Concourse: Transgression

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Showing posts with label Transgression. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Transgression. Show all posts

Saturday, January 6, 2024

Call for Paper Queer Intersectionalities: Understanding South Asia- Publisher: Routledge , Edited by Nizara Hazarika & Namrata Pathak




Critical essays are invited for a book on queer representations in literature from South Asian countries. The local and allied global developments in queer literature in the regions and subregions of South Asia encompass diverse themes which bring to the fore the intricacies of political activism and demand for rights and policies cutting across myriad socio-cultural forums and settings. Emphasizing on how local, 'situated' and specialized knowledge is produced and how they impact operations of power in multi layered South Asian societies, the proposed book would throw light on shared and shifting conversations on/of queer communities across diverse disciplines, fields of knowledge and areas.
The present volume that falls under the series, “South Asian Literature in Focus” would be a compilation of critical essays by scholars, academics, activists, writers, and artists aiming to foreground a whole spectrum of queer experiences in the South Asian regions and subregions notwithstanding the special emphasis on specificities and particularities that such a mode of enquiry demands. The book would be discussing the experiential realities of queer population, the spatial transgressions and transformations within, across and beyond the spaces and terrains in South Asia, both concrete and abstract, by discussing the potential of subversive forces at the heart of same-sex/trans and myriad affiliations of varied kinds. The documentation of queer urban spaces, and the allied disruptions of the 'paradigmatic' in the everyday narratives is one of the significant aspects of the book. Also, a few essays will spin a weave of interesting classroom experiences, the practice of teaching a queer text, its absorption and reception at both the individual and collective level. Partly, the book would try to capture the intricacies of such 'pedagogical wars', and what actually goes into the process of queering academia, what form of knowledge is excluded, rejected and discarded in the process and why. Moreover, a few essays would be discussing the new emergences in the digital turn by putting the queer experience in the intersections of fluid, virtual identities, cyber culture and robotics. Also, there would also be a segment on the ecocritical offshoot of queer studies in the wake of anthropocene and certain overlapping environmental concerns and green-earth theories. Again, a part of the book would also focus on the effect of trauma, discrimination and rejection of the queers in general and the disabled LGBTQA++ people in particular, and also the need to create a shared and sustainable space based on equality and equity. The intention here is to unlayer the complex dynamics behind care and sustenance of the queer disabled in the context of daily stigmatization. Queer and popular culture would be another vital segment of the book which aims to throw light on the current aspects of queerness as evidenced in popular cinema, performance art and music. Some of the sub-themes that the volume seeks to explore are:
  • Queer Emergences in South Asia: Queer Writing, Queer Politics
  • Intersectionalities and Queer Identity in South Asia
  • Forging Queer Spaces: Marginality, Liminality, Transgression and the Production of Spaces
  • Representation and Performativities of Queerness in South Asian Literature and Culture: the Visual and the Digital Turn
  • Queer Literature and Activism in South Asia
  • Queer Ecology and Environmentalism
  • Bodies Without Borders: Mapping Queer Desire
  • Academia and Queerness: The Pedagogical Wars
  • Queer Disability Studies
QUEER STUDIES9%
₹325.00
Interested scholars may send in 200-250 words abstracts with a title and a brief bio note to queerintersectionality@gmail.com on or before 31st March, 2024.

Thursday, January 5, 2017

International Conference
Gendering the Urban Imaginary: Fantasy, Affect, Transgression

12-13 May 2017

Keynote speaker: John McLeod
University of Leeds, UK

University of Debrecen, Institute of English and American Studies

Organisers:

Ágnes Györke, Senior Lecturer, Department of British Studies
Imola Bülgözdi, Senior Lecturer, North American Department                 

Call for Papers


The Gender, Translocality and the City Research Group at the University of Debrecen is pleased to announce its second annual conference, which is going to explore the role of gender, fantasy, and emotion in the production of urban space. Papers focusing on urban fantasy in twentieth- and twenty-first-century anglophone literary, visual and cultural studies are invited for presentation, and we also encourage submissions relying on psychogeographical approaches to explore the (post)modern imaginary of city life. Papers investigating the modern(ist) city, postmodern labyrinths, art and the aestheticization of urban space, the playable city, uncanny metropolises, paranormal urban worlds, suburban and subterranean space, spectral cities and fantasy scapes, for instance, are welcome. Presentations addressing "the mutually defining relation between bodies and cities" (Elizabeth Grosz) will be considered as well, especially if focusing on the "atmosphere" (Teresa Brennan) or "sense of place" (Jon Anderson) as the articulation of affective traces which define subjectivities in relation to specific environments. We also encourage submissions on topics such as transgressions, fear, and the city; metamorphoses, enjoyment, and urban space; emapthy and the city; and so on.Theoretical contributions investigating the intersections between affect theory and city studies, including, but not limited to, the works of Sarah Ahmed, Elspeth Probyn, Carolyn Pedwell, for instance, and Michel De Certeau, Elizabeth Wilson, Elizabeth Grosz, etc., are also within our scope of interest.

We particularly welcome submissions exploring gendered readings of the following themes:



The imaginary of everyday life
• Fantasies of corporeality
• Street art and the aestheticization of urban space
• The city and empathy
• The femme fatale and the urban imaginary
• The ideal city and fantastic dystopias
• Metamorphoses, enjoyment, and the city
• Compassion, forgiveness, and the city
• Nightmare and the city
• Shame, shaming, and the city
• Fear, vulnerability, and the city
• Transgression, terror, and urban space
• Embodied placemaking and fantasy
• Virtual geographies: embodiment and affect in cyberspace
• Urban identities, rootedness and the "sense of place"








Please send 300-400-word abstracts to urbanimaginary@gmail.com before 6 February 2017.

Advanced MA and PhD students are warmly encouraged to submit abstracts to present papers in regular sessions, and the conference also aims to provide an opportunity for them to discuss their research projects related to the theme of the call (dissertation proposals, chapters, articles, etc.). Graduate students are invited to organise 60-minute or 90-minute roundtable discussions and workshops with 3-4 participants. Please submit a 400-word proposal about the issues to be discussed, including the format you would prefer, and a 300-word summary of the role of each student in your group (for instance, moderator, respondent, etc.).


Deadline: 6 February 2017.

Notification of acceptance: 15 February 2017.



Selected papers will be published in a thematic issue of the Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies, a peer-reviewed journal listed by the MLA and available on ProQuest and JSTOR.



Registration fee : 30 EUR (normal); 20 EUR (students)

Partial registration fee waivers are available to participants from low and middle income countries, please apply before 28 February 2017.

Contact Info: 
Gender, Translocality and the City Research Group

University of Debrecen, Institute of English and American Studies


Organisers:
Ágnes Györke, Senior Lecturer, Department of British Studies
Imola Bülgözdi, Senior Lecturer, North American Department