
{"articleDetail":{"publishDateDisplay":"December 3, 2025","summary":"Geneva College is hosting its third annual Orality and Literacy Conference on March 26-27, 2026, with this year&#8217;s focus on &#8220;And&#160;the Life of the Soul.&#8221;&#160;Proposals must be&#160;submitted&#160;by December 27, 2025.","image":"site://geneva.edu/news/_assets/olconference.jpg","tagItems":"[]","articleText":"Geneva College is hosting its third annual Orality and Literacy Conference on March 26-27, 2026, with this year&#8217;s focus on &#8220;And&#160;the Life of the Soul.&#8221;&#160;\n\nPractitioners, faculty, and students are invited to&#160;submit&#160;thoughtful studies of the connections between the work of Walter Ong in&#160;Orality and Literacy&#160;and&#160;The Presence of the Word&#160;and the way that words shape the life of the soul.&#160;\nOne of the conference organizers,&#160;Jonathan Watt, PhD&#160;expands on&#160;the choice of conference theme. &#8220;Interest in spiritual matters runs across&#160;different kinds&#160;of Christianity, as well as in other religions. Our conferences draw a diversity of people who come from different countries and faiths. The conference committee members are hoping that we can engage differing interests and voices, this year with an eye toward the ways orality and literacy have played vital roles in spiritual experience, especially for those in the Judeo-Christian tradition.&#8221;&#160;\nWritten words and spoken words address us differently in spirit. Different religious practices and traditions privilege the written word over the spoken word with dramatic differences in how humans understand&#160;the&#160;religious experience. As media scholars have&#160;observed, the book tends to individuate experience&#160;whereas&#160;a speech produces a sense of corporate belonging and affinity either for or against what is being said.&#160;\nSuch questions are what panelists are encouraged to address at next year&#8217;s conference.&#160;The gathering&#160;will consider how human interactions are formed and cultivated depending on a bias for written or spoken words. Most importantly, we will investigate how this bias shapes our understanding of what is true, and how the desire to know truth mirrors the deepest longings of the soul.&#160;\nAll proposal submissions for Geneva&#8217;s Orality and Literacy Conference:&#160;And the Life of the Soul should be addressed to Jonathan Watt at&#160;oralityconference@geneva.edu. Proposals should be&#160;submitted&#160;as a Word document or PDF and include a&#160;300-500&#160;word&#160;abstract, a bibliography, and any A/V equipment&#160;needs. Author identification must be removed.&#160;\nProposals must be&#160;submitted&#160;by December 27, 2025.&#160;\nThis year&#8217;s featured speakers include Andrew McLuhan,&#160;director of the McLuhan Institute, and T. David Gordon, recently retired professor of religion and Greek at Grove City College. The Orality and Literacy Conference is sponsored in part by the Lilly Foundation.&#160;\nThe&#160;conference will be held at Geneva College, 3200 College Ave.&#160;Beaver Falls, PA 15010. More information on registration pricing and lodging:&#160;https://www.geneva.edu/events/oralityliteracy. For questions, please contact Jonathan Watt, PhD,&#160;professor of English at&#160;jwatt@geneva.edu.&#160;\nBy Reagan Shields &#8216;26&#160;","author":null,"publishDate":"2025-12-03","type":"News Release","title":"Orality and Literacy and the Life of the Soul: Call for Submissions","imageDesc":"","url":"/article/submissioncall-2026-oralityliteracy","blogCategories":"","id":"9ccd58beac0a2404395f8f910a64b828","detailUrl":"/news/2025/11/submissioncall-2026-oralityliteracy.json","sourcePath":null,"slug":"submissioncall-2026-oralityliteracy"}}
