1. And will dedicate its next issue to her memory. Please contact Laura Chrisman (Editor-in-Chief) chrisman@theblackscholar.org if you would like to contribute.

    (Source: H-Afro-Am.h-net-org)

     
  2. jhameia:

    Call for Submissions: We See A Different Frontier

    We are seeking submissions for a colonialism-themed anthology of new stories told from the perspective of the colonized, titled We See a Different Frontier, to be guest edited by Fábio Fernandes and published by The Future Fire.

    It is impossible to consider the history, politics or culture of the modern world without taking into account our colonial past. Most violent conflicts and financial inequalities in some sense result from the social-political-economic matrix imposed by European powers since the seventeenth century—even powerful countries such as the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) have to be viewed through the filter of our history to fully appreciate their current circumstances. The same is true of art and literature, including science fiction; as Rochita Roenen-Luiz eloquently explained, “it is impossible to discuss non-Western SF without considering the effects of colonialism.” Cultural imperialism erases many native traditions and literatures, exoticizes colonized and other non-European countries and peoples, and drowns native voices in the clamour of Western stories set in their world. Utopian themes like “The Final Frontier”, “Discovering New Worlds” and “Settling the Stars” appeal to a colonial romanticism, especially recalling the American West. But what is romantic and exciting to the privileged, white, anglophone reader is a reminder of exploitation, slavery, rape, genocide and other crimes of colonialism to the rest of the world.

    We See a Different Frontier will publish new speculative fiction stories in which the viewpoint is that of the colonized, not the invader. We want to see stories that remind us that neither readers nor writers are a homogeneous club of white, male, Christian, hetero, cis, monoglot anglophone, able-bodied Westerners. We want the cultures, languages and literatures of colonized peoples and recombocultural individuals to be heard, not to show the White Man learning the error of his ways, or Anglos defending the world from colonizing extraterrestrials. We want stories that neither exoticize nor culturally appropriate the non-western settings and characters in them.

    We See a Different Frontier will pay US$0.05 per word, with a minimum payment of $50, plus the possibility of royalties if sales are good enough. We are looking for stories between 3,000 and 6,000 words in length; we are willing to be flexible about this wordcount, but the further a story falls outside this range, the harder a sell it will be. Please do not submit stories that are also under consideration elsewhere. Query before sending more than one story to us. We are unlikely to be interested in reprints unless they were published in an obscure market unlikely to be known to our audience, but in any case please query before sending a reprint, explaining when and where the story has appeared before.

    Please send submissions as an attachment (.doc[x], .rtf or .odt) to differentfrontier@gmail.com. The deadline for submissions is midnight GMT, September 14, 2012.

    This was a successful Kickstarter, and I should add, a professionally-paying market.

    Please reblog widely!

     
  3. Call for Submissions: Sins & Needles: Writers and Tattoos

    latinegrasexologist:

    via @tarabetts (i dont know anything abt this but forwarding for the folks i know who are inked and DO write abt it!)

    Tattoos have been in existence for centuries, from the indigenous people of Japan to tribal people of Polynesia, Philippines, and Borneo. They are markers of time, rites of passage, symbols, remembrances, and sometimes, stupid decisions made on a drunken nights. They are everywhere—under the white sleeve of a co-worker, sneakily peaking out of a shirt collar, up and down muscled legs and arms of athletes.  There has been proliferation of reality shows centered set in tattoo parlors. What once was a subculture has now emerged as mainstream.

    Yet, in the literary landscape, there has been a conspicuous absence of writing about tattoos. The editors of the tentatively titled anthology, Sins & Needles—Ira Sukrungruang and Jim Miller—are looking for personal nonfiction narratives about the meaning behind the tattoo. Please send 500-3000 word essays in a PDF or Word document file via our submission manager.http://sinsandneedles.submishmash.com/

    The deadline for submissions is September 1, 2012. If you have any questions about the anthology, please don’t hesitate to contact, editors (at) sweetlit.com.

     
  4. At present, capitalism seems to enjoy a certain status as the last remaining “ideological superpower” in the global arena; however, many committed scholars, activists, writers, philosophers, and others continue to seek new avenues for humanistic engagement even as corporate and political interests work to circumscribe the academic community’s contributions to issues affecting the public sphere. Such imagining of alternative epistemologies is the focus of an edited volume currently under consideration at Cambridge Scholars Publishing, entitled, Marxian Cartographies: Mapping and Re-drawing the Trace. While the volume is centered on the central question of Marxism in all its various manifestations over time and ways in which it might travel and/or take on new shapes in the future, other, more specific, possible topics include (but are not limited to):

    —Marxian ideologies in literature
    —Geographical or theoretical traces
    —Utopianism/Dystopianism
    —The resurgence of new forms of “blacklisting” within the academy and the covert silencing of engagement with gender, race and ethnicity, sexuality, and class issues
    —Pedagogy
    —Corporatization of the academy
    —Digital Humanities
    —The possibility of reparative roadmaps between “classical” Marxists, Post-Marxists and other theoretical frameworks

     
  5. quirkyblackgirls:

    Concrete Orchid Media is seeking story submissions for an upcoming anthology about growing up as a black girl who never quite fit in. All women with a knack for expressing themselves using words, photography, or illustration are invited to share their personal experiences about what it was like…

     
  6. tierracita:

    INANNA PUBLICATIONS

    is seeking SUBMISSIONS for a new anthology:

    Min timeh: Arab Feminist Reflections on Identity, Resistance, and Space

    Edited by Ghadeer Malek and Ghaida Moussa

    Deadline for abstract submissions: February 28, 2012 

    Completed submission deadline: April 30,…

    (Source: facebook.com)

     
  7. jmarksthespots:

    Concrete Orchid | Black woman Anthology

    OPEN CALL: [Black Girl/Woman] Story Submissions for Upcoming Anthology
    By: Concrete Orchid Media
    Submit stories to: anthology@concreteorchid.com
    Website: ConcreteOrchid.com | Twitter: @ConcreteOrchid

    Concrete Orchid Media is seeking story submissions for an upcoming…