Women's and Gender History Symposium 2013
This blog featured periodic updates for the 2013 Women's and Gender History Symposium (WGHS). For all future posts, please visit http://illinoiswghs.blogspot.com. Thanks!
Saturday, October 12, 2013
Where is the Love?
Call for Papers for 2014 Symposium
CALL FOR PAPERS
Fifteenth Annual Women’s and Gender History Symposium
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
February 27 - March 1, 2014, at the Illini Union in Urbana, Illinois
With a Keynote Address by Professor Luise White, University of Florida
Where is the Love?
Uncovering Love, Past and Present
The concept of love has historically cast a large shadow, influencing everyday lives, political processes and social structures. We invite all papers that help us conceptualize, historicize, and complicate the themes of love and affective relations, across all time periods (ancient, medieval, and modern), while grounding their analysis in the category of gender and/or the experiences of women. We are looking for papers that consider love in a wide variety of contexts from different parts of the world. Contexts could include familial/filial love, romantic love, queer love, multiracial/inter-communal love, spiritual love and dysfunctional love. The entanglements of love with religion, the nation, comradeship, migration, ideas, and objects are also open for investigation. We also warmly welcome proposals considering the topic of affective studies and methodology, with regard to problems of evidence, archives and historical repression. The experience of love, the desire for intimacy, as well as the willingness to act on affection, have shaped peoples’ interpretations of their world. In the recent past, discourses of coloniality have also reproduced love as the counterfoil to reason and rationality. However, what exactly “love” is—and exactly how historians and other scholars can study it—remains an open question, which we are interested in exploring further. This conference will reconsider love in all its complex forms, and its multiple historical and geographical iterations.
While we do not have a specific spatial focus, we strongly encourage submissions focusing on Non-Western and Indigenous areas, or on pre-modern periods, along with those that employ inter-disciplinary approaches and tools.
The keynote address for this year’s symposium will be delivered by Professor Luise White from the Department of History at the University of Florida. A leading scholar of African history, White’s work has contributed to the gendering of labor migration and urbanization. She has also contributed significantly to methodology in the study of the African past, addressing issues concerning oral history and the use of rumor as evidence. White’s 1990 monograph, Comforts of Home: Prostitution in Colonial Nairobi, won the prestigious Melville J. Herskovits Award in African studies.
All graduate students interested in presenting at the conference should send their 300-500 word abstracts to gendersymp@gmail.com by November 15, 2013. Applicants will be notified by December about whether their paper has been accepted. We look forward to receiving your abstracts!
For all future posts, please see our new site at http://illinoiswghs.blogspot.com.
Saturday, March 2, 2013
Thank you for a wonderful conference!
Thanks to everyone - faculty, staff, students, guests and friends - who helped to make the 14th Annual Women's and Gender History Symposium a success. We heard some incredible papers from students from the University of Illinois and other universities around the country. We appreciate your presence and look forward to seeing you next year! Below is a slideshow of photos from this four day event.
Monday, February 18, 2013
kicking off the 2013 WGHS using an imagined work
"Coffy," a 1973 film starring Pam Grier, traces the experiences of a female vigilante. This motion picture was released in the period known as the blaxploitation period and thus, is fitting as a 2013 WGHS kick-off event. But was this movie and era entirely exploitative? If so, for whom and why, are questions worth exploring. Movie Screening Showtime: 5 pm
Where: Activities and Recreation Center (aka the ARC)
University of Illinois, 201 East Peabody Drive, Champaign, IL 61820, (217) 333-3806, Free Pizza served. Come see this show before Dr. Myrlie Evers-Williams, widow of slain civil rights activist Medger Evers, speaks at 7:30 pm in Foellinger Great Hall of the Krannert Center for the Performing Arts. Her talk is part of the University's Sesquicentennial of the Emancipation Proclamation Events. There will also be performances by the University of Illinois Black Choir, Dr. Ollie Watts Davis, conductor; the Women’s Glee Club, Dr. Andrea Solyea, conductor; Dr. Casey Robards, piano; and the University of Illinois Wind Symphony.
Sunday, February 10, 2013
Dakota Alcantara-Camacho, WGHS presenter
Here is a sneak peep at the critical spoken word skills of Dakota Alcantara-Camacho, one of the 2013 WGHS presenters. Here, he is speaking at a Seattle youth event.He touched on many issues including identity. "We all speak 'ocean'," he says, asking, "In which one are you drowning?"
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
deadline to book room at discount rate approaching
The WGHS Executive Committee just learned that the deadline to book a hotel room at a discounted rate ends February 7. If you plan to stay at the I-Hotel and Conference Center, site of the 2013 WGHS, please book soon! Call the hotel directly at 217-819-5000 to make reservations. Thirty-five rooms have been blocked at a special nightly rate of $130. The code is AWS. You may also book online. The rate begins Wednesday, Feb. 27 and ends Monday, March 4. Thanks.
Monday, February 4, 2013
Official flier for the 2013 WGHS
Finally, the official flier for this year's Women's and Gender History Symposium. Up top is the front; below is the back. The WGHS 2013 Executive Committee owes huge thanks to University of Illinois Doctoral Candidate Arnau Roig Mora for a terrific job on this poster.
