CfP: Society of Architectural Historians 2020 Annual International Conference. Seattle, 29 April 29 – 3 May 2020

Call for Papers: Society of Architectural Historians 2020 Annual International Conference. Seattle, 29 April 29 – 3 May 2020

The Society of Architectural Historians is now accepting abstracts for its 73rd Annual International Conference in Seattle, Washington, April 29–May 3. Please submit an abstract no later than 11:59 p.m. CDT on 5 June 2019, to one of the 33 thematic sessions, the Graduate Student Lightning Talks or the Open Sessions. SAH encourages submissions from architectural, landscape, and urban historians; museum curators; preservationists; independent scholars; architects; scholars in related fields; and members of SAH chapters and partner organizations.
Thematic sessions and Graduate Student Lightning Talks are listed below. The thematic sessions have been selected to cover topics across all time periods and architectural styles. If your research topic is not a good fit for one of the thematic sessions, please submit your abstract to the Open Sessions; two Open Sessions are available for those whose research topic does not match any of the thematic sessions. Please note that those submitting papers for the Graduate Student Lightning Talks must be graduate students at the time the talk is being delivered (29 April – 3 May 2020). Instructions and deadlines for submitting to thematic sessions and Open Sessions are the same.
Submission guidelines, keydates and the list of Paper Sessions is available here.

Share this post

News from the field

Architectural Histories | Call for Reviews Editors

Architectural Histories invites applications for review editors. Working in close collaboration with the editor-in-chief Markus Lähteenmäki, their responsibilities will be to commission and edit scholarly rigorous reviews of new books, exhibitions, or multimedia...

Materia Arquitectura 31

Guest editors: Carlos A. Segura y Richard Gerald—Rondón Institutions are inevitable conventions. They classify, create temporalities, remember and forget precedents, and authorize or censor narratives. They capture the shifting features of reality in order to serve...