CfP/CfA event (On site)
Regeneration through return: Folklore and Ecocritical Futures (NeMLA Annual Conference)
Event date:
05.03.3036
Abstract submission deadline:
30.09.2025
The recent, urgent focus on ecocriticism in the humanities has developed in parallel to increased cultural engagement with folklore studies, particularly as such areas relate to the relationship between human communities and ecosystems. The application of folklore studies in ecocriticism facilitates the incorporation of previously marginalized perspectives and identities in order to speak to a global reality, building on the 'past' while responding to potential, and potentially unstable, 'futures'. This roundtable discussion (modality: hybrid/in-person but accepting remote presentations) will discuss how creative responses to and 'regenerations' of the 'folk', folklore, and folk traditions in contemporary literature and media interrogate relationships with the land, encourage ecocritical engagement, and potentially lead to a more restorative, equitable, and empowering understanding of the environment in the age of climate change and migration. It will query how we might, as students of the humanities and as humans, work to further explore this complex intersection, deepening our understanding of folklore traditions, ecocritical theory, and the role both of these play in constructing culturally- and ecologically-responsive identities.
Kathleen Hudson
Fields of research
Venue
Pittsburg, United States of AmericaContact
Kathleen HudsonLicense:
Diese Anzeige wird unter den Bedingungen von Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universell bereitgestellt.
Proposed citation:
"Regeneration through return: Folklore and Ecocritical Futures (NeMLA Annual Conference)" (CfP/CfA event), avldigital.de, veröffentlicht am: 04.07.2025. https://avldigital.de/en/networking/information/call-for-papers/regeneration-through-return-folklore-and-ecocritical-futures-nemla-annual-conference