THE OCTAVIA E. BUTLER LITERARY SOCIETY
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Lost in deep space:
​conversations

From 2013-2025, the Octavia E. Butler Literary Society hosted a blog on its website, posting announcements and calls for papers, allowing members and special guests to write blog posts, reflections, and book reviews. Those archives can be found here.

update: we've moved our blog

6/11/2025

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In an effort to streamline and connect with people easily via e-mail, ​ ​​​we've moved our blog here. Please subscribe to stay informed and, of course, follow us on our social media platforms: http://linktr.ee/oebliterarysociety
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48 Everyday Things to Do to Resist

3/10/2025

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​Ed Chang
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  1. Breathe.  
  2. Sleep.  Rest.  Save and spend your energy where and when you can. 
  3. Celebrate others.  Celebrate yourself.  Try not to let things diminish joy, success, good luck, light, collaboration, and creation.  
  4. Embrace change, difference, diversity. 
  5. Make a new friend.  Someone older, younger, amazingly different than you.  
  6. Be curious.  Curiosity leads to empathy.  Empathy leads to centering someone other than yourself.  
  7. Learn.  Educate yourself.  Take a class.  Check your Power, Privilege, assumptions, and internalized b(ia)s.  
  8. Fact check.  Use evidence.  Share truth.  Foreground expertise and wisdom.  
  9. Read Octavia Butler, James Baldwin, bell hooks, Ralph Ellison, Audre Lorde.  
  10. Stick 'em with stickers.  
  11. Wear a t-shirt, pin, scarf.  
  12. Culture jam.  Disrupt.  Turn the machine against itself (e.g. flood “snitch” lines, make memes, brigade the good, downvote the bad)
  13. Sing.  
  14. Write a poem.
  15. Dance.  In your chair.  Next to your desk.  Out on the street.  
  16. Acknowledge, transform, repurpose anger, fear, pain, and grief.
  17. Give someone else flowers.  Give yourself some flowers.  Practice random acts of kindness.  
  18. Get vaccinated.  
  19. Wear a mask.  
  20. Learn to sew.
  21. Learn to cook. 
  22. Feed someone else.  Feed yourself.  Deliver a meal.  
  23. Go for a walk.  With a friend, neighbor, coworker.  
  24. Follow (with) kindness.  Lead (with) compassion.  
  25. Hold someone's hand.  Ask for a hug.  Share a touch.  
  26. Speak up.  Practice random acts of bravery.  Practice bystander and upstander interventions: https://www.apa.org/pi/health-equity/bystander-intervention. 
  27. Buy, barter, trade something from BIPOC and LGBTQ+ artists, creators, shops, and businesses. 
  28. Donate money, if you can, to an organization, fund, campaign, or cause.  
  29. Make a call to your representatives.  Make five: https://5calls.org/.
  30. Send a short letter, postcard, email, fax to your representative: https://www.aclu.org/writing-your-elected-representatives.
  31. Donate blood, if you can.
  32. Partner with local businesses, schools, libraries, institutions to put up a sign, to create safe zones, to support vulnerable or marginalized groups, to fundraise for area needs, goals, projects, candidates, communities.  
  33. Build coalitions, alliances, allyship, unlikely friendships.  
  34. Volunteer in your neighborhood, community, city, or region.  Help a friend, neighbor, family member, coworker, even a stranger.  
  35. Send a supportive letter, card, or email to representatives, administrators, teachers, first responders, healthcare workers, people who run our elections, and other community leaders who are facing increasing hatred, bile, and even death threats.  
  36. Vote, especially at the local and state level.
  37. Curate social media.  Post prosocially.  Signal boost selectively.  Share other strategies and care.  
  38. Brush up on first aid.
  39. Get CPR training.  
  40. Learn basic wilderness and survival skills.  
  41. Pack a bugout bag.  
  42. Cast a spell.  Light a candle.  Scatter some native seeds.  
  43. Plant a tree, native flowers, garden.  Grow food for pollinators and people.  
  44. Endure.  Survive.  Put down roots.  
  45. Love. 
  46. Create.  
  47. Witness.
  48. Imagine a better, kinder, greener, more just and hopeful world. ​
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Call for Papers: Octavia E. Butler Literary Society returns to the  American Literature Association Conference

