nathan88 Posted September 29, 2012 Posted September 29, 2012 I'm a first year graduate student and I am kind of at a loss for how to go about finding conferences to submit abstracts to. Granted, all I have really done is type a few things in to google but I figured there would be a definitive list compiled somewhere and I have found no such thing. I have found a few for film but nothing for literature. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
sebastiansteddy Posted September 29, 2012 Posted September 29, 2012 http://cfp.english.upenn.edu/ Penn hosts a site where many conferences post their CFPs.
pinkrobot Posted September 29, 2012 Posted September 29, 2012 Seconding the vote for the Penn list. Since you're in a program, maybe you could ask your adviser/professor/DGS for specific recommendations? Also, I should confess that mostly I am posting because I'm currently working on my first paper as a PhD student and, relatedly, I thought your thread title read, "Finding literary confidence." ("Oh! Hey! There's a way to get that?") practical cat, Imogene, wreckofthehope and 1 other 4
sebastiansteddy Posted September 29, 2012 Posted September 29, 2012 Seconding the vote for the Penn list. Since you're in a program, maybe you could ask your adviser/professor/DGS for specific recommendations? Also, I should confess that mostly I am posting because I'm currently working on my first paper as a PhD student and, relatedly, I thought your thread title read, "Finding literary confidence." ("Oh! Hey! There's a way to get that?") Yes, definitely talk to professors in your field too. My current MA program sends CFPs via a listserv to the whole department once a week. That is how I have found all of the conferences I have attended.
ProfLorax Posted September 29, 2012 Posted September 29, 2012 When looking at the awesome UPenn list serve, check for graduate student conferences nearby your school. I am really happy that my first conference was a conference specifically for grad students; I was able to practice writing an abstract and presenting a paper in a very supportive atmosphere of peers. Then, when I presented at larger conferences, like PAMLA and MLA, I felt much more comfortable with the whole process.
rising_star Posted October 1, 2012 Posted October 1, 2012 You might also want to see about joining academic listservs on topics related to your research or subfield. Many people circulate cfps this way.
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