Special Issue of MELUS: The Future of Jewish American Literary Studies

I already “tweeted” about this, but thought I’d publicize the announcement here, too.

“Addressing questions raised by the 2009 MLA roundtable “Does the English Department Have a Jewish Problem?,” this special issue of MELUS will survey the current state of Jewish American literary scholarship and explore new directions for the future of the field. Guest edited by Lori Harrison-Kahan and Josh Lambert, the issue aims to highlight innovative approaches that will reinvigorate and redefine the study of Jews and Jewishness in American literature and to examine challenges posed by Jewish literature to the disciplinary and theoretical paradigms of American and ethnic literature.

We invite a broad range of contributions, but topics of particular interest include:

· New opportunities for the study of Jewish literature created by recent critical approaches such as whiteness, transnational, comparative ethnic, and multilingual studies, and book history
· Moving beyond equations of Jewishness with whiteness (e.g., essays on American Jews of color, Sephardic Jews, and non-Jewish ethnic writers whose work addresses Jewishness)
· Gender, sexuality, and queer identity (e.g., essays on underrepresented women, gay, and lesbian writers)
· Aesthetic contributions of Jewish writers to the development of American literature
· Texts written, in whole or in part, in languages other than English, such as Yiddish and Hebrew
· Studies in genres other than prose fiction, including poetry, autobiography, drama, criticism, children’s and young adult literature, graphic narratives
· Pedagogical approaches to integrating Jewish literature into multi-ethnic literature curriculum.”

Deadline for submissions: June 30, 2010. Full announcement here.

Free NYC Event Next Week: "The Art of the Pitch"

From the Writers’ Institute at the Graduate Center of The City University of New York:

THE ART OF THE PITCH

“Come hear Chris Cox from The Paris Review, Priscilla Gilman from Janklow & Nesbit, Hugo Lindgren from New York Magazine, David Propson from The Week Magazine, and Eben Shapiro from The Wall Street Journal discuss how to craft a great (and perfect) pitch. Feel free to bring along anyone interested as well as all the questions you’ve been dying to ask.”

DATE: Wednesday, February 3rd from 5:30 to 7:30
PLACE: Segal Theater, at the Graduate Center, 365 Fifth Avenue (and 34th)

Sydney Taylor Book Award Celebrates Honorees with Blog Tours

From the Association of Jewish Libraries blog: “The Sydney Taylor Book Award will be celebrating and showcasing its 2010 gold and silver medalists and special Notable Book for All Ages with a Blog Tour, February 1-5, 2010! (A blog tour is like a virtual book tour. Instead of going to a library or bookstore to see an author speak, you go to a website on or after the advertised date to read an author’s interview.)” For details on books and participating blogs, click here.

Quotation of the Week: Anne Lamott

“Writing a first draft is very much like watching a Polaroid develop. You can’t—and, in fact, you’re not supposed to—know exactly what the picture is going to look like until it has finished developing. First you just point at what has your attention and take the picture.”

—Anne Lamott

Source: Lamott, Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life (1994)

(For those who are too young to recall the significance of Polaroid photography, please click here.)