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[Commlist] Matrescence symposium -Call for abstracts
Mon May 26 09:19:04 GMT 2025
Matrescence
symposium | Call for abstracts
We
invite abstracts for papers and/or panels to be presented at a
one-day, hybrid symposium (online and at The University of Queensland,
Brisbane City campus, Australia) on
Thursday 17 July 2025 exploring the broad theme of ‘matrescence’.
Matrescence
– a term coined by medical anthropologist Dana Raphael in the 1970s –
describes the period of becoming a mother. The term’s use signifies
that, like the period of adolescence (the transition from childhood to
adulthood), becoming a mother is an emotionally,
socially, physiologically, spiritually, and politically complex
experience that brings both transient and irreversible changes.
The
notion of matrescence is gaining in popular attention among mothers
and those working in the realm of maternal wellbeing, though the
experiences of conception, pregnancy, labour, birth, and early maternity
are sorely lacking in cultural and scholarly attention
in the West. This silence has vast implications for maternal, infant,
and family wellbeing but also much more broadly – socially, culturally,
economically, and politically.
Public
discourse around matrescence and early motherhood often centres the
challenges or limiting factors of maternity and tends to pathologise or
medicalise matrescence (focusing on phenomena such as postpartum
depression and anxiety, for example). While illuminating
the challenges of maternity is undoubtedly important, there is
comparably little public discourse that explores the wider breadth of
maternal experience and insights that can occur during the period of
becoming a mother.
Some
areas of feminist scholarship, especially since the 1970s, have given
much attention to the position of the mother and maternity as well as
the mother-child relationship. Adrienne Rich’s landmark book
Of
Woman Born: Motherhood as Experience and Institution,
for example,
draws
an important distinction between the social, cultural, and political
limitations placed on mothers by the ‘institution of motherhood’ and the
expansive and positive potentialities of the experience of
mothering.
Within Western philosophy, one of the most significant contributions
of French poststructuralist feminist thought was the identification and
criticism of the denigrated and silenced position of the mother in
Western thought and culture. Key figures in this
intellectual movement such as Luce Irigaray, Hélène Cixous, and Julia
Kristeva have had a profound impact on feminist theorising and political
movements by bringing the figure of the mother into view. Irigaray, for
example, diagnosed the cultural ‘matricide’
that, she claims, underpins Western philosophy and culture, and calls
for it to be remedied through creating the conditions for the mother to
be recognised as a speaking subject.
Building
on this tradition, Michelle Boulous Walker’s Philosophy
and the Maternal Body: Reading Silence
– a key text on maternity and philosophy – interrogates the silencing
of the feminine voice in Western thought and suggests new ways of
articulating the maternal body and women’s experience of pregnancy and
motherhood. Adrianna Cavarero’s
In
Spite of Plato: A Feminist Rewriting of Ancient Philosophy
draws philosophical attention specifically to the category of birth as
a way of challenging and countering the disproportionate attention (both
implicit and explicit) given to the category of death – on which, she
argues, traditional Western philosophy has
been based. There is growing philosophical interest in birth,
demonstrated by an increasing number of titles, conferences, and
symposia framed around this theme.
Angela
Davis and bell hooks raise crucial questions relating to race and
class in thinking philosophically about motherhood. bell hooks, in
“Revolutionary Parenting” (Feminist
theory: From Margin to Center
[1984]), reminds us of the failures of some feminist thinkers to
appreciate the intersections of race and class in their analyses –
particularly relating to motherhood and work. For example, hooks notes
that, in the mid- to late-twentieth century, feminist
thinking on motherhood that demanded acknowledgement for housework and
childcare actually alienated many working-class women and/or women of
colour who found parenting an affirming interpersonal relationship as
well as an escape from the world of alienating
work in the labour market. Davis, in Women,
Race and Class
(1981), offers a similar critique of this problem and argues that
rather than ‘Wages for Housework’ we should recognise the revolutionary
potential of, for example, a universal basic income or subsidised public
childcare.
Beyond
the field of philosophy, there has been expanding scholarly interest
in themes relating to maternity in what is often described as the broad
field of maternal studies. Andrea O’Reilly’s work has been central to
the development of this field and her work has
informed scholarly interest in maternity and ‘matricentric feminism’
(in fields such as sociology, history, the arts, and economics)
globally, including in Australia. O’Reilly also gives significant
attention to the experiences of mothers in academia, especially
in North America, providing frameworks to analyse the ways in which
women’s experiences as scholars are shaped and limited by their
experiences as mothers and
vice
versa,
drawing attention to structural factors underpinning these patterns.
There is much less scholarship analysing these patterns in academic
contexts outside North America.
Despite
this scholarly interest in the themes of maternity and birth, there
remains comparably little scholarship interrogating the
period
of becoming
a mother. However, we consider this phenomenon worthy of serious
intellectual attention and suggest that its careful analysis can have
broad philosophical, sociological, political, cultural, and economic
implications.
The
notion of matrescence introduces many complex questions for both
theoretical and empirical inquiry. We are therefore calling for
abstracts for papers and/or panels that explore these questions with the
intention of inspiring new and renewed scholarly interest
in the topics of matrescence and maternity.
We
are especially interested in papers that explore this theme from
within the Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences, though welcome papers
from other disciplines as well as interdisciplinary research. Papers can
follow a conventional academic format or be experimental
or creative in expression. We hope this event will garner new
connections and collaborations among both emerging and established
scholars working in this area, and we aim to collate research presented
at the symposium in a special issue of a Q1 journal.
Potential
areas of consideration include but are not limited to:
Matrescence and Australian
universities – experiences of academics and students
Matrescence and philosophy
Matrescence and rewriting
mother-child relations
First Nations experiences
of and perspectives on matrescence
Decolonial perspectives
on matrescence
How matrescence is
shaped by intersecting experiences of class, race, ability,
sexuality, and other social and identity markers
The devaluation of
mothering, care, and reproductive labour in early motherhood
Economic factors influencing
matrescence, such as poverty, financial dependence, paid and
unpaid parental leave, returning to paid work, experiences of formal and
informal childcare, etc.
Queer experiences
of and perspectives on matrescence
Phenomenology of matrescence
Matrescence and the
media
Matrescence and technology
Matrescence and infant
loss
Matrescence and adoption
Symposium
details:
Thursday
17 July 2025 | The University of Queensland, Brisbane City campus (308
Queen St, Brisbane city) and online.
There
will be no fee to attend the symposium.
We
are happy to be able to provide two $200 travel bursaries to support
HDR students and/or early-career/unwaged researchers to attend the
symposium. Please indicate if you would like to be considered for a
bursary when submitting your abstract and include a
brief outline of why the bursary would be beneficial.
This
symposium is supported by funding gratefully received by the
Australian Women’s and Gender Studies Association (AWGSA).
Organising
committee:
Dr Belinda Eslick (The University of Queensland), Dr Fabiane Ramos
(University of Southern Queensland), and Dr Laura Roberts (Flinders
University)
Please
submit a 200-word abstract and short bio by 17:00 (AEST) Tuesday 17
June 2025 to:
(matrescence.symposium /at/ gmail.com)
Please
also indicate whether you would like to attend online or in person,
and if you would like to be considered for an HDR/ECR travel bursary.
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