JLIC: New Call for Abstracts for Special Issue “Poetics in An Age of Differences” (2028)
Over the last century, literary studies has undergone a profound transformation. Once grounded in broadly universalist assumptions about literary value, aesthetic experience, and human meaning, the discipline has increasingly turned toward difference: toward historically marginalized voices, minoritized literatures, experimental forms, decolonial critique, feminist and queer reading practices, Indigenous epistemologies, and the politics of representation itself. While this turn has fundamentally reshaped literary scholarship for the better, it has also left in its wake unanswered questions about the authority, scope, and public role of literary criticism in the contemporary world alongside, perhaps, an enduring but cautious desire for some kind of reformed universalism that might unify literary practices, literary scholarship, and literature’s many diverse publics and readers.
The special issue invites contributions that interrogate what remains of universalist thinking after the discipline’s ethical, political, and epistemological transformations since the mid-twentieth century. How should literary criticism understand its public role in an era defined by fragmentation, global inequality, and contested democratic values? What forms of authority, expertise, or public legitimacy remain available to literary studies? Can concepts such as universality, collectivity, or shared human experience be rehabilitated without reproducing the exclusions historically associated with them? Conversely, what is lost when universalism is rejected outright?
- Histories of universalism in literary criticism and theory
- The post-WWII turn away from universalist paradigms
- Canon formation, anti-canon movements, and institutional authority
- Comparative, world, or planetary literature after universalism
- Literary criticism and democratic culture
- Decolonial, Indigenous, feminist, queer, and critical race critiques of universality
- The ethics and politics of reading
- Literature and the public humanities
- The future of literary expertise and criticism
- Literary studies and digital publics
- Translation, cosmopolitanism, and transnational readerships
- Literature, affect, and shared experience
- Intermediality and new publics for literature
- The relationship between literary studies and contemporary political crises
- Experimental forms of criticism and scholarly communication
- The Turn Away circa 1950: historical investigations into the decline of universalist paradigms in literary studies and criticism.
- The Politics of Literary Studies: competing claims to intellectual, ethical, and political authority within the discipline after the 1960s.
- Who Writes and Who Reads?: questions of readership, professionalization, expertise, and the vocation of criticism.
- New Publics for Literature: reimagining the social function and audiences of literary study in the twenty-first century.
We particularly encourage submissions from early career scholars, including M.A. and Ph.D. candidates and postdoctoral researchers.