SSML Resources

Calls for Proposals/Papers

2026 SSML Symposium

The 2026 SSML Symposium will be held May 28-29 at the Kellogg Center in East Lansing, MI. See the full CFP here.

Proposal Deadline: February 15, 2026

Midwestern Miscellany – Reading and Writing the Midwest

SSML invites proposals for an upcoming issue of its peer-reviewed journal Midwestern Miscellany on the topic of Reading and Writing the Midwest, to be edited by Rachael Price (rprice@abac.edu) and Catherine Clifford (cat.clifford@hastings.edu). See the full CFP here.

Proposal Deadline: March 1, 2026

Midwestern Miscellany – New Perspectives on Midwestern Working-Class Literature

SSML invites proposals for an upcoming issue of its peer-reviewed journal Midwestern Miscellany on the topic of New Perspectives on Midwestern Working-Class Literature, to be edited by Marilyn Atlas (atlas@ohio.edu). See the full CFP here.

Proposal Deadline: March 1, 2026

Midwestern Miscellany – Midwestern Drama

SSML invites proposals for an upcoming issue of its peer-reviewed journal Midwestern Miscellany on the topic of Midwestern Drama, to be edited by Marilyn Atlas (atlas@ohio.edu). See the full CFP here.

Proposal Deadline: March 1, 2026

SSML @ M/MLA & MLA

SSML sponsors sessions at the annual Midwest Modern Language Association and Modern Language Association conferences. Participation on SSML-sponsored panels is open to current SSML members with fully paid dues. If interested in participating in either session, please contact Marilyn Atlas (atlas@ohio.edu).

M/MLA Panels

2025

Milwaukee, Wisconsin – November 14-16, 2025. Marquette University

Conference Theme: The Humanities Is Where Hope Lives

Session Title: Hope and Hybridity in Working-Class Midwestern Literature

Presiding: Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio University

Presentations

  • “From ‘Hoboes’ to ‘Comrades’: Revolutionary Hope in Hobo News, a 20th-Century Migrant Newspaper,” Marc Blanc, Washington University St. Louis
  • “The Matriarchal Zook Family Women in the Novel The Waters by Bonnie Jo Campbell,” Janet Ruth Heller, Independent Scholar
  • “Finding ‘An Ornament of Comfort, a Grave and Tremulous Spring of Joy,’: Oklahoma Migrants and Hope in Sanora Babb’s 1939 novel Whose Names Are Unknown,” Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio University

2024

Chicago – November 14-16, 2024

Session Title: The Relationship of Visibility, Silences, Power, and Sickness in Midwestern Literary Texts

Presiding: Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio University

Presentations

  • “Is Winesburg, Ohio‘s George Willard an Unwitting Contributor to His Neighbors’ Neuroses?” Robert Dunne, Central Connecticut State University
  • “Foucauldian Medical Perception and the Modern Midwest in Sinclair Lewis’s Arrowsmith,” Shaun F. Richards, Finger Lakes Community College
  • “‘Weathering’ and Tillie Olsen’s Tell Me a Riddle as Midwestern Cautionary Tale,” Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio University
  • “’We can’t stop living’: Not Enough Heartland Love for Carmen Maria Machado’s Queer Midwest Memoir, In the Dream House (2019),” Patrick S. Allen and Haley M. Bateman, Elizabethtown College

2023

Cincinnati, Ohio – November 3, 2023

Session Title: Going Public: How Midwestern Writers Foster Democracy

Presiding: Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio University

Presentations

  • “Roughneck Style: Fashioning Radical, Interracial Regionalism in The Anvil,” Marc Blanc, Washington University St. Louis
  • “Going OUT in the Midwest: Brandon Taylor’s Real Life,” Heather Levy, Western Connecticut State University
  • “Joy, Abridged: Ross Gay’s The Book of Delights and the Paradoxical Indulgence of Flash Nonfiction,” Hannah Kroonblawd, Malone University
  • “What Susan Glaspell Gave Democracy in 1921: Grooming in “Love of the Hills,” “Trifles,” and The Verge,” Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio University

2022

Minneapolis, Minnesota – November 17-21, 2022

Theme of Conference: Post-Now

Session Title (Virtual): “Post-Now”: Locating the Humanities and/or the American Dream in Midwestern Literature
 
Presentations

  • “Clara Ann Thompson, Priscilla Jane Thompson, and Aaron Belford Thompson: Republishing Post-Reconstruction Black Poets in the ‘Post-Now,’” Patricia Oman, Hastings College
  • “Life on the Farm: Memoirs of the Family Farm and the American Dream,” Michele Willman, University of Minnesota Crookston
  • “What’s the Matter with Iowa? Race and Religion in Marilynne Robinson’s Gilead Novels,” John Rohrkemper, Elizabethtown College
  • “Bette Howland, Blue in Chicago, Public Spaces, and the American Dream,”  Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio University

2021

Milwaukee – November 4-7, 2021

Conference Theme: Cultures of Collectivity

Session Title: Ambivalence, Persistence, and the Role of Community in Midwestern Literature 

