Anouncements & Advertisements

 

 

Every issue of Postmodern Culture will carry notices of events, calls for papers, and other announcments, up to 250 words, free of charge. Advertisements will also be published on an exchange basis. Send anouncements and advertisements to: pmc@jefferson.village.virginia.edu

 


 

     Journal and Book Announcements:

1)   _Contention_: Debates in Society, Culture, and Science
2)   _Differences_: A journal of feminist cultural studies
3)   _Genders_
4)   _Women's Studies_ 
5)   _LIT_: Literature Interpretation Theory
6)   _City Images_: Perspectives from Literature, Philosophy, and
          Film edited by Mary Ann Caws; Gordon and Breach
          Publishers
7)   _New Perspectives on Women and Comedy_, edited by Regina
          Barreca; Gordon and Breach Publishers
8)   _New Left Review_: The Claims of Equality, NLR 190
9)   _Nomad_: An Interdisciplinary Journal of the Humanities,
          Arts, and Sciences
10)  _Representations_
11)  _Studies in Popular Culture_
12)  _Science as Culture_
13)  _Capitalism, Nature, Socialism_: A Journal of Socialist
          Ecology
14)  _Rethinking MARXISM_: A Journal of Economics, Culture, and
          Society
15)  _Communication Theory_: A Journal of the International
          Communication Association
16)  _Public Culture_
17)  _Journal of Beckett Studies_ (New Series) 
18)  _Strategies_: A Journal of Theory, Culture and Politics
19)  _ Theory, Culture and Society_
20)  _Poetics Today_
21)  _Surfaces_, an electronic journal 
22)  _Discourse_, v.15, n.1--Flaunting It: Lesbian and Gay
          Studies
23)  _U.S. Latino Literature_: An Essay and Annotated
          Bibliography; March/Abrazo Press

     Calls for Papers and Participants:

24)  _The Electronic Journal of Communication/La Revue
          Electronique de Communication_--call for papers on
          computer-mediated communication
25)  The Principia Cybernetica Project--a call for papers on
          cybernetic concepts and principles, evolutionary
          philosophy, knowledge development, computer-support
          systems for collaborative theory building
26)  The Disembodied Art Gallery Exhibition, Brighton, England,
          Summer 1992    
27)  Arts and Technology Symposium--a call for compositions,
          presentations, papers and artwork 
28)  ECHT '92, Fourth ACM Conference on Hypertext--a call for
          papers, technical briefings, tutorials, panels,
          demonstrations, videos, and posters on hypertext and
          hypermedia

     Conferences and Societies:

29)  Penn State University Seminar Series, Issues in Criticism.
          Historicisms and Cultural Critique, June 25-30, 1992
30)  Penn State Conference on Rhetoric and Composition, July
          8-11, 1992 
31)  Theory, Culture and Society, 10th Anniversary Conference,
          August 16-19, 1992
32)  Marxism in the New World Order: Crises and Possibilities at
          University of Massachusetts-Amherst, November 12-14,
          1992
33)  Society for the Advancement of Games and Simulations in
          Education and Training and The International Simulation
          and Gaming Association Conference, August 18-21, 1992  

     Networked Discussion Groups:

34)  VIOLEN-L, a networked discussion group for the study of
          violence, human rights, and public policies on violence
35)  SOVHIST, a networked discussion group for the study of
          Soviet history from 1917-1991
36)  AMLIT-L, a networked discussion group for the study of
          American literature 
37)  INMYLIFE, a networked discussion group for the study of
          Beatle era popular culture 

1)--------------------------------------------------------------

                          _CONTENTION_
            Debates in Society, Culture, and Science

     IS:
". . . simply a triumph from cover to cover."
                              *Frederick Crews*

". . . extremely important."
                              *Alberta Arthurs*

". . . the most exciting new journal that I have ever read."
                              *Lynn Hunt*

". . . superb."
                              *Janet Abu-Lughod*

". . . an important, exciting, and very timely project."
                              *Theda Skocpol*

". . . an idea whose time has come."
                              *Robert Brenner*
". . . serious and accessible."
                              *Louise Tilly*

Subscriptions (3 issues) are available to individuals at $25.00
and to institutions at $50.00 (plus $10.00 for foreign surface
postage) from the Journals Division, Indiana University Press,
601 N. Morton, Bloomington, IN 47404.  Phone: 812-855-9449.  Fax:
812-855-7931.

2)--------------------------------------------------------------

                         *_differences_*

             A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies

            Edited by Naomi Schor and Elizabeth Week

                       Volume 3, Number 1
Politics/Power/Culture: Postmodernity & Feminist Political Theory
Edited by Kathy E. Ferguson and Kirstie M. McClure

                       Volume 3, Number 2
            Queer Theory: Lesbian and Gay Sexualities
                  Edited by Teresa de Lauretis

                       Volume 3, Number 3
      Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak: Feminism in Colonization
                    Joan W. Scott: Commentary
   Ann-Louise Shapiro: Love Stories: Female Crimes of Passion
                     in Fin-de-siecle Paris.
             Mary Lydon: Calling Yourself a Woman: 
                 Marguerite Yourcenar & Colette.
                Eric O. Clarke: Fetal Attraction:
                Hegel's An-aesthetics of Gender.
           Neil Lazarus: Doubting the New World Order:
       Marxism and the Claims of Postmodern Social Theory.
                Interview with Antoinette Fouque

Subscriptions:  $28 (individuals), $48 (institutions), $10
(foreign surface post).

Order from:  INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS, 601 N. Morton,
Bloomington, IN 47404.  Phone: 812-855-9449; fax: 812-855-7931.

3)--------------------------------------------------------------

                             GENDERS

                       Ann Kibbey, Editor
                 University of Colorado, Boulder

Since 1988, _Genders_ has presented innovative theories of gender
and sexuality in art, literature, history, music, photography,
TV, and film.  Today, _Genders_ continues to publish both new and
known authors whose work reflects an international movement to
redefine the boundaries of traditional doctrines and disciplines.

                      Number 14, Fall 1992
*Lynda Hart*   Karen Finley's Dirty Work: Censorship, Homophobia,
               and the NEA
*Samir Dayal*  The Subaltern Does Not Speak: Mira Nair's _Salaam
               Bombay_ as a Post-Colonial Text
*Silvia Tubert*     How IVF Exploits the Wish to be a Mother: A
                    Psychoanalyst's Account
*Mary A. Favret*    A Woman Writes the Fiction of Science: The
                    Body of _Frankenstein_
*Karen Brennan*     Anais Nin: Author(iz)ing the Erotic Body
*Albaraq Mahbobah*  Reading the Anorexic Maze
*Muriel Dimen*      Theorizing Social Reproduction: On the
               Origins of De-Centered Subjectivity

_Genders_ is published triannually in Spring, Fall, Winter
Single copy rates:  Individual $9, Institution $14
Foreign postage, add $2/copy
Yearly subscription rates: Individual $24, Institution $40
Foreign postage, add $5.50/subscription

               University of Texas Press Journals
                  Box 7819, Austin, Texas 78713

4)--------------------------------------------------------------

_WOMEN'S STUDIES_

edited by *Wendy Martin*

Interdisciplinary and international in scope, the journal
publishes papers from a broad range of fields, including
literature, language, art, and history, as well as political
science, economics, sociology, anthropology, psychology, law and
the sciences

4 issues per volume -- ISSN: 0049-7878
Current subscription: Volume 21 (1992)

For journal prices please contact the publisher.  All prices are
subject to change without notice.  The US dollar price applies in
North America only.

GORDON AND BREACH PUBLISHERS
P.O. Box 786 Cooper Station, New York, NY 10276
US orders: call 1-800-545-8398 * fax 212-645-2459
All other countries contact the UK: call 44 (0734) 568316 * fax
44 (0734) 568211

5)--------------------------------------------------------------

_LIT_
LITERATURE INTERPRETATION THEORY

edited by *Lee A. Jacobus* and *Regina Barreca*

Placing equal emphasis on theoretical and interpretive positions,
_LIT_ offers the best in current literary controversy and debate.

Forthcoming issues focus on Helene Cixous as Critic, the Future
of Marxist Criticism, and the Politics of Popular Fiction.

4 issues per volume -- ISSN: 1043-6928
Current subscription: Volume 4 (1992)

For journal prices please contact the publisher.  All prices are
subject to change without notice.  The US dollar price applies in
North America only.

GORDON AND BREACH PUBLISHERS
P.O. Box 786 Cooper Station, New York, NY 10276
US orders: call 1-800-545-8398 * fax 212-645-2459
All other countries contact the UK: call 44 (0734) 568316 * fax
44 (0734) 568211

6)--------------------------------------------------------------

_CITY IMAGES_
Perspectives from Literature, Philosophy, and Film

edited by *Mary Ann Caws*

Offering glimpses of the city as it appears in films, novels,
photographs, poems, architecture, stagings and journals, _CITY
IMAGES_ collects essays by twenty of today's finest urban
landscape writers.  Among the distinguished contributors are
Christopher Prendergast, Richard Kuhns, Alfred Kazin and Charles
Molesworth.

