13 Novembre 2025

Call for Seminar Papers 18th ESSE Conference – Seminar 21, “The Poetics and Ethics of Sexual Dissidence in Anglophone Postcolonial Literatures”

Call for Seminar Papers: Seminar 21, “The Poetics and Ethics of Sexual Dissidence in Anglophone Postcolonial teratures” Dates: August 31–September 4, 2026 Place: Santiago de Compostela, Spain Convenors: Cédric Courtois (University of Lille, France); Angelo Monaco (Aldo Moro University of Bari, Italy) We invite submissions for a panel that will examine the intersections of sexuality, identity, resistance and dissent in Anglophone postcolonial non-fiction, fiction, drama, and poetry. We wish to explore the avenues offered by literary texts to challenge and/or disrupt heteronormative and “universal” norms of gender and sexuality, by pondering over what Jonathan Dollimore calls “sexual dissidence” (1991), linked to a form of transgressivity. In so doing, these texts can be considered as “political”, if we follow Jacques Rancière, for whom “dissensus” is at the heart of “politics” (2010). To what extent do these literary texts shed light on other modes of being that interrogate the legacies of colonialism? By adopting a decolonial perspective, which lays bare the “colonial wound”, could Anglophone literatures delve into ways of reaching “decolonial healings” (Mignolo and Vazquez 2013)? As David L. Eng puts it, sexual dissidence and other forms of intimacy can work as “sites of critical response” (2010) for addressing the challenges of race in the so-called “colorblind” age of global capitalism. By staging vulnerable, “precarious” (Butler 2004) and “ungrievable” (Butler 2009) lives, embodied and “willful” (Ahmed 2014) lives even, at the intersection of race, gender and sexuality, these texts can be said to resist censorship, the law, and more generally “queer” invisibilisation. In this light, the focus on sexual dissidence could lead to what Emmanuel Renault calls “recognition” (2001), especially for LGBTQIA2S+ people who tend to be stigmatized; the lack of “recognition” can be “experience[d] […] as real moral wounds[,] [t]he experience of [which] is painful and radical enough to lead to a revolt” (Renault 2001). Building on these insights, this panel will strive to elucidate how Anglophone postcolonial literatures help cultivate an ethics and a poetics of sexual dissidence, serving as an archive of (cultural) resistance. Deadline for the submission of proposals for seminar papers: January 31, 2026. Send to: cedric.courtois@univ-lille.fr, angelo.monaco@uniba.it Further information at: www.esse2026.com Dates: August31–September 4, 2026Place: Santiagode Compostela, SpainConvenors:Cédric Courtois (University of Lille, France); Angelo Monaco (Aldo MoroUniversity of Bari, Italy)Deadline for thesubmission of proposals for seminar papers: January 31, 2026. Send to: cedric.courtois@univ-lille.fr, angelo.monaco@uniba.it Furtherinformation at: www.esse2026.com We invitesubmissions for a panel that will examine the intersections of sexuality,identity, resistance and dissent in Anglophone postcolonial non-fiction,fiction, drama, and poetry. We wish to explore the avenues offered by literarytexts to challenge and/or disrupt heteronormative and “universal” norms ofgender and sexuality, by pondering over what Jonathan Dollimore calls “sexualdissidence” (1991), linked to a form of transgressivity. In so doing, thesetexts can be considered as “political”, if we follow Jacques Rancière, for whom“dissensus” is at the heart of “politics” (2010). To what extent do these literary texts shed light on other modesof being that interrogate the legacies of colonialism? By adopting a decolonialperspective, which lays bare the “colonial wound”, could Anglophone literaturesdelve into ways of reaching “decolonial healings” (Mignolo and Vazquez 2013)?As David L. Eng puts it, sexual dissidence and other forms of intimacy can workas “sites of critical response” (2010) for addressing the challenges of race inthe so-called “colorblind” age of global capitalism. By staging vulnerable,“precarious” (Butler 2004) and “ungrievable” (Butler 2009) lives, embodied and“willful” (Ahmed 2014) lives even, at the intersection of race, gender andsexuality, these texts can be said to resist censorship, the law, and moregenerally “queer” invisibilisation. In this light, the focus on sexualdissidence could lead to what Emmanuel Renault calls “recognition” (2001),especially for LGBTQIA2S+ people who tend to be stigmatized; the lack of“recognition” can be “experience[d] […] as real moral wounds[,] [t]heexperience of [which] is painful and radical enough to lead to a revolt”(Renault 2001). Building on these insights, this panel will strive to elucidatehow Anglophone postcolonial literatures help cultivate an ethics and a poeticsof sexual dissidence, serving as an archive of (cultural) resistance.

Call for Seminar Papers 18th ESSE Conference – Seminar 21, “The Poetics and Ethics of Sexual Dissidence in Anglophone Postcolonial Literatures” Read More »

CALL FOR PAPERS Tastes of language. Past and present Italian culinary discourse in Anglophone contexts 17th-18th September 2026, Sapienza University of Rome

This conference seeks to explore the dynamic and complex ways in which Italian culinary discourse was and is constructed, translated, and consumed within Anglophone contexts. The journey of Italian food language, from recipe titles, ingredient names, and menu descriptions to broader gastronomic narratives, presents a rich areafor interdisciplinary study, as it crosses linguistic and cultural borders. We are interested in examining the linguistic, semiotic, and cultural transformations that occur when the microlanguage of Italian food enters English-speaking spheres, both in the past and now. This includes, among others, the processes of domestication and foreignisation of Italian culinary terms, the role of media (from early cookbooks to blogs, television and social media) in shaping perceptions, and the construction of authenticity and identity through food language. This conference aims to bring together scholars from various fields – from translation studies to sociolinguistics, historical linguistics and discourse analysis, from food and cultural studies to culinary anthropology – to investigate how the tastes of language were and are perceived, interpreted,and ultimately, eaten by an Anglophone audience. Possible contributions may address:• Translation and adaptation of Italian recipe texts and cookbooks into English,• Authenticity and identity: The role of language in constructing or challenging notions of ‘authentic’ Italian food for an Anglophone audience,• Lexical borrowing and code-switching/-mixing/translanguaging: The use and function of Italian culinary loanwords in Anglophone food writing, both from historical and contemporary perspectives,• The role of ELF in spreading Italian culinary language in global Englishes,• Neologisms and hybridity: The creation of new, hybrid culinary terms and food concepts in English based on Italian originals (e.g., Italo-American, Indo-Italian, Aussie-Italian dishes, etc.),• Menu semantics and discourse: Analysis of how menus in English-speaking countries represent or market Italian cuisine,• The language of food critique: Analysis of reviews and critiques of Italian restaurants in Anglophone print and digital media,• Media and culinary representation: The linguistic and visual portrayal of Italian food on Anglophone television, films, and social media platforms. We are pleased to announce that our two confirmed keynote speakers will be Marco Bagli (University for Foreigners of Perugia) and Siria Guzzo (University of Salerno). Potential contributors are invited to submit their abstract (150-200 words in English, the conference’s working language) for a 20-minute paper and their bio (100 words) electronically to fabio.ciambella@uniroma1.it by April 30, 2026. Submissions should include the title and abstract of the paper, the contributor/s’s name, and their affiliation/s. Selected papers will be considered for publication.

CALL FOR PAPERS Tastes of language. Past and present Italian culinary discourse in Anglophone contexts 17th-18th September 2026, Sapienza University of Rome Read More »

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