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Call for Papers

Theme: Women's Spring
Subtitle: Feminism, Nationalism and Civil Disobedience
Type: International Conference
Institution: Institute for Black Atlantic Research (IBAR),
University of Central Lancashire
Location: Preston (United Kingdom)
Date: 21.–23.6.2018
Deadline: 1.4.2018

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This call for papers concerns a conference held on 21-23 June 2018 at
the University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK. The conference
proceedings will be published as a special issue in Open Cultural
Studies. Authors who cannot attend the conference are invited to
present their papers on a video platform or Skype. It is also
possible to submit a paper to the special issue without presenting at
the conference. The conference fee for the delegates is £120; for
non-attending authors £80; APCs for authors submitting their papers
directly to the journal is €100. PhD students will be offered
discounts. Authors of selected papers will be exempted from APCs.

Keynote speakers (confirmed):
- Dr Umut Erel, International Development and Inclusive Innovation,
  Strategic Research Area (The Open University);
- Prof. Dr. Helma Lutz, the Cornelia Goethe Center at Goethe
  University, Frankfurt;
- Prof. Ewa Mazierska, University of Central Lancashire;
- Pragna Patel, Southall Black Sisters;
- Prof. Nira Yuval-Davis, Research Centre on Migration, Refugees and
  Belonging (CMRB) at the University of East London. 

In a recent interview for BBC Radio 3, Paul Gilroy, rather
provocatively contended that nationalism is embedded a “fascistic”
wish for “a magical identity that will somehow dissolve every little
bit of otherness.” In the era that witnessed the success of the
Brexit campaign, the election of Donald Trump, the rise in
anti-immigrant resentment and religious fundamentalism, nationalism
is more and more often associated with militant extremism that
threatens the very existence of the secular and culturally diverse
public sphere.

As Tamar Mayer has observed, nationalism is an exercise in internal
hegemony that aims at dissolution of ethnic, religious and sexual
differences, in which “the empowerment of one gender or one nation or
one sexuality virtually always comes at the expense and
disempowerment of another” (Mayer 1). Women represent a notable
point of similarity and difference vis-a-vis ethnic, religious or
sexual others. Like minorities, women are often marginalised in the
public sphere; unlike them, due to their sheer numbers, women can
have a considerable political leverage. Often glorified for their
roles of biological reproducers of a nation and signifiers of
national/ethnic/religious singularity, women, more often than not,
constitute a “silent majority,” to misquote Richard Nixon.
Occasionally, however, women stand up en mass not only to attempts to
limit their agency but also to nationalist excesses. Ukrainian Femen,
the Black Lives Matter movement spearheaded by black women,
Argentinian 2016 #NiUnaMenos protest against femicides, the Women’s
March on Washington against Trump's populism, and Polish feminist
“black” marches against patriarchal and Catholic conservatism, are
just a few examples of women showing tremendous courage and
determination in defending  “the culture of Human Rights” (Pramod
Nayar) and “conviviality” (Paul Gilroy). With these movements, women
have aroused hope of creating what Nancy Fraser called multiple
“subaltern counterpublics” – that is discursive arenas which develop
in opposition to the official (un?)public sphere. These arenas are
bases for revolutionary politics that defies the exclusions of the
national body politic and promotes the ideal of equal civic
participation. Roger Sue called these alternative feminist social
hubs “a counter society” (La Contresociété 2016). Alain Tourain saw
in their emergence a transformative political force with far-reaching
consequences for the neo-liberal world (Le monde des femmes 2006).

The aim of this conference is to explore the ways in which female
activists and artists responded the resurgence of the far-right
nationalism and the twin evil of religious fundamentalism. We want to
take a closer look at grassroots emancipatory movements, women-led
voluntary associations, as well as cultural texts by women –
performances, installations, artworks, films and novels – in which
authors take a stance against religious bigotry, xenophobia,
homophobia, racism and misogyny. But we also invite contributions
that focus on women’s endorsement of and participation in
ultra-conservative national and orthodox religious campaigns. More
specifically, the conference will provide an opportunity to consider:

- feminist discourses and activism that shed light on current threats
  to human rights, reproductive rights, rights of freedom of movement
  and speech, LGBTQ rights;
- analyses/case studies on social/political movements initiated
  and/or run by women activists, e.g. Black Lives Matter;
- militant or transgressive feminism as conflictual and antagonistic
  counterpublics; its potential to revitalize the civil society and
  its institutions (feminist discourses, representations and activism
  that dispute anti-immigrant, fundamentalist, racist, sexist and
  homophobic abuse to promote solidarity, secularism, empathy and
  resistance),
- stories, real and fictional, about women’s struggles against the
  resurgence of nationalism, populism and religious fundamentalism;
- social media as parallel counterpublics for feminist activism and
  the struggle for preservation and expansion of human rights;
- political discourses and cultural texts by women that challenge
  “androcentric nationalism” (Elleke Boehmer 7) and imagine different
  scenarios for female agency in the public sphere;
- political discourses and cultural texts by women that endorse
  nationalism and women’s activism on behalf of right-wing and rigidly
  doctrinal campaigning platforms.

We are aware of the fact the Arab Spring to which the title of this
conference alludes ended in a disappointing disaster. Therefore, we
also welcome submissions that imaginatively tackle

- dystopian visions of a world which rejects women’s subjectivity and
  agency,
- failure of feminist movements to live up to expectations (expressed
  among others by Alain Touraine after the publications of Le monde
  des femmes)

Please send your 250-word abstracts for 20-minute papers or article
proposals and 100-word bio notes to: [email protected] by
01.04.2018.
Selected papers will be published as a special issue in Open Cultural
Studies: https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/culture


Contact:

Izabella Penier
Institute for Black Atlantic Research (IBAR)
School of Art Design and Performance
University of Central Lancashire
Preston PR1 2HE
United Kingdom
Email: [email protected]
Web:
http://ibaruclan.com/womens-spring-feminism-nationalism-and-civil-disobedience/




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