Tuesday, July 7, 2026

More Calls for Papers!

n addition to the call for papers for #kzoo2027 (to which we encourage submissions, of course), the Society has been made aware of another pair of CFPs that might be of interest to members. The first of them comes via ISSM from Laura Moncion and Dr Alicia Smith, who write

Workshop Series: Call for Participants - Saints Outside Hagiography 2026-2027
We invite expressions of interest to participate in the Saints Outside Hagiography workshop series 2026–2027. Our group examines how saints and holy people are represented outside the classic form of the single-text hagiography.

Sessions so far have examined texts including: visual art, poetry, mortuary rolls, chronicles, liturgical texts, didactic literature, and objects. We offer an informal, work-in-progress format focused on discussion of primary sources and key methodological questions in the study of saints.

Meetings consist of 1-2 brief presentations, discussing a text or object precirculated along with a short description and the speaker’s guiding questions. If you have a source related to sanctity that you would like to discuss, please get in touch with Laura Moncion (laura.moncion@philosophie.uni-tuebingen.de) and Alicia Smith (alicia.smith@uib.no) by 25 September 2026 with a brief description of the source, career stage, and institutional affiliation if any.

Guidelines
  • Chronological and geographical scope are open.
  • Participants are free to contest whether a text is ‘outside hagiography’ – we aim to study saints and the construction of saint/sanctity beyond canonical textual forms, including troubling our understanding of those forms.
  • If your source is not in English, we will need an English translation.

CFP PDF link: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1O_qFp6IrxwK30pO0ohyfny7rjYdPNiC8/view?usp=drive_link

The second comes from Rachel Warmington, also via ISSM, who writes of a 2027 MAMO session

(Post)national medievalisms

In her discussion of white supremacism in New Zealand context Louise D’Arcens argues against seeing this medievalism, and medievalism in general, in its national context. Following this line of thinking, what could then be argued is that medievalisms have already transcended their nationalistic limitations. On the other hand, there remain medievalist phenomena, such as the United Empire Loyalists origins of English Canadian medievalism postulated by M.J. Toswell, that are firmly situated within their national background. This session of papers is intended to put together these two perspectives: that medievalisms can be very much postnational, since they increasingly transcend the limits of one country and one culture, and that discussion of further national medievalisms is still very much relevant to medievalism studies.

Please send your 250-word abstract at: annaczarnowus@op.pl

The deadline is 30 August 2026.

Members of the Society interested in submitting are encouraged to do so. Those wishing to discuss session-formation with other Society members are encouraged to use the Society Discord to do so; those not already having access to the Society Discord may request it by emailing the Society at talesaftertolkien@gmail.com. And those having CFPs they'd like to see distributed are similarly encouraged. We'd love to hear from you!

#Kzoo2027 - Call For Papers!

The Tales After Tolkien Society is pleased to announce that we have FOUR offerings (three co-sponsored) for the 2027 International Congress on Medieval Studies at Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo! Two of the sessions have been given hybrid slots and the other two will be online. Please see below for the names and descriptions of each session:


The first session is a paper panel titled A Porlockian Perspective: Interruptions in Post-Tolkien Medievalist Works with the following description: The International Porlock Society, long meeting at the ICMS, is dedicated to the study and practice of academic interruption. While the Porlock Society focused its attentions on the works of Sidney and Spenser (himself an early medievalist), it is the case that interruption abounds, both in medieval literatures (witness Arthurian legend) and in the medievalist and neomedievalist media that emerge from them. The proposed session investigates the instances, forms, and functions of interruption in works of post-Tolkien neo/medievalist literatures and other media. This will be a hybrid session.


The second session, also a paper panel, is co-sponsored with Tolkien at Kalamazoo and is titled Continued Lessons from the Professor: Borrowings from Tolkien, 2020+ with the following description: The stated goal of The Tales after Tolkien Society is the investigation of medievalism in popular culture; it has in its very name a commitment to conducting those investigations through the lens of Tolkien and his works. With the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent upheavals, it may well be that the focus which this lens offers has changed. Papers for the session should look at shifts in use of Tolkien’s works, sources, and methods in the years 2020 and following, speaking to the “after” portion of the Society’s name with particular emphasis. This will be an online session.


The third session is a roundtable co-sponsored with the Lone Medievalist and is titled Medievalism Outside Academe (A Roundtable) with the following description: Most faculty are contingent. The numbers of contingent faculty are dwarfed by those who, after spending years adjuncting, sought other careers yet still feel called to intellectual life. More yet did not pursue lives in academe but still have insights into the medieval, medievalist, and neomedievalist, as well as how they function. The proposed session looks to present perspectives on the medieval, medievalist, and neomedievalist from outside traditional academic structures, calling back to Richard Utz’s ICMS 2015 plenary lecture: medievalist work began as an amateur endeavor. Bringing in nonprofessional, underrepresented, outside perspectives remains worth doing.  This will be a hybrid session.


The fourth and final session is also a roundtable and is co-sponsored with the International Society for the Study of Medievalism (ISSM). It is titled "Will It Bardcore?": Explorations of Medievalist Music (A Roundtable) with the following description: During discussion at the 2026 ICMS session 'Off of the Printed Prose Page', Dr. Elizabeth Perry asked the question of various songs: “Will it bardcore?” Although offered partly in jest, the question prompts consideration of what bardcore is, really; what makes for “good” bardcore; what are representative examples of the genre; how the genre borrows from and interacts with Tolkien and other neo/medievalisms; and what purposes and functions are served by the genre? The proposed roundtable offers space for such considerations. This will be an online session.


While session numbers have not yet been posted to the conference site, you can find all our sessions here to submit abstracts to: https://icms.confex.com/icms/2027/prelim.cgi/Index/SponsorList~Tales%20after%20Tolkien%20Society


As always, we ask you to please share this call for papers around  to anyone and everyone you believe may be interested. We would love to hear from you! Proposals from those typically excluded from formal academe are particularly welcome.


All abstract submissions are due no later than 15 September 2026 via Confex.