9/3/2024

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May 21-24, 2025
The Westin Copley Place
10 Huntington Avenue
Boston, MA   02116

Proposal Deadline: January 13, 2025
Send Proposals to: [email protected] 

The Octavia E. Butler Literary Society is returning to the American Literature Association Conference, and we are pleased to announce a call for papers for its 36th annual conference to celebrate Butler’s works and influence on science fiction, Afrofuturism, gender—and more— and how she has inspired generations of writers, scholars, and readers to rethink narratives around race, gender, technology, power, and the future.

Membership to the OEB Literary Society is not required to submit to be part of a panel or roundtable. 

For further information or specific questions about the conference, please consult the ALA website at
www.americanliteratureassociation.org or contact the conference director, Dr. Olivia Carr Edenfield, at [email protected].
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Futurity as Practice: Postcards from the Octavia E. Butler Conference at The Huntington

8/17/2024

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By Ed Chang, Ph.D.
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Pasadena is a weird place.  The Huntington is a weird place.  I had never been to either place until my recent visit to attend the “Futurity as Praxis: Learning from Octavia E. Butler” conference on May 23 & 24, 2024.  Butler was born in and grew up in Pasadena, the sights, sounds, and experiences of which inform and embedded in much of her writing and worldbuilding.  Much of the conference and the discussions of Butler’s life, stories, and legacy was framed by Pasadena as a place, a complicated and often contradictory space particularly regarding race, gender, and especially class.  The conference brought together writers, artists, scholars, activists, community members, and fans to explore and expand the “lessons” and pedagogies of Butler’s work especially in the contemporary moment.  The conference description read: 

The year 2024 marks the beginning of the critical dystopian future Octavia E. Butler (1947–2006) envisioned in her groundbreaking novel Parable of the Sower. Her fiction and the story of her life compel us to reckon with power, leadership, creativity, the Earth, human relationships, and the unknown possibilities that await us in the stars. Now, intellectuals from different communities will gather to contemplate her legacy. This conference asks how we have learned from Butler’s writing and what her archive at The Huntington—a short distance from where the author spent her formative years in Pasadena, California—can help future generations discover.

Day One

My flight was delayed into Burbank airport (also a weird place), so I ended up missing the welcome plenary.  However, I did make it in time for the first session “Creativity as Praxis,” which featured Sage Ni’Ja Whitson, a queer & trans anti-disciplinary artist and writer from the Departments of Dance and Black Study at UC Riverside; Damian Duffy, author of the graphic novel adaptations of Kindred and Parable of the Sower; and the esteemed Steven Barnes, a Black author of over thirty novels of science fiction, horror, and suspense.  

Whitson’s offered questions and commentary about Octavia Butler’s creativity, writerly process, and imaginative practice, thinking about the work of Black artists and Black embodiment, about what it means to live with and write about ghosts (literary, historical, personal), and what it means to write for different audiences, different purposes.  Duffy talked about the possibilities and pitfalls of adapting Butler’s texts into graphic novel from, about working with Butler’s stories and legacy as a white writer and his creative partnership with illustrator John Jennings, and about the forthcoming adaptation of Parable of the Talents.  Steven Barnes rounded out the conversation with anecdotes from his friendship with Butler and how to live, create, promote, sell, and survive as a writer or artist (particularly as writer or artist of color).  Barnes spoke earnestly and authentically about what it means to be a Black writer for white audiences and simultaneously as a role model for Black communities, particularly for young people.  

