SUS 36th Annual Meeting – Call for Papers (Mark II)

Here is the CFP for this October’s Meeting again, this time updated with info about the new Graduate Student Conference Travel Grants.  PLEASE, redistribute as widely as possible.

 

THE SOCIETY FOR UTOPIAN STUDIES – 36th Annual Meeting

Archiving Utopia – Utopia as Archive

The Nittany Lion Inn on the Penn State Campus

State College, Pennsylvania

October 20-23, 2011

The 2011 Society for Utopian Studies Annual Conference celebrates the ongoing evolution of one of the world’s largest—and best–collections of utopian materials in the world. The Arthur O. Lewis Utopia Collection is housed in Eberly Family Special Collections Library at Penn State’s Paterno Library. The Society’s own archive resides here, as do thousands of titles, primarily in British and American utopian literature, published from 1516 up to today. In addition to the usual stimulating schedule of papers, this conference will feature an exhibit highlighting some of the collection’s most valuable treasures. Participants will have the opportunity to acquaint themselves with the many research opportunities here.

The conference will not only highlight the breadth and depth of the Lewis Collection, but also the importance of the archive as broader theme within Utopian Studies. This refers not only to actual physical spaces, but also the significance of the archive in utopian literature, archival practices in utopian movements, and the archive as utopian space itself. We ask for papers, panels, presentations and performances on the cultural, political, social, architectural, and managerial aspects of the archive as utopian space.  We also welcome papers on other aspects of the utopian tradition – from the earliest utopian visions to the utopian speculations and yearnings of the 21st century, including art, architecture, urban and rural planning, literary utopias, dystopian writings, utopian political activism, theories of utopian spaces and ontologies, music, new media, or intentional communities.

Finally, in advance of a special issue of Utopian Studies on the theme of “utopia and education,” we also highly encourage papers on any aspect of that topic: utopian pedagogies (in utopian fictions or in actual practice), utopia as an educational process; education as a utopian process; the university as (intentional) community; geographies of utopian education.

* * *

State College, Pennsylvania is home to Penn State University’s main campus, with around 45,000 students. In addition to Penn State’s beautiful University Park campus, surrounded by farms and mountains, the town itself offers restaurants and shops. The University Park airport, serviced by Delta, United and US Air, is only 10 minutes from the conference hotel. State College is located between 3 and 5 hours by car from New York, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C.

* * *

Please send a 100-250 word abstract by June 1, 2011 to:

Sonja Fritzsche

Modern and Classical Languages and Literatures

Illinois Wesleyan University

201 E University Ave.

Bloomington, IL 61702

USA

Or e-mail submissions to: sfritzsc@iwu.edu (please put “sus submission” in the subject line). As you submit your abstract, please indicate if you have any scheduling restrictions, audiovisual needs (overhead projector; digital projector; PC/Mac laptop, speakers, DVD/VHS player), special needs, or a need for a written letter of acceptance of your proposal. Note: All specific audiovisual requests must be included in the original abstract submission. Late requests cannot be fulfilled due to conference organizational deadlines.

For information about registration, travel or accommodations, please contact the Conference Coordinator, Jennifer Wagner-Lawlor at jaw55@psu.edu, or phone 814-867-0367.

* * *

Society for Utopian Studies

Graduate Student Conference Travel Grants

Announcing newly established travel grants designed to aid graduate students with travel costs to the 2011 SUS conference at State College, PA. There are two grants of $500 each. One is for domestic travel and one is for international travel. Please send your paper proposal, budget proposal, and a recent c.v. to the conference program chair Sonja Fritzsche (sfritzsc@iwu.edu) by June 1, 2011. On the budget proposal, please list other resources you have available from your home institution, research grants, or other sources.

Selection criteria include:

1. The quality of the paper proposal/abstract, with attention to its contribution to utopian studies

2. The soundness of the proposed budget.

3. A demonstrated commitment to the society, as evidenced by repeat attendance and participation in the life of the society.

