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CALL FOR PAPERS/CONVOCATORIA

 

“MASCULINITIES AND VIOLENCE

 IN SPAIN AND LATIN AMERICA”

 

The December 2006 edition of the Journal of Iberian and Latin American
Studies (JILAS) will be a monograph dedicated to the issue of masculinity
and violence in Spain and Latin America and will be edited by Jeff Browitt,
Stewart King and Alfredo Martínez Expósito. Papers are invited in Spanish,
Portuguese, or English from scholars working in any field in which the nexus
between masculinity and violence (physical, sexual, psychological,
emotional, symbolic) is explored. We welcome papers from activists and from
academics in the Humanities and Social Sciences; we particularly welcome
papers which are inter-disciplinary in approach and make a critical use of
contemporary theories of gender, power, and violence. The deadline for
submission of papers is May 30, 2006. Papers must be no longer than 8000
words and must conform to the JILAS Style Guide:

http://www.latrobe.edu.au/history/jilas/styleguide.htm

 

It has been problematically argued that violence is primarily attached to
the masculine and knows no limits in terms of age, class, race, ethnicity or
nationality. In contemporary Hispanic/Latino societies, as in many others,
while women are sometimes complicit in domestic violence (abuse of children
or homicidal revenge against spouses), it is masculine violence that is
ubiquitous and rampant, whether in the domestic sphere of spousal and child
abuse, in sexual aggression, or in the public sphere of extortion, robbery,
gangs, sport, war and state violence. It has also been suggested that
specific acts of violence such as terrorism, sabotage, and bullying are
overwhelmingly performed by men. What role does masculinity play in
instigating/condoning violence? What role does violence play in defining
masculinity? How is the nexus between masculinity and violence portrayed,
condoned, apologised for, challenged or simply ignored in media, art, sport,
schooling, the military, legal codes and state institutions? 

 

Many forms of violence are intimately linked to patriarchal culture and the
historical residues of the now redundant divisions of labour, which hitherto
had prescribed hunting and military action to males, while women were
restricted to the affective and nurturing functions of the domestic sphere.
Is masculinity now in transition then to more acceptable, non-violent forms
of expression or indeed in transition to oblivion, along with traditional
notions of femininity, or are we witnessing a recrudesence of male violence
in the context of neo-liberal, global reordering, the silencing of
progressive thought and the intensification of the security state? What are
the rituals of masculinity that perpetuate violence? What is their
discourse? What, then, are the cultural and symbolic representations of
masculinity and violence in both historical and contemporary Spanish and
Latin American societies? Is there a particular Hispanic masculinity
bequeathed to both modern Spain and Latin America, which is imbued with
violent tendencies, or is that a damaging stereotype? Do progressive, armed
revolutionary movements promise to usher in a new society, a “New Man”, or
do they merely perpetuate the cult of weaponry, violence and death? Is
underdevelopment and poverty a cause or an excuse for male violence? In the
light of the Law Against Gender Violence recently passed by the Spanish
parliament, is legislation an effective answer?

 

Approaches may include (but are not limited to) the following topics:

 
-    media representations of violence

-         literary/filmic/artistic representations of violence

-         contemporary music and video/masculinity/violence

-         masculinity/violence/popular culture

-         domestic, intra-familiar violence

-         legal/juridical implications of masculine violence

-         power/violence/masculinity

-         masculinity/nationalism/violence

-         masculinity/terrorism/violence

-         female collusion in masculine violence

-         religion/masculinity/violence

-         the patriarchal state and violence

-         colonialism and violence

-         masculinity/violence/class

-         masculinity/violence/race

-         masculinity/violence/poverty

-         violence and gangs

-         reversals and variations of the ‘masculine-perpetrator versus
female-victim’ model

 

Submissions are to be sent to one of the editors below by no later than 30
May 2006:








Dr Jeffrey Browitt 
Institute for International Studies 
University of Technology, Sydney
PO Box 123
Broadway 2007
NSW 

AUSTRALIA

 <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]




 

Dr Stewart King

School of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Monash University 3800

Victoria 
AUSTRALIA

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Associate Professor Alfredo Martínez Expósito 

School of Languages and Comparative Cultural Studies
The University of Queensland
St Lucia, 4072

Queensland

AUSTRALIA




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(Associate Professor) Alfredo
<http://www.arts.uq.edu.au/slccs/index.html?page=18117&pid=19595>  Martínez
Expósito

Director of Postgraduate Studies and Reader in Spanish

President, Association for Iberian and Latin American Studies of Australasia
<http://www.arts.uq.edu.au/slccs/index.html?page=26229&pid=26220> AILASA 

School of Languages and Comparative Cultural Studies

University of Queensland 4072 Australia

CRICOS Provider 00025B