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  • 21st BANGKOK International Conference on Literature, Philosophy, Humanities & Social Sciences: LPHSS-27

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  • 18th ROME International Conference on Literature, Languages & Social Sciences: RL2S2-26

  • 65th LISBON International Conference on “Humanities, Social Sciences & Education” (LHSSE-26)

  • 64th PARIS World Congress on “Teaching, Education & Technology” (WCTET-26)

  • 63rd LISBON International Conference on “Humanities & Social Sciences Studies” (LICHS3-26)

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  • 61st PARIS International Conference on “Business, Finance & Management” (PBFM-26)

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Conference Chair/Eminent Speakers

  • Prof. Dr. Y. Thaweesak King Mongkuts University of Technology Thonburi, Thailand

  • Prof. MAEDA Kazuaki Full Professor CHUBU UNIVERSITY Matsumoto-cho, Aichi, JAPAN

  • Asst. Prof. Saba Yunus Mahila Mahavidyalaya P.G. College, Kanpur, India

  • Assist. Prof. Siamak Haji Yakhchali Univesity of Tehran, Iran

  • Prof. Dr. Nuno Alexandre Soares Domingues Instituto Superior de Engenharia de Lisboa and Instituto de Comunicação da NOVA (ICNOVA) FCSH-UNL (Portugal)

  • DR. HEMANTKUMAR P. BULSARA In charge - Management section, Applied Mathematics and Humanities Department, S. V. National Institute of Technology, Surat, India

  • Prof. Dr. Dinesh C. Sharma Professor & Head-Zoology, K.M. Govt. Girls P.G. College, Badalpur, UP, India

All Abstracts, Reviews, short articles, Full articles, Posters are welcomed related with any of the following research fields:

I. Literature

A. Literary Theory and Criticism

  • Formalism and New Criticism: Close reading practices, textual autonomy, intentional fallacy, affective fallacy, and the mechanics of poetic meter and structure.

  • Structuralism and Post-Structuralism: Signs, signifiers, and signifieds; binary oppositions; deconstruction; death of the author; and the instability of meaning.

  • Marxist Literary Criticism: Base and superstructure in narrative, commodity fetishism in literature, literature as ideological state apparatus, and class struggle in plot resolution.

  • Psychoanalytic Criticism: The Freudian unconscious, id/ego/superego dynamics in character development, dream analysis applied to narrative, Lacanian mirror stage, and the symbolic order.

  • Feminist and Queer Theory: Patriarchal canons, écriture féminine, gender performativity, subversion of heteronormative narratives, and intersectional identity representation.

  • Postcolonial and Decolonial Theory: Orientalism, subaltern studies, mimicry and hybridity, cultural imperialism, and the decolonization of the literary canon.

  • Reader-Response Criticism: Interpretive communities, horizons of expectation, the implied reader, and the active construction of meaning by the audience.

  • Ecocriticism: Anthropocentrism in narrative, environmental justice literature, green studies, and the representation of non-human agency.

B. Literary Forms and Genres

  • Poetry and Poetics: Epic, lyric, sonnet, blank verse, free verse, avant-garde poetry, prosody, and the historical evolution of poetic forms.

  • The Novel and Prose Fiction: Picaresque, epistolary, Bildungsroman, historical fiction, realism, magical realism, modernist stream-of-consciousness, and post-modern metafiction.

  • Drama and Performance: Classical tragedy, comedy, Elizabethan drama, Theater of the Absurd, epic theater, dramaturgy, and the transition from text to performance.

  • Non-Fiction and Life Writing: Autobiography, memoir, biography, the personal essay, literary journalism, and travel writing.

  • Speculative Fiction: Science fiction, fantasy, utopian and dystopian literature, horror, and alternative histories.

C. Comparative and World Literature

  • Translation Studies: Equivalence, untranslatability, localization, cultural adaptation, and the politics of translation.

  • Transnational and Diaspora Literature: Migrant narratives, borderland literature, exile, exophonic writing, and global literary networks.

  • Intertextuality and Adaptation: Allusion, pastiche, parody, transmedial storytelling, and textual evolution across cultures and eras.

II. Philosophy

A. Epistemology

  • The Nature of Knowledge: Definitional boundaries of knowledge, justified true belief, and the Gettier problem.

  • Sources of Knowledge: Rationalism, empiricism, skepticism, constructivism, and the role of perception, memory, and intuition.

  • Epistemic Justification: Foundationalism, coherentism, infinitism, reliabilism, and internalism versus externalism.

  • Social and Feminist Epistemology: Standpoint theory, epistemic injustice, testimonial injustice, and collective knowledge systems.

B. Metaphysics

  • Ontology: The nature of being, substance, properties, universals versus particulars, and existential categorization.

  • Philosophy of Mind: Dualism, physicalism, functionalism, panpsychism, the hard problem of consciousness, and personal identity over time.

  • Free Will and Determinism: Hard determinism, libertarian free will, compatibilism, fatalism, and moral responsibility.

  • Causation, Space, and Time: Presentism versus eternalism, the A-series and B-series of time, causal determinism, and the nature of possibility (modal realism).

C. Ethics and Axiology

  • Normative Ethics: Utilitarianism and consequentialism, deontological ethics, virtue ethics, and ethics of care.