In the afternoon was Session Two titled “The Books of the Living: Collection Researchers.”  It featured moderator Ademide Adelusi-Adeluyi, a digital humanist, author of Imagine Lagos, and Assistant Professor of History at UC Riverside; Ayana Jamieson, educator, mythologist, and founder of the Octavia E. Butler Legacy Network; Alyssa Collins, Assistant Professor of English at the University of South Carolina and 2021-22 Octavia E. Butler Fellow at The Huntington; and Lois Rosson, Berggruen Institute Fellow and 2023-24 Octavia E. Butler Fellow at The Huntington.  

The table focused on the Butler archive at The Huntington, how folks have worked with Butler’s papers, and how different disciplines could benefit from reading Butler’s writing and the questions, problems, and potential solutions it raises.  Adelusi-Adeluyi asked the panel questions about the touch and feel and presence of Butler’s papers, the ethics of “intruding” into the archive, and how Butler herself did research, take notes, make connections, and integrate research into her stories.  Jamieson talked about Butler in relation to psychology, mythology, but also Butler and everyday things, everyday realities.  Collins and Rosson described their firsthand work in the archives, in the happy accidents of finding something that they did not expect to find, and how they can use their research in their home disciplines but also in interdisciplinary ways.  
Day Two

The morning session, Session Three, of the second day was called “Mind of My Mind: Scholarship and Pedagogy” and brought together scholars, writers, researchers, and teachers to think about Butler in the classroom: what is taught, how is Butler taught, what challenges come up, and why Butler is important?  The panel was a full slate with Jasmin Young, who moderated and is Assistant Professor of Ethnic Studies at UC Riverside and co-editor of Black Power Encyclopedia, as moderator; Gerry Canavan, Professor of English at Marquette University and author of Octavia E. Butler (Modern Masters of Science Fiction); Ashanté Reese, Associate Professor of African and African Diaspora Studies at University of Texas at Austin and author of Black Food Geographies; Marisa Parham, Professor of English and Digital Studies and director of the African American Digital Humanities initiative at University of Maryland; and Valorie Thomas, who is an author, consultant, and Emerita Professor of English at Pomona College.  

Like the previous day’s sessions, the panel had a lot to share, a lot to offer regarding teaching and writing about Octavia Butler.  In response to the question about challenges in teaching Butler, Canavan addressed how many of the novels and stories are quite dark, intense, and students are often confronted by difficult topics and situations; Parham considered the ways that Butler, her archive, and the ways different students can use their disciplines to think about their own knowledge production.  When asked about the radical possibilities of Butler, Reese talked about Butler and social justice education, politics, and activism and taking Butler outside of the classroom; Thomas added Butler’s connections to the “canon” of African American literature, to figures like Phyllis Wheatley, and Butler’s place in Afrofuturism and the stakes of Black futurity.  Other topics that came up during the conversation included having students write adaptations or their own versions of Butler’s stories to process their own ideas and issues, thinking about Butler and abolition or Butler and geography, especially considering how many places use the name “Earthseed,” and finally, how to get students to read with nuance, complexity, history, media and technology, and even popular culture. 

The last session of the conference was in the afternoon on Friday.  “Earthseed: Sustainability & Activism” brought together Elyse Ambrose, Assistant Professor of Religious Studies Department at UC Riverside and the moderator; Syrus Marcus Ware, an artist, activist, member of the Performance Disability Art Collective, co-editor of Until We Are Free: Reflections on Black Lives Matter in Canada; and an Assistant Profess of the School of Arts at McMaster University; and Rasheedah Phillips, is an attorney, housing advocate, co-founder of Black Quantum Futurism, and author of The Recurrence Plot.  