1991 * Pages: 278
Hardcover * ISBN: 2-88124-426-2   *Price: $42.00
Softcover * ISBN: 2-88124-464-5   *Price: $16.00

Orders for books do not include postage and handling.  All prices
are subject to change without notice.  The US dollar price
applies in North America only.

GORDON AND BREACH PUBLISHERS
P.O. Box 786 Cooper Station, New York, NY 10276
US orders: call 1-800-545-8398 * fax 212-645-2459
All other countries contact the UK: call 44 (0734) 568316 * fax
44 (0734) 568211

7)--------------------------------------------------------------

* * Available--Spring 1992 * *

_New Perspectives on
WOMEN AND COMEDY_

edited by *Regina Barreca*

The original essays in this volume explore the way women have
used humor to break down cultural stereotypes between the
genders.  Examples from literature and the performing and visual
arts deal with humor and violence, humor and disability, humor
and the supposition of women's shame, lesbian and ethnic humor,
and particularly women's response to men's humor.

1992 * Pages: 240
Hardcover * ISBN: 2-88124-533-1  *Price: $39.00
Softcover * ISBN: 2-88124-534-X  *Price: $16.00

Orders for books do not include postage and handling.  All prices
are subject to change without notice.  The US dollar price
applies in North America only.

GORDON AND BREACH PUBLISHERS
P.O. Box 786 Cooper Station, New York, NY 10276
US orders: call 1-800-545-8398 * fax 212-645-2459
All other countries contact the UK: call 44 (0734) 568316 * fax
44 (0734) 568211

8)--------------------------------------------------------------

                        _NEW LEFT REVIEW_

                 NLR 190 THE CLAIMS OF EQUALITY

Introductory Offer--Receive This SPECIAL ISSUE Free!

*G.A. Cohen*        The Future of a Disillusion

*Paul Cammack*      Brazil: Old Politics, New Forces

*Tony Benn*         the Menace of the Secret State

*Roger Taylor*      Surviving the Thatcher Years

*Elizabeth Wilson*       Feminism Without Illusions?

*Julian Stallabrass*     Snapshots of Prague and Berlin

*Terry Bloomfield*       Rock Against the Commodity

*Victor Kiernan*         Marx and the Undiscovered Country

*Dimitris Kyrtatas*      Revelation Revised

*Branka Magas*           Comment on Gellner

   * * Subscribe now and receive this 144-page issue FREE * *

ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION (6 ISSUES)
Individuals: Overseas US$42/Can$50/&26
                         Airmail US$54/Can$65/&34; UK&22.50
Institutions: Overseas US$82/&47
                         Airmail US$94/&55; UK&43.50

For a trial subscription to NLR--with this special 144-page issue
FREE--send either check payable to _New Left Review_ 
or credit card type, number and expiration date
(Visa/Access/Mastercard/Eurocard/AmEx accepted) 
to the address below.  Alternatively you may ring our credit card
hotline:  (0)81 685 0301.

                     *Subscription Address*
                  _New Left Review_ (190 offer)
                     120-126 Lavender Avenue
                     Mitcham Surrey CR4 3HP
                               UK

9)--------------------------------------------------------------

_*NOMAD*_

===AN INTERDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL
======OF THE HUMANITIES,
=========ARTS,
============AND SCIENCES

_NOMAD_ publishes works of cross-disciplinary interest, such as
intermedia artwork, metatheory, and experimental writing.  The
journal is a forum for those texts that explore or examine the
undefined regions among critical theory, the visual arts, and
writing

Submissions: Send manuscripts (2 copies, with SASE) and artwork
(black and white camera-ready, 8.5" by 11" or less) to NOMAD, c/o
Mike Smith, 406 Williams, Florida State University, Tallahassee
FL 32306.

Subscriptions:  $9.00 per year (2 issues) from NOMAD c/o Mike
Smith, 406 Williams, Florida State University, Tallahassee FL
32306.

10)-------------------------------------------------------------
You won't want to miss . . .

                       _*represent*ations_

Number 36 * Fall 1991
     Frances Ferguson on Sade and pornography; Joseph Pequigney
     on sodomy in Dante; Alan Sinfield on Noel Coward; R. Howard
     Bloch on the romance of Old French Letters; T. Walter
     Herbert, Jr., on Hawthorne and Victorian sexuality

Number 37 * Winter 1992
     Dipesh Chakrabarty and Gyan Pandey in a forum on "India and
     the Writing of History"; Thomas Richards on British Museum
     surveys of Tibet; Stephen Tifft on Renoir and the Fall of
     France; Nicholas Dirks on Castes of Mind

Individuals $26.00, Students $18.00, Institutions $52.00. 
Outside U.S. add $6.00 postage.  Send payment to: 
_Representations_, University of California Press Journals, 2120
Berkeley Way, Berkeley, CA 94720

11)-------------------------------------------------------------

STUDIES IN POPULAR CULTURE_ 

_Studies in Popular Culture_, (_SiPC_), The journal of the
Popular Culture Association in the South, publishes articles on
popular culture however mediated: through film, literature,
radio, television, music, graphics, print, practices,
associations, events--any of the material or conceptual
conditions of life.  Its contributors from the United States,
Canada, France, Israel, and Australia, include distinguished
anthropologists, sociologists, cultural geographers,
ethnomusicologists, historians, and scholars in mass
communications, philosophy, literature, and religion. 

_Studies in Popular Culture_ is published in October and April 
by the Popular Culture Association in the South.  Authors are 
urged but not required to join the Association.  All members of 
the Association receive _Studies in Popular Culture_, the PC 
Newsletter, and announcements of the annual meeting in early 
October.  Yearly membership is currently $15.00 (International: 
$20.00).  

Write to the Executive Secretary, Diane Calhoun-French, Academic
Dean, Jefferson Community College-SW, Louisville, KY, 40272, for
information regarding membership, individual issues, back copies,
or sets. 

Direct editorial queries and send manuscripts to the editor:
Dennis Hall, Department of English, University of Louisville,
Louisville, Kentucky, 40292.  Telephone: (502) 588-6896 or 0509. 
Bitnet: DRHALL01@ULKYVM.  Fax: 588-5055.  Please enclose two
double-spaced copies and a self-addressed stamped envelope. 
Black and white illustrations may accompany the text.  Material
also may be submitted for consideration via electronic mail. 

_SiPC_ ordinarily runs short pieces, essays that total, with 
notes and bibliography, less than twenty pages in typescript. 
Documentation may be in the form appropriate for the discipline 
of the writer; the new MLA style sheet is a useful model.  Please
indicate if the work is available on computer disk.  The Editor 
reserves the right to make stylistic changes on accepted 
manuscripts. 

12)-------------------------------------------------------------

_SCIENCE AS CULTURE_

In a society where icons of progress are drawn from science,
technology, and medicine, SCIENCE AS CULTURE examines how these
disciplines relate to the rest of life.  The journal investigates
how particular values are embodied and naturalized in concepts,
techniques, research priorities, gadgets, and advertising.  Much
praised for its evocative articles, _SCIENCE AS CULTURE_
encompasses peoples' experience at the workplace, the cinema, the
hospital, the home, and the theater.  Readable and attractive, it
explores all the ways in which science is involved in shaping the
values that contend for influence over the wider society.

RECENT ARTICLES INCLUDE:

Cleaning Up on the Farm, *Les Levidow*
The Social Side of Sustainability, Class, Gender, and Race,
*Patricia L. Allen* and *Carolyn E. Sachs*
Biodiversity and Food Security, *Alistair Smith*
Alternative Agriculture and the New Biotechnologies, *Jack
Kloppenburg*
Green Meanings: What Might 'Sustainable Agriculture' Sustain?,
*Christopher Hamlin*

SAMPLE COPIES AVAILABLE!

**For more information write: Free Association Books, 26
Freegrove Road, London N7 9RQ; Credit cards (24 hours) 071-609-
5646.  
**In North America: Guilford Publications, Inc., 72 Spring St,
New York, NY 10012, Attn: Journals Dept.  Or call: 212-431-9800. 
Fax: 212-966-6708.  
**Volume 3, 1992 (4 issues); Individuals:  20/US $30;
Institutions:  35/US $65.  Single copy  5.95/US $8.              

13)-------------------------------------------------------------

_CAPITALISM
NATURE
SOCIALISM_

A Journal of Socialist Ecology

Edited by James O'Connor, University of California, Santa Cruz

_CNS_ is the only serious red-green theoretical journal in the
world.  It is edited by a distinguished group of scholars and
scholar activists, half of whom are North American, the other
half from a variety of countries.  _CNS_ seeks to meld the
traditional concerns of labor movements with the ecological
struggles in particular, and demands of the new social movements
in general.  To this end, it publishes articles, reviews,
interviews, documents, and poems that locate themselves at the
site between history and nature, or society and the environment. 

