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[Commlist] Call for Papers - Reimagining Voices and Identities in Uncertain Times
Mon Oct 18 17:53:30 GMT 2021
*Biographic, Narrative and Lifecourse Research Group (BNLR) of the
Sociological Association of Ireland (SAI)*
*First Biennial Conference Online – 12^th March 2022*
*Call for Papers*
**
*Reimagining Voices and Identities in Uncertain Times: Social
Transformation, Fragmentation and Post-Pandemic Futures*
*Overview*
The Biographic, Narrative and Lifecourse Research Group (BNLR) of the
Sociological Association of Ireland (SAI) was established in 2019 as a
forum for critical discussion and debate among Irish, European and
international social scientists on the multidimensionality of narrative,
biographic and lifecourse inquiry, to address methodological questions
and challenges and advance scholarship in these interlinking fields. Our
first biennial conference engages critically with national and
international biographic, narrative and lifecourse scholarship on voices
in uncertain times; how voice is conceptualised, why and how some voices
are accorded greater or lesser social legitimacy depending on context
and how the voices of some social groups that have traditionally been
marginalised from social debates, might be given more primacy in
contemporary social and political debates. We are also interested in the
interplay between voice and visibility, i.e. how voices may become
noticeable and seize public spaces.
The Covid-19 pandemic has wrought unprecedented changes in global
societies, irrevocably transforming governance and social relationships,
everyday interactions, touch practices, and emotional displays. At the
same time, international debates rage about climate justice, inequitable
impacts of environmental degradation in majority and minority world
contexts, while major transformations take place globally and locally in
how society is organised and governed. The social and cultural effects
of these events on people’s lived experiences are long-lasting affecting
how we talk, touch, move, and interact in private and public spaces. In
contemporary society, voices are continually repositioned and their
legitimacy is reimagined due to profound cultural transformation with
regards to rights, freedoms, membership of online communities, political
protests and the impact of non-human actors (e.g. viruses, animals) on
human worlds (and vice versa).
For this first biennial conference, we invite abstracts for papers and
proposed conference roundtables and panels from narrative, lifecourse
and biographical researchers which engage with one or more of the
following themes/topics relating to voice and social transformation:
§The meaning of voice in contemporary societies; positionalities,
legitimation and de-legitimation of particular voices;
§Methodological innovations, challenges and novel solutions to
capturing, analysing and interpreting voices and lived experiences in
times of unprecedented social and cultural transformation;
§Research with groups often considered to be ‘marginalised’ and/or ‘hard
to reach’;
§Effects of recent social transformations on lived lives and everyday
social experiences, including concealed and unspoken aspects of daily
living;
Interdisciplinary or Transdisciplinary research which incorporates
distinctively biographic, narrative or lifecourse research focus;
§Research on socially fragmented professional and working lives (e.g.
working arrangements, emotions, social isolation, innovative
technological responses; ‘blurred’ boundaries of professional and
personal living arrangements, impacts on particular professional groups;
§Voices of young people in contemporary education systems and novel
challenges of learning and teaching online;
§Societal perceptions of Covid-19, risk, trust and governance;
§Research on built space, urban/rural environments and our relationships
with non-humans;
§Reflexivity and research impacts upon individual researchers and/or
research teams.
*Submission of Abstracts*
Abstracts for papers should be 200-250 words approximately and must also
contain an indicative title, list of authors’ names, institutional
affiliation and 2-3 keywords.
Proposals for individual panels, roundtables or workshops should be
approximately 700 words in length and must contain a title, list of
convenors, outline of the key focus, and description of workshop/panel
activities (if appropriate).
*Please submit all abstracts and panel/workshop proposals to
**(bnlrgroup /at/ gmail.com)* <mailto:(bnlrgroup /at/ gmail.com)>*. Deadline for
submissions: 10^th December 2021*
Authors will be notified of the outcome of their submission by email
on/by 8th February 2021.**
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