Counting down to 2024: The sixtieth anniversary of The Munsters, the fiftieth anniversary of Mel Brooks and Gene Wilder's Young Frankenstein, the fortieth anniversary of Tim Burton's original Frankenweenie, the thirtieth anniversary of Kenneth Branagh’s film Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Universal Studios’ television series Monster Force, the twentieth anniversary of Geof Darrow and Steve Skroce’s comic Doc Frankenstein and Stephen Sommers’s film Van Helsing, and the tenth anniversary of Stuart Beattie’s I, Frankenstein.

Friday, February 2, 2018

Frankenstein@200: 2018 International Health Humanities Consortium Conference (Stanford, CA 4/20-22/2018)

Another Frankenstein conference I never heard about:

Details:  http://med.stanford.edu/medicineandthemuse/events/HHC2018_FrankensteinAt200.html

Frankenstein@200


The 2018 International Health Humanities Consortium Conference will be held at Stanford University from April 20-22, 2018.


A celebration of the 200th anniversary of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein through an exploration of medically-based ethical dilemmas and an examination of the relevance of Frankenstein in moral imagination today.

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

Alexander Nemerov
Professor, Art and Art History at Stanford University

Lester Friedman
Professor, Media and Society at Hobart and William Smith Colleges

Alvan Ikoku
Assistant Professor, Comparative Literature and Medicine at Stanford University

Catherine Belling
Associate Professor, Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University


Important Dates



  • June 1, 2017: Call for proposals opens
  • Summer 2017: Conference registration opens
  • November 1, 2017: Deadline for proposals
  • December 1, 2017: Decisions communicated
  • April 20-22, 2018: Conference dates
  •  
  • Program for Why Frankenstein Matters at 200 (Rome 7/3-6/2018)


    WHY FRANKENSTEIN MATTERS AT 200:
    RETHINKING THE HUMAN THROUGH THE ARTS AND SCIENCES

    Program: http://sites.nd.edu/operation-frankenstein/program/

    UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME
    ROME GLOBAL GATEWAY

    3-6 JULY 2018
    CO-ORGANIZERS:
    Eileen Hunt Botting (Political Theory, University of Notre Dame)
    Agustín Fuentes (Anthropology, University of Notre Dame)
    Greg Kucich (English, University of Notre Dame)

    Tuesday July 3
    3-5pm                          Registration at Global Gateway. Please bring presentations on jump drives to load onto computer terminal for conference sessions.

    Wednesday July 4
    8-8:30am                     Coffee and Registration at Global Gateway
    8:30am                        Welcome and Opening Remarks by Co-organizers & Giuseppe Albano, Director, Keats-Shelley House, Rome

    9-10:30am                  PANEL
    “It was on a dreary night of November”:
    AESTHETICS AND IMAGINATIONS
    Joyce Carol Oates (Creative Writing, Princeton University)
    Frankenstein and ‘Monstrous Imagination’”
    David Archard (Philosophy, Queen’s University Belfast)
    “The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Evil and Monstrosity”
    Steven B. Smith (Political Theory, Yale University)
    Emile, Frankenstein, and the Ethics of Science and the Scientific Imagination”
    Chair: Eileen Hunt Botting (Political Theory, University of Notre Dame)
    Format: Three 20-minute papers followed by 30-minute discussion with audience

    10:30-11am                 Coffee Break in Global Gateway

    11am-12:30pm           PANEL
    “The accomplishment of my toils”:
    SAVAGES, SCIENTISTS, AND THE (NON)HUMAN
    Susan Wolfson (English, Princeton University)
    “Reading at the Limits: Frankenstein and the ‘Savage Man’”
    Peta Katz and Jonathan Marks (Anthropology, University of North Carolina-Charlotte)
    Frankenstein and the moral dimension of life science”
    Tracy Betsinger (Anthropology, SUNY-Oneonta)
    “Frankenstein’s Creature and Vampires: Embodiments of Fear”
    Chair: Greg Kucich (English, University of Notre Dame)
    Format: Three 20-minute papers then 30-minute discussion with audience

