“Proper Study for Ladies” and other gems that didn’t make it into Taking her Place

TakingHerPlace_Books

Books on display in Taking Her Place as part of the section on Gender and Intellect.

When we were collecting material for the exhibition Taking Her Place, it was a challenge to find items that would tell the story of women’s ascent into higher education without relying too heavily on only text. Periodicals such as The Ladies’ Companion and The Ladies Garland are some of the best resources that we have for gauging society’s attitude towards female intellectualism, as the articles they featured show the developing shape of public opinion. However, they do not make ideal exhibit items: arranged behind glass, the books are difficult or impossible to read at length, and an exhibition dominated by unreadable books makes for a bland visual display. Therefore, we found ourselves with many fascinating textual objects that illustrated the story we wanted to tell but did not have a place in the exhibition. Many of those items hold an important place in the narrative of women’s rise into the public sphere, and as we move into the final week of the exhibition, we will highlight a few of them on this blog in order to more fully flesh out the themes that we address in that space. We will post more material in conjunction with the release of an online version of the exhibition, which will take the form of a digital exhibit like the others on our website.

LadiesGarland_TitlePage

Title page of the July 1, 1842 issue of The Ladies’ Garland. Click for an enlarged view.

One item that we would have like to include is this article from an 1839 issue of The Ladies’ Garland, entitled “Proper Studies for Ladies,” which touches on many of the themes common to the opinion pieces of the era. As higher education for women appeared on the horizon, society grappled with what forms of knowledge would be appropriate for a woman to pursue. In this article, the anonymous male author juxtaposes the intellectual and commercial realms of society and seems to feel dubiously about women’s place in either.

The prevailing message of the piece is that modern women are wont to forgo the enriching study of history and natural philosophy in favor of “fashionable trifles,” “idle romances and puerile tales.” Instead, he writes, ladies “of the first rank” ought to “form their taste upon the best authors, and collect ideas from their useful writings.”

LadiesGarland_ProperStudy

Page 31 of The Ladies Garland, Volume II, 1839, including “Proper Study for Young Ladies.” Click for enlarged view.

While I was combing through contemporary journals and magazines to get a sense public opinion across the era, this piece stood out to me as unusual. It struck me as fairly advanced for 1839 that a male author would take for granted that intellectual study was both available to and appropriate for women. However, though it seems progressive in its advocacy for ladies’ serious study, there is a strong conservatism at its core that I will devote this post to exploring. This paradox is characteristic of many of the articles that Jennifer and I read while researching for the exhibition: I’ve learned that progressivism and conservatism often move together in strange ways as society adjusts to major changes, and are rarely as separable or black-and-white as I would have initially expected to find them.

It fascinates me that the author is certain at such an early date that any woman who wished to could gain access to intellectually stimulating study. “This is a large volume,” he writes of such pursuits, “that is open to all.” However, “In vain…does nature present her miracles to the generality of women,” as if the study of natural science was so available that women would have to work hard not to be exposed to it. It is unclear exactly how he expected them to engage with such material, considering the state of formal schooling at the time: Oberlin College, the first co-educational college in the United States, had been founded only six years earlier, in 1833. The only other form of secular post-secondary education for women at the time was the seminaries that offered training for a teaching career, of which there were eight in existence nationwide in 1839. Since formal higher education was hardly widespread, the author therefore seems to imagine that women should be pursuing academic curiosity in a self-guided capacity.

Writers of a previous age, and many who wrote well into the 1800s, considered the education of a woman to be tantamount to her corruption. This author clearly disagrees, but if a woman of virtue could be an intellectual, what sort was she to be and to what end was she to use her sophistication? A hint can be found at the very beginning of the piece, in the epigraph:

“Beauty in vain her pretty eyes may roll,
Charms strike the sight, but merit wins the soul.” [1]

This quotation frames the article by asserting the value of substance over appearance, which is consistent with the article’s rejection of ornament—but, notably, it also situates the matter within the context of women’s appeal to others: it lays groundwork for an article that will posit female intellectualism as a tool for attraction; in short, another form of ornament.

