Gothic Literature: Creative Activity, Research, and Pedagogy

Call for Papers
Interdisciplinary Humanities
Special Double Issue
Gothic Literature: Creative Activity, Research, and Pedagogy

Interdisciplinary Humanities announces a special double issue dedicated to exploring Gothic literature’s rich and diverse world. This special issue will feature creative works, scholarly research, and pedagogy with a particular focus on the New England Gothic context, although submissions on alternate Gothic traditions are encouraged for specific areas of focus outlined below. We invite papers that investigate the New England Gothic genre’s literary, cultural, and historical dimensions as well as creative works that engage with, draw inspiration from, and/or reinterpret Gothic traditions for contemporary audiences.

Research Topics

We welcome submissions that engage with topics such as the following:

  • Critical analysis of Gothic texts, particularly focused on those rooted in the New England Gothic tradition.
  • The evolution of New England Gothic literature’s themes and motifs, including the supernatural, horror, isolation, and decay. Of particular interest are the ways in which these phenomena integrate with conversations about Indigenous peoples, the Puritans, religious and cultural superstitions and stereotypes, clashes of diverse cultures in these contexts, etc.
  • The intersection of Gothic literature with other literary genres such as horror, fantasy, science fiction, and media such as film, video games, and digital texts. This topic is open to submissions rooted across a more holistic Gothic literature and art field.
  • Comparative studies of New England Gothic with other regional Gothic traditions, such as Southern Gothic or Transatlantic Gothic.
  • Exploration of how New England Gothic literature reflects and shapes cultural anxieties related to gender, race, class, or historical trauma.
  • Environmental and eco-Gothic themes, particularly in relation to the landscapes of New England.
  • The role of art, architecture, geography, and space in Gothic narratives. This topic is open to submissions investigating a broad field of Gothic traditions.
  • The relationship between Gothic literature and cultural theory and analysis, including religious or philosophical traditions.

Creative Works

We also invite creative submissions inspired by Gothic traditions. These may include but are not limited to:

  • Short stories, flash fiction, or novel excerpts that are drawn specifically from New England Gothic themes and/or contexts.
  • Poetry that evokes the New England Gothic tradition’s atmosphere, tone, or imagery.
  • Experimental or hybrid forms that push the boundaries of New England Gothic literature.
  • Creative non-fiction or memoirs that reflect on personal encounters with New England Gothic themes, narratives, or landscapes.

Pedagogy

  • Innovative teaching methods for the Gothic.
  • Curriculum design and assessment strategies.
  • Interdisciplinary approaches to teaching Gothic texts.
  • Digital humanities and Gothic literature /culture education.

Editors

Volume 1: Gothic Literature: Creative Activity and Research

  • Jay Burkette (Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University)
  • Wendy Galgan (Saint Joseph’s College of Maine)
  • Megan Gannon (Ripon College)
  • Darian Wharton (University of New Mexico)

Volume 2: Gothic Literature / Culture and Pedagogy

  • Debra Bourdeau (Missouri University of Science and Technology)
  • Clint Jones (Capital University)
  • Mary Powell (Desert Vista High School and Grand Canyon University)
  • Elissa Pugh (Concord University)

Important Dates

  • Submission Deadline: September 1, 2025
  • Notification of Acceptance: November 1, 2025

Review Process

  • All submissions will undergo a double-blind peer review process. Manuscripts will be evaluated
    based on originality, relevance, methodological rigor, and contribution to the field.

Contact Information

  • Ed Cueva, Interdisciplinary Humanities Lead Editor: cuevae@uhd.edu

PBIC Thai Studies

We are happy to announce that the 3rd PBIC Thai Studies conference shall be on “Ghosts”. The conference shall take place on June 15th 2025 at PBIC Thammasat, Tha Prachan campus. We accept abstracts until May 1st 2025 sent to thstudies@pbic.tu.ac.th. Please see the poster for more information.

Monster Talk

MonsterTalk has been promoting science and critical thinking since 2009. We use monsters as a springboard to talk about a variety of monster topics. We’re skeptical of the existence of monsters, but we want to understand the mysterious experiences people report.

Blake Smith is the host & producer of MonsterTalk.

Karen Stollznow is an author, researcher and the co-host of the show.

The hosts of MonsterTalk are pretty easy to find but here’s some pointers if you need to get in touch with them.

Blake – Blake@monstertalk.org
Karen – Karen@monstertalk.org

Underground Creatures

\"\"As part of an edited collection, we are seeking proposals for a volume on Underground Creatures, which will form part of the Transmedia Monsters and Villains series with Lexington Press. This new series aims to cover the fascinating subject of monsters and villains through an interdisciplinary perspective represented by fields as different as literary, film, religious, gender and art studies as much as philosophy and sociological and ecocritical approaches. Each volume will focus on a single figure (or group of figures) and examine it in its multiple incarnations, from their origins in myth, folklore and history as well as in a literary text, to their various adaptations in different media, including comics, graphic novels, cinema, TV, exhibitions, the visual arts, merchandise and tourist attractions. Most welcome will also be an approach to the subject that transcends genres and thus examine the single monsters and villains as they are presented in horror fiction, thriller, science fiction, etc.

