01/16/14

Extended Deadline!

EXTENDED: Deadline for submission February 1st, 2014

“I Will Be Myself”: Identity in Children’s and Young Adult Literature, Media and Culture is a one-day conference showcasing graduate student research that explores, questions, and analyzes the issues surrounding identity in various elements of children’s and young adult literature. You are invited to submit an academic paper proposal or a creative writing submission that contributes to the existing body of literature and research in the area of children’s and young adult literature studies, which includes novels, films, apps, and picturebooks, as well as other culturally produced modes of children’s literature. We are particularly interested in research and creative pieces that draw upon broadly interpreted themes of identity, which can include liminality, hybridity, Otherness or Othering, gender, and transformation.

Topics may include, but are not limited to:

  • Identity as a critical lens for reading children’s and young adult literature
  • The child or young adult choosing or combining identities
  • Issues of hybridity: hybridity of genre, multimodality, cultural identity, racial identity, sexual identity
  • How ‘otherness’ shapes identity in materials for children and youth
  • Negotiation of self and Other as represented in cultural texts
  • Liminality and other states of ‘being in between’
  • Indigenous identities
  • National identities
  • Boundaries, their creation and transgression
  • Multiple, cross-cultural, and/or transnational identities
  • The role of identity in constructing literature and literacies
  • Reconstructive identity and multiple selves
  • Imagined identities: dreams, fantasy and desire
  • The cultural markers of childhood and adolescence
  • Identity and performativity: a gendered discourse
  • Fluid subjectivities; multiplicity of selves
  • The pedagogical implications of identity in various stages of literacy
  • Virtual selves in virtual worlds
  • The ‘coming of age’ trope in 21st century literature
  • Neoliberal capitalism and the individualistic ‘I’
  • Identity embodied: mixed abilities represented in YA and children’s literature
  • Marginalised identities represented in works of fiction for youth
  • Eco-critical understandings of subjectivity
  • Interwoven subjectivities and the individualistic ‘I’

Academic papers on any children’s or young adult genres are welcome, as are papers that discuss other children’s texts such as film, virtual texts, or graphic novels.  The topics above are a guideline for the proposals we would like to see, but we are eager to receive and review paper proposals on any topic related to children’s and young adult texts.

Please send a 250 word abstract that includes the title of your paper. A list of works cited and references in MLA format is optional. In a separate document please include a 50-word biography, your name, your university affiliation, email address, and phone number. Please send both documents to the review committee at submit.ubc.gradcon@gmail.com. Please include “Conference Proposal” in the subject line of your email.

Creative writing for children and young adults in any genre is welcome, including prose, poetry, picture books and graphic novels. The topics above are a guideline for the proposals we would like to see, but we are eager to receive and review submissions on any topic.

Please send a piece of work no longer than 12 pages double spaced, anything shorter is welcome (poetry, for example, might only be a page). A chapter, a short story, a poem (a set of poems), a picturebook manuscript, a play script, anything is welcome! The submission should include the title of your piece, a list of references in MLA format (if you have any), a 50-word biography, your name, your university affiliation, email address, and phone number to the review committee at submit.ubc.gradcon@gmail.com. Please put “Creative Conference Proposal” in the subject line of your email.