__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Theme: Contested Terrains
Subtitle: Women of Color, Feminisms, and Geopolitics
Type: International Conference
Institution: Feminist Ethics and Social Theory (FEAST) Conference
Location: Clearwater Beach, FL (USA)
Date: 1.–4.10.2015
Deadline: 27.2.2015

__________________________________________________


Description

Engaging in feminist theory in the 21st century requires placing
emphasis on the "where" of its production. Such an emphasis includes
considering the situated perspectives and geopolitical locations out
of which a given theory is produced. Another equally important part
of contemporary engagement in feminist theory concerns appreciating
the ways that theory travels and changes through the traveling. The
notion of contested terrains is invoked to refer to the many
junctures of perspective, location and travel with which feminist
theory must contend in an era of multinational reception.

For example, it is at the juncture of perspective, location, and
travel that one finds the often contested political identifier "women
of color." The term is contested not only because there is no
singular "woman of color" perspective and/or location, but also
because of the diversity of possible stories of travel in and out of
"women of color" spaces. As Jacqui Alexander explains, one is not
born but becomes a woman of color. That "becoming" is by no means a
given and, for many, "women of color" is not a personal identifier.
The term is contested, and its meaning is continually recreated
through the contesting.

Feminism is practiced and theorized within contested terrains in a
transnational world. Understanding the connections and disputes
created by borders, castes, classes, and other boundaries is at the
heart of geopolitics. Feminist geopolitical analyses concern the
spaces, places, relations of power, and interchange among feminists
in local, regional and global contexts, paying careful attention to
the locations out of which we theorize and practice feminism(s).

Topics

This year's FEAST conference invites submissions that take up this
notion of contested terrains in relation to women of color, feminism,
and geopolitics. We welcome papers that take both theoretical and
practical approaches to these issues and related issues in feminist
ethics, epistemology, political and social theory more broadly
construed.

Topics to consider may include, but are not limited to:

- Situated knowledges, including the racialized terrains of knowledge
  production
- Intersectional theories of space and place
- "Women of color," "third world women," "women of the global South,"
  "postcolonial women" and other descriptors as contested
  identifications
- Tensions between White/US feminism, women of color feminisms, third
  world feminisms, and transnational feminisms
- Women"s agency and autonomy as contested feminist assumptions
- Contested conceptions of home and homelands
- The different social locations and embodied experiences of racism
- Perspectives on trauma and violence, terrorism and conspiracy,
  security and danger
- The geopolitics of mobility and immobility, including tourism,
  migration, detention and deportation
- Gatekeeping geographies, technologies of surveillance and border
  patrols
- The geopolitics of intimacy, including the racialized affective
  labor of mail order brides, transracially and transnationally
  adopted children and migrant domestic workers
- Geopolitical analyses of neo-liberalism, global capitalism and
  militarism, including their effects on women of color
- Ecofeminisms and resource conflicts
- Solidarity movements among diverse groups of women of color and
  white feminists

FEAST encourages submissions related to this year's theme. However,
papers on all topics within the areas of feminist ethics and social
theory are welcome.

Submission deadline: February 27, 2015
 
Call for abstracts: Difficult Conversations

A signature event of FEAST conferences is a lunch-time "Difficult
Conversation" that focuses on an important, challenging, and
under-theorized topic related to feminist ethics or social theory.

In keeping with this year's theme of Contested Terrains, this year
our topic for the difficult conversation panel is "Damage by Allies."
This conversation hopes to provide an environment conducive to
dialogue for and among women of color and white academics concerning
the harm that can be done by well-meaning feminist allies who,
despite possible commonalities of values, can sometimes undermine the
viewpoints and work of women of color. We hope that women of color
will be able to bring to light both subtle and obvious experiences of
damage done by allies and open a discussion about how this might be
avoided or dealt with effectively in the future. We are soliciting
abstracts (see below) that address, in both North American and
transnational contexts: concrete experiences of the sorts of hardship
that academics and activists of color experience at the hands of
allies; well-intentioned but misplaced pedagogical and political
strategies; strategies for being a better ally to marginalized
peoples in academia and elsewhere; strategies for women of color to
respond to misplaced attempts at solidarity; and effective
transnational activism that does not undermine the agency of its
intended beneficiaries.

Submission Guidelines

Please send your submission, in one document (a Word file, please, so
that abstracts can be posted), to <[email protected]> by
February 27, 2015. In the body of the email message, please include:
your paper or panel title, name, institutional affiliation, e-mail
address, surface mail address, and phone number. All submissions will
be anonymously reviewed.

Individual Papers

Please submit a completed paper of no more than 3000 words, along
with an abstract of 100-250 words, for anonymous review. Your
document must include: paper title, abstract of 100-250 words, and
your paper, with no identifying information. The word count (max.
3000) should appear on the top of the first page of your paper.

Panels

Please clearly mark your submission as a panel submission both in the
body of the e-mail and on the submission itself. Your submission
should include the panel title and all three abstracts and papers in
one document, along with word counts (no more than 3000 for each
paper).

Difficult Conversations and other non-paper submissions (e.g.,
workshops, discussions, etc.): Please submit an abstract with a
detailed description (500-750 words).

Please clearly indicate the type of submission (Difficult
Conversation, workshop, roundtable discussion, etc.) both in the body
of your e-mail and on the submission itself.

Venue

Sheraton Sand Key Resort, Clearwater Beach, Florida

Keynote speakers

Kimberle Crenshaw
Distinguished Professor of Law at UCLA and Columbia and founder of
the African-American Policy Forum. An international activist,
Crenshaw is well known for her foundational scholarly work on
intersectionality and critical race theory. Professor Crenshaw's
publications include Critical Race Theory (edited by Crenshaw, et
al., 1995) and Words that Wound: Critical Race Theory, Assaultive
Speech and the First Amendment (with Matsuda, et al., 1993). Her work
on race and gender was influential in drafting the equality clause in
the South African Constitution and she helped facilitate the
inclusion of gender in the U.N. World Conference on Racism
Declaration. In the U.S., she served as a member of the National
Science Foundation's committee to research violence against women and
assisted the legal team representing Anita Hill.

Sunera Thobani
Associate Professor at the Institute for Gender, Race, Sexuality and
Social Justice at the University of British Columbia. A founding
member of RACE (Researchers and Academics of Colour for Equity) and a
past President of Canada's National Action Committee on the status
of Women, Thobani's research focuses on critical race, postcolonial
and feminist theory, globalization, citizenship, migration, Muslim
women, the War on Terror and media. Professor Thobani is the author
of Exalted Subjects: Studies in the Making of Race and Nation in
Canada (University of Toronto Press, 2007) and numerous other works.
As a public intellectual, Thobani is well known for her vocal
opposition to Canadian support of the U.S. led invasion into
Afghanistan.

Invited Sessions

- Invited Panel honoring the work of Maria Lugones
- Invited Panel on U.S. Wars/Imperialism and the Women Within

For more information on FEAST or to see programs from previous
conferences, go to: http://www.afeast.org

Questions on this conference or the submission process may be
directed to the Program Chairs, Ranjoo Herr ([email protected])
and/or Shelley Park ([email protected]).

Conference website:
http://www.afeast.org/Conferences3_files/conferences3.html




__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
http://interphil.polylog.org

Intercultural Philosophy Calendar:
http://cal.polylog.org

__________________________________________________

 

Reply via email to