SUS 36th Annual Meeting – Call for Papers

THE SOCIETY FOR UTOPIAN STUDIES – 36th Annual Meeting

Archiving Utopia – Utopia as Archive

The Nittany Lion Inn on the Penn State Campus
State College, Pennsylvania
October 20-23, 2011

The 2011 Society for Utopian Studies Annual Conference celebrates the ongoing evolution of one of the world’s largest—and best–collections of utopian materials in the world. The Arthur O. Lewis Utopia Collection is housed in Eberly Family Special Collections Library at Penn State’s Paterno Library. The Society’s own archive resides here, as do thousands of titles, primarily in British and American utopian literature, published from 1516 up to today. In addition to the usual stimulating schedule of papers, this conference will feature an exhibit highlighting some of the collection’s most valuable treasures. Participants will have the opportunity to acquaint themselves with the many research opportunities here.

The conference will not only highlight the breadth and depth of the Lewis Collection, but also the importance of the archive as broader theme within Utopian Studies. This refers not only to actual physical spaces, but also the significance of the archive in utopian literature, archival practices in utopian movements, and the archive as utopian space itself.  We ask for papers, panels, presentations and performances on the cultural, political, social, architectural, and managerial aspects of the archive as utopian space.   We also welcome papers on other aspects of the utopian tradition – from the earliest utopian visions to the utopian speculations and yearnings of the 21st century, including art, architecture, urban and rural planning, literary utopias, dystopian writings, utopian political activism, theories of utopian spaces and ontologies, music, new media, or intentional communities.

Finally, in advance of a special issue of Utopian Studies on the theme of “utopia and education,” we also highly encourage papers on any aspect of that topic: utopian pedagogies (in utopian fictions or in actual practice), utopia as an educational process; education as a utopian process; the university as (intentional) community; geographies of utopian education.

*       *       *

State College, Pennsylvania is home to Penn State University’s main campus, with around 45,000 students. In addition to Penn State’s beautiful University Park campus, surrounded by farms and mountains, the town itself offers restaurants and shops. The University Park airport, serviced by Delta, United and US Air, is only 10 minutes from the conference hotel. State College is located between 3 and 5 hours by car from New York, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C.

Please send a 100-250 word abstract by June 1, 2011 to:

Sonja Fritzsche
Modern and Classical Languages and Literatures
Illinois Wesleyan University
201 E University Ave.
Bloomington, IL 61702
USA

Or e-mail submissions to:  sfritzsc@iwu.edu (please put “sus submission” in the subject line).  As you submit your abstract, please indicate if you have any scheduling restrictions, audiovisual needs (overhead projector; digital projector; PC/Mac laptop, speakers, DVD/VHS player), special needs, or a need for a written letter of acceptance of your proposal. Note: All specific audiovisual requests must be included in the original abstract submission. Late requests cannot be fulfilled due to conference organizational deadlines.

For information about registration, travel or accommodations, please contact the Conference Coordinator, Jennifer Wagner-Lawlor at jaw55@psu.edu, or phone 814-867-0367.

SUS Conference Dropbox

Well, we’ve made it through another year.  Our 35th Annual Meeting has come and gone, Milwaukee, Wisconsin having hosted us well.  To properly archive the event, a dropbox folder has been set up where you can put your pictures and anything else you like to share from the conference.  The contributions will be used to compile the next print issue of Utopus Discovered, which will hit mailboxes before the end of the year.  We’re hoping to get any issues we’ve had with what addresses we have reconciled so that everyone gets this next issue, so if you haven’t gotten the last two issues, don’t worry.  We’re pretty confident we’ve got it all straightened out.

In any case, in order for you to be able to add things to the “SUS Conference Stuff” Dropbox folder, you’ll need to drop the dropbox folder moderator a line so he can get you added.  You can do so by emailing the editor.  He’ll get you added straightaway and you can show us your stuff.

Utopus Content Call

Greetings Utopians!

