Dear Colleagues,
The deadline for abstracts for our Women Writing Pleasure conference is now only three days away, and we still have plenty of space for more papers. I’m delighted to say that the event will include a keynote by Professor Patricia Duncker, whose new novel Sophie and the Sibyl will be published by Bloomsbury in April 2015.
Please find below our call for papers for this event, which we hope you will share as widely as possible.
We hope you’ll consider submitting an abstract and would love to see you in Liverpool in July. If you have any questions about the event, please don’t hesitate to contact us via email ([log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>) or on Twitter (@women_writing).
Please note: if for any reason you feel you cannot meet Saturday’s deadline or abstracts, please get in touch with me directly and let me know when you feel you could send us your proposal.
All the very best,
Nadine, Chloe, and Tina
** PLEASE CIRCULATE WIDELY ***
WOMEN WRITING PLEASURE
A One-Day Conference
3 July 2015<x-apple-data-detectors://1>
Research Centre for Literature & Cultural History
Liverpool John Moores University
Keynote Speaker
Professor Patricia Duncker
The representation of female pleasure has been a topic of much notoriety and discussion in contemporary popular culture as well as having a literary and cultural history of its own that, of course, begins much earlier than the heated debates over E. L. James’s Fifty Shades trilogy. Women’s expressions of pleasure have been policed, pathologised, silenced, celebrated, and fetishized, and have, over the centuries, taken on a plethora of forms, particularly in literature, ranging from Radclyffe Hall’s infamous single sentence to the lavish images of excess created by writers such as Angela Carter and Margaret Atwood. The heroines of the female Gothic are dangerously thrilled by novels, while many a feminist’s protagonist expresses the pleasures achieved from intellectual as well as sexual and other physical pursuits. Others again grapple with the competing pleasures of the body, the mind, and the material realm, including the works of writers such as Charlotte Roche and Sarah Hall.
This one-day symposium seeks to chart the ways in which women writers have expressed, interrogated, and celebrated female pleasure, its manifestations, and its origins in a variety of genres from the nineteenth century through to the present day and in a range of constellations, including, but by no means limited to: sexual pleasure; histories of women and pleasure; the body as a source of pleasure; psychological and intellectual pleasures; the feminist politics of female pleasure; pleasure, consumerism, and consumption; pleasure and addiction; pleasure and pain; pleasure and excess.
Please email abstract of 300 words to [log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]> no later than 31 January 2015<x-apple-data-detectors://5>. Speakers will be notified by 15 February 2015<x-apple-data-detectors://6>. We welcome submissions from researchers at all stages of their careers.
The conference is organised by Chloe Holland, Dr Nadine Muller, and Krystina Osborne. You can follow us on Twitter via @Women_Writing, and you can find our conference blog at http://www.womenwritingpleasure.com<http://www.womenwritingpleasure.com/>.
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