Labels:
arnau roig mora,
conference,
flier,
gender,
university of illinois
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Official Schedule for the 2013 Women's and Gender History Symposium
Here is the official schedule for the 2013 Women's and Gender Symposium. We welcome everyone including students, faculty and staff from the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana community to attend the panels and keynote address, which will be held at I-Hotel and Conference Center,1900 S. First Street, Champaign, Illinois. Registration and select meals for presenters also held at I-Hotel and Conference Center.
Wednesday, February 27, 2013,
5:30 pm: “Coffy” film screening at the ARC,201 East Peabody Dr., Champaign, IL 61820.
Thursday, February 28, 2013,
7:30pm: Keynote address by Celine Parreñas Shimizu, University of California-Santa Barbara Professor of Film and Performance Studies.
Friday, March 1, 2013,
8:30am: Registration and Breakfast.
9-10:15am, Panel 1: (Un)speakable (Dis)junctures:
Mike Staudenmier, Sexual Exploitation and Phantom Pheminists: An Alternate Pre-History of the Feminist Sexuality Debates, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign,
Elise Kramer, The “Enemies” of Free Speech: Political Correctness, Feminism, and the Anti-American, University of Chicago,
Sonia Brown, Effecting Social Change: Postmodern Categories of “Woman” or Sisters in Solidarity?, DePaul University,
Randi Cruz, Deconstructing Misogyny and the Politics of Sexism: Julia Gillard as Case Study of Resistance, University of Arkansas,
10:30-11:45am, Panel 2: Where Ladies Don’t Belong:
Sandy Bolzenius, World War II Ft. Devens Strike: African American Women in the Military, Ohio State University,
Marc Arenberg, An 'Unkempt Army' of Hobos: Gendered Discourse in the IWW's Spokane Free Speech Fight, 1909-1910, Northeastern Illinois, University,
Rebecca Fu, Being Grouped and Articulated: Literate Women in Medieval Chinese Documents, University of Pennsylvania,
Stefan Kosovych, Science, Gender, and Nationality in Third Republic France: Press Reactions to Marie Curie, 1903-1904 and 1910-1911 University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign,
12-1pm: Presenter Lunch
1-2:15pm, Panel 3, Mediated Women:
Ana Alvarez, Performing Sexuality in Art and Activism, Brown University,
Megan Woller, “I Am an American Girl Now:” Representation of Puerto Rican Women in Hollywood’s Adaptation of West Side Story (1961), University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign,
Elizabeth Caroll, Love and Lust in the Blood: Female Vampires in Twentieth Century European and American Films, University of Iowa,
Mei-Hsuan Chiang, Daughters of Rebellion and Disciplined Bodies: The Representation of Madwoman in Early Taiwanese Cinema, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign,
2:30-3:45pm, Panel 4: Exploiting the Literary Imaginary,
Margaret Witzke, Sita, ayana Gonna Say Something?, University of Kansas,
Aaron George, The Philosophy That Lived Under A Red Flag: Anticommunist Depiction of Sexual Violence, Ohio State University,
Joshua Jones, Surviving the Multiplicity of Chicano/a Identity in Gloria Anzaldúa’s Poetry, Bowling Green State University,
Konstantina Karageorgos, Sarah Wright’s Unsung Marxism: An Historically Materialist Reconsideration This Child’s Gonna Live, University of Michigan,
4-5:15, Panel 5: Resistifying,
Melissa Ford, “We Know How to Build Bridges:” Claudia Jones and the Transnational Struggle Against Oppression, Saint Louis University,
Hilary Scott, “Victoria Woodhull and Citizenship: Employing Antislavery Republican Rhetoric to Promote Women’s Emancipation,” University of Arkansas,
Kristi Carter, Abusive Second Husbands Just Don’t Understand: Elizabeth Ashbridge’s Quest for Religious Identity through Her Subconscious Rejection of Patriarchal Influence, University of Nebraska at Lincoln,
Saturday, March 2, 2013,
8:30am: Registration and Refreshments.
9-10:15am, Panel 6: Corporal Colonialism,
Nandini Bhattacharyya Panda, Women in the Legal Tradition: Colonialism, Law and Violence in the Indian Subcontinent, University of Calcutta,
Liz Perego, The Veil or a Brother’s Life: French Exploitation of Muslim Women’s Images during the Algerian War of Independence, 1954-1962, Ohio State University,
Reeju Ray, Women as Producers of Ethnicity: Two Case studies from North East India, Queens University,
Nabaparna Ghosh, Settling Women: Prostitute Neighborhoods in Colonial Calcutta, Princeton University.
10:30-11:45am: Panel 7, Of Bodies and Borders,
Kristen Loveland, Impossibilities of Reproductive Self-Determination: The Globalization and Domestication of a Third World Narrative in Germany, 1984 – 2002, Harvard University,
Rico Kleinstein Chenyek, Dis-ease Sustains Life: Gloria Anzaldúa’s Coatlicue State and the Physics of Love, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign,
Kyle Pasha & Ponni Arasu, Queer Crossings and Border Erasure, Arizona State University and University of Toronto.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)