    12:30-2:30pm              Lunch Break in Rome

    2:30-5pm                    ROUNDTABLE AND FILM SCREENING
    “I collected the instruments of life around me”:
    RACE, GENDER, AND (RE)PRODUCTION
    Elizabeth Young (English and Gender Studies, Mt. Holyoke College)
    “Black Frankenstein at 200”
    Alan Coffee (Political Theory, King’s College London)
    “Slave Narrative and (or in) Frankenstein”
    Serena Baiesi (Modern Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, University of Bologna)
    “Strange, supernatural, and necromantic adventure”: Mary Shelley’s gothic stories and the inherence of Frankenstein
    Ronald Levao (English, Rutgers University)
    “Meta-Cinematic Metaphors in James Whale’s Films”
    Chair: Devi Snively (Independent Filmmaker)
    Format: Four 15-minute papers followed by 30 minutes of discussion with the audience 

    4-4:15pm        Break

    4:15-5pm        SCREENING OF “BRIDE OF FRANKIE” (2017),
    an independent film directed by Devi Snively and produced by Agustín Fuentes
    Format: screening of short film “Bride of Frankie,” followed by 25 minutes of discussion with director, producer, and audience. 

    5-6:30pm                     Rooftop Reception in Global Gateway


    Thursday July 5

    8:30-9am                     Coffee at Global Gateway

    9-10:30am                  ROUNDTABLE
    “The lifeless thing that lay at my feet”:
    THE CORPOREAL IN THE ANTHROPOCENE
    Timothy Morton (English, Rice University)
    “What Was That Again about Frankenstein and Ecology?”
    Lilla Crisafulli (Modern Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, University of Bologna)
    “From the Physiognomic Body to the Problematic Self in Frankenstein
    Gudrun Grabher (American Studies and Medical Humanities, University of Innsbruck)
    “Levinas and the Ethical Challenges of Frankenstein’s Monster”
    Nancy Hirschmann (Political Theory, University of Pennsylvania)
    “Logos and Soma in Frankenstein
    Chair: Essaka Joshua (English and Disability Studies, University of Notre Dame)
    Format: Four 15-minute papers followed by 30 minutes of discussion with audience

    10:30-11am                 Coffee Break in Global Gateway

    11-12:30pm                PANEL
    “The detested shore”:
    RACE AND THE IRISH FRANKENSTEIN
    ~~ Keough Global Seminar Session ~~
    James Chandler (English, University of Chicago)
    “A race of devils”?  What to Make of the Irish Episode
    Julie Kipp (English, Holy Cross College)
    Frankenstein, the Shelley Circle, and Radical Politics in Ireland”
    Claire Connolly (Modern English, University College Cork)
    “Archipelagic Frankenstein? Sea Crossings, Scale, and National Culture”
    Chair: Chris Fox (University of Notre Dame, Keough-Naughton Institute for Irish Studies)
    Format: Three 20-minute papers followed by 30 minutes of discussion with audience

    12:30-2:30pm              Lunch Break in Rome

    2:30-4pm                    ROUNDTABLE
    “That I might infuse a spark of being”:
    ELECTRICITY, LABOUR, MACHINES, AND AI
    Charles Gross (Psychology and Neuroscience, Princeton University)
    “Electricity and Biology in Frankenstein
    Sylvana Tomaselli (History and Political Thought, University of Cambridge)
    “Labour of Love”
    Aku Visala (Theology, University of Helinski)
    “Where Does the Buck Stop? On the Responsibility of Artificial Beings and their Creators”
    Scott Reents (Data Analytics and E-Discovery, Cravath, Swaine & Moore, LLP)
    “Frankenjustice: Artificial Intelligence, Reason-Giving, and the Transparency of Law”
    Chair: Agustín Fuentes (Anthropology, University of Notre Dame)
    Format: Four 15-minute papers followed by 30 minutes of discussion with audience

    4-5:30pm                     STUDENT POSTER SESSION AND RECEPTION
    Chair: Neil Delaney (Philosophy, University of Notre Dame)
    Format: Undergraduate and graduate students from Notre Dame will be available to discuss their research posters on Frankenstein and its legacies


