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News

PhD conference in Drammen

From Lotta Strandberg’s email:

Dear all,

Please distribute this information among your PhD candidates.

PhD course Narrative Possibilities: Human rights and the art of storytelling (2,5 ects) in Drammen in June 22-23.6.2023.

https://www.usn.no/forskning/doktorgradsutdanning/pedagogiske-ressurser-og-lareprosesser/kurs-og-emner-i-pedagogiske-ressurser-og-lareprosesser/

The course description is attached but here is a brief description of the content: 

Human rights is a profoundly interdisciplinary topic, approachable from a broad variety of

scholarly perspectives and susceptible to a range of methodological approaches. Following

the ‘narrative turn’ that has exerted such influence across academia in recent decades, this

course has two core aims: to investigate the ways in which the study of narrative is uniquely

equipped to illuminate dimensions of human rights issues less easily accessible to other

modes of textual representation; and to explore how storytelling practices condition our

understanding of the world, and, by extension, scholarly engagements with human rights

issues within and beyond the humanities. Beyond the specific domain of human rights, the

course addresses the broader question of why it is important for scholars and students who

deal with different aspects of the human existence – historians, psychologists, lawyers,

social scientists, and medics, to name a few – to have an understanding of the fundaments

of narrative theory, and explores a variety of answers to this increasingly salient question.

The deadline for registration is 14 April.

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CFP News

Conference on Reading and In-Depth Learning

The CfP for our conference Reading for in-depth English Learning: Texts in and beyond the classroom is now open!

The conference team is very much looking forward to receiving proposals soon, please see the website for all conference and submission details https://site.nord.no/ridel/

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CFP

Naples conference on MOOCs and more

Call for papers ‘Language MOOCs and OERs: new trends and challenges’
Naples, 28-29 September 2023

The University of Naples L’Orientale together with Federazione Nazionale Insegnanti Centro di iniziativa per l’Europa (FENICE), as one of the partners of the project “Romance Languages for Slavic-Speaking University Students” (LMOOC4Slav) funded by the Erasmus+ Programme, invite you toattend the Second International Conference on “Language MOOCs and OERs: new trends andchallenges”, to be held in Naples (Italy) on 28-29 September 2023.


The conference aims to bring together higher education professionals, applied linguists, and language technologists working on issues related to language learning and teaching, namely: MOOCs, OERs, new approaches in language teaching and learning, academic mobility, linguistic description of languages, linguistic diversity, language for specific purposes, digital transformation in Education and new educational technologies, new collaboration projects, multiculturalism, and initiatives and developments related to these areas supported by European and national programmes.

Call for Abstracts (deadline: June 17th, 2023)
We particularly encourage proposals on, but not limited to, the following areas related to the conference themes:

  • MOOCs – design, learning, teaching, quality assurance, etc.
  • OER / OEP for language learning and teaching
  • Pedagogical approaches in LMOOCs and OERs
  • MOOCs and OERs for language teachers: new tools for professional development
  • LMOOCs and skills development
  • MOOCs to support multilingualism and international Mobility
  • … and much more

Conference presentations and posters can be in Italian, English or Portuguese. More information about the call for proposals, the conference team, the important dates, the submission guidelines, the contribution template and the conference venue, can be found in the website in three languages (EN, IT, PT) at: https://www.lmooc4slav.eu/conferences.php
Submitted abstracts within the deadline June 17th, 2023 will be selected in double-blind peer review mode based on originality, technical quality, and presentation. Abstracts may be submitted in English,
Italian or Portuguese. Interested parties will be contacted by 15 July 2023.
Any queries, contact us at
conference@lmooc4slav.eu

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CFP News

ESSE Conference 2024

Our mother organisation, ESSE, has annonced its big international conference for 2024, which will take place in Switzerland.

From the invitation email:

Dear Colleagues,

It is a great pleasure to send out the invitation for the ESSE 2024 conference in Lausanne, Switzerland. 

On behalf of the conference organizers, I would like to ask you to circulate the invitation to your respective associations and to encourage participation. 

You can find all the information and the different deadlines in the document [see link below]. 

We are looking forward to seeing you in Lausanne in 2024!

All best wishes,

Anita Auer

SAUTE president

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Vacancies

Vacancy at Nord University

A permanent full-time position as Associate Professor in English Language Teaching (ELT) (Førsteamanuensis i engelsk språkdidaktikk) is vacant in the Department of English at Nord University, Levanger campus. The application deadline for this position is 16 April:

https://www.jobbnorge.no/en/available-jobs/job/240236/associate-professor-in-english-language-teaching-elt

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CFP

Conference: Anglistentag 2023

Dear colleagues,

on behalf of the German Association for the Study of English, I’d like to invite you all to our yearly conference!

The ‘Anglistentag 2023’ will take place at the University of Siegen from 24th-27th of September, organised by Felix (Sprang) and his team.