It is essential that contributions to the volume on Underground Creatures exhibit interdisciplinarity and focus on the issues of adaptation and transmediality. Proposals may include (but are certainly not limited to) the following figures:

  • Gnomes
  • Trolls
  • Goblins
  • Dragons
  • Troglodytes
  • Morlocks
  • Undead/Zombies/Mummy
  • Penguin/Batman
  • Demons/Devil
  • Sewer Monsters
  • Pennywise/Stephen King’s It
  • Mole Man/Marvel comics
  • Lava Men/Marvel comics
  • Miscellany creatures from Marvel’s Subtarannea world
  • Worms/Tremors
  • Aliens/Quatermass and the Pit
  • Irradiated ants/Them!
  • Umber Hulk/Dungeons & Dragons

 Proposals should be around 300-400 words. Please submit to Sarah A. Joshi at sjoshi@pitt.edu by June 30th, 2024.

Poetry and the Gothic

Poetry and the Gothic

Poetry has been an integral part of the Gothic mode since its inception. However, the connection between poetry and the Gothic seems a less explored area of critical inquiry, in comparison to fiction. While the Graveyard Poets and other Anglophone poetry movements are already considered foundational to the Gothic mode, our edited collection seeks to broaden the scope of what can be conceived of as “Gothic poetry” or poetry inspired by the Gothic.

Despite geographic differences and historical contexts, the reflexive and productive capacities of  the Gothic in poetry, and of poetry itself, bring poetic works in affinity. Tragic histories are simultaneously past and present: past in the sense that events haunt us and remind us of our violent encounters but also present in the haunting as a continuation of these disaster consequences into the present. Expressing this Gothic sensibility, the poet speaks from a liminal stance. Thus poetry, perhaps, fits perfectly into the conception of a Global Gothic.

We welcome papers that take a flexible view of the Gothic, locating it in various cultural contexts and languages from the long 18th century to the 21st century. We also welcome those who take a more historicist view of the Gothic to submit their work. What constitutes a Gothic poet? How do we conceptualize Gothic poetry differently from other genres? We invite essays that rethink the connection between poetry and the Gothic. Investigations of Gothic poetry and its connection to other genres and media are also welcome.

We invite 300 word abstracts on topics related to the Gothic and poetry, broadly considered, for an edited collection to be submitted to an academic publisher. With your abstract, please include a brief 100 word bio. If accepted, you will be asked to submit a chapter of about 6000 to 7000 words by November 30th, 2024.

Please email your abstract and bio as a PDF, .doc, or .docx attachment by June 15th, 2024 to:
gothicpoetryanthology@gmail.com

Some possible topics include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Liminality and the Gothic
  • The numinous and spirituality
  • Poetry as foundational to the Gothic
  • Gothic and poetry in translation
  • Gothic poetry and Romanticism
  • Essays focusing on 20th and/or 21st century poets
  • Poetic Forms and Modernity
  • Poetics and Politics
  • Transcultural Poetics and the Global Gothic
  • Poetry and the EcoGothic
  • Poetry, disaster, and crisis
  • Poetry and Gothic novels
  • Lyricization and the Gothic
  • Gothic poetry and gender
  • Gothic Poets and their Biographies
  • Gothic poetry and class
  • Poetry and Multimedia/Video Games
  • Western and Non-Western Gothic poetry traditions
  • Gothic poetry and race/ethnicity
  • Postcolonial/Decolonial Approaches to Gothic poetry

Editors

Samantha Landau (The University of Tokyo, Japan), Li-Hsin Hsu (National Chengchi University, Taiwan), Thomas Leonard D. Shaw (University of the Philippines, Diliman)

Contact Email

gothicpoetryanthology@gmail.com

Note on Editors:

Li-hsin Hsu is Professor of English at National Chengchi University, Taiwan. Her research interests include Emily Dickinson studies, Romanticism, Taiwan modern poetry, and Ecocriticism. She has co-edited a number of special issues and collected volumes on Asian Gothic related topics. She is also involved in the Emily Dickinson International Society and is a co-founder of the Gothic in Asia Association.

Samantha Landau is a Project Associate Professor at the University of Tokyo (Komaba) in Japan. Her research primarily concerns Gothic fiction. She also researches at the intersection of cultural studies, music, and poetry. She is a co-founder of the Gothic in Asia Association and Tokyo Humanities Project. In addition to her academic work, she is a published poet. She is also a classical vocalist and has been performing for over 30 years.