RECENT ARTICLES INCLUDE: Political Economy of the Gulf War, J.
O'Connor  Eco-feminism and Eco-Socialism, Mary Mellor 
Sustainable Agriculture at the Crossroads, Patricia Allen  Green
Cities Politics, Patrick Mazza  Lewis Mumford: The Forgotten
American Environmentalist: An Essay in Rehabilitation,
Ramachandra Guha  Economics of the U.S. Greens, C. Thurner 
Ecology and Regulation Theory, Alain Lipietz  Red Green Movements
in India, Gail Omvedt  Political Ecology of Marx, Manuel
Sacristan  Is Sustainable Capitalism Possible? James O'Connor

SAMPLE COPIES AVAILABLE!

For more information write: Guilford Publications, Inc., 72
Spring St, New York, NY 10012, Attn: Journals Dept.  Or call:
212-431-9800.  Fax: 212-966-6708.  

Volume 3, 1992 (4 issues); Individuals: $20.00, Outside U.S.:
$25.00 (surface mail), $35.00 (airmail); Institutions: $60.00,
Outside U.S.: $75.00 (airmail).  

Also available in better bookstores.

14)-------------------------------------------------------------

                      _Rethinking MARXISM_
          a journal of economics, culture, and society

The aim of this journal is to stimulate interest and debate over
the explanatory power and social consequences of Marxian economic
and social analysis.  To that end, it publishes studies that seek
to discuss, elaborate, and/or extend Marxian theory.  The
concerns of the journal include theoretical and philosophical
(methodological and epistimilogical) matters as well as more
concrete empirical analysis--all work that leads to further
development of a distinctively Marxian discourse.  Contributions
are encouraged from people in many disciplines and from a wide
range of perspectives.

ARTICLES OF INTEREST:  Post-America and the Collapse of Leninism,
Immanuel Wallerstein  On Marx and Freud, Louis Althusser  Louis
Althusser and the Unity of Science and Revolution, Nancy
Hartstock  Race, Culture, and Communications: Looking Backward
and Forward at Cultural Studies, Stuart Hall  Fordism/Post-
Fordism, Marxism/Post-Marxism: The Second Cultural Divide, Julie
Graham  New World Order and Other Art, Sue Coe.

SAMPLE COPIES AVAILABLE!

For more information write: Guilford Publications, Inc., 72
Spring St, New York, NY 10012, Attn: Journals Dept.  Or call:
212-431-9800.  Fax: 212-966-6708.  

Volume 5, 1992 (4 issues); Individuals: $27.50, Outside U.S.:
$32.50 (surface mail), $42.50 (airmail); Institutions: $55.00,
Outside U.S.: $70.00 (airmail); Students: $20.00 (current I.D.
required).  

Also available in better bookstores.

15)-------------------------------------------------------------

_COMMUNICATION THEORY_

A JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATION ASSOCIATION

Edited by Robert T. Craig
University of Colorado at Boulder

COMMUNICATION THEORY is an international, interdisciplinary forum
for theory and theoretically oriented research on all aspects of
communication.  It is designed to sustain a scholarly dialogue
across disciplinary, methodological, and geographical boundaries.

Holding up a mirror to the field of communication in all its
diversity, stimulating reflection and dialogue on issues of
interdisciplinary significance, encouraging innovations and
experimentation, and at times provoking controversy,
COMMUNICATION THEORY will engage its readers in the
reconstruction of an academic discipline at a crucial juncture in
its history.

ARTICLES OF INTEREST:

Communication Boundary Management: A Theoretical Model of
Managing Disclosure of Private Information Between Marital
Couples, Sandra Petronio
Syntactic and Pragmatic Codes in Communication, Donald G. Ellis
Conversational Universals and Comparative Theory: Turning to
Swedish and American Acknowledgement Tokens-in-Interaction, Wayne
A. Beach & Anna K. Lindstrom
Theories of Culture and Communication, Bradford 'J' Hall
Communication, Conflict, and Culture, C. David Mortensen

SAMPLE COPIES AVAILABLE!

For more information write: Guilford Publications, Inc., 72
Spring St, New York, NY 10012, Attn: Journals Dept.  Or call:
212-431-9800.  Fax: 212-966-6708.  

Volume 2, 1992 (4 issues); Individuals: $30.00; Institutions:
$60.00.  Outside U.S., add $17.50 (airmail included).  

16)-------------------------------------------------------------

                        _PUBLIC CULTURE_

           * * * Volume 4, Number 1 (Fall 1991) * * *

Looking at Film Hoardings, R. Srivatsan  *  Knocking on The Doors
of Public Culture, Pradip Krishen  *  The Meaning of Baseball in
1992, Bill Brown  *  Becoming the Armed Man, J. William Gibson  *

The Function of New Theory, Xiaobing Tang  *  Worldly Discourses,
Dan Rose  *  Voices of the Rainforest, Steven Feld  * 
Anuradhapura, Wimal Disanayake  *  River and Bridge, Meena
Alexander

          * * * Volume 4, Number 2 (Spring 1992) * * *

The Banality of Power and the Aesthetics of Vulgarity in the
Postcolony, Achille Mbembe  *  Take Care of Public Telephones,
Robert J. Foster  *  The Death of History?, Dipesh Chakrabarty  *

The Public Fetus and the Family Car, Janelle Sue Taylor  *  Race
and the Humanities: The "Ends" of Modernity?, Homi Bhabha  * 
"Disappeating" Iraqis, David Prochaska  *  Algeria Caricatures
the Gulf War, Susan Slyomovics  *  Mobilizing Fictions, Robert
Stam  *  Television and the Gulf War, Victor J. Caldarola

             Engaging Critical Analyses of Tensions
            Between Global Cultural Flows and Public
                  Cultures in a Diasporic World

_Public Culture_ is published biannually at The University
Museum, University of Pennsylvania, 33rd and Spruce Streets,
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6324.  A year's subscription for
individuals is $10.00 ($14.00 foreign); institutions $20.00
($24.00 foreign).  Back issues are available.  Write, call 215-
898-4054, or fax: 215-898-0657.

17)-------------------------------------------------------------

The Florida State University Department of English announces the 
           _JOURNAL OF BECKETT STUDIES_ (New Series)  

Beginning with a double issue Vol. I, Nos. 1 and 2 (spring 1992),
the Journal will appear semi-annually thereafter:  Vol. II, No. 1
(autumn 1992) and Vol II, No. 2 (spring 1993). 

The current double issue features two previously unpublished
poems by Samuel Beckett: "Brief Dream," a five-line poem in
English which Beckett sent to publisher John Calder in 1988, and
"L+," a 1987 quatrain in French dedicated to James Knowlson (both
published with permission of Calder Publications).  Vol. 2, No. 1
(autumn 1992) will feature Beckett's revised text for _What
Where_ (with permission of Faber and Faber, Ltd.). 

The Journal is dedicated to printing scholarship, criticism and
theory of the highest quality, reviewing significant books and
productions in a timely fashion, and, on occasion, printing
previously unpublished material by Samuel Beckett.  We cannot
publish regularly, and even, as we hope, expand our publication
with special issues and monographs, without your support.  Please
return the coupon below with your check to help keep the _Journal
of Beckett Studies_ a vital source of Beckett scholarship. 

               Ruby Cohn Prize in Beckett Studies 

The Journal of Beckett Studies is proud to offer the bi-annual
Ruby Cohn Prize for the most significant contribution to the
Journal by an individual who has not previously published on
Beckett.  The winner will be determined by the Editorial Board
from nominations submitted by readers and contributors.  The
award will carry a $250.00 honorarium, be announced in the spring
1993 issue (Vol. 2, No. 2), and thereafter in even numbered
volumes. 

Individual subscriptions are $15.00 
New Series Vol. I, Nos. 1 & 2 (spring 1992)................$15.00
New Series Vol. 2, No. 1 (autumn 1992) 
           Vol. 2, No. 2 (spring 1993).....................$15.00

              Journal of Beckett Studies (New Series) 
Dept. of English, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306

18)-------------------------------------------------------------
_STRATEGIES_
A JOURNAL OF THEORY, CULTURE & POLITICS 

4289 BUNCHE HALL 
UCLA 
LOS ANGELES, CA  90024 

NEW ISSUE NOW AVAILABLE: 

Marx After Elvis:  Politics/Popular Culture 
Issue No. 6 

Susan Buck-Morss        Is There a Common Postmodern Culture? 
Slavoj Zizek            The `Missing Link' of Ideology 
Iain Chambers           Migrant Landscapes 
Laurence A. Rickels     Missing Marx: or, How to Take Better Aim 
Kelly Dennis            Leave it to Beaver: The Object of        

                           Pornography 

Michael Shapiro         American Fictions and Political Culture 
J. Michael Jarrett      Rhapsody in Read: Ishmael Reed and Free  

                           Jazz 
Stathis Gourgouris      Adorno After Sun Ra 
Katrina Irving          Building Equivalences Through Rap-Music 
Sande Cohen             Cultural Use-Value and Historicist       

                           Reduction 

Current Rates: (Make all checks payable--in US Dollars--to
Strategies) 
                                 single          subs 
                                issues          (2 issues) 

Ind.                            $ 7             $12 
For. Ind.                       $ 9             $16 
Inst.                           $12             $20 
For. Inst.                      $14             $24 

Back Issue Rates:
                                         Ind.       For. Ind.   
Inst. 

