CFP: Tales After Tolkien: Medievalism and Twenty-First Century Fantasy Literature
Panel at the International
Medieval Congress, Kalamazoo. May 9-12, 2013 http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/congress/
For a work of contemporary fantasy literature to be compared
with those of J. R. R. Tolkien can be either compliment or condemnation; the
juxtaposition might suggest a major, original contribution to the genre or
imply a work is merely derivative. Yet if Tolkien had one of the first words on
fantasy and medievalism he did not have the last. Author Steven Erikson
recently described himself and other writers of epic fantasy as “post-Tolkien”
in The New York Review of Science Fiction
and lamented the tendency of some scholars to not realise that “we’ve moved
on.” This panel seeks papers which explore the ways in which twenty-first
century fantasy literature deploys ‘the medieval’ with all its relics, forms
and incarnations. Papers may or may not directly contrast and compare with
Tolkien’s practice. The panel asks, for example, how contemporary trends in
technology, society, politics, and culture intersect with and influence
contemporary writers, readers, and critics in their re-imaginings of medieval
material. Are there shifts in the genre as a whole? Tolkien drew largely on the
European Middle Ages as do his imitators; is this changing as Eurocentric views
become increasingly problematic and the world is ever more globalised? How do
technological developments and the explosion of multi-media fantasy products
including film, television and video-gaming engage with literature? How do
representations of race, gender, and class intersect with medievalism in
contemporary fantasy? Is the idea of an ‘authentic’ Middle Ages important? How
do writers research the past and approach their sources? Papers which address
these or any other topic related to the theme of the panel are invited. They
might address short stories, novels, comics and graphic novels, series, authors
and/or their oeuvres, or the genre as a whole, as well as adaptations for or
from film, tv, gaming, and fandoms including fan-fiction.
Please send a 250-300 word abstract for a 20 minute paper,
and a brief biography, to the organizer, Dr Helen Young by 1st September
2012. Abstracts are best emailed to Helen.young@sydney.edu.au
but may also be posted to Helen Young, John Woolley Building A20, University of
Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
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