    Friday July 6

    8:30-9am                     Coffee in Global Gateway

    9-10:30am                  ROUNDTABLE
    “I saw the dull yellow eye of the creature open”:
    (RE)ANIMATION, GENETICS, AND EVOLUTION
    Anne K. Mellor (English, UCLA)
    “Mothering Monsters: Frankenstein and Genetic Engineering”
    Eileen Hunt Botting (Political Theory, University of Notre Dame)
    “Hearing the Creature: Articulating the Child’s Right to be Genetically Modified.”
    Eben Kirksey (Anthropology, University of New South Wales, Australia)
    “CRISPR Trans-Migrations: Gene Editing and Consumer Choices”
    Blaine Maley (Anthropology and Anatomy, Idaho College of Osteopathic Medicine)
    “Transplants, Xenotransplants, and the Prescience of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein
    Agustín Fuentes (Anthropology, University of Notre Dame)
    “We are all composite creatures: evolution, genetics, ancestry, and false narratives of lineage purity in human becoming ”
    Chair: Holly Goodson (Molecular and Cell Biology and Biophysics, University of Notre Dame)
    Format: Five 12-minute papers followed by 30 minutes of discussion with audience

    10:30-11am                 Coffee Break in Global Gateway

    11-12:30pm                PANEL
    “I am a traveller”:
    REFUGEES AND HUMAN RIGHTS
    Mary Jacobus (English, University of Cambridge)
    “Translating Inhospitality: Migration, Monstrosity, and the Other”
    Franca Dellarosa (Department of Letters, Language, and Arts, University of Bari Aldo Moro)
    “Frankenstein and the ‘perplexities of the rights of man’”
    Marina Calloni (Social and Political Philosophy, University of Milano-Bicocca)
    “Protecting Unaccompanied Minors.”
    Chair: Monika Nalepa (Political Science, University of Chicago)
    Format: Three 20-minute papers followed by 30 minutes of discussion with audience

    12:30-2:30pm              Lunch Break in Rome

    2:30-4pm                    ROUNDTABLE
    “I had no choice but to adapt my nature”:
    PRESUMPTION, ADAPTATION, AND NEW PERSPECTIVES
    Greg Kucich (English, University of Notre Dame)
    “Peake’s Presumption of 1823”
    Jeffrey N. Cox (English, University of Colorado-Boulder)
    Melodramatic Frankenstein:  Radical Content in a Reactionary Form”
    Stuart Curran (English, University of Pennsylvania)
    Frankenstein and the Monstrosity of Literary Criticism”
    David Punter (English, University of Bristol)
    “Frankenstein in Baghdad”
    Anton Juan (Film, Television, and Theatre, University of Notre Dame)
    “Staging Presumption: Contemporizing the Creature”
    Chair: Yasmin Solomonescu (English, University of Notre Dame)
    Format: Five 12-minute papers followed by 30 minutes of discussion with audience

    4-5:30pm                     Closing Reception in Courtyard of Global Gateway


    Why Frankenstein Matters at 200: Rethinking the Human through the Arts and Sciences Conference (Rome 7/4-6/2018)

    Another conference outside the US:

    Why Frankenstein Matters at 200: Rethinking the Human through the Arts and Sciences, July 4-6, 2018
    http://sites.nd.edu/operation-frankenstein/

    This bicentennial conference on the persisting cultural and scientific impact of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein will take place July 4-6, 2018 at the University of Notre Dame’s Rome Global Gateway facility, adjacent to the Coliseum. The conference will bring together a group of distinguished scholars (30-35) from a wide range of disciplinary backgrounds across the sciences, humanities, and arts to interact on the continuing urgency of Frankenstein—the most widely taught novel worldwide at the university level—for a broad spectrum of pressing concerns in such fields as bioethics, genetics, artificial intelligence, evolutionary theory, environmental studies, race relations and colonialism, literary and theater studies, human rights, refugee studies, gender studies, disability studies, philosophy, and religious studies.

    The organizing theme of this event considers how Shelley’s gripping  novel, and its many theatrical and screen adaptations over the years, have shaped or may shape our evolving comprehension of the human experience, especially in relation to art, culture, science, technology, ethics, and politics most broadly conceived.

