Chla newsletter spring 2013

Page 1

Children’s Literature Association

NEWSLETTER

President’s Message

Volume 20 | Issue 1 Spring 2013

In This

ISSUE: President’s Message.....................................1 Call for Nominations for the Anne Devereaux Jordan Award.....................1 2013 ChLA Conference “Play and Risk in Children’s and Young Adult Literature”.........2 2014 ChLA Conference “Diverging Diversities”..................................3 2013 ChLA Award Recipients........................4 2013 Anne Devereaux Jordan Recipient........5 2013 ChLA Grant Recipients.........................5 Results of the 2013 ChLA Election................5 Guaranteed Sessions at the 2014 MLA Conference..................................6 2015 MLA Session Call.................................6 2014 ChLA Conference Call for Papers..........7 JHUP Announcement....................................8

Anne Devereaux Jordan Award Call for Nominations The Anne Devereaux Jordan Award is intended to honor the lifetime achievement of an individual whose scholarship and service have had a significant impact on the field of children‘s literature scholarship. The award is not restricted to ChLA members or to those whose work has benefited the Association specifically. The award may be given posthumously. To nominate someone for the Anne Devereaux Jordan Award, send a letter that explains the person’s accomplishments and contributions to children‘s literature scholarship to committee chair Martha Hixon (martha.hixon@mtsu.edu). If possible, include the nominee’s current vita with the nomination letter. Nominations must be received no later than October 1, 2013. Although nominees are considered annually, there may be years in which no award is given.

by Claudia Nelson Inspired by recent research I’ve been doing into books of golden deeds as a mini-genre within children’s literature, I’m thinking about golden deeds being done within the Children’s Literature Association itself. The classic literary golden deed has a tendency to bring about the doer’s death or at least mutilation, and I’m happy to say that these are not the outcomes we’re seeing here. Even so, our golden-deed-doers (you catch the Wizard of Oz film reference, I know) are sacrificing considerable time and energy. This is the time of year when your president’s mailbox fills up with messages about ChLA award winners, grant applications approved, and election results. All these winners deserve our hearty congratulations for their achievements—and all these pieces of happy news also depend upon the golden deeds of many committee members who put in the many hours necessary to evaluate, discuss, agree and disagree, and arrive at a conclusion. Meanwhile, officers, board members, editors and associate editors, and members of the many other committees upon whose energies ChLA depends are doing golden deeds in areas ranging from internationalization to diversification, membership to money, publicity to publications. And speaking of elections, one might note here that all of you who were willing to see your names appear on the ballot were vying for the opportunity to give our organization the aforementioned time and energy, all without a hope of converting your service into a well-paid lobbying gig later on.* Sounds like a golden deed to me. Prominent among golden deeds that get done for this organization is the organizing of our annual conference. This year it’s hosted by the University of Southern Mississippi and to be held in Biloxi, Mississippi, with an optional side trip to visit the de Grummond Children’s Literature Collection, now the home of the ChLA Archives. Many of you share with me fond memories of the 1991 conference also hosted by USM—I hasten to add that we were children when we attended it, or perhaps are remembering the occasion from a past life. But even if you weren’t there, I’m confident that you share my feelings of pleasurable anticipation at enjoying USM’s hospitality once again, and my eagerness to thank in person our conference coordinators, Kay Harris, Ellen Ruffin, and Eric Tribunella, and the rest of their team for their golden deeds in planning, selecting papers, and expertly performing the plethora of other tasks large and small that putting a conference together requires. If you haven’t yet registered for the conference, whose theme is “Play and Risk in Children’s and Young Adult Literature,” you can do so at chlaconference.org/registration. Don’t forget to make your hotel reservations at the same time, using the contact and group code information provided in the online instructions. I look forward to seeing you in Biloxi for an occasion that will, I’m sure, feel much more like Play than like Risk. Warmly,

Claudia *Though if you do see opportunities in the latter direction, feel free to share this information.


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Chla newsletter spring 2013 by Meeting Expectations, Inc. - Issuu