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Editorial board

HONORARY DIRECTOR:
Professor Ioan SIMUŢ, PhD
Department of Romanian Language and Literature, University of Oradea, Romania; Literary critic
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF before 2020 issue: Professor Ioan SIMUȚ

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF:
Assoc. Professor Dana SALA, PhD, since 2020 issue

ASSOCIATE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF:
Professor Ioan DERŞIDAN, PhD, before 2020 issue
Assoc. Prof. Delia-Maria RADU, PhD, since 2020 issue

EDITORIAL SECRETARY:

      LOGISTICS MANAGEMENT:
      Prof. Dr. Ingrida Eglė ŽINDŽIUVIENĖ-EDITOR
      Coordinator of the BA Study Programme "English Philology"
      Department of Foreign Language, Literary and Translation Studies
      Faculty of Humanities
      Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania
      Prof.Habil. Dr. NAGY Levente- EDITOR
      Head of Department
      Faculty of Humanities
      Institute of Romance Studies
      Department of Romanian Philology
      Eötvös Loránd University - ELTE, Budapest, Hungary

 

      REVIEWS EDITORS:

 

      Senior Lecturer Paula NEAMŢU (NEMŢUŢ) PhD



      SECTION EDITORS & WEB-MANAGEMENT:

 

      Reader/Associate Professor Crenguţa GÂNSCĂ, PhD

 

      Senior Lecturer Anca Tomoioagă, PhD

 

 

Senior Lecturer Magdalena INDRIEŞ, PhD

Issues

ARCHIVES of ANALELE UNIVERSITATII DIN ORADEA FASCICULA LIMBA ȘI LITERATURA ROMÂNĂ
ISSN 1224-7588

 

ISSUES 2011-2023

Volume 31, the 2024 ISSUE

Volume 30, the 2023 ISSUE

Volume 29, the 2022 ISSUE

Volume 28, the 2021 ISSUE

Volume 27, the 2020 ISSUE
Volume 26, the 2019 ISSUE
Volume 25, the 2018 ISSUE
Volume 24, the 2017 ISSUE
Volume 23, the 2016 ISSUE
Volume 22, the 2015 ISSUE
Volume 21, the 2014 ISSUE
Volume 20, the 2013 ISSUE
Volume 19, the 2012 ISSUE
Volume 18, the 2011 ISSUE

The journal ALLRO, ISSN 1224-7588, is not open-access. The articles can be found in C.E.E.O.L., irrespectively EBSCO databases (EBSCO Literary Reference Center Plus).

 

 

Contact

Redactor șef: Ioana Cistelecan

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Facultatea de Litere

Universitatea din Oradea

Campus central, Pavilion C/parter

Str. Universității nr. 1
480178 Oradea, Bihor
Romania

 

 

Analele Universității din Oradea Fascicula Limba și Literatura Română

ANNALS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ORADEA ROMANIAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE FASCICULE is an academic, peer-reviewed journal, aiming to bridge the world of academic literary criticism and theories with evaluations on everyday literary phenomena as reflected in Romanian literary magazines and cultural events. ALLRO intends to harmonize two approaches to criticism: the academic, research-oriented study on one hand, with the critical valuations expressed by influential, value-oriented critics in the pages of the active Romanian literary magazines and literary gazettes, on the other hand. The general outlook of our journal is that the field of theory should be connected and not disconnected from the most recent realities of contemporary books. The academic study of literary texts may find new creative resources when intellectually confronting the debate-focused style of criticism predominant in the top Romanian literary magazines of the moment. A section of the book-reviews in ALLRO promotes young or still young Romanian critics who have dared to challenge long-established paths/patterns of Romanian criticism.

THE TOPICS COVERED BY OUR JOURNAL: ◊ The dynamics and trends of Romanian literature. ◊ The dialogue of Romanian literature with other cultures and literatures. ◊ Identity, otherness, anthropology and literature, cultural studies. ◊ Identity and literary constructs. ◊ Time and literary theory. ◊ Myths and (Post)modern authors. ◊ Language phenomena, Romance languages and literatures. ◊ Comparative literature. ◊ European Romance languages and literatures and their dialogues with other continents.

 

Candidates who want to submit directly should use the journal's e-mail (institutional)address:

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At least 2/3 of the total number of articles and book-reviews are in English. Up to 1/3 may be represented by research papers published either in Romanian or in a circulated language of the same Latin parentage: French, Italian, Spanish, and Portuguese.

ALLRO advocates the open peer-review system (single-blind instead of double-blind): the sender of the manuscript appears with her/his name when the manuscript is sent by the reviews editor to the peer-reviewers who have no additional information, just the name of the manuscript's author. Unmasked author identity suits better to the specificity of ALLRO. The authors must assume their ideas and be able to defend them against critical evaluations. It is more challenging if the authors appear with their names from the beginning. This way the journal aims to retain some of the benefits of the writer-reader relationship. Even a text of criticism and/or a research article, even a book review is a form of creation. The peer-reviewer enters a genuine dialogue with the text. The sent manuscript always becomes enriched by being read, assessed and by having this dialogue with a professional reader.