The author’s thesis is that because they fail to take advantage of the intellectual richness available to them, most women thus reduce their prospects for good matches by offering only conversation which is vapid and unappealing to respectable men—who are, of course, the true victims of this unfortunate situation. “What preservation is there against weariness and disgust,” he ruminates, “in the society of women of weak and unimproved understandings? In vain do they endeavor to fill the void of their conversation with insipid gaiety; they soon exhaust the various funds of fashionable trifles, the news of the day, and the hackneyed compliments; and are at length obliged to have recourse to scandal.” The true goal, therefore, of women’s learning, is to make them into better companions.

The article suggests that the idea of what would corrupt women was changing. The previous belief was that knowledge itself would corrupt, whereas here it is the wrong kind of knowledge that is to be feared—In other words, a misuse of intellectual powers. Indeed, language of misuse, in the form of waste and misdirected spending, permeates the piece. Three examples come to mind: the phrase “in vain” appears three times including the epigraph, each instance describing a woman (if we count the personified Nature) fruitlessly expending effort in order to appeal to another. The unlearned lady whose foolish prattle fails to impress “soon exhaust[s] the various funds of fashionable trifles.” (Italics mine.) And, at the end of the article, the author bemoans the “waste of intellect which is caused by the dissipation of the town.” Instead of such wasteful behavior, he suggests that women “collect” (ideas from the best authors) rather than spend. This language underlies his portrayal of women consumed with the trivial trappings of femininity, especially those that could be linked to commercialism and had an air of cheapness: they were attracted to the “fashionable trifles” that were being marketed to them (in magazines just like this one), and even their trivial conversation (“the news of the day,” “scandal,”) is ephemeral and probably harvested from the gossip columns.

LadiesFriend_crop

The Ladies’ Friend, another popular periodical at the time, interspersed fiction and opinion pieces with large pull-outs like this one depicting the fashions of the season.

Considering all of the negative associations that he establishes between women and commercial economy, perhaps the feminine ideal that the author paints (studious, yet passive, and economically disengaged) is a paranoid reaction to women’s growing economic power as a class of consumers. He manages to exclude women from both the commercial and intellectual realms: he blames them for partaking in the former, and suggests that they would be welcome in the latter if only they had the virtue to earn themselves a place there. And do they? He writes that “scarcely a young lady” exists who has not fallen into the pitfalls of cheap and entertaining literature. Though he idealizes the woman who devotes her time to academic study, he speaks of such women as if they are in practice an impossibility, a mythical being. Women’s real practices are demonized, and the hypothetical woman who “gets it right,” so to speak, doesn’t exist: perhaps he is so threatened by female agency that he is compelled to write them out of all public realms. So, if they can exist productively nowhere in the public sphere, what use are women to society? The one role that the author feels comfortable ascribing to women is that of passive indicator of the state of society. He ends with the proclamation that the “amusement [of proper study] will…repair that waste of intellect which is caused by the dissipation of the town,” as if women’s unintellectualism is a symptom of a societal disease. He implies that the health of society can be read through the quality and state of its women, positing them as a kind of diagnostic tool rather than as a class of people.

This article, one of many that we would have liked to include more prominently in Taking Her Place, demonstrates several themes that are common to the opinion articles of the age. It shows a surprisingly advanced advocacy for women’s learning, while still clinging rigidly to the traditional role of the subordinate an ornamental woman. It also conspicuously lacks an argument for education for its own sake: it was much more common to posit education as a means to serve some aspect of traditional femininity, such as aptitude for motherhood or (as seen here) male companionship. The juxtaposition of commercial and intellectual pursuits was also a major topic of writings of the time, especially with an air of blame towards any woman who demonstrated too much affinity for the former. Combing through these books and journals was a fascinating activity and gave us a broad sense of the complexity of changing opinion across an era. Anybody who is interested in learning more, or in reading other articles from our wide collection, is encouraged to come visit in Bryn Mawr Special Collections in Canaday Library and browse the collection for themselves.

[1]Though uncredited and misquoted, the lines are from Alexander Pope’s “The Rape of the Lock,” first published in 1712. The first line in the original text reads “Beauties in vain their pretty eyes may roll.”