No. 1   Beyond the Modern . . .         --              --     
$16 
No. 2   Pedagogical Theories, 
        Educational Practices           $10             $12    
$16 
No. 3   In the City                     $10             $12    
$16 
No. 4/5 Critical Histories              $10             $12    
$16 

Special Rate for Individuals 
Ordering Both Nos. 2 & 3                $12 Domestic, $14 Foreign

19)-------------------------------------------------------------

_THEORY,
CULTURE &
SOCIETY_

             Explorations in Critical Social Science

"It seems to me that Mike Featherstone
and his editorial group have done
more than any other sociological group
to move sociology forward into new 
terrains of thought and discourse and
they have done so with power, grace
and insight."  Professor Norman Denzin

_Theory, Culture & Society_ was launched to cater to the
resurgence of interest in culture within contemporary social
science.  The journal provides a forum for articles which
theorize the relationship between culture and society.  _Theory,
Culture & Society_ builds upon the heritage of the classic
founders of social theory and examines the ways in which this
tradition has been re-shaped by a new generation of theorists. 
_Theory, Culture & Society_ also seeks to publish theoretically
informed analyses of everyday life, popular culture and new
intellectual movements such as postmodernism.

The journal features papers by and about the work of a wide range
of modern social and cultural theorists such as Foucault,
Bourdieu, Baudrillard, Goffman, Bell, Parsons, Elias, Gadamer,
Luhmann, Habermas, Giddens and Simmel.

_Theory, Culture & Society_ is published quarterly in February,
May, August and November.

20% Introductory Discount

Enter your new subscription to _Theory, Culture & Society_ at a
special introductory discount.  Subscribe today and you'll save
20% off the cost of your subscription.

Individual: One Year $37 ($46*)
            Two Years $74 ($92*)
Institutional: One Year $99 ($123*)
               Two Years $198 ($248*)

*Usual rate

Send your order to:  Sage Publications Ltd.
                     P.O. Box 5096
                     Newbury Park, CA 91359
                     USA

Ask about the special back issue sale!

20)-------------------------------------------------------------

                         _POETICS TODAY_

   International Journal for Theory and Analysis of Literature
                        and Communication

Editor: Itamar Even-Zohar (Tel Aviv)
Published by Duke University Press in cooperation with the Porter
Institute for Poetics and Semiotics, Tel Aviv University.

Here's how you can benefit from using _Poetics Today_ special
issues in your classroom:  CONVENIENT * ACCESSIBLE * CHEAP *
RISK-FREE

Children's Literature
Zohar Shavit, editor
          This introduction to the field explores questions of
          childhood and children's culture, the teaching function
          of children's literature and current thinking on the
          demarcation of boundaries between children's and adult
          literature.  250 pages.  1992

Disciplinarity
David R. Shumway and Ellen Messer-Davidow, editors
          An examination of the discipline as a historically
          specific form, offering diverse perspectives on the way
          modern disciplines control the organization and
          production of knowledge.  171 pages.  1991

Narratology Revisited I, II, and III
Brian McHale and Ruth Ronen, editors
          In three volumes, narratologists and other scholars of
          narrative reflect on the progress (or lack of progress)
          in narrative theory over the past decade and on the
          current state of the art.  191, 237, 247 pages
          (available singly or as three issues).  1990 and 1991

*Free examination copies* of _Poetics Today_ special issues are
available for course consideration and will be sent upon receipt
of your request on departmental letterhead.  Fax: 919-684-8644.

*Single issue orders* send a check payable to Duke University
Press, $14.00 for each issue.  Or call 919-684-6837 and have
credit card information ready.

*Subscriptions* Individuals can get a 1992 subscription (4
issues) for $28; students pay only $14 with a photocopy of their
current I.D.  Add $8 for postage outside the U.S.  Send a check
payable to Duke University Press or call 919-684-6837 and have
VISA or MasterCard information ready.

Mail orders to:  Duke University Press, Journals Division, 6697
College Station, Durham, NC 27708.

21)-------------------------------------------------------------

_SURFACES_

A New Interdisciplinary Electronic Journal

Published by the Department of Comparative Literature at the
University of Montreal, _SURFACES_ is an open forum oriented
toward the reorganization of knowledge in the humanities.  The
growth of interdisciplinary study in the humanities and the
emergence of new areas of inquiry has reached a point that calls
into question both traditional thematic comparisons and the
pretensions of any one theoretical approach to delimit and
dominate a field of study.  _SURFACES_ aims to provide an
international forum for scholars to address contemporary problems
and questions, using its electronic format to offer services
beyond the reach of traditional journals.

_SURFACES_ is available free of charge through the various
electronic mail networks (Internet, Bitnet, Janet, Earn &
Netnorth).

Submissions welcomed:  Please address articles, reviews, notes,
comments and news items for inclusion to the editors either by e-
mail, on diskette or in hard copy.  We are particularly
interested in essays that address the cultural problematics
engendered by and for new technologies.

All correspondence to:  The Editors, SURFACES, Dept. of
Comparative Literature, University of Montreal, C.P. 6128, succ.
"A", Montreal, Canada, H3C 3J7.

Tel.: 514-343-5683
FAX: 514-343-5684

INTERNET Access via FTP anonymous: harfang.cc.umontreal.ca

22)-------------------------------------------------------------

                            _DIS
                              COURSE_

          Volume 15, Number 1
          SPECIAL ISSUE

          **Flaunting It: Lesbian and Gay Studies**

          Delinquent Desire: Race, Sex, and Ritual in
          Reform Schools for Girls by *Kathryn Baker*

          Lesbian Pornography: The Re-Making of (a)
          Community by *Terralee Bensinger*

          Investigating Queer Fictions of the Past:
          Identities, Differences, and Lesbian and Gay
          Historical Self-Representations by *Scott Bravmann*

          "I Am What I Am" (Or Am I?):  The Making and 
          Unmaking of Lesbian and Gay Identity in _High 
          Tech Boys_ by Sarah Chinn and Kris Franklin

          Nudes, Prudes, and Pigmies: The Desirability 
          of Disavowal in _Physical Culture Magazine_ by 
          Greg Mullins

          Muscling the Mainstream: Lesbian Murder 
          Mysteries and Fantasies of Justice by JoAnn 
          Pavietich

          Obscene Allegories: Narrative Structures in Gay
          Male Porn by David Pendleton

          Applied Metaphors: AIDS and Literature by
          Thomas Piontek

          The Traffic in Dildoes: The Phallus as Camp and
          the Revenge of Genderfuck by June L. Reich

Special Issue: $12.95 individual
               $25.00 institution
               $1.75 post

Subscription (3 issues): $25.00 individual
                         $50.00 institution
                         $10.00 foreign surface post

Send orders to Journals Division, Indiana University Press, 601
N. Morton, Bloomington, IN 47404; Fax to 812-855-7931; Call 812-
855-9449 with credit card orders.

23)--------------------------------------------------------------

_U.S. LATINO LITERATURE_

An Essay and Annotated Bibliography

by Marc Zimmerman

From visions of a reclaimed Aztlan and Borinquen to portrayals of
inner city rural and urban life to the multi-faceted perspectives
of Latina feminists, U.S. Latino literature has developed and
flourished as a new sphere of cultural expression.

Marc Zimmerman's new book introduces the representative Chicano,
Puerto Rican, Cuban and other U.S. Latino writers' key works in
poetry, fiction and drama, the major trends, the pre-history,
history, and possible future of the literature and the diverse
people it represents.

Including a thought-provoking, overview essay, _U.S. Latino
Literature_ is above all the most handy, comprehensive and
economical one-volume reference work in its field.

Marc Zimmerman teaches Latin American Studies at the University
of Illinois at Chicago.  His recent books include _El Salvador at
War_ (MEP, 1988 and with John Beverley, _Literature and Politics
in Central American Revolutions_ (University of Texas Press,
1990).