Thomas Leonard Shaw is a faculty member at the Department of English and Comparative Literature, University of the Philippines Diliman. His latest publication is an essay on Philippine Horror Cinema included in the anthology Contemporary Horror on Screen (Springer). Thomas has several upcoming publications on Philippine gothic literature. His research interests include but are not limited to: gothic and horror studies, memory studies, and Philippine literature.

SARE

SARE: Southeast Asian Review of English is an international peer-reviewed journal founded in 1980. It publishes scholarly articles and reviews, interviews, and other lively and critical interventions.

Serving as an electronic journal from 2016, SARE aims to be a key critical forum for original research and fresh conversations from all over the world on the literatures, languages, and cultures of Southeast, South, and East Asia. It particularly welcomes theoretically-informed articles on the literary and other cultural productions of these regions.

SARE has been committed from its inception to featuring original and unpublished poems and short fiction.  

https://sare.um.edu.my/index.php/SARE/index

In 2012, SARE published a special journal issue on EcoGothic Asia (59.1) co-edited by one of our members, which can be accessed here

https://sare.um.edu.my/index.php/SARE/issue/view/2050

Plaridel

Plaridel: A Philippine Journal of Communication, Media and Society was first published in 2004 as a national journal of communication and has been released on a regular bi-annual basis since. It has since evolved to a more inclusive regional focus and has recently begun publishing papers from other Asian countries. Papers published in Plaridel Journal include original research in different areas of media and communication studies in the Philippines and Asia. These can be qualitative or quantitative work in media effects, industry, political economy, subcultural practices, and journalism studies, among others.

Plaridel is registered with the ISSN National Center Philippines, Bibliographic Services Division, National Library of the Philippines: ISSN 1656-25340.

Information for Authors

In 2015, Plaridel published a special journal issue on Locating Southeast Asian Horror (12.2) co-edited by one of our members, which can be accessed here

https://www.plarideljournal.org/theme/locating-southeast-asian-horror

 

Horror Studies

 

Horror Studies is a peer-reviewed academic journal devoted to the rigorous study of horror in all its manifold cultural and historical forms. With a strong interdisciplinary focus, the journal seeks to publish high-quality articles and reviews on topics relevant to the study of horror across a range of disciplines. 

Horror Studies is a double-blind peer-reviewed journal that intends to serve the international academic community in the humanities and specifically those scholars interested in horror. Exclusively examining horror, this journal will provide interested professionals with an opportunity to read outstanding scholarship from a variety of disciplinary perspectives, including work conceived as interdisciplinary. By expanding the conversation to include specialists concerned with diverse historical periods, varied geography, and a wide variety of expressive media, this journal will inform and stimulate anyone interested in a wider and deeper understanding of horror.

ISSN 20403275 , ONLINE ISSN 20403283

https://www.intellectbooks.com/horror-studies

In 2014, Horror Studies published a special journal issue on Thai Horror Film (5.2) co-edited by one of our members.

Gothic Studies

Gothic Studies is the journal of the International Gothic Association, and covers the field of Gothic studies from the eighteenth century to the present day, providing an international platform for dialogue and cultural critcism in the sphere of Gothic from within every period and media form.

The aim of Gothic Studies is not merely to open a forum for dialogue and cultural criticism, but to provide a specialist journal for scholars working in a field which is today taught or researched in academic institutions around the globe. Gothic Studies invites contributions from scholars working within any period of the Gothic; interdisciplinary scholarship is especially welcome, as are studies of works across the range of media, beyond the written word.

Print ISSN: 1362-7937 Online ISSN: 2050-456X

Published on behalf of the International Gothic Association

For information on Gothic Studies’ guidelines for submission, view the style guide here. Send your title page and anonymised manuscript to gothiceditors@gmail.com.

If you would like to propose a guest edited special issue, please write to Emily Alder, Editor, at gothiceditors@gmail.com to discuss your idea. If suitable, you will then be invited to submit a full proposal for peer review. Please read the instructions for guest editors for more information.

In 2020, Gothic Studies published a special issue on Gothic Folklore and Fairy Tale (22.1) edited by one of our members.

eTropic

eTropic publishes new research from Arts, Humanities, Social Sciences and allied fields on the variety and interrelatedness of nature, culture, and society in the Tropics.

Special Issue themes draw together scholars of the tropics, including: Northern Australia, Southeast Asia, South Asia, East Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean, tropical Africa, the Indian Ocean Islands, the Pacific, Hawai\’i, and the American South.

eTropic journal is free open access, indexed in Scopus, Google Scholar, DOAJ and Ulrich\’s, and archived in Pandora and Sherpa/Romeo. eTropic uses DOIs and Crossref. The journal is ranked Scimago Q1.

Editor-in-Chief Associate Professor Anita Lundberg
Founding Editor Professor Stephen Torre

In 2019, eTropic published a double special issue on Tropical Gothic (18.1 and 18.2) co-edited by one of our members, which can be accessed here

https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/issue/view/192

https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/issue/view/193