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Apologies for cross-postings.

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Call for Papers: Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting,
Tampa, FL, April 8-12th - 2014

Intimate Ecologies of Social Reproduction

Session organizer: Paul Jackson (Dartmouth College)

This session looks to build upon the long history of marxist-feminist
debates on social reproduction to explore the more "biological" — fleshy
and messy (Katz 2001) — aspects of everyday life through political ecology
and its various subfields (urban political ecology, feminist political
ecology, and political ecology of health). How is the non-human intimately
integrated into social reproduction? Intimacy signals both the politics of
close proximity (breathing, eating, toxins, viruses, exchanging fluids) and
the emotional relationships with others (love, solidarity, power
relations). David Graeber (2012) recently suggested that we recast the
concept of social reproduction to be the “production of human
beings…producing each other…[that] cannot be reduced to standard categories
of political economy.” The notion of human beings producing-each-other
reformulates the interconnected spheres of production and reproduction. At
the same time this concept helps to make explicit the collective nature of
disease, hunger, shelter, knowledge, thirst, technology, and work. As
"lively capital" (Sunder Rajan 2012) increasingly mediates these intimate
ecologies, what politics are emerging at the intersection of investment and
survival?

Both theoretical and empirical studies are welcome. Themes can include, but
are not limited to:

- biological and ecological processes of producing-each-other
- the ecology closest in
- toxic environments and environmental justice
- internalizing the environment (food, pharmaceuticals, breathing, etc)
- producing intimate urban life
- survival strategies
- intimate resources and economies
- infectious forms of life
- living with chronic conditions
- intimate entanglements of production and social reproduction
- uneven intimate ecologies

I invite potential participants to send their abstracts (300 words) to Paul
Jackson ([log in to unmask]) by October 15th, 2013.


+ Graeber, D (2012) in conversation with David Harvey, Rebel Cities: From
the Right to the City to the Urban Revolution, Against the Grain, May 22nd
2012.
+ Katz, C (2001) Vagabond capitalism and the necessity of social
reproduction. Antipode 33: 709–728
+ Pratt, G and Rosner, V (2012) The global and the intimate: feminism in
our time. New York: Columbia University Press
+ Sunder Rajan, K (ed.) (2012) Lively capital: biotechnologies, ethics, and
governance in global markets. Durham: Duke University Press


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Paul Jackson, PhD
Postdoctoral Fellow | Department of Geography | Dartmouth College
[log in to unmask] | paulsbjackson.com