  • Meta-Ethics: Moral realism, moral anti-realism, cognitivism, non-cognitivism, error theory, and the is-ought problem.

  • Applied Ethics: Bioethics, environmental ethics, business ethics, technology and AI ethics, animal rights, and the ethics of warfare.

  • Aesthetics: The definition of art, the nature of beauty, aesthetic experience, institutional theories of art, and the intersection of art and morality.

D. Logic and Philosophy of Language

  • Formal and Informal Logic: Propositional logic, predicate logic, modal logic, syllogisms, and informal fallacies.

  • Sense and Reference: Frege's distinction, Russell's definite descriptions, Kripke's rigid designators, and direct reference theory.

  • Pragmatics and Speech Acts: Locutionary, illocutionary, and perlocutionary acts; conversational implicature; and performative language.

III. Humanities

A. History and Historiography

  • Methodology and Philosophy of History: Historical objectivity, primary versus secondary sources, archival theory, and linear versus cyclical interpretations of historical progression.

  • Social and Cultural History: History of everyday life, microhistory, history of mentalities, subaltern history, and oral history.

  • Global, Intellectual, and Economic History: History of ideas, conceptual history, mercantilism, industrialization, and globalization networks.

B. Art History and Visual Culture

  • Iconography and Semiotics: Decoding symbols, visual language, signs in art, and structural analysis of images.

  • Art Movements and Periods: Classical, Renaissance, Baroque, Impressionism, Modernism, Postmodernism, and Contemporary global art.

  • Material Culture and Museology: Provenance, curation, cultural heritage preservation, repatriation of artifacts, and the politics of exhibition spaces.

C. Religious Studies

  • Comparative Religion: Systematic analysis of world religions, indigenous spiritualities, new religious movements, and mythological structures.

  • Philosophy of Religion: Arguments for and against the existence of deities, the problem of evil, divine command theory, and the nature of faith.

  • Sociology and Anthropology of Religion: Ritual theory, sacred versus profane spaces, secularization theses, and the role of religion in state formation.

IV. Social Sciences

A. Sociology

  • Social Stratification and Inequality: Class dynamics, racial and ethnic stratification, gender structures, social mobility, and systemic inequality.

  • Sociological Theory: Classical foundations (Marx, Weber, Durkheim), structural functionalism, symbolic interactionism, conflict theory, and contemporary social critique.

  • Institutions and Socialization: Family units, education systems, religious institutions, mass media, and the internalization of social norms.

  • Urban and Rural Sociology: Urbanization, gentrification, community building, spatial segregation, and rural-urban migration patterns.

B. Anthropology

  • Cultural Anthropology: Ethnography, kinship systems, gift economies, language and worldviews, and cultural relativism versus ethnocentrism.

  • Archaeology: Material culture recovery, site excavation methodologies, human evolution, and the rise and fall of ancient civilizations.

  • Linguistic Anthropology: Sociolinguistics, language revitalization, linguistic relativity (Sapir-Whorf hypothesis), and discourse analysis within power dynamics.

  • Biological Anthropology: Paleoanthropology, human genetic variation, primatology, and bioarchaeological analysis.

C. Political Science

  • Political Theory and Philosophy: Classical political thought, liberalism, conservatism, socialism, anarchism, fascism, and democratic theory.

  • Comparative Politics: State structures, electoral systems, democratization, authoritarianism, regimes, and institutional designs.

  • International Relations: Realism, liberalism, constructivism, Marxism in international affairs, hegemony, global governance, and conflict studies.

  • Public Policy and Administration: Bureaucracy, policy implementation, policy evaluation, state budgeting, and governance mechanics.

D. Human Geography

  • Spatial Analysis and Geopolitics: Border formations, territoriality, critical geopolitics, and space as a social construct.

  • Economic and Cultural Geography: Global supply chains, uneven development, cultural landscapes, and the geography of globalization.

  • Environmental Geography: Human-environment interactions, political ecology, resource management, and spatial adaptation to environmental changes.

V. Interrelated and Interdisciplinary Frameworks

A. Critical Theory and Cultural Studies

  • The Frankfurt School: Culture industry, instrumental rationality, communicative action, and critique of mass media.

  • Subcultures and Hegemony: Cultural resistance, ideology and hegemony (Gramsci), hegemony encoding/decoding (Hall), and youth subcultures.

  • The Body and Biopolitics: Foucault's biopower, discipline and punish, surveillance studies, and the medicalization of society.

B. Gender, Sexuality, and Intersectionality

  • Intersectional Frameworks: Overlapping vectors of race, class, gender, and ability as defined across sociology, law, and literary analysis.

  • Queer Phenomenology and History: Spatial configurations of identity, historical genealogies of sexuality, and queer ecologies.

C. Science, Technology, and Society (STS)

  • Actor-Network Theory (ANT): Symmetry between human and non-human actors in sociotechnical networks.

  • Philosophy and Sociology of Science: Paradigm shifts (Kuhn), falsifiability (Popper), social construction of scientific facts, and scientific objectivity critiques.

  • Digital Humanities and Digital Sociology: Computational text analysis, mapping literary networks, digital ethnography, and the socio-philosophical impacts of algorithms.

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