Archive for calls, March 2014

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[ecrea] Kate Millett Conference CFP Deadline Extended

Wed Mar 05 01:36:24 GMT 2014




CFP DEADLINE EXTENDED: 14 MARCH 2014

Flying: An Interdisciplinary Conference on Kate Millett

30 May 2014
School of Arts
Birkbeck, University of London
Supported by the Feminist Review Trust

Keynote: Victoria Hesford (SUNY Stony Brook University), author of Feeling Women's Liberation (Duke UP, 2013)

Papers are invited for an interdisciplinary conference dedicated to the work of Kate Millett. Millett became an iconic figure of second wave feminism after the publication of Sexual Politics in 1970. As one of the first pieces of academic feminism to come out of the American academy, Sexual Politics was a handbook of the Women's Liberation Movement. Moreover, after appearing on the cover of Time Magazine in the same year as Sexual Politics was published, Millett became one of the Movement's most recognizable faces. However, arguably, Millett has since largely disappeared from both the public eye and contemporary feminism, despite the fact that she has continued to publish (Flying [1974], The Prostitution Papers [1975], The Loony-Bin Trip [1990], Sita [2000], and Mother Millet[2001]), make films (Three Lives [1971], Not a Love Story [1981], The Real Yoko Ono [2001]), and sculpt.

In aiming to reflect on/account for/address/redress some of this silence, this conference is compelled on the one hand, by recent calls in feminism to re-engage with the second wave (see Hemmings' Why Stories Matter, Duke, 2011) and to re-visit foundational feminist texts (see Merck and Sanford's Further Adventures of the Dialectic of Sex, Palgrave, 2010). Moreover, it is also influenced by Victoria Hesford's recent Feeling Women's Liberation (Duke, 2013), which places Millett as a central figure in the production and remembrance of the Women's Liberation Movement. Hesford's publication signals that now is perhaps a timely moment to create a larger dialogue about Millett; to ask questions about Millett's role in feminist history; and to discuss how her work is situated in and amongst contemporary feminist concerns. The conference thus aims to: consider new frameworks for approaching Millett's past or ongoing work; interrogate the politics and possibilities of the second wave; explore the politics of memory, forgetting, and citation in feminism; critically reflect on the potential difficulties of some of Millett's past work travelling into the present; and to consider whether and how (despite her ongoing feminist work) Millett might be produced as 'untimely' in the feminist present. Topics might include, but are not limited to:

Affect and the second wave
Feminism and autobiographical writing
Feminism and forgetting
Feminist film-making
Generational politics or the politics of mother/daughter relationships
Lesbian politics and the Women's Liberation Movement
Narrating mental illness
Non-monogamy as feminist politics
Race and feminism
Sexuality and the second wave
Sexual Politics and feminist literary criticism
The media and the second wave
The Women's Liberation Movement

The conference invites proposals for individual papers, panels, or artistic responses from any discipline and theoretical perspective. Submissions are welcome from students, activists, artists, academics, and unaffiliated researchers. Please send a title and 300 word abstract for a 20 minute paper along with your name, affiliation (if applicable), and 100 word bibliography to (s.mcbean /at/ bbk.ac.uk) <mailto:(s.mcbean /at/ bbk.ac.uk)> by 14 March 2014.

The conference is organized by Dr Sam McBean (Birkbeck, University of London) and is being supported by the Feminist Review Trust.

Select papers will be sought for publication as part of an edited collection. For further information please email Sam at (s.mcbean /at/ bbk.ac.uk) <mailto:(s.mcbean /at/ bbk.ac.uk)>

Conference website: flyingkatemillettconference.wordpress.com <http://flyingkatemillettconference.wordpress.com/>

--
Dr Sam McBean
Lecturer in Modern Literature and Gender
Department of English & Humanities
Birkbeck, University of London
(s.mcbean /at/ bbk.ac.uk) <mailto:(s.mcbean /at/ gmail.com)>

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