Dear all,
Registration is now open for 'Forthcoming Feminisms' organised by the BSA Gender Study Group and the Centre for Interdisciplinary Gender Studies (CIGS) at the University of Leeds, to be held at Weetwood Hall, Leeds on October 26th 2012.
For full details please see below and attached.
To register please follow the link:
http://portal.britsoc.co.uk/public/event/eventBooking.aspx?id=EVT10233
The programme will be available on the BSA and CIGS websites shortly after registration has closed on October 5th.
All best, Sally
Registration Open @ http://portal.britsoc.co.uk/public/event/eventBooking.aspx?id=EVT10233
Forthcoming Feminisms: Gender Activism, Politics and Theories
Organised by the BSA Gender Study Group & the Centre for Interdisciplinary Gender Studies (CIGS, University of Leeds)
26th October 2012: Weetwood Hall Hotel, Leeds, LS16 5PS
Keynote Speakers: Julia Downes (Durham); Imogen Tyler (Lancaster)
This one day conference will seek to explore the contemporary landscape of gender politics and theory at a crucial moment of feminist resurgence. Against the backdrop of political economies of austerity, in which women are disproportionately disadvantaged, and in challenge to ‘post-feminist’ cultural prophecies, current times indicate a renewed interest in, and commitment to, feminism. In academic climates, while women’s and gender study programs face threats of closure, the popularity of such programmes continues to grow; reflecting the continuation of feminist and gender theory as a flourishing and dynamic arena. This conference speaks to these political and theoretical paradoxes and flows in exploring varied (and sometimes opposing) feminist cultures, values, ethics, knowledges, challenges and aspirations across the levels of the social and cultural.
The conference will examine these issues in relation to temporality: how do current feminisms speak to those of the past and how might we imagine feminisms’ future?; the micro and the macro: how do grass roots feminist politics respond to structural processes and materialities?; the local and global: what are the similarities and differences – the uniting and dividing features - of national and international feminisms?; place and culture: how are feminisms formed through, and in opposition to, fields of habitus and spaces of public/private; citizenship and recognition: who can – and who can’t – find a place within feminism, who is – and who isn’t – able to ‘belong’?; equality and diversity: to what extent has feminism been mainstreamed?, what are the effects of this on gender studies and politics in and outside the academy?; intersectionality: how do social identities and material positionings impact on feminist commitments and lived experiences?, how do patterns of inequality bear on feminist aspirations and imaginings?; difference: how can feminism productively interact with trans and queer politics, theories, and communities?, how can feminism account for embodied diversities?
Papers will address questions of:
• Sites of Activism
• Political Agendas
• Spaces and Places
• Gender Mainstreaming
• Feminisms at the Local and Global
• Intersections of Class, Race, Ethnicity, Faith, Age, Gender, Sexuality and Embodiment
• Feminist Times and Generations
• Agency and Affect
• Political Economies
• Inclusions and Exclusions
• Transgender and Queer Feminisms
• Representation, Media and New Technologies
BSA Members £45 Non-BSA Members £55
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