Rockefeller Archive Center releases digitized documents

Courtesy pbey 4103-ICT, http://wanzhafirah.wordpress.com/

Courtesy pbey 4103-ICT, http://wanzhafirah.wordpress.com/

With the support of the Rockefeller Foundation, the Rockefeller Archive Center has created a website that contains over 4500 newly digitized key documents from the Rockefeller Foundation archives, including photographs and film excerpts.

The website also contains over a hundred short essays and biographical entries that trace the Foundation’s history as well as its work in fields like agriculture, health, education, culture and the natural and social sciences. Important documents related to major figures in these fields can be found throughout the site and in the site’s digital library. The site is available at: www.rockefeller100.org

James Allen Smith, Vice President
Rockefeller Archive Center
15 Dayton Avenue
Sleepy Hollow, NY 10591
914-366-6379
Email: jasmith@rockarch.org
Visit the website at http://www.rockefeller100.org

Luce Irigaray International Seminar Symposium, Friday 14 June 2013, University of Bristol

Courtesy Co.Design, http://www.fastcodesign.com/

Courtesy Co.Design, http://www.fastcodesign.com/

Luce Irigaray International Seminar Symposium

Friday 14 June 2013

5-7pm
Institute for Advanced Studies, Verdon-Smith Room
University of Bristol
Royal Fort House, Clifton, Bristol BS8 1UJ

The symposium is an opportunity for researchers participating in the Luce Irigaray International Seminar to share their work with the public. Discussion will include commentary by Luce Irigaray, one of the world’s leading Continental philosophers, and Leverhulme Visiting Professor to the University of Bristol, 2013-2014.

This is a free event, but places are limited. To attend, contact Martisse Foster at martisse.foster@bristol.ac.uk.

For more information about events related to Professor Irigaray’s visit to Bristol, please contact Dr Maria Fannin (m.fannin@bristol.ac.uk; 0117 92 88928)

Support for this event has been generously provided by The Leverhulme Trust, Bristol Institute for Research in the Humanities and Arts (BIRTHA), the School of Geographical Sciences, and the Faculty of Science at the University of Bristol.

Göttingen Centre for Digital Humanities: DARIAH-DE International Digital Humanities Summer School

Courtesy Digital Trends, www.digitaltrends.com

Courtesy Digital Trends, www.digitaltrends.com

The Göttingen Centre for Digital Humanities at the University of Göttingen, Germany, is pleased to host the 2013 DARIAH-DE International Digital Humanities Summer School.  This summer school will be a one-week crash course in using the scripting language Python and its Natural Language Toolkit to perform in-depth computational analysis of digital texts.  The summer school will take place between August 19-23, 2013.  The instructors will be Mike Kestemont from the University of Antwerp and Lars Wieneke from the CVCE.  The summer school is aimed primarily at Ph.D. and post-doctoral researchers and others with advanced knowledge of humanities research.  The language of instruction and discussion will be English.

More information on the summer school and information on how to apply can be found here: http://www.gcdh.de/en/events/calendar-view/2013-dariah-de-international-digital-humanities-summer-school/.

Conference: Changing Feminist Paradigms and Cultural Encounters: Women’s Experiences in Eastern Mediterranean History in the 19th & 20th Centuries, June 7-9, 2013, İstanbul

Conference icon to use on blog postsChanging Feminist Paradigms and Cultural Encounters: Women’s Experiences
in Eastern Mediterranean History in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries

June 7-9, 2013, İstanbul

June 7, Friday:
Cultural Heritage Museum Seminar Room, Boğaziçi University

9:30-10:30 Opening Speeches
Jean Quataert (Binghamton University, Co-editor, Journal of Women’s History)

Leigh Ann Wheeler (Binghamton University, Co-editor, Journal of Women’s
History)

Arzu Öztürkmen (Boğaziçi University, Journal of Women’s History)

10:30-11:00 Coffee Break

11:00-12:30 Women Pioneers, Agency, and Activism
Chair: Leigh Ann Wheeler (Binghamton University, Co-editor, Journal of
Women’s History)