Ambrose framed the panel’s conversation around three main ideas: first, what are your values, beliefs regarding activism, sustainability, and community, and who are your “people,” to whom do you feel accountable; second, how does your work relate to time and temporality given that “Earthseed” as imagined in the Parable of the Sower and the Parable of the Talents is “worlding toward a world one will never see,” how do we think about queering temporality; and third, how do you/we live and thrive despite the constraints of Western time and reality?  Ware talked about their own identities, about working as and with trans, queer, disabled, BIPOC communities, about abolition, responding to conflict and crisis, and about the need for disability justice and trans justice.  Phillips shared her experiences in Philadelphia, being a young mother, of being told that she had no future, how we might imagine “Black quantum futurism” and “Black times” and “Afrodiasporan time,” and the importance of centering the people most impacted by the world’s problems.  All of the presenters focused on getting out of crisis, thinking long term, thinking generationally, and what it means to imagine different possibilities, solutions, and hope.  
Lessons Learned
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2024 is a weird.  The twenty-first century is weird.  And as many of the presenters noted over the two days, we are in the year that begins Butler’s Parable of the Sower.  We are living through the prescient, dystopian world that Lauren Olamina, the narrator and main character of the novel, is living through.  Climate change.  Environmental disaster.  Economic crisis.  Fires.  Failing governments and social structures.  Disability.  Violence.  War.  White nationalism.  Death.  But all of the presenters also tried to articulate ways to change, transform, and survive.  Unfortunately, Butler herself was not able to bring the trilogy to a hopeful close; it is said that she put the series down to think about how to finish the last novel Parable of the Trickster, but she unexpectedly died in 2006 before she could complete it.  In a deep way, everyone that attended the conference, everyone that presented or organized, and everyone that has engaged Butler is continuing her work, her passion, her dreams even in a tiny puzzle-piece way.  

I think that is the biggest lesson of the conference—many hands and hearts make light work but also literally make survival possible, particularly for those most vulnerable or marginalized.  I regularly teach Butler’s texts in my classes wherever and whenever possible, and students always find her stories and novels rich, troubling, and energizing.  I am reminded of an essay I wrote called “Drawing the Oankali: Imagining Race, Gender, and the Posthuman in Butler’s Dawn,” which was published in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Octavia Butler edited by Tarshia Stanley.  I wrote about students drawing the aliens in Dawn and their responses to the novel’s main ideas and challenges.  What they learned, what they reported remind me of the discussions and elucidations offered by conference goers and presenters:

What the students imagine, what the students encounter in the text, and what the students reflect on and respond to may not always be easy, tidy, or necessarily hopeful. Dawn and Butler's other worlds are always dystopian and utopian…Butler's stories and worlds do not shy away from exploring these difficult questions and posing difficult answers.  It is these acts of imagining new, different, radical possibilities that are at the heart of reading Dawn, teaching Butler, and making drawings of aliens. (88)

I really appreciated everyone’s curiosity, openness, and compassion.  I think these are the things we need to catalyze and embolden in 2024 and beyond.  They are the antidone to so much of the fear and destruction of the current world.  Even though we were talking and thinking about heavy, heavy things, there was always humor, laughter, play, and joy in the mix.  I really loved seeing and feeling that part, too.  I think one of my favorite moments of all the conference was during the morning session on Day Two when Valorie Thomas revealed that Butler loved horses.  Butler was a horse girl.  It was a side of Butler that I had not encountered, and it made me so happy.  It made the whole room happy.  

