posted by organizer: seanhadley || 5594 views || tracked by 2 users: [display]

SECCL-SAMLA 2021 : The Company You Keep: Reading, Writing, & Socializing in Religious Literature

FacebookTwitterLinkedInGoogle

Link: https://www.christianityandliterature.com/conferences
 
When Nov 4, 2021 - Nov 6, 2021
Where Atlanta, GA
Submission Deadline May 31, 2021
Categories    interdisciplinary   literature   religion   philosophy
 

Call For Papers

CFP for SAMLA 93, November 4-6, 2021, Atlanta, GA

The Company You Keep: Reading, Writing, & Socializing in Religious Literature

Affiliate Group: Southeast Conference on Christianity and Literature

Literature is rife with the concept of the “social,” whether it be through exclusion or connection. The Bible records letters sent, Church History preserves the ways in which communities gathered and encouraged one another regardless of distance, and Christian writers have invested heavily in understanding the topic of community and social structures. This panel welcomes submissions that address the topics of intimacy, community, or exile. We welcome papers exploring literary works that engage with Christianity (or religion broadly) on the idea of the “social.” Papers might consider one or more of the following:

• Definitions of community in the writings of A. J. Mojtabai
• Social networks, broadly conceived, in the writings of Walker Percy
• Letter writing between authors as a source for inspiration (i.e. the letters of Ernest Hemingway)
• News or gossip in relation to community connections (i.e. gossip in the works of William Faulkner or the importance of the news in James Fenimore Cooper’s writing)
• Exile and reconciliation in American Catholic fiction (i.e. J. F. Powers and Harry Sylvester)
• The nature and definition of exilic literature (or literary depictions of characters in exile)
• The question of authenticity in religious literature
• Ways that literary texts comfort the reader or challenge religious traditions
• The conventions and techniques of religious literature and their adaptation over time and distance
• How religious writers turn to other religious traditions for resources of community or inspiration
• The relationship between society and exile in religion
• Pedagogical approaches to religious literature
• The nature of communities built around the reading of good books
• Creative writing submissions addressing the panel theme are also welcome

Please send a 250-word proposal, a CV, and any A/V requests to Sean C. Hadley at sean.hadley@faulkner.edu. (For creative writing submissions, please submit the full work to be read and not an abstract). All abstracts or creative writing submissions are due May 31.

Related Resources

Reading Morrison 2026   Toni Morrison’s A Mercy in Focus
EEIEJ 2026   Emerging Trends in Electrical, Electronics & Instrumentation Engineering: An international Journal
PJA 78 (1) 2027   AI, Art, and Ethics - The Polish Journal of Aesthetics
MIGRATION 2026   MIGRATION, ADAPTATION AND MEMORY - 9th International Interdisciplinary Conference (Online)
GIFCon 2026   Call for Papers GIFCon 2026 - The Technologies of the Fantastic
PhilGenres 2026   Cfp Philosophy and Literary Genres in the Twentieth Century
AIMH 2026   AI Meets Humour: Special issue of the European Journal of Humour Research
ICLL 2026   2026 10th International Conference on Linguistics and Literature (ICLL 2026)
ICLLA 2026   2026 13th International Conference on Linguistics, Literature and Arts (ICLLA 2026)
SRF Essay Prize 2026   Science and Religion Forum Peacocke Student Essay Prize 2026