF (preferable), and e-mail the full
package to the Society Secretary at fellowships@bibsocamer.org. It is
preferable to submit the application package as a single file with the
subject line ³[Applicant Name]: BSA Fellowship,² that is, ³Chris Smith: BSA
Fellowship.² This application package and two supporting letters of
recommendation must be received by 15 December 2012. We regret that we
cannot consider late or incomplete applications. Applicants are advised to
request recommendation letters well in advance and to direct referees to the
BSA site (http://www.bibsocamer.org/fellows.htm) for guidance.

NOTE: The Society has added an on-line application form as a simpler
alternative to e-mail or postal submission:
http://www.bsafellowships.org/bsa/application_form.php.
This page features fill-in fields for all the information contained in the
traditional application form as well as buttons for electronically
submitting curriculum vitae and Project Description files.

For more information, contact the Society Secretary at
fellowships@bibsocamer.org.

Call for Papers: Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century British Women Writers Conference, April 2013

Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century British Women Writers Conference
*
*April 4-6, 2013 in Albuquerque, NM*

The English department at the University of New Mexico is pleased to host
the 2013 British Women Writers Conference. The conference will be April
4-6, 2013 at the Hyatt in downtown Albuquerque, NM. The conference theme is
“Customs,” and we look forward to a wide range of unique presentations on
the topic.

Customs are often thought of as the habits or social norms that dictate
behavior, sometimes so rigidly that they appear to be laws. Conversely,
though, “custom” can refer to a product or service tailored to the
“customer’s” individual specifications, or the taxes or duties on
imports/exports, the governmental department charged with implementing such
fees, or the place in which all items entering a country from foreign parts
are examined for contraband.  Regardless of its particular connotation,
“custom” denotes a sense of rigidity, restriction, or control; it is these
forms of social, economic, and/or personal limitations that we wish to
explore with this year’s conference. Prospective panelists are encouraged
to think of “customs” broadly as the term might apply to British and
Transatlantic women writers and their often-underrepresented contributions
to literary studies.

Potential topics related to this theme might include but are not limited to
the following themes in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British women’s
writing:
Habits, practices, and routines
Fashions and manners
Rituals and ceremonies (religious, political, social, and cultural)
Trade issues in the local and/or global economy
Business and mercantile transactions and expansion
Trade and exchange (economic, cultural, philosophical, or trade in
knowledge and ideas)
Issues of circulation (monetary as well as other goods and services in the
social, political, global, or domestic spheres)
Debt and credit
Traditions and conventions (how they are established as well as how they
are upheld or subverted, modified, or re-imagined)
Customers and patronage
Taxation, duties, and tributes
Law and legal systems

Please send abstracts of 250 words for panel proposals by November 15, 2012
and for individual paper presentations by December 15, 2012 to
BWWC2013@gmail.com

*Check out our website at 2013BWWC.com