CFP

American, British and Canadian Studies Special Issue: Contemporary Crime Fiction

demonologist      louisepenny   McFetridge

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS:  AMERICAN, BRITISH AND CANADIAN STUDIES SPECIAL ISSUE:  CONTEMPORARY CRIME FICTION

(Information provided by Dr Charlotte Beyer)

American, British and Canadian Studies, the Journal of the Academic Anglophone Society of Romania, invites submissions for a special 2017 issue on Contemporary Crime Fiction, guest edited by Dr Charlotte Beyer. Continue reading

Call for Contributions: Crime Fiction and Food

 
 Y en avait
CFP sent by Jean Anderson, Carolina Miranda, and Barbara Pezzotti
Following our recent projects The Foreign in International Crime Fiction: Transcultural Representations (Continuum/Bloomsbury, 2012; see information available at www.continuumbooks.com/books/detail.aspx?BookId=167802&SubjectId=997&Subject2Id=927) and Serial Crime Fiction: Dying for More (forthcoming 2015, Palgrave McMillan; see http://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/serial-crime-fiction-jean-anderson/?K=9781137483683), we invite interested scholars and specialists to contribute to a planned volume on crime fiction and food.  We envisage including studies of print, television, and film series and are keen to consider a wide range of authors, countries and time periods. The category ‘crime fiction’ is here understood in the broad sense i.e. detective, spy, mystery and thriller.

Continue reading

CFP:Postcolonial and Transnational Crime Fiction

CRIME FICTION HERE AND THERE

Call for Papers

The Journal of Commonwealth and Postcolonial Studies (published by Routledge from 2016)

Special Issue – Postcolonial and Transnational Crime Fiction

Since the nineteenth century crime fiction has provided a space for authors to comment on colonial relations, the iniquities of colonialism, and the aberrations of colonial systems of law enforcement and justice.  The complex legacy of colonialism in contemporary times continues to be explored in transnational crime fiction.  This special issue aims to showcase the latest scholarship on postcolonial and transnational crime fiction in which the following questions are raised and answered:

  • How has the genre of crime fiction, and its many sub-genres, been adapted, transformed, re-imagined and subverted by postcolonial and transnational crime fiction texts?
  • How does postcolonial and transnational crime fiction investigate colonial and neo-colonial power dynamics, structures of authority, notions of justice and law enforcement?
  • What specific cultural and socio-political contexts are examined in…

View original post 309 more words