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Dear all,
apologies for cross posting.

*Upcoming conference organised by IBAR in partnership with: openDemocracy
50.50, the Cornelia Goethe Center (Goethe University, Frankfurt);
International Development and Inclusive Innovation, Strategic Research Area
(The Open University), De Gruyter Open*

*(website: http://ibaruclan.com/womens-spring-feminism-nationalism-and-civil-disobedience/
<http://ibaruclan.com/womens-spring-feminism-nationalism-and-civil-disobedience/>)*

*21-23 June 2018, University of Central Lancashire, Preston,*

*Keynote speakers (confirmed):*

   - *Dr Umut Erel, *International Development and Inclusive Innovation,
   Strategic Research Area (The Open University)*;*
   - *Prof. Dr. Helma Lutz, *the Cornelia Goethe Center at Goethe
   University, Frankfurt;
   - *Prof. Ewa Mazierska, *University of Central Lancashire;
   - *Prof. Toby Miller*, University of California, Riverside; Loughborough
   University London
   - *Pragna Patel, *Southall Black Sisters;
   - *Prof. Nira Yuval-Davis, *Research Centre on Migration, Refugees and
   Belonging (CMRB) at the University of East London.



The aim of this conference is to explore the ways in which female activists
and artists responded the resurgence of the far-right nationalism and the
twin evil of religious fundamentalism. We want to take a closer look at
grassroots emancipatory movements, women-led voluntary associations, as
well as cultural texts by women – performances, installations, artworks,
films and novels – in which authors take a stance against religious
bigotry, xenophobia, homophobia, racism and misogyny. But we also invite
contributions that focus on women’s endorsement of and participation in
ultra-conservative national and orthodox religious campaigns. More
specifically, the conference will provide an opportunity to consider:

   - feminist discourses and activism that shed light on current threats to
   human rights, reproductive rights, rights of freedom of movement and
   speech, LGBTQ rights;
   - analyses/case studies on social/political movements initiated and/or
   run by women activists, e.g. Black Lives Matter;
   - militant or transgressive feminisms as conflictual and antagonistic
   counterpublics; their potential to revitalise the civil society and its
   institutions (feminist discourses, representations and activism that
   dispute anti-immigrant, fundamentalist, racist, sexist and homophobic abuse
   to promote solidarity, secularism, empathy and resistance),
   - stories, real and fictional, about women’s struggles against the
   resurgence of nationalism, populism and religious fundamentalism;
   - social media as parallel counterpublics for feminist activism and the
   struggle for preservation and expansion of human rights;
   - political discourses and cultural texts by women that challenge
   “androcentric nationalism” (Elleke Boehmer 7) and imagine different
   scenarios for female agency in the public sphere;
   - political discourses and cultural texts by women that endorse
   nationalism and women’s activism on behalf of right-wing and rigidly
   doctrinal campaigning platforms.

We are aware of the fact the Arab Spring to which the title of this
conference alludes ended in a disappointing disaster. Therefore, we also
welcome submissions that imaginatively tackle

   - dystopian visions of a world which rejects women’s subjectivity and
   agency,
   - failure of feminist movements to live up to expectations (expressed
   among others by Alain Touraine after the publications of* Le monde des
   femmes*)

Please send your 250-word abstracts for 20-minute papers or article
proposals and 100-word bio notes to:*[log in to unmask]
<[log in to unmask]>* by *01.04.2018*. Selected papers will be published
as a special issue in *Open Cultural Studies*
https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/culture



*References:*

Boehmer, Elleke. *Stories of Women: Gender and Narrative in the
Postcolonial Nation.* Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2005.

Fraser, Nancy. “Rethinking the Public Sphere: A Contribution to the
Critique of Actually Existing Democracy.” Ed. Craig J Calhoun. *Habermas
and the Public Sphere. Studies in Contemporary German Social Thought*.
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press 1992.

Gilroy, Paul. Interview by Philip Dodd in BBC Radio 3, Free Thinking <
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b08chbpf>

Mayer, Tamar. *Gender Ironies of Nationalism: Sexing the Nation*. London
and New York: Routledge, 2000.

Nayar, Pramod. *Writing Wrongs: The Cultural Construction of Human Rights
in India.* London and New York: Routledge, 2012.
-- 
Dr Anna Malinowska
Institute of English Cultures and Literatures
University of Silesia
Poland

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