 

 

Call for papers

Issue 2025 

Autofictions and Mutations: Crises of the Self, Crises of the World

 

 

Autofiction, a term coined by Serge Doubrovsky in the 1970s, blends autobiography and fiction in ways that challenge the boundaries of both genres. Since its emergence, autofiction has unsettled traditional notions of authorship, identity, and narrative truth. Initially debated within French literary circles as a response to Philippe Lejeune’s autobiographical pact (1975)—which posits a truthful alignment between author, narrator, and protagonist—Doubrovsky’s Fils (1977) shattered this pact through a fragmented, self-reflexive narrative that foregrounds the instability of memory and identity. The self, in autofiction, emerges as fluid rather than fixed.

In both Francophone and Anglophone literary studies, autofiction remains a contested term. While some critics view it broadly—as any novel incorporating autobiographical elements—others insist on more restrictive definitions, considering it a narrative modality (Hughes, 2002), a subgenre of autobiography, a distinct genre, or a literary strategy (Effe & Lawlor, 2024). As Gasparini (2008) notes, autofiction has evolved into an umbrella term encompassing a wide variety of hybrid texts that defy easy classification.

Positioned at the crossroads of post-structuralism, deconstruction, intertextuality, and postmodernism, autofiction blurs the lines between reality and fiction, destabilizing genre conventions and challenging reader expectations. Its fluidity enables writers to explore and experiment with narrative forms, creating texts that resist definitive interpretation and demand active reader engagement. Autofiction does not simply represent the self—it questions, fragments, and reconstructs it, reflecting the fractured nature of subjectivity in a world marked by cultural, technological, and psychological shifts.

This crisis of the self, at the heart of autofiction, mirrors broader societal crises. In our post-truth age—characterised by disinformation, shifting national identities, and cultural upheaval—autofiction resonates as a form uniquely suited to capturing personal and collective uncertainty. As global narratives fracture and digital self-curation transforms how individuals present their stories, autofiction emerges as both a symptom and critique of these mutations.

The 2025 issue of Confluențe. Texts and Contexts Reloaded invites interdisciplinary contributions that explore autofiction as a response to personal and global crises. We seek articles that investigate how personal narratives engage with wider cultural, political, and existential challenges, illuminating the interplay between individual identity and collective experience.

 

We welcome submissions that address, but are not limited to, the following topics:

  • Autofiction as narrative form: How do autofictional texts blur reality and fiction to navigate crises of the self and the world?

  • Identity and crisis: In what ways does self-writing articulate both personal and collective crises in contemporary contexts?

  • Narrative strategies: What rhetorical and structural tools does autofiction employ to provoke reflection on identity, truth, and crisis?

  • Cultural perspectives: How do different cultural traditions approach autofiction in times of crisis, and how do these narratives compare across linguistic and national contexts?

  • Digital autofictions: How has the rise of digital media influenced autofiction, self-writing, and identity construction?

Submission Guidelines:

  • Articles may be written in English, French, or German.

  • Length: 5,000–7,000 words.

  • Submissions will undergo a double-blind peer review, with authors receiving detailed reports.

  • Please follow the Instructions for Authors.

  • Deadline for full articles: 31 July 2025.

  • Send submissions to: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Suggested Bibliography:

  1. Colonna, V. (2004). Autofiction & autres mythomanies littéraires. Editions Tristam.

  2. Doubrovsky, S. (1977). Fils. Galilée.

  3. Effe, A., & Lawlor, H. (2024). Rethinking autofiction as a global practice: Trajectories of anglophone criticism from 2000 to 2020. A/b: Auto/Biography Studies, 1–33.

  4. Effe, A., & Lawlor, H. (Eds.). (2021). The autofictional: Approaches, affordances, forms. Palgrave Macmillan.

  5. Gasparini, P. (2008). Autofiction: Une aventure du langage. Seuil.

  6. Gibbons, A. (2017). Contemporary autofiction and metamodern affect. In R. van den Akker, A. Gibbons, & T. Vermeulen (Eds.), Metamodernism: Historicity, affect, and depth after postmodernism (pp. 117–130). Rowman & Littlefield.

  7. Gilmore, L. (2001). The limits of autobiography. Cornell University Press.

  8. Lejeune, P. (1975). Le pacte autobiographique. Seuil.

  9. Shands, K., et al. (Eds.). (2015). Writing the self: Essays on autobiography and autofiction. Södertörns Högskola.

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Informații de contact

Adresă: Str. Universităţii nr.1 Oradea 410087
România
Telefon 1: 0040 259 408178
Telefon 2: 0040 259 408267
Mail: litere@uoradea.ro