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The Sexual Politics of Austerity. Queer Everyday life in neoliberal times.

Deadline for submission is *18 April 2013*.

(Session at the II European Geographies of Sexualities Conference, Lisbon,
September 5th – 7th)

Call for Papers

Convened by: *Cesare Di Feliciantonio* (Sapienza- Università di Roma,
Italy); *Gavin Brown* (University of Leicester); and *Paulo Jorge
Vieira* (Center
for Geographical Studies, Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning,
University of Lisbon)

Even thought debt and financial crisis seems to favor the emergence of new
and original social movements and anti-capitalistic actions, neoliberal
policies remain the main response to crisis by formal institutions
(Aalbers, 2013; Rossi, 2013), promoting austerity measures and the cuts to
welfare systems. At the same time, neoliberal regimes intervene in the
sexual and affective life of people, reinforcing new forms of normativity
in LGBT movements and populations. In fact, just over a decade ago, Lisa
Duggan (2002) famously described ‘the new homonormativity’ as “the sexual
politics of neoliberalism”. Her arguments are now familiar in relation to
the rapid liberalization of social and legal attitudes towards
homosexuality since the early 1990s.  Lesbian and gay life has been
domesticated and depoliticized; and, some mainstream LGB(T) advocacy
organisations have moved to the right – their calls for ‘equality’ no
longer offer even a pretense of addressing broader issues of social and
economic justice.  Discriminatory laws have been removed from the statute
books and new forms of legal ‘equality’ have been enacted in many polities;
albeit in ways that privilege individualised responsibility for social
well-being through consumption.  Although uneven, aspects of these changes
have been witnessed in most countries in the Global North, increasingly in
several of the more dynamic emerging economies in the Global South
(especially the so-called BRICS nations), and a smattering of other
nations.  Duggan’s theorisation of homonormativity has been influential,
but it was written during a period of economic boom. This session seeks to
question how the sexual politics of neoliberalism has altered since the
global financial crisis of 2008, as neoliberalism has entered a period of
austerity and intensified revanchism. At the same time, our aim is not to
build a monolithic and solely hopeless account of the sexual politics of
neoliberalism – we would like to discuss which kinds of opportunities and
interstitial spaces can be offered by crisis and austerity measures in
terms of class recomposition and political action for sexual dissidents
(trans people, sex workers, people involved in polyamourous unions, people
living with HIV/AIDS, and other new sexual/gender minorities).

Empirical and / or theoretical papers are welcomed on any theme which
deepens the plural understanding of the geographic dimensions of neoliberal
sexual politics and the possible challenges towards it; possibly
interesting topics include:

   - Heteronormativity/homonormativity and everyday life in austerity times;
   - The effects of austerity measures on sexual dissidents’ everyday life;
   - Class, Ethnicity and Same Sex Marriage;
   - Compulsory coupledom and the burdens of single life;
   - Neoliberalism, Sexual Politics and new spaces of political action
   challenging it;
   - The gendered and sexually dimensions of class recomposition;
   - Queer Theory, Feminism, and (materialist) critique of normativity;
   - The (re)emergence of gay and lesbian revanchist politics

Please send your name, affiliation details, and email address along with
your abstract of no more than 300 words to *Cesare Di Feliciantonio* (
[log in to unmask]); *Gavin Brown*([log in to unmask]);
and *Paulo Jorge Vieira* ([log in to unmask])

Deadline for submission is *18 April 2013*.
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Paulo Jorge Vieira

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00351  914477147

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NETURB - Núcleo de Estudos Urbanos
Centro de Estudos Geográficos
IGOT - Instituto de Geografia e Ordenamento do Território
www.igot.ul.pt
Universidade de Lisboa/University of Lisbon

não te prives – Grupo de Defesa dos Direitos Sexuais
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