We're also pleased to announce that Dr. Angela Laflen will be this year's keynote speaker. Dr. Laflen is Associate Professor of English at California State University, Sacramento, and author of Critical Data Storytelling in the Composition Classroom
(Utah State UP 2025). A timely framework for integrating data literacy into multimodal composition pedagogy, Laflen’s study demonstrates that, in an era dominated by big data and AI, the need to understand how to work with data is no longer limited to scientists
and mathematicians. At the heart of Laflen’s approach is critical data storytelling—a practice that equips students with the skills to understand, interpret, and ethically communicate with and about data through various multimodal formats.
We're excited to read your submissions! Please also feel free to share this CfP with your networks and with graduate students across disciplines. Thanks!
Utopian Impulses in the 2020s
An Interdisciplinary Graduate Student Conference at the University of Cincinnati: Friday, February 6, 2026
Proposals Due: Friday, December 19, 2025
Among its political and technological predicaments, America’s 2020s have been a time of steady upheaval, crisis, and change. As we continue to wrestle our way through the agendas, regimes, and big-data systems of this historical moment as teachers, students,
and researchers, we recall the utopian thinking of More and Marx, which reminds us “to keep from being blinded by what seems normal — to help us see that what is natural is constructed, not inevitable” (Elbow, p. 83). In the same spirit, then, we hope to meddle
with the rhetorics of political and technological inevitability that define our daily lives. We ask presenters to share questions and ideas that entertain movement toward, rather than away from, the utopian visions that we often disregard as unwieldy, futile,
or childish. What if we could decouple machine learning from AI companies? What if we had a robust theory for fundamentally rethinking our flawed U.S.-centric version of writing research? In allowing ourselves to think about and envision utopias, we make visible
the threats we face, the workarounds we create, and the bonds that give us reason to hold together.
We welcome proposals that “honor the utopian impulse” (p. 98) — that is, at the brink of change, those that ask, “how things
should be” (p. 83) in your field. What preferable future(s) do you want for your field, and what do the possibilities and difficulties of that direction look like? We encourage:
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Empirical research (qualitative, quantitative, or mixed method): What research models can we use to help build, shape, or sustain a utopian vision? How can such models be used by others?
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Theory-building: How is utopia framed, imagined, or composed in your discipline? How do we continue to use, revise, or ignore it today?
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Personal narrative and autoethnographic inquiry: How does the utopian impulse help us question or counter grand narratives, if it does at all? In what ways does such work help us grapple with
contingent, material, historical, and local perspectives?
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Reflections in pedagogical practice: What can the utopian impulse tell us about our teaching, assessment, or classroom design?
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Reimagining data literacy: As we navigate pressures to use AI and big-data systems (their transparency, methodologies, literacies, applications, and assessments), how might we imagine and
know utopia?
Please submit
individual proposals (up to 250 words) or panel proposals (up to 500 words) to
UCGradConf...@gmail.com. For panels, number each speaker and include the title of each presentation. We welcome presentations or workshops in an interactive style (e.g., classroom demonstrations, PechaKucha, poster sessions, fishbowl).
All the best,
Anna D'Orazio
Anna D'Orazio (she/her)
Doctoral Candidate, Rhetoric & Composition, University of Cincinnati
Academic Writing Center Graduate Assistant
President, English Graduate Student Association
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