I am thankful that I got to attend and witness so many great moments.  Truth be told, I found out about the conference only a week or so before the event dates, and I decided on a lark to make the trip.  I wanted to visit The Huntington, particularly to find out a little more about the archive and their fellowship opportunities, and I wanted to see and meet some of the speakers listed in the program.  Given that I am a member of the executive board of The Octavia E. Butler Literary Society, I felt like there needed to be representation at the conference.  I am glad I went even though I had no idea what to expect.  In my head, as an academic, I thought it was going to be more along the lines of conferences I usually attend.  It ended up being a bigger audience and a more mixed audience than I had imagined, all of us in one theater to watch and listen to each session.  I wanted more opportunity to interact with folks, to socialize, to talk after each session.  I am glad that I paid for the lunches each day because it was the only real chance to sit, meet, and get to know others.  Overall, I had a wonderful time at the conference, wandering around The Huntington, and getting to see a little bit of the city of Pasadena.  (I had some good food, bought some seven-sided dice at Odyssey Games, and had a few drinks at The Boulevard, Pasadena’s only gay bar.)  I was not able to see the actual archives though; I wish there had been an option to take a tour.  But I intend to return.  I hope the conference runs again, and next time, I would love to be one of the people on the stage.  I look forward to following up on all of the amazing speakers, thinkers, and creators I saw and met; I am excited by the art and work and organizing that everyone is doing.  

A big thanks to the organizers, staff, and presenters.  A big thanks to the attendees and to the venue.  And, finally, a big happy birthday wish to Octavia E. Butler!  ​
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Passing the Torch: The Next Chapter for the OEB Literary Society

12/29/2023

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The Octavia E. Butler Literary Society is one of those seeds I wanted to sow, water, weed and then watch someone else grow to maturity. 

In 2013, I asked the two most prominent scholars of Butler's work, Drs. Greg Hampton and Conseula Francis, to meet with me at the American Literature Association gathering in Boston. I proposed to them that we start the OEB Literary Society. They agreed and we set about building a network, a website, and some reason for being. While we weren't sure what would happen, we knew it would be incredible. 
 
The most exciting things to come out of these years have been the three conferences we held. I owe great thanks to Matt Mullins, Associate Professor of English at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, for helping lay the initial foundation. Matt and I met with famed speculative fiction author Tananarive Due and Dr. Claire Curtis, Consuela's colleague at the College of Charleston, to determine what would be different about our group. We knew we wanted a literary social and intellectual meeting place that could be accessed by any Butler reader. One of the things that made that first conference at Spelman College in 2016 so special was that we had a group of high school students as presenters. Their teachers rented a van and drove them from North Carolina to Atlanta and I arranged for them to stay in the dorms. Those young people had their first experience as scholars of Butler as they shared what they'd learned from reading Parable of the Sower with academics and college students. We also had a presenter who had never written an academic paper so Matt in particular worked with her to shape her thoughts so that she could share how reading Butler had changed her. We treated the non-academics like any other scholars of Butler and we could not have been happier. We were succeeding at building a cross-roads of sorts, a place where theory could meet practice and not engage in combat but actually coexist. 
 
The 2018 conference featured the phenom Toshi Reagon who'd worked with her mom Bernice Johnson Reagon to compose an opera based on Parable of the Sower. Our fledgling--pun intended--society could not afford to bring the opera to Spelman so Toshi took pity on us and came and did a one-woman show where she sang excerpts and told the story of how she came to convince Octavia that Parable also had a musical story to tell. That too was magical. 
 
Life and the pandemic ushered the 2021 conference to a homebase in St. Paul, MN and on to zoom connection where yet other "only because it's Octavia Butler" connections occurred. Dr. Ed Chang, Associate Professor at Ohio University, helped me take the society to the next level when we actually partnered with community activists in the Twin Cities who were responsible for planning half the conference. That year we alternated between traditional academic and what we called "Community" sessions all on line. We'd have one presentation of papers and then next would be a creative and interactive presentation courtesy of local activists who were using Butler's work. We were also pleased to feature artwork from a student whose art class at St. Catherine University had participated in their Butler themed Integrated Learning Series. We had more than one thousand people register to view the zoom sessions from all over the world. And, once again, Toshi stepped in to lend her power and energy. She and her band recorded a show featuring some songs from the opera that was broadcast only to registered participants via Vimeo. Then, she did a live talk-back. Did I tell you that incredible things happen when you get involved with Butler's work? 
 
