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[ecrea] CFP Representing Abortion

Tue Oct 02 18:30:44 GMT 2018





*Call for papers: /Representing Abortion/*

*Edited by Rachel Alpha Johnston Hurst*

*EXTENDED DEADLINE for proposals: October 15, 2018*

*Email: (rahurst /at/ stfx.ca) <mailto:(rahurst /at/ stfx.ca)>*

Rosalind Pollack Petchesky argued in 1987 that “feminists and other prochoice advocates have all too readily ceded the visual terrain,” abandoning the field of fetal imagery to antiabortion activists (264).She called for new fetal images that “recontextualized the fetus” (Petchesky 1987, 287).Such images would locate the fetus in a body (and a social context) outside of what Carol A. Stabile would later describe as “an inhospitable waste land, at war with the ‘innocent person’ within” that is a dominant theme in antiabortion discourse (1992, 179).Recently, Shannon Stettner wrote that although there are more ordinary stories about abortion circulating as a political response to threats to abortion access, they are typically anonymous and online, and so it remains a reality that “we are still a long way from a world in which women will not feel obliged to conceal the fact that they had an abortion” (2016, 7).Even in circumstances that support access to abortion, abortion can remain a secret: invisible and unheard.

How do we represent abortion?What work does representing abortion do?Can representing abortion challenge and change conventional reproductive rights understandings of abortion that circulate publicly?Will reclaiming representations of abortion help publicly express the “things we cannot say” about abortion from a pro-choice perspective, like grief and multiple abortions (Ludlow 2008, p. 29)?Alternatively, does taking back control of representing abortion from antiabortion activists provide a space to “celebrate” abortion as a central component of reproductive justice (Thomsen 2013, 149)?This edited collection begins from these questions to consider how artists, writers, performers, and activists create space to make abortion visible, audible, and palpable within contexts dominated by antiabortion imagery centred on the fetus and the erasure of the person considering or undergoing abortion.This collection will build on the recent exciting proliferation of scholarly work on abortion that investigates the history, politics, and law of abortion, as well as antiabortion movements and experiences of pregnancy loss (Haugeberg 2017; Johnstone 2017; Lind & Deveau 2017; Sanger 2017; Saurette & Gordon 2016; Smyth 2016; Stettner 2016; Stettner, Burnett, & Hay 2017; Watson 2018).Central to the considerations in this proposed collection is the intellectual and political work that these artworks, texts, performances, and actions do and make possible.Contemporary and historical analyses are welcomed.

Some possible topics include, but are not limited to:

  * “ordinary” stories about abortion told through a variety of media
    (e.g. “The Abortion Diaries Podcast” by Melissa Madera; various
    blogs and websites like “My Abortion. My Life”)
  * abortion memoirs (e.g. Marianne Apostolides’ /Deep Salt Water/;
    Kassi Underwood’s /May Cause Love: An Unexpected Journey of
    Enlightenment After Abortion/)
  * visual art (e.g. Laia Abril’s /On Abortion/; Paula Rego’s /The
    Abortion Pastels/)
  * making the abortion procedure visible, audible, and palpable in
    abortion support services (e.g. offering the option to view products
    of conception; abortion support zines)
  * activist art and performance (e.g. the Abortion Caravan in Canada;
    Chi Nguyen’s “5.4 MILLION AND COUNTING” quilt in Texas; Maria
    Campbell’s mixed media art on Prince Edward Island; Heather Ault’s
    travelling graphic art exhibit /4000 Years for Choice/;
    #RepealThe8th protest art in Ireland)
  * plays (e.g. Julia Samuels’ /I Told My Mum I Was Going On An RE
    Trip/; Jane Martin’s /Keely and Du/)
  * films (e.g. Poppy Liu’s /Names of Women/; Tracy Droz Tragos’
    /Abortion: Stories Women Tell/)

    To submit a proposal for inclusion in this collection, please submit
    a 500 word abstract, a working title, and a 100 word biographical
    statement to (rahurst /at/ stfx.ca) <mailto:(rahurst /at/ stfx.ca)>.Proposals must
    be received on or before _October 1, 2018 (NOTE: Deadline extended
    till OCTOBER 15, 2018.)._Full papers will be invited no later than
    November 1, 2018, and the abstracts will be used to prepare a book
    proposal to be submitted to refereed academic publishers.(NOTE:
    Papers submitted by the original deadline will be responded to by
    November 1; there may be some delay for those submitted by the
    extended deadline.) Complete manuscripts will be due on June 1,
    2019, so they can be revised by October 1, 2019 to submit to the
    publisher.





    _References_

    Haugeberg, Karissa. 2017. /Women Against Abortion: Inside the
    Largest Moral Reform Movement of the Twentieth Century. /Indiana:
    University of Illinois Press.

    Johnstone, Rachael. 2017. /After Morgentaler: The Politics of
    Abortion in Canada/. Vancouver: UBC Press.

    Lind, Emily R. M. and Angie Deveau, Editors. 2017. /Interrogating
    Pregnancy Loss: Feminist Writings on Abortion, Miscarriage and
    Stillbirth/. Bradford, ON: Demeter Press.

    Ludlow, Jeannie. 2008. “The Things We Cannot Say: Witnessing the
    Trauma-tization of Abortion in the United States.” /WSQ: Women’s
    Studies Quarterly/36(1/2): 28-41.

    Petchesky, Rosalind Pollack. 1987. “Fetal Images: The Power of
    Visual Culture in the Politics of Abortion,” /Feminist Studies
    /13(2): 263-292.

    Sanger, Carol. 2017. /About Abortion: Terminating Pregnancy in
    Twenty-First Century America./Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

    Saurette, Paul and Kelly Gordon. 2016. /The Changing Voice of the
    Anti-Abortion Movement: The Rise of "Pro-Woman" Rhetoric in Canada
    and the United States/. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

    Smyth, Lisa. 2016. /Abortion and Nation: The Politics of
    Reproduction in Contemporary Ireland. /London: Routledge.

    Stabile, Carol A. 1992. “Shooting the Mother: Fetal Photography and
    the Politics of Disappearance,” /Camera Obscura /10(1): 178-205.

    Stettner, Shannon, Kristin Burnett, and Travis Hay. 2017. /Abortion:
    History, Politics, and Reproductive Justice after Morgentaler/.
    Vancouver: UBC Press.

    Stettner, Shannon. 2016. “Without Apology: An Introduction.” In
    /Without Apology: Writings on Abortion in Canada./Edited by Shannon
    Stettner. Edmonton: Athabasca University Press.

    Thomsen, Carly. 2013. “From Refusing Stigmatization toward
    Celebration: New Directions for Reproductive Justice Activism,”
    /Feminist Studies/39(1): 149-158.

    Watson, Katie. 2018. /Scarlet A: The Ethics, Law, and Politcs of
    Ordinary Abortion/. Oxford: Oxford University Press.





    About the Editor: Rachel Alpha Johnston Hurst is Associate Professor
    of Women’s and Gender Studies at St. Francis Xavier University in
    Antigonish, Nova Scotia.She is author of /Surface Imaginations:
    Cosmetic Surgery, Photography, and Skin/(MQUP, 2015), and a
    co-editor of /Skin, Culture, and Psychoanalysis/(Palgrave, 2013).Her
    research is concerned with the relationships between power,
    embodiment, and (visual) culture, from the perspectives of
    psychoanalysis and decolonial thought.


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