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Call for Papers

"Veiled Constellations: The Veil, Critical Theory, Politics, and
Contemporary Society"
Interdisciplinary Conference
York University
Toronto, ON (Canada)
3-5 June 2010

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Overview

This conference offers a forum to problematize the prevailing
discourses surrounding the veil while exploring the veil’s subversive
potential. The extent to which the veil can erode, or even invert
power and oppression is, with the exception of various Islam-inspired
positions, an overlooked and under-explored area of academic
theorizing. We ask what new insights may be unearthed in moving
beyond the impetus to repudiate, fear, or adore the veil. This
conference is a unique opportunity to discuss those contested voices
situated within the interstices of the liberal, conservative and
Islamic constellations, and, in the process, to re-evaluate the veil
in an entirely new light by intersecting multiple disciplinary
perspectives. Perhaps as importantly, we see the appraisal of
critical theory in moving theory beyond the mainstream discursive
impasse as central to epistemological responsibility and
accountability. This event will highlight highly innovative and
thought-provoking approaches to not only the Islamic veil, but the
veil as such. We envision the rich insights of critical inquiry as an
under-utilized terrain that may help unpack the current intellectual
discourse on the veil. Essentially, we seek a different kind of
conversation and a different set of lexical and philosophical devices
to navigate the many paradoxes that the veil represents.

From our perspective, part of this conversation should address the
relationship between theory and policy as it pertains to the veil and
Muslims in contemporary society. We imagine that some innovation in
addressing the real and perceived contradictions of the veil could
meaningfully contribute to policy discussions. Specifically, we would
like to consider the effects of re-interpretations of the veil on the
personal, social, and political life of veiled people. The act of
pursuing novel political spaces (re-conceptualizing the veil and
advancing new forms of understanding) may have the concomitant effect
of advertently or inadvertently bridging disparate communities, and
potentially easing domestic policy efforts to control, contain, and
assimilate veiled people. Such theorizing may encourage the
re-examination of foreign policy approaches towards Muslim societies
by providing the necessary intellectual atmosphere to transcend fear
and enter constructive dialogue. Participants of this conference will
therefore be encouraged to relate radical reinterpretations of the
veil to the religion of Islam, and the relationship(s) between
Muslims and contemporary society.

Elaboration

Although there is a rich supply of documentation and research on the
veil, the qualitative nature of the veil is under-theorized. The
entrenched debate among competing mainstream understandings of the
veil, the increasing politicization of the veil, made most prominent
by conservative and radical secular movements within the EU and by a
growing literature that paints the veil as a threat to human rights
and/or security, have had an immeasurable effect on inter-cultural
exchanges, especially in metropolitan centers. These secular forms of
theorizing and debating have been countered by a concurrent movement,
spearheaded by Islamic-minded thinkers: the shrouding of the female
form as a variation of patriarchal resistance. Given the amplified
visibility of the veil and the growing desire of people to veil and
unveil, what kinds of research options can move us beyond this
analytical impasse? Have the responses to the liberal, conservative,
and Islamic positions on the veil been cogent? What theoretical
questions have not yet been asked? What impact has this hitherto
insoluble debate had on those who choose everyday to wear the veil?
These questions are tremendously relevant, possibly overdue, in large
part because of the increasing salience and persuasiveness of the
contested perspectives on the veil. Such views are reinforced by the
uncertainties of a post 9/11 world, including the prevailing social
and political mistrust of multifarious actors. The protracted debate
in Canada and abroad, to the exclusion and possible silencing of all
other views, leads invariably to the stultification of thought and
action. This conference seeks then, in the face of these trends, to
bring previously unheard views on the veil to the fore.

Within Canadian society, the relationship between those who veil and
the veil itself is complex. People navigate any number of positions
in this regard. At times, we discover those who "deify" the textile,
exhibiting forms of extreme attachment to it. With others, a relative
indifference towards the injunction to veil is evident, which
sometimes turns into an unrelenting evasion of the veil's obligatory
weight. The veil could be viewed as fabric, symbol, symptom, means,
ends, expression, submission, a reclaiming, empowerment, a voiding
process, protection, separation, sacrifice, or facilitating a sigh of
relief. Has the mainstream debate adequately addressed these and
other understandings of the veil? What new questions can be asked?
For example, can one "deify" the veil and yet continuously evade it?
Can people engage in indifference towards the veil as a form of
evasion? In what ways is orthodox observance of the veil a subversive
and revolutionary act? How powerful is the veil in undermining the
forces of assimilation in Canada? How do people who veil navigate the
difficulty of the veil as protection and separation? How well do
veiled people understand themselves? These, and other
counter-intuitive—sometimes paradoxical—questions need to be
confronted and assessed.

A central purpose of this event is to engage these questions in new
ways in order to render more flexible, more porous—possibly to
completely undo—the boundaries that seek to encapsulate, control, and
own the veil. Not only will the prevailing discourses be interrogated
and problematized, the very spaces opened up by this event will
likewise undergo the same rigorous investigation.

We welcome submissions of all sorts that deal with the issue,
including those that take cross-cultural, historical, and/or
comparative approaches. Submission formats may include academic
papers from any relevant discipline and/or creative submissions such
as poetry, video performances, storytelling, visual arts and other
alternative formats. We promote traditional modes of presentation
such as panels and roundtables, but are also open to other
interesting and innovative approaches.

We encourage submissions from all disciplines that push the
boundaries of creativity and intellectual discussion, and that take a
critical and previously unexplored position on the veil. For example,
we are very interested in exploring the interpretative possibilities
that arise from psychoanalytic approaches to the veil (especially
that of Lacanian theory). This being said, the veil can be
investigated in relation to a whole assortment of topics, which we
welcome and encourage. We will privilege those submissions that raise
the level of debate to new heights of originality.

Suggested Themes

The veil can be related to: militarism, revolution, warrior/guerrilla
movements, the postcolonial experience, un-doing borders,
citizenship, nationalism, the commodity form, the market, labor,
jouissance, feminine sexuation, patriarchy, matriarchy, empowerment,
identity, the beautiful, the sublime, beingness, popular culture,
prisons, enclosures, concealing males, epistemology, philosophy, art,
calligraphy, history, poverty, civil disobedience, political
participation, social justice, motherhood, anarchism, geography,
urban environment, and literature.

How to Submit Proposals for Participation

Proposals for papers, films, or other formats should include:
1) Paper/project title
2) Name and contact information (mail, email, phone, affiliations)
3) Bio (approx. 50 words)
4) Abstract (maximum 150 words)
5) Technology needs for presentation (please be specific)
6) Translation needs, if applicable
7) Desire to present via teleconferencing/video-conferencing

Proposals for panels and roundtables should include:
1) Panel/roundtable title
2) Name and contact information (and paper title, if applicable) for
each presenter (mail, email, phone, affiliations)
3) Bio of each speaker (approx. 50 words for each speaker)
4) Abstract explaining the panel/roundtable’s focus (maximum 150
words) 5) Names and contact information (mail, email, phone,
affiliations) for any discussant(s) or respondent(s)
6) Technology needs of presentations (please be specific)
7) Translation needs, if applicable
8) Desire to present via teleconferencing/videoconferencing

Please send complete proposal submissions by Thursday, October 1st,
2009, to: [email protected] 

Co-sponsored by:
Department of Political Science (graduate program)
Department of Sociology (graduate program)
Department of Communication and Culture (graduate program)
Graduate Students’ Association
York University

Conference website:
http://www.veiledconstellations.com/callforpapers.html

 
 
 
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