Now a decade has passed since I sat in that room with Greg and Conseula. They have both become ancestors and I have been waiting for a descendent to come and take the society into its next dimension. That person has finally arrived and I am excited, proud, and grateful for what is to come. I have always known who I am. I am a sower and reading and working and living in Octavia's work has only deepened that identity for me. 

The Octavia E. Butler Literary Society is one of those seeds I sowed, watered, weeded, and now will watch someone else grow maturity. 
 
Tarshia L. Stanley, PhD
Founding/Past President
OEB Literary Society 
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Speculative Futures, Present Imaginations

1/26/2021

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Virtual Exhibition
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​Image courtesy of St. Catherine University student Karla Scherber. (Untitled, oil on canvas, 16" x 20")

Call for art: The Catherine G. Murphy Gallery invites artists to participate in Speculative Futures, Present Imaginations, a virtual community art exhibition celebrating the visionary writings of Octavia E. Butler (1947-2006).

This exhibition complements the annual conference of the Octavia E. Butler Literary Society, presented online and co-sponsored by the Abigail Quigley McCarthy Center for Women at St. Catherine University, in honor of International Women’s Day. This year’s conference, The Confluence: Octavia E. Butler at the Intersection of Cultural Critique and Climate Collapse, takes place March 6-7, 2021, and will recognize the work of Butler through scholarship, discussion, community engagement and art.

Artists exploring any of the following themes are encouraged to submit 1-3 images of artwork for this virtual exhibition:
  • Afrofuturism
  • Antiracism
  • Alternate theologies and spiritualities
  • Cyborgs and the Posthuman
  • Climate change and collapse
  • Community organization
  • Disability studies
  • Indigenous sovereignty
  • Institutional transformation
  • LGBTQIA+ explorations
  • Mapping and cartography
  • Migration
  • Pleasure activism
  • Utopian and dystopian imaginings

Please note that all submissions are subject to curation by gallery staff, both technical and contextual.

To participate: send 1-3 images (jpeg, 300 dpi, approximately 5x7”) to [email protected] along with your name, the artwork title, medium and dimensions. You may also provide a brief artist statement or share any information you would like viewers to know about your work. (150 words or less, please.) Submission deadline: February 15, 2021.

About this exhibition: Butler’s work, which falls mainly in the genre of speculative fiction, has remained startlingly relevant for decades, and even more so in recent years, as our national and global communities wrestle with issues of climate change, polarizing politics and racist violence. Today, Butler’s extraordinary imaginings of future realities appear less speculative and ever more present. The Octavia E. Butler Society explains:
“Octavia E. Butler’s work continues to be a catalyst for scholars, artists, and activists to engage contemporary issues that are shaped by our nation’s legacies of colonialism and capitalism. Offering visions of apocalypse shepherded by diverse characterizations of leadership, much of Butler’s work urges aspirational engagement with the myriad dimensions of our current cultural polarization and the devastating consequences of climate collapse. Her critical representations of the environment, sexuality, race, gender, politics, and many other topics have established her as a revolutionary thinker, and her influence cannot be contained by the traditional categories and boundaries in which knowledge is typically organized.”
​

Questions: contact Nicole Watson, Gallery Director, [email protected]
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2021 CONFERENCE REGISTRATION IS FREE!

1/11/2021

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In celebration of International Women's Day the conference registration fees for the 2021 virtual conference are waived. Presenters will still need to join the society and attendees will still need to register. We ask that attendees consider supporting the society by becoming members. Click on SOCIETY MEMBERSHIPS to join.
​
REGISTRATION OPENS January 19, 2021.  
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The Confluence: Octavia E. Butler at the Intersection of Cultural Critique and Climate Collapse (We will be meeting virtually) March 6-7, 2021

11/23/2020

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A confluence is the place where two rivers meet. It is a place of not only great energy but great power and creativity. Located at one of the great confluences,  the Twin Cities occupy this place called Bdote – “where two waters come together” – that is sacred to the Dakota people. The Octavia E. Butler Literary Society invites you to join us at this sacred place of power and creativity for the third biennial conference where we will feature work honoring Butler. Our host is St. Catherine University in St. Paul MN.