I am beginning to think about compiling the next issue of Utopus Discovered, and I was hoping some of you might have some things to offer.  Have a look around here at http://utopusdiscovered.wordpress.com to see back issues and miscellaneotopia, and please send me anything you think worthy of the next issue, which should make it to your mailboxes a couple weeks before the conference in Milwaukee this October.  If it is possible, please get me anything you can by mid-August.  That gives me plenty of time for layout and etc.  Thanks in advance, and I look forward to getting another issue of Utopus Discovered together!

Alex Hall
Editor, Utopus Discovered

35th Annual Meeting Submission Deadline Extended

By “popular demand,” the Society for Utopian Studies has extended the deadline for submissions to present at its 35th Annual Meeting to July 15th.  Since the CFP is still only a couple posts below, I won’t re-post it here, but do have a look if you want to present something at the conference but were unable to make the earlier deadline of June 1st.  Cheers!

35th Annual Meeting Submission Deadline Creeping Up

The deadline to submit presentation proposals for the 35th Annual Meeting of the Society for Utopian Studies is less than a week away, and I promised I’d post a reminder, so here ya go.  The CFP was posted here only two posts ago, so I won’t re-post the entire thing, but do remember that your 100-250 word abstracts are due to Brian Greenspan at brian_greenspan@carleton.ca or via snail mail by June 1st.  Here’s Brian’s address for hard copy mailing:

Brian Greenspan
Department of English
1812 Dunton Tower
Carleton University
1125 Colonel By Drive
Ottawa, ON, Canada  K1S 5B6

See you all in Milwaukee!

THE SOCIETY FOR UTOPIAN STUDIES 35th Annual Meeting

THE SOCIETY FOR UTOPIAN STUDIES  35th Annual Meeting

Civil Rights, Social Justice, and the Midwest

Hilton Milwaukee City Center
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
October 28-31, 2010

Milwaukee in the 1960s and 1970s was a key site for civil rights marches,
particularly around the open housing movement. From 1897 through much of the
20th Century, the city was governed by a succession of Socialist mayors,
elected on their platform of practical, “sewer socialism.” And Wisconsin
itself and its Midwestern neighbors have long been home to experiments
in intentional community.

We encourage papers, panels, presentations and performances on literary,
political, social, and architectural aspects of the civil rights struggle,
intentional communities, and practical socialism with a Midwestern focus for
the 2010 conference.  We also welcome papers on other aspects of the utopian
tradition – from the earliest utopian visions to the utopian speculations
and yearnings of the 21st century, including art, architecture, urban and
rural planning, literary utopias, dystopian writings, utopian political
activism, theories of utopian spaces and ontologies, music, new media, or
intentional communities.

*       *       *

Milwaukee has a rich array of museums, restaurants, theaters, parks, and
universities for conference attendees to visit. The city boasts the first
U.S. commission by Santiago Calatrava, at the world-class Milwaukee Art
Museum; Frank Lloyd Wright buildings; an excellent opera company;
microbreweries galore; award-winning chefs; 19th Century beer baron
mansions; Lake Michigan, and more.

Please send a 100-250 word abstract by June 1, 2010 to:

Brian Greenspan
Department of English
1812 Dunton Tower
Carleton University
1125 Colonel By Drive
Ottawa, ON, Canada  K1S 5B6

Or e-mail submissions to:  brian_greenspan@carleton.ca  (please put “sus
submission” in the subject line).  As you submit your abstract, please
indicate if you have any scheduling restrictions, audiovisual needs
(overhead projector; DVD/VHS player), special needs, or a need for a written
letter of acceptance of your proposal.

For information about registration, travel or accommodations, please contact
the Conference Coordinator, Peter Sands, at:  sands@UWM.EDU

Utopian Bibliography Returns

Stephanie Stripling, having volunteered at the last meeting of the Society for Utopian Studies, has come through with a reboot of the utopian bibliography, which was traditionally part of the Utopus Discovered package, but is now its own entity of sorts.  Stephanie has put my blog-designing skills to shame, as you’ll see, but I’m okay with it.

Discoveries: A Bibliography for the Utopian Inclined