Order from: MARCH/Abrazo Press * P.O. Box 2890 * Chicago IL 60690
            tel. 312-539-9638
                       ISBN 1-877636-01-0
                       Paperback, 158 pp.
            $10.95 plus $3.00 postage for single copy

24)-------------------------------------------------------------

                      CALL FOR PAPERS
                      ---------------
                       SPECIAL ISSUE

          THE ELECTRONIC JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION/
           LA REVUE ELECTRONIQUE DE COMMUNICATION

         Topic:  "COMPUTER-MEDIATED COMMUNICATION"

Issue Editor:
Thomas W. Benson
Department of Speech Communication
Penn State University
BITNET:   T3B@PSUVM
INTERNET: t3b@psuvm.psu.edu

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

The ELECTRONIC JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION/LA REVUE ELECTRONIQUE DE
COMMUNICATION is seeking original, unpublished manuscripts on the
topic of "Computer-Mediated Communication."  Papers addressing
any issues related to the general topic, based on any conceptual
framework and any methodological approach, are welcome, though we
are interested in approaches that include the human and social
aspects of communication and are not exclusively technical or
technological in content.  Examples might include critical,
discourse analytic, or content analytic studies of computer
networks; historical accounts; considerations of theoretical,
political, or economic issues; user surveys; analyses of policies
about access and use; reviews of literature; and so on.  Book
reviews are solicited; contact the editor with your suggestions. 
International perspectives are encouraged.  The major criterion
is that papers should make a significant contribution to our
understanding of the nature, roles, effects, or functions of
computer mediated communication.  Papers will be reviewed
anonymously.

The final DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION is September 15, 1992;
manuscripts are now (February 1992) being accepted for review and
the issue will be closed to further manuscripts when the issue is
complete--which may be before September 15, 1992.  Publication is
expected in late Fall, 1992.

SUBSCRIPTIONS TO EJC/REC may be obtained free of charge, by
sending the message:

SUBSCRIBE EJCREC your_name

as in:  Subscribe EJCREC  Jane Smith

to: Comserve@Rpiecs (Bitnet) or Comserve@Vm.Ecs.Rpi.Edu
(Internet).  Subscribers automatically receive each issue's table
of contents, abstracts for each article in the issue, as well as
instructions for how to obtain electronic copies of each article
in the issue from Comserve.  The EJC/REC is supported by the
Communication Studies Department at the University of Windsor,
and Comserve at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, of Troy, N.Y. 
Articles are protected by copyright (c) by the Communication
Institute for Online Scholarship (ISSN # 1183-5656).  Articles
may be reproduced, with acknowledgment, for non- profit personal
and scholarly purposes.  Permission must be obtained for
commercial uses.

25)-------------------------------------------------------------

                      Call For Papers

     *********************************************************
     *   SYMPOSIUM:  THE PRINCIPIA CYBERNETICA PROJECT       *
     *      computer-supported cooperative development       *
     *        of an evolutionary-systemic philosophy         *
     *********************************************************

                        as part of the

            13th International Congress on Cybernetics
               NAMUR (Belgium), August 24-28, 1992

About the Principia Cybernetica Project
_______________________________________
The Principia Cybernetica Project (PCP) is a collaborative
attempt to develop a complete and consistent cybernetic
philosophy.  Such a philosophical system should arise from a
transdisciplinary unification and foundation of the domain of
Systems Theory and Cybernetics.  Similar to the metamathematical
character of Whitehead and Russell's "Principia Mathematica", PCP
is meta-cybernetical in that we intend to use cybernetic tools
and methods to analyze and develop cybernetic theory.

These include the computer-based tools of hypertext, electronic
mail, and knowledge structuring software.  They are meant to
support the process of collaborative theory-building by a variety
of contributors, with different backgrounds and living in
different parts of the world.

As its name implies, PCP will focus on the clarification of
fundamental concepts and principles of the cybernetics and
systems domain.  Concepts include: Complexity, Information,
System, Freedom, Control, Self-organization, Emergence, etc.
Principles include the Laws of Requisite Variety, of Requisite
Hierarchy, and of Regulatory Models.

The PCP philosophical system is seen as a clearly thought out and
well-formulated, global "world view", integrating the different
domains of knowledge and experience.  It should provide an answer
to the basic questions: "Who am I?  Where do I come from?  Where
am I going to?"  The PCP philosophy is systemic and evolutionary,
based on the spontaneous emergence of higher levels of
organization or control (metasystem transitions) through blind
variation and natural selection.  It includes:  

 a) a metaphysics, based on processes or actions as ontological
primitives

 b) an epistemology, which understands knowledge as constructed
by the subject, but undergoing selection by the environment

 c) an ethics, with survival and the continuance of the process
of evolution as supreme values.

PCP is to be developed as a dynamic, multi-dimensional conceptual
network.  The basic architecture consists of nodes, containing
expositions and definitions of concepts, connected by links,
representing the associations that exist between the concepts.
Both nodes and links can belong to different types, expressing
different semantic and practical categories.

Philosophy and implementation of PCP are united by their common
framework based on cybernetical and evolutionary principles: the
computer-support system is intended to amplify the spontaneous
development of knowledge which forms the main theme of the
philosophy.

PCP is managed by a board of editors (presently V. Turchin [CUNY,
New York], C. Joslyn [NASA and SUNY Binghamton] and F. Heylighen
[Free Univ. of Brussels]).  Contributors are kept informed
through the Principia Cybernetica Newsletter, distributed in
print and by email, and the PRNCYB-L electronic discussion group,
administered by C. Joslyn (for subscription, contact him at
cjoslyn@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu).  Further activities of PCP
are publications in journals or books, and the organization of
meetings or symposia.  For more information, contact F. Heylighen
at the address below.

About the Symposium
___________________
After the successful organization of a symposium on "Cybernetics
and Human Values" at the 8th World Congress of Systems and
Cybernetics (New York, June 1990), and of the "1st Workshop of
the Principia Cybernetica Project" (Brussels, July 1991), the
third official activity of the Principia Cybernetica Project will
be a Symposium held at the 13th Int. Congress on Cybernetics. 
The informal symposium will allow researchers potentially
interested in contributing the Project to meet.  The emphasis
will be on discussion, rather than on formal presentation.
Contributors are encouraged to read some of the available texts
on the PCP in order to get acquainted with the main issues
(Newsletter available on request from the Symposium Chairman).

Papers can be submitted on one or several of the following
topics:

The Principia Cybernetica Project
Cybernetic Concepts and Principles
Evolutionary Philosophy
Knowledge Development
Computer-Support Systems for Collaborative Theory Building

About the Congress
__________________
The International Congresses on Cybernetics are organized
triannually (since 1956) by the Intern.  Association of
Cybernetics (IAC), whose founding members include W.R. Ashby, S.
Beer and G. Pask.  The 13th Congress takes place in the "Institut
d'Informatique, Facultes Universitaires Notre-Dame de la Paix, 21
rue Grandgagnage, B-5000 Namur, Belgium".  The official congress
languages are English and French.

Registration fee :
members of the IAC and authors of papers: 6000 BF (about $180)
other participants:                       10000 BF (about $300)
Young researchers under 30 years          2000 BF (about $60)
(with certificate of their university)

The fee covers congress attendance, conference abstracts and
coffee-breaks.

Submission of papers
____________________

==Deadlines==

* for abstract submission:                    March 31, 1992
* for final texts (max 5 pages):              August 28, 1992

 For submissions of papers or further information about the
Principia Cybernetica project, contact the symposium chairman:
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Dr. Francis Heylighen
PO-PESP, Free Univ. Brussels, Pleinlaan 2, B-1050 Brussels,
Belgium
Phone   +32 - 2 - 641 25 25     Email  fheyligh@vnet3.vub.ac.be
Fax     +32 - 2 - 641 24 89     Telex  61051 VUBCO B
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

For congress registration or further information about the
congress, contact the secretariat:
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
International Association for Cybernetics
Palais des Expositions, Place Ryckmans, B-5000 Namur, Belgium
Phone     +32 - 81 - 73 52 09     Email  cyb@info.fundp.ac.be
Fax     +32 - 81 - 23 09 45
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

26)-------------------------------------------------------------

             THE DISEMBODIED ART GALLERY EXHIBITION
                     BRIGHTON, ENGLAND, 1992

        *=*Starting in May and Continuing Until . . .*=*

        England's largest Arts Festival will be taking place in
Brighton again this year.  Each May over one hundred theatre,
dance and comedy events are presented in venues throughout the
town - from traditional opera to experimental dance, classical
Greek plays to world debut performances.

        However little of the Festival spirit seems to overflow
onto the streets and much of the population could be forgiven for
not even noticing when the Festival begins or ends.  
        Participation in the Festival just costs the price of a
ticket, but these often seem prohibitively high to some sections
of the community that the Festival aims to introduce to the Arts.

Few of the scheduled events actually present interesting, new
work TO the people of the town ON the streets.

        By contrast, Edinburgh can barely contain the (much
larger) Festival that it hosts each August - and it is impossible
to walk around the town, day or night, without encountering
street plays, jugglers and buskers from literally all over the
world.