Octavia E. Butler’s work continues to be a catalyst for scholars, artists, and activists to engage contemporary issues that are shaped by our nation’s legacies of colonialism and capitalism. Offering visions of apocalypse shepherded by diverse characterizations of leadership, much of Butler’s work urges aspirational engagement with the myriad dimensions of our current cultural polarization and the devastating consequences of climate collapse. Her critical representations of the environment, sexuality, race, gender, politics, and many other topics have established her as a revolutionary thinker, and her influence cannot be contained by the traditional categories and boundaries in which knowledge is typically organized. Her work is too vital to be put into any kind of box and, like the rivers, is energized when scholars, artists, organizers, activists, educators and lovers of speculative fiction come together in creative confluence.


Join us at St. Catherine University from March 6-8, 2021 to honor the life and legacy of Octavia E. Butler. We encourage proposals for both individual scholarly papers and workshops, pedagogical discussions, roundtables, art work, dance performances, and other presentations. 


Additional abstracts of no more 200 words will be accepted for  papers, panels and presentations or summaries of art and performance pieces and are due by December 15, 2020. Presenters will be notified by January 1, 2021.  Abstracts should be sent to [email protected] 


Investigations of Butler’s works might include but are not limited to the following themes: 
  • Afrofuturism 
  • Antiracist pedagogies
  • Apocalypse and eschatology
  • Climate Collapse
  • Community organizing as a result of Buter’s influence 
  • Cyborgs and the Posthuman
  • Disability studies
  • Ecocriticism 
  • Indigenous sovereignty 
  • Institutional transformation
  • LGBTQIA+ studies
  • Mapping and cartography
  • Migration 
  • Pleasure activism 
  • Speculative Fiction and Science Fiction
  • Utopia/dystopia

Sponsored by: The Octavia E. Butler Literary Society, St. Catherine University and the Office of Academic Affairs,Contact: Tarshia L Stanley, [email protected] Or [email protected],  65 1.690.8846
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Happy Birthday Octavia E. Butler

6/22/2020

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Happy Birthday Octavia,
Today is Octavia Butler's birthday and the debut of Octavia's Parables w/ Toshi Reagon and Adrienne Maree Brown.
Join us as we take a deep dive into each chapter of Parable of the Sower, Parable of the Talents and maybe even a look at the unfinished novel Parable of the Trickster.
 
TODAY Adrienne and I will be live on Instagram I Today June 22nd at 3pm EST
at adriennemareebrown.
Listen to the podcast here https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/octavias-parables/id1519024926
Toshi Reagon
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American Literature Association Bloodchild and Other Stories CFP

11/12/2018

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Octavia E. Butler Literary Society
American Literature Association Annual Conference
Boston
May 2019

​The American Literature Association’s 30th annual conference will meet at the Westin Copley Place in Boston on May 23-26, 2019 (Thursday through Sunday of Memorial Day weekend).  The deadline for proposals is January 30, 2019. For further information, please consult the ALA website at www.americanliterature.org or for specific questions, contact the conference director and Executive Coordinator of the ALA, Professor Olivia Carr Edenfield, at [email protected] or the Executive Director of the ALA, Professor Alfred Bendixen at [email protected].
​
The OEB Literary Society invites prospective participants to submit proposals relating to any aspect of Butler’s life and work. We especially encourage papers/panels addressing Butler’s short story collection, Bloodchild and Other Stories, and would like to devote at least one of the panels to this topic. We are open to the submission of both full panels and individual papers. Please email full panel proposals and/or individual abstracts of 300 words to Matthew Mullins at [email protected] Abstracts are due no later than January 15, 2019 and should include a brief biographical note.
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