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[Commlist] CfP: GIFCon 2024 Conjuring Creatures and Worlds
Wed Nov 15 19:44:24 GMT 2023
Please find below the Call for Papers for the seventh *Glasgow
International Fantasy Conversations* (GIFCon), taking place**online from
*15-17 May 2024 *through the University of Glasgow. Submission and
registration for the event is *free* and the theme of this year’s
conference is ‘_Conjuring Creatures and Worlds_.' Please feel free to
share this email or details of our event (found here
<https://fantasy.glasgow.ac.uk/index.php/2023/11/02/gifcon-2024-conjuring-creatures-and-worlds-call-for-papers/>)
with any colleagues or students within the areas of literature, creative
writing, film, television, theatre, comics, and games who you think may
be interested.
We have also included Advice for First Time Submissions
<https://www.gla.ac.uk/schools/critical/research/researchcentresandnetworks/fantasyatglasgow/gifcon/#submissionguidelines> in
our Submission Guidelines that may be particularly useful for first-time
conference applicants.
++++
*GIFCon - Glasgow International Fantasy Conversations*
*The **Centre for Fantasy and the Fantastic
<https://www.gla.ac.uk/schools/critical/research/researchcentresandnetworks/fantasyatglasgow/>** is
pleased to announce a call for papers for Glasgow International Fantasy
Conversations (GIFCon) 2024, to be held online on 15-17 May, with the
theme of ‘Conjuring Creatures and Worlds’. *
Fantasy is inherently an act of conjuration. When we create, dismantle,
or engage with fantasy, we are conjuring magic: the impossible, the
mysterious, the unknown, and the indefinable. Conjuring fantasy is an
act of creation not necessarily defined by our existing modes of being
or reality, yet it is always in conversation with our own world. Thus,
when we enter fantastika, we necessarily enter a conjured world that
invites us to reimagine fundamental aspects of our existence. One way it
effects this is by encountering seemingly nonhuman creatures, through
which we meet the magical, the uncanny, the monstrous, the Other, and
perhaps most uncomfortably, ourselves. Brian Froud writes in /Good
Fairies/ /Bad Faeries/ (1998) that “like any supernatural encounter,
meeting a fairy—even one who is gentle and benign—is never a comfortable
experience”. Samantha Langsdale and Elizabeth Coody argue in /Monstrous
Women in Comics /that “the monster is difference made flesh”. The same
is often true of the worlds these creatures exist in. Conjurations,
then, are not wholly foreign; their components are knowable. Through
fantasy we can conjure, and therefore communicate, with the necessarily
mysterious, the otherwise ineffable.
The act of conjuration is an ambivalent one, being both beyond and
outside our own world yet inherently connected to it and therefore
susceptible to the same limitations and preconceptions. In /Race and
Popular Fantasy Literature/, Helen Young argues that “the logics of race
and racial difference are so deeply ingrained in Western society that it
is extremely difficult, often even for members of marginalised racial
groups, to imagine worlds that do not have those structures.” Indeed,
Fantastika has often been concerned with narratives where creatures
“function as recognizable stand-ins for majorities and minorities and
the inevitable conflicts that emerge between identity groups”. We are
interested in explorations of marginalised identities, including
creatures, systems of magic, and worlds concerned with (but not limited
to) race, ethnicity, gender, queerness, class, and (dis)abilities. These
conjured creatures and worlds offer an alternative viewpoint into other
modes of identity and being. Additionally, the /ways/ in which these
fantasies are conjured is important. The medium through which the reader
(in the broadest sense of the word) encounters and interacts with the
fantasy affects its meaning.
How do academics, creative practitioners, and fans conjure (and
understand the conjuration of) fantasy, creatures and worlds? Fantasy
and the fantastic have the capability to conjure the ephemeral and the
horrific, the indefinable and the real, the Other and ourselves, but how
do we understand these creations? And how do these encounters with
creatures, magic, and worlds conform or challenge our understanding of
the fantastic?
Suggested Topics include, but are not limited to, the following:
* Fantasy texts and media by creative practitioners from marginalised
backgrounds, and from beyond the anglophone and Anglocentric fantastic
* Creatures as corporeal and/or spiritual beings
* Worlds and magic as material or conceptual spaces, realms, or
structures
* Multi-media representations of creatures, worlds, and creators
* Creating and recreating race, class, queerness, (dis)ability and
other marginalised identities in fantasy
* Explorations and representations of the Other in fantastika
* Attraction to, repulsion or rejection of creatures and the nonhuman
* Depicting alienation, body dysphoria, body swapping and
transformation in fantasy
* The anthropomorphising of objects and creatures
* Human and nonhuman binaries, hierarchies, and dynamics
* Conforming to and challenging conventional depictions of creatures
e.g., mythic and supernatural traditions, folklore, fantastic tropes
and iconic and archetypal characters
* Representations of fantastical creatures for example cryptids, fae,
magical creatures, supernatural beings, the undead, humanoids,
animals, hybrids, AI, extraterrestrials, demons, monsters, horrors,
boogeymen
* Environments, alternate worlds, ecocriticism, posthumanism, the
Anthropocene
* Conjuring futures and pasts
* Organic vs. artificial worlds, spaces and creatures
* Conjuring as a destructive or creative act
* Conjuring magic and magic systems
* How fandoms and scholars recreate, reinterpret, or conjure
creatures, worlds and magic systems
GIFCon 2024 is a three-day virtual conference welcoming proposals for
papers relating to this theme from researchers and practitioners working
in the field of fantasy and the fantastic across all media, whether from
within the academy or beyond it. We are particularly interested in
submissions from postgraduate and early career researchers, and
researchers whose work focuses on fantasy from the margins.
We ask for abstracts for 20-minute *papers*. See our Suggested Topics
list above for further inspiration. Please submit a *300-word
abstract* and a *100-word bionote* via this form
<https://forms.office.com/pages/responsepage.aspx?id=KVxybjp2UE-B8i4lTwEzyPiplqGoEQ1JirqHAG6lJGlUQk8yTjMyU1pDVTM4RENGODE5MkU0TlFRUi4u> by
*January 5th, 2024*, at *midnight GMT.*
We also ask for *workshop* descriptions for 75-minute creative
workshops, for those interested in exploring the creative processes of
conjuring these creatures and worlds into being from a practice-based
perspective. Please submit a *100-word description* and a *100-word
bionote* via this form <https://forms.office.com/e/5MzfLeX5Wn> by
*January 5**^th **, 2024 at midnight GMT*.
If you have any questions regarding our event or our CfP, please contact
us at (GIFCon /at/ glasgow.ac.uk) <mailto:(GIFCon /at/ glasgow.ac.uk)>. Please also
read through our Code of Conduct
<https://www.gla.ac.uk/schools/critical/research/researchcentresandnetworks/fantasyatglasgow/gifcon/>.
We look forward to your submissions!
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