Event details

CFP: 2026 Conference of the International Jacques Ellul Society

  • 1 Oct 2025
  • Proposals due

Call for Papers: 2026 Conference

The Humiliated Word in a Time of Crisis

Conference of the International Jacques Ellul Society

July 14–16, 2026 | University of Notre Dame, Indiana

What is the word’s status today? In a time marked by division and polarization over politics, medicine, science, culture, or even what it means to be human, often words are weaponized and truth buried under lies.

Confronted by such circumstances, what would it look like to attune ourselves to the conditions of spoken and written words today? What challenges and possibilities might emerge if we take the word seriously, even imaginatively and hopefully, today and in the future?

The 2026 International Jacques Ellul Society Conference explores these and related questions through engagement with themes developed in and beyond Jacques Ellul’s 1981 book The Humiliation of the WordHumiliation is a creative sociological, theological, and personal meditation on the place of language in the late twentieth-century West, written during a time of deep cultural upheaval, technological change, and political tension. For this reason, many readers rank Humiliation as a piece of Ellul’s most profound sociology, most mature theology, and most poetic prose. Furthermore, it is a distinct contribution to and central text for the field of media ecology.

But if this text is so significant, what did Ellul say within it that makes it so resonant? Although there are many ways to answer this question, a short form answer can be given here: Ellul uses this text to show us that the humble fragility of the spoken word is humanity’s most sure path toward freedom, truth, and peace. In this sense, Ellul makes an ambitious and hopeful claim for the power of the word in a time when the word seems to be powerless.

Submission Guidelines

We invite proposals for short papers from scholars, thinkers, artists, poets, and anyone for whom words matter and dialogue is capital. Papers examining either sociological or theological aspects of Ellul’s work are welcome. Possible themes include but are not limited to the following:

  • Relationships between word and image
  • Language and cognition
  • Word and image in Media Ecology perspectives
  • Modernity, post-/late modernity, and the philosophy of language
  • Theologies of the Word of God
  • AI and human speech
  • Political discourse, polarization, and propaganda
  • Word and image in biblical studies
  • Imagery vs. iconography vs. idolatry
  • Phenomenology and speech
  • Language in the thought of Ellul and Kierkegaard
  • Poetry, prose, and plain language
  • Word vs. image in the fine arts
  • Education and the Word
  • Truth vs. reality
  • Explorations of the Bible, doctrine, ethics, and/or ethics as applied to any of the above
  • Explorations of sociology, anthropology, psychology, and/or philosophy as applied to any of the above

While papers examining other aspects of Ellul’s work or related themes will also be considered, priority will be given to papers closely related to the conference theme.

Interested presenters should submit an abstract of 250–350 words and a brief professional biography (100 words max.) no later than October 1, 2025. Submissions should be sent by email to ijes@ellul.org.

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