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    MLA 2026 CFP

    MLA 2026: Toronto, 8–11 January 2026, CFP:

    The circle game

    We invite proposals on Atwood’s work and impact engaging with the theme of Families—broadly defined, including lineage, kinship, inheritance, found families, cross-species bonds, intertextuality and literary genealogies. 250-word abstract and CV due 3/23.

    Deadline for submissions: Sunday, 23 March 2025

    Lee Frew, York U (leefrew@yorku.ca)

    MLA Panel 2025

    The Atwood Session at this year’s MLA is on Saturday, Jan. 11th, at 8:30 AM Central Time. It’s virtual, so any registered member can join!

    https://mla.confex.com/mla/2025/meetingapp.cgi/Session/20698

    Atwood Symposium: This Friday, September 13th!

    ‘A word after a word after a word is power’: The Hulu Adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale (2017-2025): A one-day multidisciplinary symposium.
    University of Northumbria at Newcastle upon Tyne / UK
    Friday 13 September 2024
    From the organizers:

    This is a one-day Symposium on the Hulu Adaptation of The Handmaid’s Tale, Margaret Atwood’s famous 1985 dystopia. The novel was published during the challenging period of Ronald Reagan’s America, which witnessed second-wave feminism, anti-pornography, pro-life and pro-legal abortion campaigns, and the first season of the adaptation also came out during troubled times, a few months after the controversial election of Donald Trump as the 45th President of the USA, which created an equally tense political scene. Women across the world were protesting for female and human rights, often dressed in the now iconic Handmaid’s costume. The eerie resemblance between facts and fiction is the main reason behind the critical and popular success of both the novel and its 2017-2025 TV Adaptation.

    The Hulu adaptation of The Handmaid’s Tale has enjoyed unprecedented academic and popular international success, with the first season winning eight out of thirteen Primetime Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Drama Series and Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series for Elizabeth Moss. Therefore, there will be a variety of papers presented, from the fields of literature, language, film studies, and fashion, by postgraduate students and academics at various stages in their career. The Symposium is supported by research funding by Northumbria University and represents two research groups, ‘Gendered Subjects’ and ‘Modern and Contemporary Writings’. It is also endorsed by The Margaret Atwood Society.

    https://www.northumbria.ac.uk/about-us/news-events/events/2024/09/atwood-symposium/

    All the papers will be delivered onsite, and we would be delighted if you could join us. There will be a small conference fee (£15 for unwaged, £25 for waged delegates) that will cover light refreshments and lunch. Please inform the conference organiser, Dr Kiriaki (Korina) Massoura of any allergies or dietary requests (vegan, or gluten-free) or of any access assistance that you may need: kiriaki.massoura@northumbria.ac.uk

    The registration page has an online option, so please register and the organiser will send you the link so that you can participate online. Alternatively, you can e-mail the organiser and ask for the link. We are looking forward to seeing you on Friday 13 September 2024.

    NeMLA CFP

    NeMLA 2025 (Philadelphia, March 6-9)

    Deadline for submissions: September 30, 2024

    Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA) Conference – Philadelphia, March 6-9, 2025

    Contact email: riley.thomas@temple.edu

    Title: Themes of (R)evolution in Atwood’s Works and Adaptations

    The “Themes of (R)evolution in Atwood’s Works and Adaptations” panel at NeMLA 2025 (March 6-9, Philadelphia) invites proposals for 20-minute papers exploring themes of revolution and evolution in Margaret Atwood’s texts, adaptations, and real-life crossovers. In what ways has Atwood’s works sparked revolutionary change—or not? What role does evolution play in her texts?

    Please submit an abstract (250-300 words) and a brief bio (<100 words) by September 30th through the NeMLA portal for consideration: https://www.cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/21213. Please reach out to Riley Thomas at riley.thomas@temple.edu with any questions.

    Congratulations to the winners of the Margaret Atwood Society Poster Prize!

    The University of Innsbruck, Austria, had a one-day workshop, “The Handmaid’s Tale Revisited – An Intermedia Workshop,” June 2nd, 2023, organized by Prof. Dorothee Birke, Dept. of English, and Dr. Doris Eibl, Canadian Studies Centre, in collaboration with Dr. Dunja Mohr, University of Erfurt, European Representative Margaret Atwood Society and Head of the Women, Gender, and Diversity Studies Section, Association of Canadian Studies in German-speaking countries. About 40 students participated, who were either in a class on utopia/dystopia or in a class on gender theory in that summer term 2023.

    1st Prize: The Significance of Family in Dystopian Settings: Offred’s Experience of Family in The Handmaid’s Tale
    Monja Bauer
    Tanja Niederkofler
    Jonas Oberparleiter

     

    2nd Prize: Space in The Handmaid’s Tale
    Aiofa Hagen
    Silvana Rauch
    Reka Pihes

     

     

    3rd Prize: The Handmaid’s Tale – Space II
    Christoph Amann
    Larissa Huber
    Linda Haßlwanter

    CFP for MLA 25, due 3/31/24

    CFP: MLA 2025

    9-12 January 2025, New Orleans

    “A word after a word after a word is power”

    We invite proposals on any topic concerning the works, adaptations, and/or career of Margaret Atwood that address the MLA presidential theme of Visibility. What are the purposes and perils of art in unstable times? 250-word abstract and cv are due 3/31 to Lee Frew, York University (lee.frew@gmail.com).

    Winners of the 2023 Margaret Atwood Society Awards

    Congratulations to the 2023 winners of the
    Margaret Atwood Society Awards!

    Best Book on Atwood and Her Work:The Fiction of Margaret Atwood, by Fiona Tolan, Bloomsbury 2023.

    Best Article: “The Shape of Your Absence”: Coming to Terms with Loss and Grief in Margaret Atwood’s Dearly” in Canadian Studies June 2023), by Pauline Montassine, Université de Reims

    Best Graduate Essay or MA Thesis: “Prelapsarian Ustopias: Reversing the Genetic Fall in Octavia E. Butler’s Lilith’s Brood Trilogy and Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam Trilogy,” by Maya Hollander, MPhil thesis, Cambridge

    Best Undergraduate Essay (tie): “Through Double Doors,” by Maria Dunlap, California State University, Northridge, and “The Art of the Fragmented Narrative in Margaret Atwood’s The Blind Assassin,” by Mina Baniewicz, Saint Xavier University (Chicago)

    MLA 2024 CFP

    Dressing the Part: Fashion in Atwood’s Works and Adaptations
    The Margaret Atwood Society invites papers on depictions of fashion in Atwood’s works and adaptations, understood broadly as relating to clothing, style, or expressions of socio-political or technical change. 250-word abstract and bio due 3/15.
    Deadline for submissions: Wednesday, 15 March 2023
    Lauren Rule Maxwell, The Citadel (lauren.maxwell@citadel.edu ) Lee Frew, York U (leefrew@yorku.ca )