        As a small independent group, we feel that we can do
little to attract international artists to travel to Brighton but
we can attempt to invite a little MAIL ART CULTURAL TOURISM into
our town.

        So, we have decided to hold Brighton's first DISEMBODIED
GALLERY EXHIBITION throughout the town during the month of May. 
We would like to put some new visual artwork onto the streets
instead of inside a gallery space;  distribute original artwork
around the town and give anyone the opportunity in participating
or collecting these artifacts.

        Our aim is to broaden the base of the Festival and to
initiate a much needed debate about the role of this Festival,
and more importantly about the role of the Arts within the
community.

        So we are making a call for original A3 or A4 decorative
artwork, on paper or card, originals or Xeroxes, 1 to 100 copies.

All artwork that we receive will be displayed in the streets of
Brighton in the month of May and into June and beyond if the
artwork keeps coming.  In return for your contribution, we will
photograph the artwork in place and document the comments from
the towns' people about your artwork.  Your pictures will be
fly-posted, hung from bus-stops and distributed around shops,
arcades, pubs and clubs.

        We wish to challenge the concept of Art being a sacred
relic to be worshipped from a distance and be sold as a costly
trophy.  We will ask passersby to comment on the artwork and its
place in THEIR town and encourage them to keep work that they
like.

Although there is no rigid theme to the exhibition, we would
particularly like to encourage you to produce new work that
addresses the issues that are documented above.  Prospective
participants are reminded that their work will be displayed in
full public view and so the subject matter should be chosen with
this fact in mind.

              K. de Mendonca  and M. A. Longbottom,
                     (disembodied curators)

             PLEASE SEND YOUR ARTWORK OR QUERIES TO:

             1992 DISEMBODIED ART GALLERY EXHIBITION
                   FLAT 5, 65 LANSDOWNE PLACE
                    HOVE, SUSSEX, BN3 1FL, UK

27)-------------------------------------------------------------

  =*CALL FOR COMPOSITIONS, PRESENTATIONS, PAPERS AND ARTWORK*=

The Connecticut College Center for Arts and Technology, in
conjunction with the departments of Music, Art, Art History,
Dance, Theater, English, Mathematics/Computer Science, Physics,
Physical Education, Psychology and Linguistics is pleased to
announce: 

        The Fourth Symposium on The Arts and Technology 
                        March 4-6, 1993  

The Symposium will consist of paper sessions, panel discussions,
an art exhibition, and concerts of music, mixed media works, 
video, dance, experimental theatre and interactive performance. 
Selected papers will be published as Proceedings and will be 
available at the Symposium. 

Papers: 

A detailed two page abstract including audio-visual requirements
should be sent to the address below no later than 15 September,
1992.  Approved abstracts will be notified by 15 November 1992. 
Finished papers must be submitted in camera-ready form by 15
January, 1993.  The Symposium encourages research presentations
and demonstrations in all areas of the arts and technology but is
particularly interested in receiving work concerned with
Interactivity, Virtual Reality, Cognition in the Arts,
Applications in Video and Film, Experimental Theater, The
Compositional Process, Speculative Uses of Technology in
Education and examples of scientific visualization.  Other topics
include but are not limited to acoustics, artificial
intelligence, psyhco-acoustics, vision, and imaging.  

Artworks: 

Works of computer-generated or computer-aided art, or computer- 
controlled interactive art are encouraged.  Animation or other
works of computer art on tape will be shown throughout the
Symposium.  Slides or Video Tapes (VHS), and complete
descriptions of works should be submitted no later than 15
September 1993.  Accepted artists will be notified by November
15, 1993.  Black-and-white photographs of accepted works should
be sent by 15 January, 1993.  Selected works will be published as
an insert in the Proceedings.  Funds available for the shipping 
of work are extremely limited.  Call or write the address below
for more information on the transport of artwork. 

Compostions: 

Works for instruments and tape or tape alone are being solicited
at this time.  Available instruments are: flute (doubling on
piccolo), oboe, clarinet (doubling on bass clarinet), bassoon,
trumpet, horn, trombone, percussion (two players), piano, and
strings (2,1,1,1). 

Works should not exceed 15 minutes in length and should be
submitted with accompanying score, where appropriate, before 15
September 1992.  We are especially interested in receiving a
number of interactive performance compositions and video works. 
Dance compositions are also encouraged, as are experimental
theater works using "new technology." 

Tapes for selection purposes should be on cassette or 1/2 inch
VHS.  Tapes for performance should be 15 i.p.s. stereo or
quadraphonic, or DAT.  Video works should be 3/4 inch Umatic or
1/2 inch VHS. 

A self-addressed, preposted envelope should be provided for the
return of materials within the U.S.A.  Foreign materials will be
returned at our expense. 

Send art and science related materials before 15 September 1992
to: 
David Smalley, Co-director 
Center for Arts and Technology 
Box 5637 
Connecticut College 
270 Mohegan Avenue 
New London, CT 06320-4196 
Internet:  dasma@mvax.cc.conncoll.edu 
Bitnet:    dasma@conncoll.bitnet 

Send music and AI related materials before 15 September 1992 to:
Dr. Noel Zahler, Co-director 
Center for the Arts and Technology 
Connecticut College 
Box 5632 
270 Mohegan Avenue 
New London, CT 06320-4196 
Internet:  nbzah@mvax.cc.conncoll.edu 
Bitnet:    nbzah@conncoll.bitnet 

28)-------------------------------------------------------------

                     CALL FOR PARTICIPATION

                            ECHT'92 

               Fourth ACM Conference on Hypertext 

                 NOVEMBER 30 - DECEMBER 4, 1992 
                          MILANO ITALY 

Sponsored by: 
ACM 
SIGLINK 
SIGOIS 
SIGIR 

In cooperation with: 
SIGCHI, POLITECNICO DI MILANO, AICA, LINK-IT!, INRIA 

SUMMARY OF DEADLINES 
***July 13, 1992 -- papers, technical briefings, tutorials,
          panels, demonstrations, videos, and posters 
***September 20, 1992 -- acceptance notification for paper,
          panels, technical briefings, tutorials 
***September 30, 1992 -- acceptance notification for
          demonstrations, videos, posters 
***October 15, 1992 -- final copy of papers imperatively received
          by the conference secretariat 

All submissions must be sent to: CONFERENCE SECRETARIAT,
Enza Caputo, Politecnico di Milano,  Dipartimento di Elettronica,
Piazza Leonardo da Vinci 32, 20133 Milano (Italia). 
E-mail: Caputo@ipmel1.polimi.it 
Telephone: (39) 2-23993405   Fax: (39) 2-23993411 

SCOPE
ECHT'92 is the second in a series of European conferences on 
Hypertext and Hypermedia in alternation with the U.S.-based 
HYPERTEXT conferences, coordinated and sponsored by ACM SIGLINK. 

The conference will include prominent guest speakers, 
presentations of refereed papers, panel sessions, technical 
briefing sessions, poster and video presentations, as well as 
demonstrations of experimental research prototypes and 
commercial products.  The conference will also feature two days
of introductory and advanced tutorials on a variety of topics.
There will be opportunities for informal meetings of special
interest groups. 

You are invited to participate in ECHT'92 and to submit original
papers, proposals for panels, tutorials, technical briefings, 
demonstrations, videos and poster sessions.  All submissions will
be stringently reviewed to ensure the highest levels of 
originality and merit.  We encourage innovative submissions in
any area concerned with Hypertext and Hypermedia research
development and practice.  A non-exhaustive list of suggested 
topics includes: 

Hypertext and Hypermedia 
-Applications 
-Modelling and design 
-Development methodologies and tools 
-Responsive interfaces 
-Evaluation 
-Systems software technologies 
-Authoring 

Hypertext-Hypermedia in connection with: 
-Database management systems 
-Object-oriented systems and languages 
-Operating systems 
-Knowledge-based systems 
-Information retrieval 
-Cooperative work 
-Computer-aided design 
-Software engineering 
-Electronic publishing 
-Technical documentation 
-Presentation, museums, and kiosk systems 
-Fiction 
-Interactive learning and teaching 

INSTRUCTIONS FOR SUBMISSION 

PAPERS 
Technical papers relate original work or integrative review 
(theoretical, empirical, systems).  We discourage simple 
presentations of projects or commercial products.  We encourage 
emphasizing "experiences," "lessons learned," or "integrative 
reviews."  Papers should provide a clear scientific message to 
the audience, place the presented work in context within the 
field, cite related work, and clearly indicate the innovative 
aspects of the work. 

Submission:  Full papers (<6000 words) should be submitted in 
five paper copies.  A separate cover page must contain the title 
of the paper, name(s), affiliation and complete mailing address 
(incl. phone, telefax, e-mail) of the authors together with an 
abstract (about 200 words) and 3 - 5 keywords.  Please send an 
e-mail version of the abstract with title, name, address, and 
affiliation to the conference secretariat as soon as possible. 

