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[ecrea] cfp: Sexual Cultures 2: Academia Meets Activism
Sun Oct 26 15:46:30 GMT 2014
Call for Papers
Sexual Cultures 2: Academia Meets Activism
April 8-10 2015 University of Sunderland London Campus, South Quay,
London, UK
Deadline for the submission of proposals is October 31 2014.
This conference, co-hosted by the Centre for Research in Media and
Cultural Studies, University of Sunderland, and the Onscenity Research
Network will take place on April 8-10 2015 at the University of
Sunderland London Campus, London, UK
The conference will host several keynote panels, bringing together
academics and activists on the topics of:
· Sex and disability
· Trans* and non-binary activism
· Sex worker and stripper activism
· Youth, race and sexuality
Confirmed Keynote Panelists include: Andrea Cornwall, Jade Fernandez,
Kat Gupta, Kate Hardy, Laura Harvey, Alex Iantaffi, Tuppy Owens, Ruth
Pearce, Emma Renold, Jessica Ringrose, Nabil Shaban, Jay Stewart.
The overriding theme of the conference is the bringing together of
academia with activism. Submissions are particularly welcomed from:
academics who are also activists, activists who are also academics,
academic/activists on the inside and outside of conventional academia,
and academics and activists who are working together on projects
relating to sexual cultures.
The key themes of the conference are:
Intersecting sex
Many of the most important and current debates around sexual identities,
practices and cultures in recent years have cohered around
intersectionality. Sex is an area in which we particularly see
intersections playing out between various forms and systems of
oppression discrimination. For example, key debates concern the
possibilities for consensual sex and agency within multiple intersecting
structures of oppression; the ways in which ‘sexualization’ operates –
and is discussed – in gendered, classed, and raced ways; which bodies
and identities are considered to have the potential to be sexual or not,
and which are regarded as intrinsically hypersexual or pathologically
sexual. Papers in this strand will explore intersectional elements of
sexual identity, practice, experience and culture, the ways in which
academics and/or activists are engaging and intervening in these areas
(online and offline), and the key points of tension and conflict that
are emerging around these issues.
Advising/educating sex
Sex advice and education is a key area of concern in relation to sexual
cultures. Sex advice and sex education are arenas in which cultural
conceptualisations of sex are reproduced and perpetuated, as well as
being potential sites for the resisting of dominant cultural
understandings and offering alternative possibilities. Sex advice and
education occur across various media and diverse professional contexts,
including – for example – self-help books, problem pages, websites,
online forums, news reporting, TV documentaries, and pornography, as
well as school sex ed, youth work, sexual health clinics, sex therapy,
sex coaching and sex work. Papers in this strand will explore the kinds
ways in which intimacies are being mediated through various forms of sex
advice and education, as well as considering the ways in which activists
and/or academics are engaging and intervening in these areas (online and
offline, in policy and in practice) and the forms of sex advice and
education that are emerging from these engagements and interventions.
Sex and technology
Technologies of all kinds have been central to the ways in which sex is
understood and experienced in contemporary societies. We are interested
in papers that explore evolving technologies in the presentation of sex
through print, photography, film and video to todays online and mobile
media; the ways that technologies are increasingly integrated into
everyday sex lives; the expansion of sex technologies in toy, doll,
machine and robot manufacture, the marketing of drugs such as Viagra and
cosmetic technologies such as body modification and genital surgery for
enhancing sex; the expansion of sex work and recreation online; sex 2.0
practices, regimes and environments such as porn tubes, sex chat rooms
and worlds like Second Life; and the shifting relations between bodies
and machines in the present and in predictions of futuresex.
Working sex
In recent years sex work has become a potent site for the discussion of
labour, commerce and sexual ethics, attracting increased academic
attention and public concern. Papers in this strand of the conference
will seek to develop our understanding of commercial sex, focus on
conceptualizing emerging types of sexual labour, and explore the place
of sex work of all kinds in contemporary society. They will ask how an
investigation of contemporary forms of sex work and sex as work may shed
new light on the study of cultural production, industry, commerce, and
notions of commodification and labour. We are also seeking papers which
are interested in exploring the connections between work and leisure,
work and pleasure, sex work as forms of body and affective labour, and
the ethics and politics of sexual labour.
We invite proposals for the following:
Panels, roundtable discussions, and workshops of up to four
presenters/facilitators (1 hour)
Papers/interactive events (20 minutes)
Short Ignite papers (5 minutes/20 slides)
Posters
We particularly welcome proposals for non-standard types of presentation
which question the academic/activist distinction, such as fish bowl
discussions, pecha kucha, creative methods workshops, and interactive
workshops.
All presenters are requested to make their material accessible to an
audience which will include academics, activists, practitioners and
community members.
Deadline for the submission of proposals is October 31 2014.
For all individual papers please submit a 150 word abstract and 150 word
biographical note. Please indicate which key theme of the conference
your paper belongs to.
For panels, workshops and roundtable sessions please submit a 600-800
overview and set of abstracts with 150 word biographical notes. Please
indicate which key theme of the conference you want your panel to be
considered for.
All submissions should be addressed to
sexualcultures2[at]sunderland[dot]ac[dot]uk
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