Ana Stjelja (Independent Scholar), Historical Patterns of Women’s Activism
in the Region: The Case of Serbian Writer Jelena J. Dimitrijevic
(1862-1945)

Nevila Pahumi (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor), Visions of a Petite
Diplomate: Paraskevi Kyrias and “Albania” at the Paris Peace Conference,
1919

Umut Azak (Okan University)/Henk de Smaele (University of Antwerp),
National and Transnational Dynamics of Women’s Activism in Turkey in the
1950s and 1960s: The Story of the IWC Branch in Ankara

12:30-14:00 Lunch Break

14:00-15:30 Can We Speak of “Women”? Different Agendas, Different Feminisms

Chair: Benita Roth (Binghamton University, Associate Editor, Journal of
Women’s History)

Amany Soliman (Alexandria University), Non-Muslim Feminists in Egypt’s
Early 20th Century: A Double Challenge

Başak Tuğ (İstanbul Bilgi University), The Alternative Modernity of Sabiha
Sertel’s Cicianne

15:30-16:00 Coffee Break

16:00-17:00 Education, Agency and Nationalism

Chair: Arzu Öztürkmen (Boğaziçi University, Journal of Women’s History)

Ellen Fleishmann (University of Dayton), Education and Agency in Early
Twentieth-Century Lebanon: Women Educated “Under an American Roof”

Nadya Sbaiti (Five College), Separate in our Togetherness? Education for
Women and Nation in Interwar Lebanon

June 8, Saturday
Santral Residence, “Board of Trustees Meeting Room”, İstanbul Bilgi
University

9:30-11:00 Reconstructing the Untold Experiences

Chair: Jean Quataert (Binghamton University, Co-editor, Journal of Women’s
History)

Ebru Aykut (Mimar Sinan University), Home-Rebels in the Late Ottoman
Empire: Murderous Wives and Female Arsonists

Nadezhda Alexandrova (Sofia University), Bulgarian Women in Istanbul in
the 1860s and 1880s

Yavuz Selim Karakışla (Boğaziçi University), Nursing in the Ottoman
Empire, 1854-1923

11:00-11.30 Coffee Break

11:30-13:00 Gendered Experiences of Inclusion and Exclusion

Chair: Elisa Camiscioli (Binghamton University, Book Review Editor,
Journal of Women’s History)

Gülhan Balsoy (Işık University), The Women of the Haseki Women’s Hospital
and Being a Poor and Lonely Woman in Late Nineteenth-Century Istanbul

Kent Schull (Binghamton University), State Patriarchy and Gendered
Incarceration: Women, Children, and Prison Reform in the Late Ottoman
Empire

Liat Kozma (Hebrew University), The Traffic in Women and Children in the
Middle East in the Interwar Period

13:00-14:30 Lunch Break

14:30-16:00 Challenging the Nationalist Historiographies

Chair: Yeşim Arat (Boğaziçi University, Journal of Women’s History)

Zeynep Türkyılmaz (Dartmouth College), Being the Mother for Others’
Daughters: Maternal Colonialism and the Female Nation-Builders of the
Turkish Republic

Rezzan Karaman (University of California, Los Angeles), The Formation of
Gender Roles within the Context of Kurdish National Discourse in the Late
19th and Early 20th Centuries

Selda Tuncer (Middle East Technical University), Going Public: Women’s
Everyday Experiences of Public Space in Modern Turkey

16:00-16:30 Coffee Break

16:30-18:00 Roundtable Discussion

Moderator: Nükhet Sirman (Boğaziçi University)

Feminist Publishing in Turkey and the US: Comparative Histories and
Experiences

June 9 , Sunday

Cultural Heritage Museum Seminar Room, Boğaziçi University

9:00-11:30 Discourses on Women

Chair: Suraiya Faroqhi (İstanbul Bilgi University)

Ceyda Karamürsel (University of Pennsylvania), Re-reading the Second
Constitutional Era through Women and Slavery

Eftymia Kanner (University of Athens), Communal Interaction, Discourses on
Women’s Rights and Feminist Interventions from the Ottoman Reform Era to
the Early Turkish Republic

Katerina Dalakoura (University of Crete), Discourses on Women’s
Emancipation in Greek Women’s Journals (1880-1911): “Feminisms” in Ottoman
context

11:30-12.00 Coffee Break

12:00-13:30 Closing Remarks

14:00-18:00 Visit to Topkapı Palace and Harem

http://journalofwomenshistory.org/?p=983

Call For Papers: Feminisms and Marxisms

Feminisms and Marxisms: Connecting Struggles, Rethinking Limits

book-stackCall for Papers within the framework of the 10th Historical Materialism
Conference, Making the World Working Class.
7-10 November 2013, London, SOAS.

