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>From [log in to unmask] Thu Jun 29 22:00:12 2000
Date: Thu, 29 Jun 2000 13:54:05 -0400
From: co-editor h-demog <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To: H-Net Historical Demography List <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: CFP: Isolation: Places and Practices of Exclusion (Edited Volume)

Isolation: Places and Practices of Exclusion
Publication Date: 2000-10-01

Call for Papers

Isolation:
Places and Practices of Exclusion

Editors: Carolyn Strange and Alison Bashford

Abstracts are sought for a multi-disciplinary collection that critically
examines enforced isolation in the 19th and 20th centuries. The editors
seek contributions that explore the cultural, political, medical and legal
dimensions of containment and exile. We invite submissions from scholars
in cultural studies, geography, sociology, history, and anthropology. 

The exclusion of certain populations (eg. lepers, convicts, the
feeble-minded, political prisoners) hinges on experts' and authorites'
determinations of their undesirability and dangerousness: it entails the
deprivation of liberty, the restriction of movement, and the imposition of
behavioural regimes.

But isolation is also a matter of place-making. The exclusion of the
undesirable can render places undesirable. However, these sites can also
be re-made, their histories neutralised, memorialised, or even sanctified. 

While isolation works to silence and hide, the isolated are never
voiceless or invisible. Moreover, strategies of exclusion can also produce
newly-politicised subjectivities and allegiances. 

We seek essays that consider questions such as: 

* How do practices of exile and containment differ from each other and over
time?
* Which populations have been isolated?  How has their composition changed?
(eg. lunatics; refugees; native peoples; the infectious)
* Which spaces have been made into isolated places? (eg. islands, urban
zones, colonies, buildings)
* How have isolation strategies been rationalised and how have  they been
contested? (eg. isolating people is a matter of debate, not a matter of
fact)
* How do places of exclusion figure in wider communitiesí imagination (eg.
as visible sites of punishment; as places remote and unseen, yet known)
* What renders places undesirable? (eg. gender segregation; crime and its
punishment; disease and its treatment)
* How have the isolated made their voices heard? (eg. escape, prison
writings, formal complaints)

Possible places of isolation include:

* Prisons
* Native reserves
* Leper colonies
* Epileptic colonies
* Feeble minded institutions
* Refugee camps
* Quarantine stations
* Lunatic asylums
* Lock hospitals
* Places of exile

Submissions

* Send an abstract of 200 words to either one of the editors
* Include a short c.v.

Important Dates

Deadline for abstracts and c.vís: 1 Oct. 2000
Decision date for contributions: 1 Dec. 2000
Completion of drafts: 1 June 2001
Workshop for contributors: 23-4 June 2001
(in Toronto, Canada)
Final drafts submitted: 30 Dec. 2001

The Editors

Alison Bashford is the co-editor (with Claire Hooker) of Contagion:
Historical and Cultural Studies (Routledge 2001), the author of numerous
articles in Australian and British medical history, as well as the author
of Purity and Pollution: Gender, Embodiment and Victorian Medicine
(Macmillan 1998).  She is a senior lecturer in Gender Studies at the
University of Sydney.
e-mail: [log in to unmask]

Carolyn Strange has published several articles on prison history tourism.
She is the editor of Qualities of Mercy: Justice, Punishment, and
Discretion (University of British Columbia Press, 1996), the co-author
(with Tina Loo) of Making Good: Law and Morality in Canada, 1867-1939
(University of Toronto Press, 1997), and the author of Torontoís Girl
Problem: The Perils and Pleasures of the City, 1880-1930  (University of
Toronto Press, 1995).  She is an associate professor of History and
Criminology at the University of Toronto.
e-mail: [log in to unmask]

Contact information:
Dr. Alison Bashford
Dept. of Gender Studies
University of Sydney
Sydney, NSW, Australia  2006
61 2 9351-3884
This announcement was submitted via the H-Net Announcements Website.
Find it at: http://www.h-net.msu.edu/announce/show.cgi?ID=125939
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----
au revoir

niall johnson
Email: [log in to unmask]

Department of Geography		and		Sidney Sussex College
University of Cambridge				Cambridge
United Kingdom	CB2 3EN				United Kingdom CB2 3HU




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