Deadline:  July 13th, 1992
For more information, please contact: 
Jocelyne & Marc Nanard - PAPERS CO-CHAIRS 
LIRMM, Universite Montpellier II, France 
Phone: (33) -67148517 or (33) -67148523 
Fax: (33) -67148500 
E-mail: nanard@crim.fr 

TUTORIALS 
Courses should be designed to provide advanced technical 
training in an area, or to introduce a rigorous framework for
learning a new area.  Courses can be proposed for half-day (3
hours) or full-day (6 hours) length. 

Submission: Proposals should describe the content of the course 
and its format (1000-2000 words), should identify the target 
audience, the level of expertise required, and the length (1 or 2
half days).  Qualification and profile of the instructor(s) 
should also be included.  A separate page containing title, 
name(s), affiliation and complete mailing address (incl. phone,
telefax, e-mail) of the instructors must be provided. 

Deadline: July 13th, 1992  
For more information, please contact: 
Franca Garzotto - TUTORIALS CHAIR 
Dipartimento di Elettronica Politecnico di Milano, 
Piazza L. da Vinci 32, 20133 Milano, Italy 
Phone: +39-2-2399 3520 
Fax: +39-2-2399 3411 
E-mail: garzotto@ipmel1.polimi.it 

PANELS 
Panels are meant to provide an interactive forum for involving 
both panelists and audience in lively discussions and exchanges 
of different points of view. 

Submission: Moderators are invited to provide a description of 
the proposed panel by submitting 3 - 5 pages listing the topic, 
e.g., by providing leading questions to be raised by the 
moderator, the specific format intended, the names and 
affiliations of the panelists with their specific backgrounds 
and their positions on the (hopefully  controversial) issues of 
the panel.  Panel statements will appear in the proceedings. 
A separate cover page must contain the title of the panel, 
name(s), affiliation and complete mailing address (incl. phone, 
telefax, e-mail) of the panelists. 

Deadline:  July 13th,  1992  
For more information, please contact: 
Norbert Streitz - PANELS CHAIR 
GMD-IPSI 
Dolivostr. 15, D-6100 Darmstadt, Germany 
Phone: +49-6151 869 919 
Fax: +49-6151 869 966 
E-mail: streitz@darmstadt.gmd.de 

DEMONSTRATIONS, POSTERS, AND VIDEOS 
Demonstrations provide the attendees with the opportunity to 
experience hypertext systems and question the developers of the 
systems.  Poster presentations give researchers the opportunity 
to  present significant work in progress or late-breaking results
and to  discuss their work with those attendees most deeply 
interested in the topic.  Videos are appropriate for illustrating
concepts that are best captured visually. 

Submission: Demonstrations and posters should be submitted in the
form of an extended abstract (approx. 1000 words), describing the
content, the relevance for the conference and what is noteworthy
about the presented work.  Demonstrators are informed that they 
must provide  their own hardware.  Videos should be submitted in 
the form of a 5-10 minutes VHS PAL or NTSC tape, with a 500 
word abstract, describing the content, relevance, and 
noteworthiness as above.  A separate page must contain the title 
of the demo, poster, or video, name(s), affiliation and complete
mailing address (incl. phone, telefax, e-mail) of the author(s). 
Deadline:  July 13th, 1992  
For more information, please contact: 
Paul Kahn - DEMONSTRATIONS, POSTERS, AND VIDEOS CHAIR 
IRIS, Brown University 
P.O.BOX 1946, Providence RD 02912, USA 
Phone: 401 - 863 2402 
Fax: 401 - 863 1758 
E-mail: pdk@iris.brown.edu 
or 
Antoine Risk - EUROPEAN DEMONSTRATIONS  CHAIR: 
EUROCLID 
Promopole 12 Av. des Pres, 78180 Montigny le Bretonneux, France 
Phone: 1 - 30441456 
Fax:     1 - 30571863 
E-mail: antoine.rizk@.inria.fr 

TECHNICAL BRIEFINGS 
Technical briefings aim at presenting details of a concrete
design rather than an empirical or theoretical contribution.
Presentations should emphasize experience in the design and
implementation of hypertext systems or applications, and discuss
decision points and trade-offs. 

Submission: Proposals (approx. 1500 words) should be submitted in
five paper copies and outline the points to be made in the 
briefing.  A separate page must contain the title of the 
briefing, name(s), affiliation and complete mailing address 
(incl. phone, telefax, e-mail) of the author(s). 

Deadline:  July 13th, 1992  
For more information, please contact: 
Norman Meyrowitz - TECHNICAL BRIEFINGS CHAIR 
GO Corporation, 950 Tower Lane- Suite 140 
Foster City CA 94404, USA 
Phone: 415 - 345 9833 
Fax:    415 - 345 7400 
E-mail: nkm@go.com 

For more information or to be added to the ECHT'92 mailing list: 

Paolo Paolini - GENERAL CONFERENCE CHAIR 
Politecnico di Milano, Italy 
Dipartimento di Elettronica, 
E-mail: paolini@ipmel1.polimi.it 
Telephone: (39) 2-2399 3520 
Fax: (39) 2-2399 3411 
or 
Polle Zellweger - U.S. COORDINATOR 
Xerox PARC 
3333 Coyote Hill Rd 
Palo Alto CA 94304 U.S.A. 
Phone: 415-812 4426 
Fax: 415-812 4241 
E-mail: zellweger.parc@xerox.com 
Phone: 415 - 345 9833 
Fax:    415 - 345 7400 
E-mail: nkm@go.com 

29)-------------------------------------------------------------

                   PENN STATE UNIVERSITY SEMINAR SERIES
                            ISSUES IN CRITICISM

                              Summer Seminar

                    HISTORICISMS AND CULTURAL CRITIQUE

                             June 25-30, 1992

                        State College, Pennsylvania

WAI-CHEE DIMOCK, Department of English, University of California,
San Diego.  Author of Empire for Liberty: Melville and the
Poetics of Individualism (1989) and Symbolic Equality: Political
Theory, Law, and American Literature (forthcoming); co-editor of
the forthcoming Class and Literary Studies.  Professor Dimock
will focus on the shifting configurations of gender and history.

MARJORIE LEVINSON, Department of English, University of
Pennsylvania.  Editor of Rethinking Historicism (1989) and author
of Keats's life of Allegory: the Origins of Style (1988) and
other monographs treating Romantic poetry.  Professor Levinson's
general title is "The Dialectic of Enlightenment: To Be
Continued," considering paradigms from the preCartesian to the
present deep ecology movement.

BROOK THOMAS, Department of English and Comparative Literature,
University of California, Irvine.  Author of Cross-Examination of
Law and Literature (1987) and The New Historicism and Other Old-
Fashioned Topics (1991).  Professor Thomas's central topic "The
Turn to History and the Crisis of Representation."

Participants will hear presentations by three well-known scholar-
critics--Wai Chee Dimock, Marjorie Levinson, and Brook
Thomas--and engage in seminar-type discussions organized by these
leaders.  Registrants are asked to indicate their first and
second choices for morning seminar groups.  The schedule and
atmosphere are intended to encourage informal discussions among
participants.

For further information contact:

                              Wendell Harris
                           Department of English
                       Pennsylvania State University
                   University Park, Pennsylvania  16802
                 Telephone: 814-863-2343 or 814-865-9243

30)-------------------------------------------------------------

     The Penn State Conference on Rhetoric and Composition 

                        July 8-11, 1992 

The Penn State Conference on Rhetoric and Composition, now 
entering its second decade, is a four-day gathering of teachers
and scholars.  It offers a generous mixture of plenary and
special-interest sessions in a relaxed atmosphere; a chance for
learning, leisure, and reflection on composition and rhetoric;
and an extended opportunity to discuss professional concerns with
nationally known speakers and interested colleagues. 

Each year the conference features plenary sessions, concurrent 
sessions, workshops, and roundtable discussions on topics of
current interest.  This year, the conference will run
concurrently with the Association of Departments of English (ADE)
regional summer meeting of department heads; several joint
activities are planned. 

***Panel Sessions and Workshops 
Papers this year will concern a wide variety of subjects
involving rhetoric and composition, such as rhetorical theory;
the composing process; technical or business writing; advanced
composition; ESL; writing across the curriculum; the history of
rhetoric; teaching methods; collaborative learning; tutoring and
writing labs; connections among reading, writing, and speaking;
computers and writing; legal, political, or religious rhetoric;
literacy; language and stylistics; basic writing; social
implications of writing; writing in the workplace; rhetorical
criticism; rhetoric and literature; testing and assessment; and
the administration of writing programs. 

Workshops will be offered on multimedia resources for the writing
classroom, portfolio assessment, and teacher development. 