Extended Deadline: June 7

Abstracts for papers and panels should uploaded to:
http://www.historicalmaterialism.org/conferences/annual10/submit

(Visit http://feminismsandmarxisms.wordpress.com/)

Our present poses enormous political and analytical challenges to those
committed to the struggle against the oppression and exploitation of
women. It demands the creation of spaces for the development of an
oppositional culture able to confront new forms of domination, rethink
its own assumptions and foster serious political responses. One year ago
Historical Materialism launched a call for papers on Feminisms and
Marxisms with the aim to provide a space for a dialogue between Feminist
and Marxist critiques of capitalism in their various articulations. The
response to the call went beyond our most optimistic expectations,
demonstrating the vitality and wealth of new research inspired by
Marxist-Feminist approaches. This call aims to build on last year’s
discussions, giving voice to a new generation of anti-capitalist
feminists and continuing a collective reflection about how Feminisms and
Marxisms can together contribute to criticising and transforming the
present. At this year’s conference, we aim to think beyond the issue of
the compatibilities or tensions between Feminism and Marxism as separate
traditions, and explore the way in which they provide the tools to
intervene in contemporary debates about labour, oppression and power. We
also hope to foster new approaches to old debates, from social
reproduction to patriarchy, and advance the understanding of the
historic limits and contemporary potentials of Marxist-Feminist
theorisations of capitalism.

We welcome papers that address (but are not confined to) the following
themes:

Marxist-Feminism in the 21st century
Social Reproduction Feminism and Intersectionality Theory
The Political Economy of Sex Work and Sex Workers’ Struggles
Class/Gender Intersections: Masculinities, LGBTQ, Queer Studies and
Trans Politics.
Homophobia and Heteronormativity
Gendered Labour Exploitation
Feminist and Marxist critiques of Racism and Islamophobia
Marxist Feminism and Materialist Feminism
Securitization and Carceral Detention
Theories of Sexuality, Bodies, Embodiment
Feminisms, Marxisms and Art Theory
Gender, International Migration and the Political Economy of Care
Feminist-Marxist Critique of Sexual Violence
Diaspora, Indigeneity, and Solidarity in Marxisms and Feminisms
Inclusive Theories of Class and Resistance
Marxist-Feminist critiques of historical and 21st-century fascism
Feminism and Autonomist Marxism: Understanding the legacy
Marxism and Feminist economics

We welcome and encourage people to submit panel proposals. When you do
so, please send an abstract of the general theme of the panel together
with the abstracts of the individual papers in the panel. For individual
paper proposals, it is helpful, although it is not necessary, to
indicate the theme (above) to which your paper could contribute. This
will help us to compose the panels.

Coordinating Council for Women in History Ida B. Wells Graduate Student Fellowship

library imageThe Coordinating Council for Women in History Ida B. Wells Graduate Student Fellowship is an annual award of $1000 given to a graduate student working on a historical dissertation that interrogates race and gender, not necessarily in a history department.

The award is intended to support either a crucial stage of research or the final year of writing. The applicant must be a CCWH member; must be a graduate student in any department of a U.S. institution; must have passed to A.B.D. status by the time of application; may hold this award and others simultaneously; and need not attend the award ceremony to receive the award. The deadline for the award is 15 September 2013. Please go to www.theccwh.org for membership and application details.

 

Sandra Trudgen Dawson
Northern Illinois University
Dekalb IL 60115
815-895-2624
Email: execdir@theccwh.org
Visit the website at http://www.theccwh.org

Call for Papers: Whose Beloved Community?: Black Civil and LGBT Rights Movements, Emory University, March 27-29, 2014

book-stackWhose Beloved Community?: Black Civil and LGBT Rights Movements
An international conference at Emory University, March 27-29, 2014
Call for Proposals: Review of proposals begins June 17, 2013. Notification of acceptance will be no later than September 15, 2013.