Siegen is situated in the middle of Germany, in the area bordering the three German federal states of Hesse, North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatine (the nearest airports are Cologne/Bonn, Düsseldorf, and Frankfurt.)

I attach the preliminary programme for your consideration. 

Information about the different panel sections can be found here: http://www.anglistenverband.de/en/conferences/anglistentag-2023.

There will be three keynotes to look forward to, by Christina Lupton (Warwick), Leah Knight (Brock) and Kathleen C. Riley (Rutgers), as well as a reading with Northern Irish novelist and playwright Lucy Caldwell.

It would be a great pleasure to welcome many of you in Siegen!

The AV will, of course, cover your accommodation and the conference dinner on Tuesday, 26th September.

The dinner is actually a conference party on this occasion, as there will also be some opportunity for social dancing afterwards :).

I kindly ask that you let me know by June 1st at the latest if you are planning to join us, so that we can make the necessary arrangements.

In the meantime, please don’t hesitate to get in touch if you have any queries.

Best wishes

Julia

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Vacancies

PhDs and Postdoc at UiB

Two PhDs and a Postdoc position have been advertised at the Department of Foreign Languages (IF) at the University of Bergen. The positions are tied to one of the Research groups at IF.

More information here.

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CFP

Multilingualism conference at UiA

The Department of Foreign Languages and Translation and ANPE Norge (The Norwegian Association for Spanish Teachers) invite researchers, teachers, teacher educators and research fellows to our conference in Kristiansand on Multilingualism in Language Teaching and Learning.

The conference will take place in September 2023. More information here.

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CFP

Nordic Irish Studies Network Conference

Recirculations: Transmissions and Transits in Irish history, literature, and culture
Háskóli Íslands/University of Iceland, Reykjavík, 25-26 May 2023

Ireland’s geographical position as an island at the western edge of Europe has made it, in turns, a marginal or central location for various forms of material, social, and cultural transmission. Rather than novelty,
such encounters in literature, culture, and art have often emerged as instances of revision, rediscovery, or recirculation of texts, languages, narratives, and images. Similarly, people, goods, and documents travel
along familiar or revised routes in the North Atlantic and North Sea region; information and ideas are received and transmitted within networked infrastructures connecting Ireland and other parts of the globe.
Ireland’s history, culture, and geography thus demonstrate how stories of origin and authenticity can gloss over entangled cartographies of exchange. These recirculations highlight Ireland as situated at the intersection of diverse cultural and material flows within and outside its borders. Joyce’s Finnegans Wake reflected this idea by embodying the manner in which, as David Earle has observed, “history recirculates, water recirculates, [and] the cultural debris of Dublin recirculates”, as do commodities of various kinds in and outside the capital, and the island itself [David Earle, “Popular Joyce, for Better or Worse” in Catherine Earle (ed.), The New Joyce Studies (Cambridge University Press, 2022), p. 173.]

Literary texts and narratives appear, disappear, and reappear, often without clear sense of origins or originals, from medieval re-tellings and translations of classical Greek and Roman literature to Doireann
Ní Ghríofa’s prose rendering and interweaving of Caoineadh Airt Uí Laoghaire. Irish writers have drawn on stories and imagery of previous eras, from the imagined pagan past in Táin Bó Cúailgne to narratives
providing the historical backdrop for discussions on the Good Friday Agreement. In the nineteenth century, medieval Irish formed the bulk of European philological research, and antiquarian activity was
largely centred around translations of medieval and early modern texts, both Irish and Latin. The constant return of past images and ideas both sustains and complicates relations between social groups and informs
responses to changing society, including newcomers seeking to make Ireland their home. Historically and in the present, personal and collective pasts are re-used and revised to suit present circumstances, in
literature, the arts, everyday life, or political rhetoric.

To address the above themes, the forthcoming Nordic Irish Studies Network conference explores the idea of recirculations in Irish culture through themes including, but not restricted to

  • Exchanges between Ireland and other cultures
  • Uses of the past in literature, culture, and society
  • The manuscript trade in Ireland and beyond
  • Antiquarianism
  • Renderings of foreign literature into an Irish form
  • Translations to and from Irish, and interface between Irish and English
  • Medieval literature in the early/modern era, and beyond
  • Ireland, material culture and travel in the North Atlantic and North Sea region
  • Old and new media

As always, the organisers also accept submissions on topics related to Irish Studies but not directly connected to the conference theme.

We are delighted to welcome Dr Peadar Ó Muircheartaigh, University of Edinburgh as a keynote speaker and Dr Kathy D’Arcy as artistic performer and speaker.

Abstracts of 200-300 words should be sent by 28 February to nisn2023@gmail.com, with a short biographical note. For any queries related to the CFP or the conference, please contact Ciaran McDonough
at mcdonough@hi.is.

Please note that all speakers must be paid members of NISN at the time of the conference.

Categories
Vacancies

OsloMet Vacancy

Read more about their one-year English/English didactics position here. NB! Very short deadline!