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*Feminist Futures: Critical Engagements with the Fourth Wave*

*A Symposium at Queen Mary, University of London, 27 June 2015*



As the year 2014 drew to a close, the media’s annual summations were awash
with celebratory claims regarding the achievements of feminist individuals
and organisations across the world, from the work of grassroots activism to
new energy generated by prominent political, cultural and popular talking
heads. While *The* *Guardian* boldly claimed 2014 to be a watershed year,
with women’s voices apparently attaining ‘an unprecedented power’,
*Time* magazine
went so far as to state that this ‘may have been the best year for women
since the dawn of time’.[1]
<https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#14b2c4dc5ffe3ac8__ftn1>
<https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#14b2c4dc5ffe3ac8__ftn1>


This one-day symposium invites critical reflection and debate on what has
been called feminism’s ‘fourth wave’. Over the past few years, the
ambivalent attitudes that characterised the postfeminist climate of the
1990s and early 2000s have arguably been replaced by a vibrant unveiling of
new feminist potencies on the streets and online. The economic crash of
2008, the ensuing austerity measures, and the spread of an insidious
rhetoric targeting under-privileged and marginalised groups, have laid bare
to many the structural inequalities embedded in the UK. Renewed engagement
with feminism has been galvanised in this highly politicised environment by
a range of issues that continue to confront women into the twenty-first
century, from unequal pay, to the objectification and abuse of women’s
bodies, to ‘everyday sexism’. Alongside grassroots activism, and
publications aimed at a general readership, this putative ‘fourth wave’
of feminism has mobilised political activity online. In the face of the
ever-new forms of misogyny churned out by digital
media, feminist internauts are fostering valuable spaces for women to stake
their claim to the virtual worlds of the future.



However, there are also concerns being voiced about the directions in which
these new feminist energies are channelled. What does it mean when members
of the coalition government don T-shirts proclaiming ‘This is what
a feminist looks like’? Are the ‘feminist’ advertising campaigns run by the
beauty industry cause for celebration or concern? Does feminism really need
to be ‘re-branded’ as Elle magazine proposes? What happens when ‘feminist’
discourses are co-opted by the political right? Furthermore, there is a
sense that, despite its vigour, this ‘fourth wave’ is undertheorised. As
Kira Cochrane put it in in her recent exploration of
the feminist resurgence ‘[this movement] hasn’t yet produced a swathe of
theory’ (2013: 242).


In response to Cochrane’s concern, this symposium invites reflection and
debate on the possibilities, limits and contradictions of ‘fourth
wave’ feminist discourse. What specific concerns and issues are being
foregrounded by the fourth wave? How do they relate to, reflect on, and
advance former feminist and postfeminist debates? What is the relation
between the surge in feministactivity on the streets, in the media, in
popular culture and online, and critical discourses of feminism? How
might feministthought, across the arts and humanities, engage with or
theorise this new energy? And what misgivings remain in relation to the
rhetoric of a ‘popular’ feminism, one that may well be steeped in
neoliberal agenda, easily co-opted and instrumentalised by the very
dominant forces that might limit its efficacy? The symposium endeavours to
bring ‘academic’ feminism into close contact with broader political and
cultural feminist discourses and to illuminate the impact of such debates
already being felt within academic contexts themselves.


We invite proposals for twenty-minute papers offering critical perspectives
on contemporary feminist debates across the arts and humanities, including
philosophy, critical and cultural studies, history, geography, the social
sciences, English and Modern Languages. Topics may include, but are not
limited, to the following:

n     theoretical responses to key debates foregrounded by the fourth wave,
including women and work, material and structural inequalities; women’s
bodies, sexualities, rape culture and consent, abuse and violence,
pornography and sex work; everyday sexism

n     feminism and grassroots activism

n     feminist campaigns

n     feminism and consumer culture

n     feminism and popular culture

n     feminism and the arts

n      feminism online

n      feminism and humour

n       corporate feminism

n       intersectional feminism

n       feminism and queer culture

Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words to
[log in to unmask], along with your name and affiliation, by 5pm
on Friday 13th March 2015.





Organisers:



Alice Blackhurst, doctoral candidate in French, University of Cambridge

Amaleena Damlé, Affiliated Lecturer in French, University of Cambridge

Anna Kemp, Lecturer in French, Queen Mary, University of London




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[1] <https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#14b2c4dc5ffe3ac8__ftnref1>
http://www.theguardian.com/news/2014/dec/30/-sp-rebecca-solnit-listen-up-women-are-telling-their-story-now
;
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/dec/31/guardian-view-year-feminism-2014-watershed
; http://time.com/3639944/feminism-2014-womens-rights-ray-rice-bill-cosby/