Forum on Mark Twain's "The War Prayer" in Mark Twain Studies (Japan) -- Submission Deadline extended to February 1, 2006 Mark Twain Studies Vol.2 No. 1 Special Feature: Twain and Asia Despite its importance, Mark Twain's "The War Prayer" has received almost no critical attention from scholars. The next issue of Mark Twain Studies (Japan), devoted to "Twain and Asia," will redress some of this neglect. For a special international forum in volume 2 of Mark Twain Studies, co-editors Takayuki Tatsumi and Shelley Fisher Fishkin seek short commentaries and essays on "The War Prayer." Essays of up to 1250 words in length (five pages or under) might consider "The War Prayer" in relation to the Philippine-American War (which prompted Twain to write it), and other writing by Twain inspired by events in Asia; in relation to other works by Twain ( such as Twain's writings on war, on religion, on strangers, on the "lie of silent assertion," or other themes); or in relation to works by other writers (such as anti-war writing by U.S. and non-U.S. authors). We welcome literary, rhetorical, historical, and political analyses, along with discussions of the place of the text in popular culture in the U.S. and abroad. Please email essays by January 15, 2006, to: Takayuki TATSUMI [[log in to unmask]], and Shelley Fisher Fishkin [[log in to unmask]] under the subject-heading "The War Prayer." Articles are restricted to unpublished work in English, but articles that have been published in languages other than English and papers that have been delivered at conferences are eligible when that fact is noted on the cover sheet.