    The finalized conference line-up of speakers features, among other leading writers, Joyce Carol Oates and includes the following speakers:  Stuart Curran, Anne Mellor, Jeffrey Cox, Timothy Morton, David Punter, Mary Jacobus, James Chandler, Susan Wolfson, Serena Baiese, and Claire Connolly (literary studies and Romanticism); Steven B. Smith, Nancy J. Hirschmann, Marina Calloni, and David Archard (philosophy an
    d political theory); Monika Nalepa (political science); Franca Dellarosa (comparative literature); Elizabeth Young, Ron Leavao, and Devi Snively (film studies); Eben Kirksey, Jon Marks, and Tracey Betsinger (anthropology); Charles Gross (neuroscience); Sylvana Tomaselli (history); Lilla Maria Crisafulli (gender studies) and Holly Goodson (molecular and cell biology).
    Conference activities will also include a new feminist film adaptation of Frankenstein.
    The University of Notre Dame conference organizational team represents the interdisciplinary dynamic of this event:  Eileen Hunt Botting (Political Science); Agustin Fuentes (Anthropology); Anton Juan (Film, Television, and Theater); Greg Kucich (English), and Devi Snively (Independent Filmmaker/Anthropology).

    CFP The Fates of Frankenstein Conference (4/30/2018; Edinburgh 11/23-24/2018)

    Travel grant, please: 

    The Fates of Frankenstein

    deadline for submissions: 
    April 30, 2018
    full name / name of organization: 
    Edinburgh Napier University
    contact email: 
    Call for papers
    Conference: The Fates of Frankenstein
    23-24 November 2018, Edinburgh Napier University, Edinburgh

    2018 sees a flourishing crop of events commemorating, one way or another, the bicentenary of Frankenstein’s publication. The Fates of Frankenstein is a two-day conference about adaptations and appropriations of Shelley’s novel.

    The fate of Frankenstein and his monstrous creation has been to outlive their original context. Indeed, Frankenstein almost immediately escaped its book covers into Richard Brinsley Peake’s 1823 stage adaptation, Presumption; or, the Fate of Frankenstein. Two hundred years later, Shelley’s compelling tale has given rise to what Audrey Fisch describes as a ‘panoply of manifestations and permutations’ in popular culture.

    This conference explores Frankenstein’s myriad cultural fates, in which it not only inspires new narratives and creative works but is also widely invoked by the media and in a range of social and scientific contexts. Over two anything-but-dreary days in November, the conference will take stock of the ways in which Frankenstein remains very much alive in 2018, and of trends and innovations in its adaptations, retellings, and reuses in the last two centuries.

    Confirmed speakers: Nick Dear, playwright; Professor Catherine Spooner, Lancaster University; Dr Daniel Cook, University of Dundee.

    Potential topics include, but are not limited to:
    • Frankenstein on television, in films, on stage
    • Frankenstein for young readers and viewers, in children’s literature, in YA
    • Frankenstein art, craft, fashion
    • Fandom, fan studies, fan fiction
    • Genre treatments: Gothic, horror, weird, SF, comedy, romance
    • Interdisciplinary Frankensteins: medical humanities, environmental humanities, digital humanities
    • Frankenstein and the social sciences
    • Frankenstein and the life sciences
    • Frankenstein in technology, robotics, AI
    • Frankenstein metaphors
    • Frankenstein in the news, in politics, in social media
    • Frankenstein in science communication
    • Graphic novels
    • Cartoons, animations
    • Creative writing
    • Music, soundtracks, performance
    We welcome proposals for traditional 20-minute papers, and also encourage pre-formed panels, round tables, performances, workshops (or other appropriate format).

    Please send proposals of around 250 words plus a short biography to the conference organisers Sarah Artt and Emily Alder at frankensteinat200@gmail.com by 30 April 2018.

    Last updated January 30, 2018
    This CFP has been viewed 127 times. 

    CFP Dangerous Knowledge: 2018 PEAKS Interdisciplinary Conference (expired; Arizona 2/9/2018)

    Sorry to have missed posting this:


    Dangerous Knowledge: 2018 PEAKS Interdisciplinary Conference at Northern Arizona University
    https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2018/01/15/deadline-extended-dangerous-knowledge

    deadline for submissions: 
    January 22, 2018
     
    full name / name of organization: 
    Northern Arizona University's Graduate English Organization
     
    contact email: 
    Keynote Speaker: Salvador Plascencia, author of The People of Paper

    Conference Date: Friday, February 9, 2018

    Contact Email: peaksconference@gmail.com

    As an interdisciplinary conference, PEAKS encourages and accepts research from a wide range of scholarly and creative disciplines such as literature, linguistics, rhetoric, education, creative writing, history, art history, musicology, women and gender studies, film studies, science, philosophy, psychology, communications, and much more!  


