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 ***apologies for cross-posting***



*Sexual(ities that) progress?: Call for Papers*



American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, April 2017



Organised by Kath Browne, Joe Hall, Jason Lim and Nick McGlynn





Liberal acceptance of diverse sexual practices and identities, particularly
in the metropolitan Global North, has widely been framed in the discourse
of ‘progress’. Such progress is often measured in terms of shifting
attitudes to sexual agency – especially women’s sexual agency – and
increasing inclusivity and rights gains for LGBTQ people.  This discourse
has been critiqued, however, and many authors and activists argue that
these trajectories of ‘progress’ are spatially and temporally specific and
question their applicability globally. Geographical imaginations of
‘progress’ often rely on the construction of a homogeneous and antediluvian
Global South – an imagination that erases both the ‘achievements’ of
activists therein and the continued injustice, violence and oppression in
what are imagined as the heartlands of progress in the metropolitan Global
North. Discourses of ‘progress’ have also been challenged on the basis that
they tend to normalize particular sexual identities and then to globalize
them, for instance in the tying of development aid to recognition of LGBTQ
identities.





Building on broader geographical engagements with questions of ‘progress’,
this session seeks to develop critical insights regarding the relations
between progressive politics and the sexual(ities) that progress. We invite
speakers to critically interrogate assumptions of progress, and the ideals
and models that follow from understandings of certain places as ‘leading
the way’ in terms of sexual and gender inclusions.

Papers are invited that address any of the following points, but this list
is not exhaustive:

·         What counts as ‘progressive sexual politics’? How is ‘moving
forward’ constituted and contested? What does ‘not progressing’ mean?

·         How are sexualities used to define ‘progress’ and ‘failure’?

·         How are sexualities mobilized in the production of progressive or
failing polities(e.g. nation states, ‘progressive cities’)?

·         How are geographical constructs such as ‘safe spaces’ and
‘autonomous spaces’ used in the creation of ‘new’ progressive politics?

·         How are ‘progressive sexual politics’ embodied?

·         Technological spaces of sexual progress

·         How do demands for sexual progress touch down in a variety of
places, networks and across different spatial scales?

·         How are ideals and ideas of sexual progress reconstituted through
(im)migration, and social differences, including race, ethnicity, religion,
class, disability, gender?



*Please send titles and 250-word abstracts to Kath Browne *
*[log in to unmask]* <[log in to unmask]>*,** Jason Lim *
*[log in to unmask]* <[log in to unmask]>* , Joseph Hall *
*[log in to unmask]* <[log in to unmask]>*  and Nicholas Mcglynn *
*[log in to unmask]* <[log in to unmask]>* by October 1,
2016.*