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[Commlist] CFP- Mediating Mother-Activism
Mon Aug 16 13:09:33 GMT 2021
Call for Chapters - edited volume
Mediating Mother-Activism
Edited by Gilda Seddighi and Sara Tafakori
Recent years have seen a renewed interest in exploring motherhood and
mothering as political and emotional resources for digital activism.
Although the intertwinement of mothering and politics predates the
digital context, feminist debates around the politicization of
mothering, from protests against state killings and disappearances, via
the role of the mother in nation-building, to advocacy for right wing
populisms, need addressing all the more urgently as we endeavour to
understand the ways in which mothering is not only mediatised, but
agentively deployed across social media platforms. The political role
and significance of the mother, the uneasy relation between motherhood
as gendered identity and mothering as daily practice, continue to be
contentious issues for feminists (Rich 1976, DiQuinzio 1999, Gumbs,
Martens and Williams 2016, Naber 2021). Mother-activists have
historically constructed public issues from their personal experiences
of suffering and loss within family structures (Reiger 2000), utilizing
the symbolic power of motherhood in order to motivate others to join
their causes (Logsdon Conradsen 2011). Notwithstanding, campaigns such
those of the Argentinian Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo have been cast as
‘trapped by a bad script’ (Taylor 1997), that is as reproducing the
same narratives of familialism and heteropatriarchal bloodline that
underpin the narrative of the state. Conversely, many feminist scholars
have argued that the political mobilisation of the trope of the mother
has the potential to challenge the ‘official’ frameworks of national,
ethnic or other group loyalty and to undermine or to radically reframe
these very narratives (Kim 2020, Athanasiou 2017, Carreon and Moghadam
2015, ). For example, the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo have raised the
slogan ‘One child, all the children’ (Sosa 2014), taking the campaign
beyond limits of blood kinship.
A key debate to address is the relation between individual and
collective in mothers’ digital activism, and how this relation shapes
the politics of mothering. On the one hand, digital activism is often
celebrated as connecting ‘private’ individual and personal experiences
and emotions with the public realm (Bennett and Segerberg 2013,
Papacharissi 2010, Vivienne 2016), something which has perhaps favoured
‘popular feminism’ in the shape of MeToo and other mobilisations (Baer
2016, Banet-Weiser 2018). On the other hand, this perspective is often
criticised as downplaying the potential of digital activism both for
building collective identifications and projects (Gerbaudo 2012, Dean
2016, Nunes 2015) and for creating new forms of exclusion and hierarchy
(Seddighi 2014). In light of discussions around datafication (Lomborg,
Dencik, & Moe 2020) and disinformation (Bennett & Livingstone 2018), the
question of how mother-activists utilise digital media affordances to
shape modalities of political intervention, has become even more important.
The proposed edited volume aims to bring together contributions from a
broad range of interdisciplinary perspectives with a focus around
mothering and the uses of social media for social and political change.
We aim to include conceptual papers as well as empirical studies from a
broad range of contexts across the global South and global North. Papers
may address one or more of the following topics but are not limited to
these:
- The relation between digital affordances and mother-activism
- Creating digital political spaces beyond the binary of horizontalism
vs hierarchy - Intersectional and decolonial approaches to mediating
mother-activism - Mediating queer mothering
- How to build spaces and practices of solidarity
- Centre-periphery narratives and mothers at the margins: how
hierarchies and mechanisms of
social exclusion are reproduced and/or challenged/interrupted
- The mediation of/relations between local, national and transnational
spaces of mothering - Temporalities of mothering: memory work; futurities
- Mediated affects and affective practices of mother-activism
- The visual mediation of mothering; tropes, repertoires, disruptions
- Mobilising motherhood and mothering under authoritarian governments -
The deployment of motherhood tropes in right-wing movements; the mother
figure and racism or nativism
- Mediating motherhood during economic or political crises
- Interrelations and tensions between online and offline activism
Abstract submission deadline: September 15, 2021. Please submit a title
and an abstract of around 500 words with a short bio (150 words) to
both email accounts: Gilda Seddighi (gse /at/ vestforsk.no)
<mailto:(gse /at/ vestforsk.no)> and Sara Tafakori (s.tafakori /at/ lse.ac.uk)
<mailto:(s.tafakori /at/ lse.ac.uk)>. Abstracts should reference 3-4 works in
the relevant literature. The accepted abstracts will serve as chapter
summaries in the book proposal.
Notification of abstract acceptance: October 1, 2021
Full paper submission: March 6, 2022 (between 6500 and 7500 words)
Please note: Our initial book proposal received interest from the editor
of the Palgrave MacMillan Gender Studies list. The full proposal with
chapter summaries will go out by November 8, 2021 with the intention of
getting a book contract early in 2022.
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