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The meetings of professional organizations in conjunction with the annual CLA conventions are to be encouraged when their goals and interests are compatible with those of CLA and meetings under other circumstances would be difficult or impossible. Such meetings enable smaller constituencies to engage in the scholarly exchange of information and to enrich the general activities and programs of the CLA convention.
To achieve allied organization status, the interested group should submit a petition to the CLA Executive Committee. Only the Executive Committee can grant allied organization status. The petition should include 1) a description of the disciplinary goals and interests of the organization, 2) a statement of how the interests of the group and CLA would be better served by such status, and 3) a copy of the group's Constitution or Bylaws. Petitions may be submitted at any time, and they will be reviewed within sixty days of receipt. The continued status of allied organizations will be reviewed annually by the Program Committee.
These policies were adapted from the Allied Organization Guidelines adopted in 1994 at the CLA Executive Meeting in Washington (14-15 Oct. 1994). They have been updated by a unanimous vote of the Executive Committee on 1 Nov. 2020.
Alice Childress SocietyContact: La Vinia D. Jennings, laviniaj@utk.edu |
Charles Chesnutt SocietyContact: Ernestine Pickens-Glass, epglass@gmail.com |
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Langston Hughes SocietyContact: Christopher Allen Varlack, lhsociety.president@gmail.com Named in honor of the first African American to make his living solely by his pen, the Langston Hughes Society (LHS) is a national association of scholars, teachers, creative and performing artists, students, and lay persons who seek to increase awareness and appreciation of Langston Hughes by promoting scholarship and creative achievement. In honor of his legacy and his commitment to encouraging young writers, the Langston Hughes Society, established in 1981, remains dedicated to supporting writers today. The Langston Hughes Review (ISSN: 0737-0555) is the official publication of the Society. |
The Modernist Studies AssociationContact: jrnlcirc@press.jhu.edu The Modernist Studies Association is devoted to the study of the arts in their social, political, cultural, and intellectual contexts from the later nineteenth- through the mid-twentieth century. The organization aims to develop an international and interdisciplinary forum to promote exchange among scholars in the revitalized and rapidly changing field. |
The Octavia E. Butler Society
Contact: Tarshia Stanley, oebliterarysociety@gmail.com Website: https://oebsociety.wordpress.com/ The Octavia E. Butler Society is devoted to preserving Butler's literary legacy by encouraging the teaching of her works in the academy and other acts of scholarly engagement.
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The Toni Morrison SocietyContact: tonimorrisonsociety@gmail.com Website: https://www.tonimorrisonsociety.org/society.html The Toni Morrison Society was founded May 28, 1993, at the annual meeting of the American Literature Association in Baltimore, Maryland. At the invitation of Carolyn Denard, then an Associate Professor of English at Georgia State University, twenty-six scholars and supporters of Morrison's work met in Baltimore to establish the Toni Morrison Society as an official member of the coalition of American author societies that comprise the American Literature Association. With its founding, the Toni Morrison Society became the 41st author society of the Association and the fourth dedicated to an African American author.
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