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Call for Publications

Theme: Contested Terrains
Subtitle: Third World Women, Feminisms, and Geopolitics
Publication: Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy
Date: Volume 32, Issue 3 (2017)
Deadline: 1.12.2015

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Hypatia seeks papers for a special issue on "Contested Terrains"
featuring feminist scholarship that explores the varied geopolitical
landscapes on which contestations about feminist theories and
practices regarding Third World women are situated. The experiences
and perspectives of Third World women have been frequently erased,
distorted and manipulated both by dominant feminist discourses and by
dominant geopolitical discourses. Long after the proclaimed demise of
second wave feminism in the academy, neoliberal feminist discourses
continue to dominate within neocolonial geopolitical regimes.
Conventional geopolitical discourses flatten the complexity of Third
World women's lives and ignore their diversely embodied, material and
psychic realities within nations by emphasizing conflicts and
alliances between nation-states. We invite feminist analyses that
rescale geopolitical landscapes, shifting our attention from the
macroscopic perspectives of international affairs and globalization
to the smaller scale connections between space and politics that play
out at the level of Third World women's intimate lives, community
practices, and everyday tactics of survival and resistance.  Papers
that explore the ways in which race, ethnicity, class, gender,
sexuality, disability, age and other forms of difference intersect
with issues of geopolitical location are encouraged.

This special issue starts from the premise that differences and
disagreements among women have value. Thus, we encourage submissions
that explore tensions among women – locally, regionally, nationally
and globally – as a potential source of productive feminist
questioning, reflection, knowledge and practice. At the same time,
such tensions should not be romanticized; disagreements are
experienced differently and disproportionately by diverse
participants with varying issues at stake. Because the material and
psychic consequences of disagreement are rarely distributed evenly
across geopolitical terrains, contributors are encouraged to analyze
the consequences – as well as the origins – of contestations between
and among Third World and First World women.

We use the identifier "Third World women" here to center the
perspectives of women of color who – whether living in the Third
World or in the First World – contest the neocolonialism and cultural
imperialism of the First World, including First World feminisms.
However, contributions critically examining geopolitical divisions of
the globe into "First" and "Third" worlds (or other conventional
geopolitical mappings) are welcome.  How best to describe the
differing geopolitical contexts of different feminisms in the era of
economic, political, and cultural globalization is – and should be –
itself a site of contestation.

Possible topics may include:

- Contested discursive terrains:
For example, the contested geopolitical partitionings of West/East;
North/South; or First World/Third World and competing feminist
understandings of globalization as embedded in  theories of "Third
World feminism," "transnational feminism," "women of color feminism,"
"postcolonial feminism," and "global feminism."

- Contested epistemological terrains:
For example, inequitable access to publishing resources, the
privileging of written over oral traditions, and different
understandings of cultural intelligibility.

- Contested political terrains:
For example, the geopolitics of war, military occupations,
nationalism, patriotism, terrorism, migration, border patrols,
detention, and deportation; differing experiences of trauma and
violence, security and danger.

- Contested economic terrains:
For example, resource conflicts between and among women (and girls)
situated differently as owners, sellers, consumers, workers and
commodities in various industries ranging from agriculture to
technology to tourism.

- Contested terrains of kinship:
For example, local and global disagreements among women concerning
the ethics of polygamy, arranged marriages, transnational adoptions,
and other familial forms.

- Contested terrains of solidarity:
For example, the struggles that arise between women, locally and
globally, with different ethico-political values or priorities; how
allies often harm those they intend to help.

Submission deadline: December 1, 2015

Guest Editors:
Ranjoo Herr (Bentley University) and Shelley Park (University of
Central Florida)

Papers should be no more than 8000 words, inclusive of notes and
bibliography, prepared for anonymous review, and accompanied by an
abstract of no more than 200 words. In addition to articles, we
invite submissions for our Musings section. These should not exceed
3,000 words, including footnotes and references. All submissions will
be subject to external review. For details please see Hypatia's
submission guidelines:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1527-2001/homepage/ForAuthors.html#prep

Please submit your paper to: https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/hypa
When you submit, make sure to select "Contested Terrains" as your
manuscript type, and also send an email to the guest editor(s)
indicating the title of the paper you have submitted:

Ranjoo S. Herr:
[email protected]

Shelley Park:
[email protected]

Journal website:
http://hypatiaphilosophy.org




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