Message sent in behalf of Prof. Fred Botting 
(please reply at (monstrousmedia /at/ lancaster.ac.uk))
Ninth Biennial Conference of the International Gothic Association:
monstrous media/spectral subjects
21-24 July 2009, Lancaster University, UK
Confirmed plenary speakers:
Elisabeth Bronfen, Tanya Krzywinska, Marina Warner
(Further plenary events to be confirmed.)
CALL FOR PAPERS
Gothic forms and figures have long been bound up 
with different media, from the machinery of 
Walpole?s modern romance to Robertson?s 
phantasmagorical shows in the eighteenth 
century; from uncanny automata to ghostly 
photographs and monstrous kinetograms in the 
nineteenth; from cinematic shocks to digital 
disembodiments in the twentieth. More than 
merely exploiting new technical developments in 
cultural production and consumption, gothic 
modes, in adopting and adapting new media, 
engage with excitements and anxieties attendant 
on cultural and technological change.
Examining conjunctions of literary, visual, 
spatial and digital texts in relation to 
spectral and visceral effects and affects, the 
conference aims to stimulate discussions of the 
relationship between gothic fictions and other 
cultural forms, media and technologies. Doubling 
monstrosity and spectrality, it sets out to 
explore the cultural production and consumption 
of monsters and ghosts from the eighteenth century to the present.
This interdisciplinary, international conference 
will be hosted by the Department of English and 
Creative Writing and supported across the 
University by colleagues in English, Film, Media 
and Cultural Studies, Gender Studies and the 
Contemporary Arts. It is hoped that 
international scholars from diverse fields will participate.
Topics which may be covered include, but are not limited to:
· Early visual technologies (phantasmagoria/ 
magic lantern shows/spirit photography)
· Gothic embodiments (staging, smoke and 
mirrors, automata and mechanical curiosities)
· Gothic on screen
· Digital Gothic (web, video games, hypertext)
· Visualising Gothic narrative (graphic novels, comics and illustration)
· Monstrosities (subjects, texts, bodies, forms)
· Media monsters
· Spectralities (subjects, spaces, environments, images)
· Transgeneric crossings (cyborgs, science, fictions)
Send queries and 250-word abstracts to Dr 
Catherine Spooner and Prof. Fred Botting at 
(monstrousmedia /at/ lancaster.ac.uk) by 5 January 2009.
Suggestions for panels and for sessions which 
break the traditional academic mould are warmly welcomed.
Further information to follow shortly at www.monstrous-media.com.