Member News

PAMLA members are invited to submit academic announcements and CFPs to Craig Svonkin, PAMLA's Executive Director: svonkin@netzero.com. Please send potential academic announcements to Craig Svonkin as word document attachments. Announcements will be posted at the discretion of the Executive Director, and may only be proposed by current PAMLA members.

American Literature Assistant Professor Position

The Department of English and Foreign Languages at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, invites applications and nominations for the position of Assistant Professor of 20th/21st-Century American Literature (background in African American or Chicano Literature preferred).

Visiting Assistant Professor in French Position

SCRIPPS COLLEGE, CLAREMONT, CALIFORNIA 

VISITING ASSISTANT PROFESSOR IN FRENCH

Congratulations to Heather Wozniak, PAMLA's Webmaster

Congratulations to Heather Wozniak, PAMLA's wonderful webmaster.  Heather has moved up to Washington to work in the College of Arts & Sciences at the University of Washington.  There, she'll use her technical knowledge and Ph.D.

2012 MLA Convention: “Why Comics Are and Are Not Picture Books” CFP

Call for Proposals: “Why Comics Are and Are Not Picture Books”

Modern Language Association (MLA) Annual Convention, 5-8 Jan. 2012, Seattle, Washington

Theodore Koulouris's New Book on Virginia Woolf and the Greeks

PAMLA Member Theodore Koulouris has published Hellenism and Loss in the Work of Virginia Woolf (Ashgate, January 2011).

Oceanic Popular Culture Association Conference: May 27-28, 2011, Chaminade University of Honolulu

Longtime PAMLA member Cheryl Edelson is proud to announce the Oceanic Popular Culture Association Conference

May 27-28, 2011, Chaminade University of Honolulu, Honolulu, HI

Check out the new OPCA blog at: http://oceanicpopularcultureassociation.blogspot.com/

"Inscriptions: The Material Contours of Knowledge" Conference, March 10-11, 2011, UC Riverside

PAMLA member Adriana Craciun is the Faculty Organizer for the "Inscriptions: The Material Contours of Knowledge" Conference, March 10-11, 2011, at UC Riverside.   Jerome McGann and Adrian Johns are the keynote speakers for the conference, which is free and open to the public.  For more information, see:

Longtime PAMLA member Héctor Mario Cavallari's New Essay on Michelangelo Antonioni

Longtime PAMLA member and Mills College faculty, Héctor Mario Cavallari, has co-written with his Film Studies colleague, Dr. Ken Burke. “Julio Cortázar and Michelangelo Antonioni: Words, Images, and the Limits of Verbal and Visual Representation,” Dissidences: Hispanic Journal of Theory and Criticism 6/7 (May 2010): n. pag. Web.

National Sporting Library & Museum Seeks Applicants for 2011-2012 John H. Daniels Fellowships

The National Sporting Library & Museum seeks applications for the John H. Daniels Fellowship, which supports scholars doing research in the area of horse and field sports. Applications must be postmarked no later than February 1, 2011. The John H. Daniels Fellowship supports scholars at the NSL&M for periods of two weeks to one year. Applicants must submit a formal application demonstrating how they will utilize the NSL&M’s collections of books, periodicals, manuscripts, archival materials, and fine art. A special fellowship will be offered this year for topics relating to field sports and conservation.
 
Selected fellows receive complimentary housing in Middleburg and a stipend to cover living and travel costs. University faculty and graduate students; museum curators and librarians; and writers and journalists are encouraged to apply. Past fellows from the disciplines of history, literature, equine studies, journalism, art history, anthropology, area studies, and sport and environmental history have received fellowships.
 
The program began in 2007 in honor of sportsman and book collector, John H. Daniels (1921-2006), a longtime supporter of the NSL&M. Past topics have included a biography of champion show jumper, Snowman; American stable design; the history of riding dress; conservation and ethics in American fly fishing; and Early Modern horsemanship manuals. Since 2007, the NSL&M has hosted 23 fellows from throughout the United States and from five countries. A complete list of past projects is available on the fellowship webpage.
 
The NSL&M has 17,000 volumes on horse and field sports dating from 1523 to the present. Its collections comprise many areas of equestrian sports, including works on Thoroughbred racing, foxhunting, steeplechasing, dressage, and general horsemanship. Works also include treatises on veterinary medicine, animal husbandry, farriery, cavalry, and training of horses and sporting dogs. Also represented are the non-equestrian, traditionally-British sports of fly fishing, shooting, and fowling. The National Sporting Art Museum will open in 2011 on the Library campus, with 11 galleries featuring exhibits of American and European fine sporting art.
 
Further information, application criteria, and a brochure may be found at www.nsl.org/fellowship.html or by contacting fellowship@nsl.org or 540-687-6542 x 11.
 

Important New Translation by PAMLA Members Nathalie Kasselis-Smith and Stella Moreno Monroy

In 2006, the University of Arizona Press published Because I Don’t Have Wings: Stories of Mexican Immigrant Life, a collection of essays in which Philip Garrison discusses the problematic issue of the Mexican immigrant life in the United States, and more particularly in the Pacific Northwest.