A one-day interdisciplinary conference, taking place at the University of Warwick, organised by Giulia Champion, and funded by the Humanities Research Centre and the Department of English and Comparative Literary Studies
Call for papers
Deadline:17 July 2018
Keynote speaker: Professor Manuel Barcia (University of Leeds)
Since Antiquity, eating practices have helped regulate human differences, and anthropophagy served as a marker of difference across cultures in order to underline improper diets, as well as to metaphorically describe inappropriate relationships between people from the nuclear family to wider spheres of socio-political structures. This one-day interdisciplinary conference exploring the evolution and the different uses of the tropes and figures of cannibalism aims to understand and deconstruct the fascination with anthropophagy and its continued afterlife, as well as to promote discussions and connections on this subject across disciplines and institutions.
We invite abstracts on topics and disciplines including, but not limited to:
We invite individual proposals for 20-minute papers, as well as proposals for panels (three 20-minute papers). Please send an abstract (200-300 words) and a brief biography to cannibalism.warwick@gmail.com by 17 July 2018.
Following the conference, delegates will be invited to submit their work for publication with the Warwick Series in the Humanities (with Routledge).
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