    Dangerous Knowledge: 2018 PEAKS Interdisciplinary Conference at Northern Arizona University 
    EXTENDED Deadline for Submissions: January 22, 2018
    Full Name/ Name of Organization: NAU's Graduate English Organization
    Contact Email: peaksconference@gmail.com
    Keynote Speaker: Salvador Plascencia, Harvey Mudd College, author of The People of Paper
    Conference Date and Time
    • Friday, February 9, 2018
    • Panels and Presentations: 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
    • Keynote Address: 6:30 p.m.
    Is knowledge dangerous? Under what circumstances does knowledge aid or hinder the individual? The community? What is the relationship between knowledge and progress; stagnation; desire? What does knowledge perpetuate? To honor the elements of language, communication, “otherness,” science and science-fiction, nature, psychology, history, and much more, and to discuss the implications of knowledge, the 2018 PEAKS Interdisciplinary Conference would like to celebrate the bicentennial anniversary of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. In that spirit, PEAKS encourages submissions on the novel, the novel’s histories and themes, adaptations (film, print, other media), and Frankenstein and his creature as cultural icons. Topics not related to this year’s theme are also welcome!

    As an interdisciplinary conference, PEAKS encourages 15-20 minute papers from a wide range of scholarly and creative disciplines such as literature, linguistics, rhetoric, education, creative writing, history, art history, musicology, women and gender studies, film studies, psychology, and communications. Topics may include, but are not limited to:
    • Postcoloniality and “Otherness”
    • Science, Pseudoscience, and Science Fiction
    • Nature and Natural Sciences
    • Feminist Theory, Queer Theory, and Gender Studies
    • Quest for Knowledge; or, Dangerous Knowledge
    • Existence and Consciousness
    • Revenge and Revenge Narratives
    • “Birth” Myths and Family Studies
    • Construction and Creation Studies 
    • History and Historical Narratives
    • Philosophy, Morality, and Ethics
    • Image, Ego, and Formation of Identity
    • Language and Communication
    • Imaginary Geographics
    Types of Presentations: 
    • Individual Paper (8-10 pages, 15-20 minutes with Q & A) 
    • Research Project (15-20 minutes with Q & A) 
    • Creative Writing (15-20 minutes with Q & A) 
    • Panels (3-4 Presenters) (60-90 minutes)  
    Please submit proposals of no more than 250 words along with a brief, 50 words or less, description of the paper to be used on the conference website. Use the “Submit” link on peaksconference.weebly.com by the extended deadline: January 22, 2018.

    Direct Link for Submissionhttps://peaksconference.weebly.com/submit.html
    Contact Email: peaksconference@gmail.com
    Facebook: www.facebook.com/GraduateEnglishOrganization

    Creature Re-feature: Frankenstein at 200 at NeMLA (4/14/2018)

    49th Annual Convention of the Northeast Modern Language Association, April 12 to 15, 2018
    Omni William Penn 
    (full conference details at https://www.buffalo.edu/nemla/convention.html)

    16.4 Creature Re-feature: Frankenstein at 200
    Saturday, Apr 14; Track 16 (01:30-03:00)

    Chair: Rikk Mulligan, Carnegie Mellon University
    Location: Carnegie III (Media Equipped)

    Cultural Studies and Media Studies & Anglophone

    "Fresh Horrors of Frankenstein: Representations in Recent Comics"
    Michael Torregrossa, Unaffiliated

    "Liberal Secret Agent Frankenstein"
    Avery Wiscomb, Carnegie Mellon University

    "Dreadful Doctor: Tempering Genius with Empathy to End the Curse of Frankenstein"
    Rikk Mulligan, Carnegie Mellon University

    "Mary Shelley among the Daleks: Reconfigurations of Frankenstein in the New Doctor Who"
    Timothy Ruppert, Slippery Rock University