***Saturday Morning Sessions 
On Saturday morning, participants will have a special opportunity
to concentrate for an extended period on one of three important
areas: New Ideas for Integrating Critical Writing and Critical
Reading, Peer Tutoring and Reviewing, and Program Assessment in
English. 

***Plenary Session Speakers 

Donald McCloskey, our keynote speaker, is professor of history
and of economics at the University of Iowa, where he directs the
Project on Rhetoric of Inquiry (POROI).  

Anne Ruggles Gere, professor of English and of education at the 
University of Michigan.   Her research encompasses both the
theory and pragmatics of composition.

Steven Mailloux, professor of English and Comparative Literature
at the University of California at Irvine.  His work examines the
relationships among rhetoric, literary theory, cultural studies,
and hermeneutics.  

***Time and Location 
This conference will begin at 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday, July 8 and
will end at noon on Saturday, July 11.  It will be held on Penn
State's University Park Campus in State College, Pennsylvania. 

***Fee and Registration 
The $100 fee ($75 for graduate students, lecturers, and retired 
faculty) covers registration, materials, and three social events.
It may be paid by check, money order, VISA, MasterCard, or
request to bill employer (accompanied by a letter of
authorization).  We regret that we cannot offer daily rates for
conference registration.  Fees remain the same for all or any
part of the conference.  To register, contact Penn State by June
22.  See below for address and telephone numbers.  Those who
register in advance will be notified of program changes.
Registrations will be acknowledged by mail. 

Refunds will be made for cancellations received by June 22. 
After that, the individual or organization will be held
responsible for the fee.  Anyone who is registered but cannot
attend may send a substitute. 

***For more about program content: 
Davida Charney 
117 Burrowes Building 
The Pennsylvania State University 
University Park, PA 16802 
phone (814) 865-9703 
secretary (814) 863-3066 
FAX (814) 863-7285 
E-mail to IRJ at PSUVM.PSU.EDU 

***About registration and housing:
Chuck Herd 
409 Keller Conference Center 
The Pennsylvania State University 
University Park, PA 16802 
phone (814) 863-3550 
FAX (814) 865-3749 

31)-------------------------------------------------------------

                    THEORY, CULTURE & SOCIETY

                   10TH ANNIVERSARY CONFERENCE
                       AUGUST 16-19, 1992    

                  Seven Springs Mountain Resort
                   Champion, Pennsylvania, USA

The Conference's main plenary themes are: 
          Modernity/Reflexivity/Postmodernity; 
          The Body, Self, and Identity; 
          Cultural Theory and Cultural Change.  

***The themes are continued in six panels and five parallel
streams of sessions.  These are:  The Body, Modernity and
Postmodernity; Cultural Theory; Political Culture and Cultural
Studies.  

***We also have an additional stream in which six postmodern
films will be shown and discussed.  

***To complete the program we have over twenty round tables on a
wide range of topics.

The _Theory, Culture & Society_ Conference will provide a unique
opportunity to participate with leading figures in the discussion
of some of the central issues in social and cultural theory.  

For complete details and a conference packet:

Kathleen White
-Theory, Culture & Society_ Conference
University Center for International Studies
4G22 Forbes Quadrangle
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA
telephone:  412-648-7418
fax:        412-648-2199

OR

_Theory, Culture & Society_ Conference
School of Health, Social and Policy Studies
Teesside Polytechnic
Middlesbrough,
Cleveland, TS1 3BA
United Kingdom
telephone:  (44) 0642 342346/7
fax:        (44) 0642 342067

32)-------------------------------------------------------------

                        CALL FOR PAPERS

     ========================
     /    __Rethinking      /
     /      MARXISM__       /
     ========================

         --- Announcing an international conference ---

    MARXISM IN THE NEW WORLD ORDER: CRISES AND POSSIBILITIES
                      November 12-14, 1992
               University of Massachusetts-Amherst

          We encourage papers and, especially, organized panels
          and events on the many dimensions (political, artistic,
          cultural and academic) and in the many traditions with
          which contemporary Marxism can meet the challenges of
          today.

          For conference information: Antonio Callari, Conference
          Coordinator, Economics Department, Franklin and
          Marshall College, Lancaster PA 17604.  Phone 717-291-
          3947; Fax 717-399-4413.

33)-------------------------------------------------------------

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
** *                                                             

  * **     ----------------------                                

        **     Call for participation:  ---------------------    

            **     ----------------------   Joint 1992
conference:  ///////////    **                             
---------------------   S A G S E T    **                        

                             I S A G A     **   Society for the
Advancement of Games and           \\\\\\\\\\\    **  
Simulations in Education and Training                            
**                   International Simulation and Gaming
Association   **                                                 

                  **   Conference theme:        Developing
transferable skills through   **   ----------------              

          simulation and gaming   **                             

                                      **   18-21 August, 1992    

 Napier University, Edinburgh, Scotland   **                     

                                              **   For further
information:                          Fred Percival   **  
                             SAGSET/ISAGA Conference Secretary  
**                                                 Napier
University   **                                                
219 Colinton Road   **   Telephone:  44 / 31-455-4394            

   Edinburgh EH14 1DJ   **   Facsimile:  44 / 31-455-7989        

                 Scotland   **                                   

                                ** *                             

                                  * *  * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
+----------------------------------------------------------------
-------+|  Chet Farmer, Assistant Director   |   English / 103
Morgan           ||  Project IDEALS -- FIPSE, DoE      |  
Tuscaloosa, AL  35487-0244     ||  University of Alabama         

  |   tel 205-348-9494               |

34)-------------------------------------------------------------

From: PSDMSPIN@BRUSP.ANSP.BR
Subject: Announcing a new list

Dear Friends,

We would like to announce the creation of VIOLEN-L, a
discussion group for those devoted to the study of the problem
of violence, Human Rights, and public policies on these
and related subjects.  VIOLEN-L is managed by the Nucleo de
Estudos da Violencia da Universidade de Sao Paulo (Center for the
Study of Violence of the University of Sao Paulo).  Those who
want to subscribe must send the following command:

TELL LISTSERV AT BRUSPVM SUB VIOLEN-L "your true name"

Everybody who would like to join the discussion will be welcomed!

Sincerely yours,

Mario Baldini
(PSDMSPIN@BRUSP.BITNET)

35)------------------------------------------------------------- 

This letter is to announce the formation of and offer a welcome
to a new Listserv discussion list--SovHist--(the discussion of
Soviet history from 1917-1991).

This list will be used as a forum for the reasonable discussion
of any aspect of the history of the Soviet Union from the
"February Revolution" of 1917 to the breakup of the USSR that
occurred 25 December, 1991.

Any element of this period is discussable, so long as the
criteria of being reasonable and polite in one's discourse are
adhered to.  Any questions about suitable topics should be
directed to me, Valentine Smith, at the Internet address
(cdell@vax1.umkc.edu).

Anyone wishing to participate in this list should send the
following command to one of the following Listservs; USCVM,
DOSUNI1, or CSEARN via e-mail in the body of a mail message (not
the "Subject:" line) SUB SovHist (your real name).  To
unsubscribe, send the command UNSUB (your real name).  Other
Listserv commands can be gotten by sending HELP in the message
body to any Listserv.

This is an unmoderated list.  However, I will closely keep an eye
on it, and hope that we can engage in some fruitful discussions
on Soviet history.  All that is asked is reasonable and polite
dialogue--any problems will be first addressed by private mail,
and then removal if that private discussion fails to resolve a
conflict.  This could be an exciting forum, I hope it will be,
and I encourage you to be an active participant.

Enjoy! Valentine Smith (cdell@vax1.umkc.edu)

36)-------------------------------------------------------------

AMLIT-L on LISTSERV@UMCVMB           American Literature
Discussion List
        or LISTSERV@UMCVMB.MISSOURI.EDU

   The American Literature Discussion List has been created for
the discussion of topics and issues in the vast and diverse field
of American Literature among a world-wide community interested in
the subject.  You can expect consultations, conferences, and an
ongoing exchange of information among scholars and students of
American Literature on this list.  In addition, announcements of
relevant conferences and calls for papers are welcome and
encouraged.

     To subscribe send a message to listserv@umcvmb or
     listserv@umcvmb.missouri.edu.  In BODY of the message state:

          SUB AMLIT-L your full name

     eg: SUB AMLIT-L E. Allen Poe

     If you have any questions please contact the owner.

     Owner: Michael O'Conner 
                        or 

37)-------------------------------------------------------------

NEW LIST: INMYLIFE - Beatle era popular culture 

INMYLIFE@WKUVX1.BITNET 

Topics will include but not be restricted to history, politics, 
culture, music, literature, collectibles, comic books, comix,
counter culture, drugs, Vietnam (and the war), Cold War, between
1962 (the first Beatle hit record in England) and 1974 (US out of
Vietnam). 

Interested parties should send a one line command 

                SUB INMYLIFE firstname lastname 

to LISTSERV@WKUVX1.BITNET. 

   Owner: Matt Gore