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Surveillance & Society | New Call for Papers

Gender, Sexuality and Surveillance

http://www.surveillance-and-society.org
<http://www.surveillance-and-society.org/> 

 

Deadline: March 31st 2008.

 

Kirstie Ball, Nicola Green, Hille Koskela, David J. Phillips

 

Since its inception, surveillance studies has highlighted how monitoring
practices divide, classify, order and sort target populations. It has
been argued not only that populations assigned to different categories
are subjected to different intensities and kinds of surveillance, but
also that surveillance itself is integral to the production of those
populations. 

 

With a few exceptions, gender and sexuality - as ubiquitous structuring
principles in society - have been neglected within surveillance studies.
The body and its desires, as they are invoked in mainstream surveillance
studies, tend to be assumed rather than specified.  In this special
issue of Surveillance and Society, we are therefore interested in
explicitly examining the relations among gender, sexuality, and
surveillance. Hence, this issue foregrounds and highlights how the gaze
is gendered and sexualized, how surveillance is experienced across
populations, and how the construction of subjectivities and bodies via
surveillance practices invokes gender and sexuality. Moreover, we hope
to consider how feminist and queer theories might be used to understand
and explain surveillance practices, and to highlight debates about the
technocentrism associated with surveillance studies. Surveillance
studies is itself historically constructed by male theorists, and it is
notable that key feminist works that focus on discipline, subjectivity,
power and the body [such as that of Bordo (1989, 1993), Butler (1990),
McNay (1992), Ramazanoglu (ed, 1993) and Sawicki (1991)] remain marginal
within the field. We therefore ask whether feminist or queer thought may
also impact and reconstruct the concepts and theories of surveillance
studies itself.  

 

Contributions are welcome on any of the following themes, which might
include, but are not limited to:

 

*	the surveillance of women/men
*	the construction of normative gender and sexual identities
*	exhibitionism, voyeurism, desire and surveillance technologies
*	vulnerability & exposure, border/ boundary movement and
violation
*	surveillance and the body
*	gender & medical surveillance - biotechnologies, reproductive
technologies, alcohol & addiction
*	feminist theory, the panopticon and power
*	queer theory, normativity and power
*	gender-based identification, identity, subjectivity and
discipline
*	surveillance and sexual subcultures 
*	gendering the watchers & the watched
*	discourses of masculinity, femininity, hetero-normativity and
surveillance

 

Full papers, research notes, reviews, opinion pieces, art and poetry
submissions should be sent electronically to Emily Smith
([log in to unmask]) by 31st March 2008.

 

Bibliography:

 

Bordo, S. (1989) "The Body and the Reproduction of Femininity: A
Feminist Appropriation of Foucault." In Alison M. Jaggar and Susan Bordo
(eds). Gender/Body/Knowledge: Feminist Reconstructions of Being and
Knowing. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press: pp. 13-33.

 

Bordo, S. (1993) Unbearable Weight: Feminism, Western Culture and the
Body Berkley: University of California Press

 

Butler, J. (1990) Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of
Identity. New York: Routledge.

 

McNay, L. (1992) Foucault and Feminism: Power, Gender and the Self.
Cambridge: Blackwell, Polity Press.

 

Ramazanoglu, C. (ed)(1993) Up Against Foucault: explorations of some
tensions between Foucault and feminism London: Routledge.

 

Sawicki, J. (1991) Disciplining Foucault: Feminism, Power and the Body
New York: Routledge.

 

 

Address for Submissions 

Surveillance & Society Editorial Assistant, Emily Smith 

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

 

 

 

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