Thursday, February 29, 2024

CFP Mythmoot XI: The Resilience of Imagination (3/31/2024; Leesburg, VA/Online 6/20-23/2024)

Mythmoot XI: The Resilience of Imagination


deadline for submissions: March 31, 2024

full name / name of organization: Signum University

contact email: events@signumu.org

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/02/05/mythmoot-xi-the-resilience-of-imagination



The Resilience of Imagination

June 20-23, 2024
National Conference Center,
Leesburg, VA

“In a time of destruction, create something”

Maxine Hong Kingston

This year, our theme is “The Resilience of Imagination.” Imagination intrinsically ties into stories and the creative work that creates the world and characters contained within said stories. Imagination does not limit itself just to writers though – anyone who creates or interacts with art relates to imagination. What does imagination mean in a story? How do you use imagination? What does it encompass?

Resilience is a capacity to withstand, an endurance, and a term that can apply to imagination in a variety of ways. How do you see the resilience of imagination in the books, games, films, and other media you consume? Is it something the author places into the secondary world? Is it something that you, as a creator, consider?


“We all have futures. We all have pasts. We all have stories. And we all, every single one of us, no matter who we are and no matter what’s been taken from us or what poison we’ve internalized or how hard we’ve had to work to expel it—we all get to dream.”

N. K. Jemisin

We are accepting proposals for Papers, Panels, Workshops, and Creative Presentations about our theme of “The Resilience of Imagination” in the following areas:

  • Imaginative Literature including film and other media (ex: Howl’s Moving Castle, Dune, The Broken Earth Trilogy, Naruto, The Left Hand of Darkness, Star Trek, Kindred, The Vorkosigan Saga, Lord of the Rings, Watership Down, etc.)
  • Tolkien and Inklings Studies
  • Classic Literature from ancient times to the present
  • Philology, Historical Linguistics, ConLangs and invented worlds
  • interrelated topics such as superheroes, philosophy, media, and fandom studies

If you are unsure whether your topic fits, send your proposal or a description of your idea to events@signumu.org, and we will review it for relevance.

(N.B. The “creative” category is not limited to original works of fiction but can include crafting, music, drama, dance, or other performative arts. If you have questions about what you can present, please contact us.)

Individual presentation/paper whether creative or critical, will have 30 minutes: 20 minutes for presentation and 10 for Q&A. Each presentation/paper will be presented in 90-minute sessions of 1 – 3 presenters.

Panels must contain at least 3 papers and/or presenters and will be allocated 90 minutes total, inclusive of presentations and Q&A.

Workshops will be either 30 min, 60 min, or 90 min; the proposal must include justification for the requested time. We recommend at least two leaders for each workshop. (Workshop examples: the knitting of a phoenix, an interactive discussion on the elements of haunted house novels that are also used when describing houses in the real world, etc.)!

To submit visit the conference CFP page: https://signumuniversity.org/mythmoot/mythmoot-xi/mythmoot-xi-call-for-p... which will have a link to the submission form.

No presentations will be given if you are not registered to attend, and your submission to Mythmoot XI is considered an agreement to both register, at the cost of the conference ticket, and attend (either digitally or in person) to present should your proposal be accepted.

For an in-person event, each room will have a projector for presenter use. If you are presenting virtually, ensure that you have access to a computer, video camera, and microphone.



Last updated February 8, 2024
This CFP has been viewed 286 times.

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