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[ecrea] III Geographies of Sexualities Conference Crossing Boundaries: Sexualities, Media and (Urban) Spaces
Sun Mar 15 23:39:16 GMT 2015
Queer Safe Spaces - Call for Papers
Co-organizers: Gilly Hartal, Bar-Ilan University, Lital Pascar,
Northwestern University, Yossi David, The Hebrew University
III Geographies of Sexualities Conference
Crossing Boundaries: Sexualities, Media and (Urban) Spaces. Rome, 16-18
September 2015
‘Safe space’ is usually understood as a deconstruction of hegemonic
discourses, as well as a relational production of alternative spaces
constitutive of known logic and rules (Evans & Boyte 1992; Gamson 1996;
Polletta 1999; The Roestone Collective 2014). Safety has long been a
formative subject within queer communities. In feminist, LGBT and queer
discourses, a ‘safe space’ is usually a physical/virtual space, either
temporary or permanent in time and space, which is defined as an open
and accepting environment, designated to allow its attendants a feeling
of self-safety, and a space for full self-expression without the threat
of violence.
Consequently, the concept of ‘safe space’ is an ever-changing, fluid,
and flexible concept - dependent on time, place, participants,
spatiality, temporality, environment and more. Moreover, since ‘safe
space’ is rooted in a discourse of cultural diversity, it provides tools
for dealing with the violent and oppressive sanctions used to discipline
queer individuals in public space. Altogether, these different features
lead us to a definition of ‘safe space’ as essentially a refuge place; a
space intended to offer a solution, even if only a temporary and partial
one, to an everyday lacking security.
This session will explore the politics of “safe space” in various
scales, contexts, places and spaces.
We seek submissions that critically investigate, but are not limited to:
- Paradoxes in the practice or discourses around ‘safe space’
- The operation of discourses and actions within ‘safe spaces’
- The politics of “safe space” in virtual contexts
- Sex, intimacy, and emotional work in ‘safe spaces’
- The boundary work and policing work around ‘safe spaces’
- The ways in which queer ‘safe space’ is framed, produced and
negotiated within social movements and grassroots activism groups
- Bisexual and transgender identities and ‘safe spaces’
- Race, class and sexuality intersections and ‘safe space’
- The academia’s place as a ‘safe space’ for queer scholars/queer
scholarship
- Intersections between queer tourism, ‘safe spaces’ and virtual
encounters
- Schools as location of ‘safe spaces’
- ‘Safe spaces’ in view of the rural and urban.
- ‘Safe spaces’ in spaces of disability
- Religious or spiritual ‘safe spaces’
- ‘Safe space’ and diaspora
Please submit abstracts (200 words maximum) to (queersafespaces /at/ gmail.com)
by April 15, 2015. Questions or comments about the session are also
welcomed.
References
Collective, T.R., 2014. Safe space: Towards a reconceptualization.
Antipode, 46(5), pp.1346–1365.
Evans, S.M. & Boyte, H.C., 1992. Free spaces: The sources of democratic
change in America, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Gamson, W.A., 1996. Safe spaces and social movements. Perspectives on
social problems, 8, pp.27–38.
Polletta, F., 1999. “Free spaces” in collective action. Theory and
Society, 28(1), pp.1–38.
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