Presentations

  • “Rewriting the Chicago Renaissance: Collectively Creating the Midwest—from Hamlin Garland to Gwendolyn Brooks, 1900-1945,” Aaron Cliff Babcock, Ohio U
  • “Community and the Unkillability of Eugene Henderson in Saul Bellow’s 1959 novel, Henderson the Rain King,” Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio U
  • “Toni Morrison, the Haunting Legacies of the American South, and the Creation of a Midwest Community.” Alejandra Marie Ortega, Purdue U
MLA Panels

2026

Toronto, Ontario, January 8-11, 2026

Presidential Theme: Family Resemblances

Title of Session: Family Resemblances: Hybridity and Genre in Midwestern, Working-Class, Middle-Class, and/or Radical Literature

Presiding: Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio University, Athens

Presentations

  • “The Poetics of Collective Efficacy: Gwendolyn Brooks and Eve Ewing in Chicago,” Jared Hackworth, University of Illinois, Chicago
  • “Reclaiming Richard Wright’s Radical Racial and Proletarian Politics,” Lydia Burleson, Stanford University
  • “‘a partitioned city’: Liminality and the Working-Class in Bette Howland’s ‘Blue in Chicago,'” Kane Kijek, Ohio University
  • “Resemblances and Feminist Agency in Sanora Babb’s 1939 Dustbowl Novel Whose Names Are Unknown,” Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio University

2025

New Orleans, January 9-12, 2025

Presidential Theme: Visibility

Title of Session: Visibility and Power in Midwestern Literature

Presiding: Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio U, Athens

Presentations

  • “Foucauldian Analysis of Visibility, Power, and Knowledge in Sinclair Lewis’s Arrowsmith,” Shaun Richards, Finger Lakes Community College
  • “Making the Invisible Visible: from Nella Larsen’s Quicksand to Gwendolyn Brooks’ Emmet Till Poems,” Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio University, Athens
  • “The Invisible Dark Dangers of Urban Design in Adrienne Kennedy’s Ohio State Murders,” Jared Hackworth, University of Illinois at Chicago
  • “Making the Unspoken Visible in Mona Susan Power’s A Council of Dolls,” Michele Willman, University of Minnesota Crookston

2024

Philadelphia, January 4-7, 2024

Presidential Theme: Joy and Sorrow

Title of Session:  The Role of Joy in Midwestern Literature

Presiding: Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio U, Athens

Presentations

  • “Small Bursts of Joy: Dawn Powell’s Imaginative Return Home in My Home Is Far Away,” Jericho Williams, Spartanburg Methodist College
  • “Social Change and Personal Happiness in Lorraine Hansberry’s The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window,” Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio University
  • “The Joy-Sorrow Continuum in Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse-Five,” Jayne Waterman, Ashland University
  • “Majestic Canopy and Gnarled Roots: Joy and Sorrow in Richard Powers’s Overstory,” John Rohrkemper, Elizabethtown College

2022

Washington, DC – January 6-9, 2022

Presidential Theme: Multilingual US

Title of Session:  Writing With An Accent in Midwestern Literature

Presiding: Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio U, Athens

Presentations

  • “The City in Which I Love You: Asian American Poets and the Urban Midwest,” Timothy Yu, University of Wisconsin
  • “Crumbling Houses and Electric Dreams: Postwar Posthumanism in Raymond DeCapite’s A Lost King,” Aaron Babcock,Ohio U, Athens
  • “Safety Pins and Hidden Tears: Textual Healing in Louise Erdrich’s Love Medicine,” Ross Tangedal, U of Wisconsin, Stevens Point
  • “Writing English with an Accent: Bette Howland’s Blue in Chicago and the Defamiliarized Image,” Marilyn Judith Atlas, Ohio U, Athens

Other Organizations That Suport the Study of Midwest Culture

Black Midwest Initiative: www.theblackmidwest.com

Modern Language Association (MLA): www.mla.org

Midwest Modern Language Association (MMLA):  www.luc.edu/mmla

Midwest Popular Culture Association: www.mpcaaca.org

American Literature Association:  www.americanliteratureassociation.org

Association for the Study of Literature and Environment:  www.asle.org

Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association:  pcaaca.org

Poetry Society of Michigan:  poetrysocietyofmichigan.wordpress.com

Detroit Working Writers: www.detworkingwriters.org

Midwestern History Association:  www.midwesternhistory.com/

Members are also responsible for publishing and editing the following:

Urban Farmhouse Press

Cornerstone Press

Hastings College Press

The New Territory‘s Literary Landscapes

Patricia A. Anderson Library Endowment for Children’s Books

In 2007, David Anderson established a special fund at Michigan State University Library honoring Pat Anderson’s extraordinary devotion to library work and children’s literature. The endowment will support the acquisition and preservation of a collection of children’s literature that will be housed in the Special Collections division of the Michigan State University Main Library. To read more about the collection and to donate to the Patricia A. Anderson Library Endowment Fund for Children, go to this MSU Libraries page.

Friends and admirers of Pat who may honor her memory may consider contributing to the Patricia A. Anderson Library Endowment for Children’s Books and find information on how to do so here.

You are welcome to call the Michigan State University development office at 517.432.6123, ext. 137, with any questions or concerns.

Read the obituary and Roger Bresnahan’s eulogy for Pat.

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