The role of Black lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people in both race-based and sexuality-based civil rights movements is frequently rendered invisible as a result of prevailing national narratives that present (presumed white) LGBT communities and (presumed straight) Black communities as opposing forces.  In recent years, however, an increasing number of scholars and activists have produced work seeking to make visible the vital points of intersection and contention among the U.S. Civil Rights movement, the LGBT equality movement, and Black LGBT communities.  This work is shaped by questions related to identity formation, intersectionality, tokenism, marriage equality, the role of religion and “respectability” in African American communities, the emergence of the South as a center of Black LGBT life in the U.S., HIV/AIDS and its continuing effect on African American communities, the proliferation of a prison-industrial complex unprepared for its LGBT population, and the appropriation of the civil rights movement by the right.  This conference seeks to make visible and critically engage the points of convergence and divergence between these two historic, overlapping, yet distinct social movements that continue to transform civil society, law, and the academy.

We encourage paper and panel proposals on a wide range of topics including, but not exclusively encompassing, the following:

•      The legacy of the Civil Rights Movement
•      Identifications and disidentifications with “movements”
•      Black LGBT leaders and popular figures, historical and contemporary
•      Literary, artistic and popular culture engagements with Black LGBT identities
•      Inclusion and marginalization of transgender and bisexual identities in Black LGBT communities/politics
•      Intersections with other post-1960s civil rights movements (other racial groups, people with disabilities, women, etc.)
•      Black LGBT activism in relation to work in other LGBT communities of color
•      Racial diversity in White-led LGBT organizations
•      Law and politics
•      Black queer politics of space
•      Public health
•      Memory, mourning, trauma, and resilience
•      Black LGBT families
•      Marriage equality movements
•      Sexuality and respectability
•      Class and elitism
•      Sexism, classism, and other “isms” in the Black LGBT movement
•      Black masculinity in LGBT communities
•      Black feminism in LGBT communities
•      Intergenerational issues
•      Intersections between public advocacy/policy and academia
•      Intersections of U.S. Civil Rights with Black queer Atlantic political movements
•      The future of Black queer studies
•      Teaching Black LGBT history, Black queer studies, etc.
•      Black LGBT university populations
•      LGBT issues and Historically Black Colleges and Universities

Each submission must include a cover page with paper titles, presenters, their affiliations, and a current email contact, along with a maximum two-page c.v. of each presenter.  For individual papers, please submit an abstract of no more than 250 words. For panels, submit an overall abstract of no more than 500 words and individual paper descriptions of no more than 250 words each. Please submit materials via email to Whose.beloved.community@emory.edu<mailto:Whose.beloved.community@emory.edu>.

This conference is generously supported by the Arcus Foundation and Emory University.

Whose Beloved Community [whose.beloved.community@emory.edu]

Building infrastructures for archives in a digital world: 26 -28 June 2013, Trinity College in Dublin

Courtesy pbey 4103-ICT, http://wanzhafirah.wordpress.com/

Courtesy pbey 4103-ICT, http://wanzhafirah.wordpress.com/

Building infrastructures for archives in a digital world, organized by the consortium of the EU-funded (within the ICT Policy Support Programme) project APEx. The main aim of this forum is to discuss the major challenges archives face on their path into the digital world.

The conference will be held from 26 -28 June 2013 at Trinity College in Dublin (IE). It is free of charge and registration will be opened from 01 – 31 May 2013.

Conference language: English

For registration and further information on the program please click herehttp://www.apex-project.eu/index.php/events/dublin-conference.

3 rolled into one place

The APEx conference will not only correspond with the DLM Forum Meeting which will be held from 24-25 June 2013 in Dublin for which further information can be found herehttp://www.dlmforum.eu/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=159%3Adlm-forum-members-meeting-dublin-june-25-and-26-2013&catid=16%3Aevents&Itemid=49&lang=en.

There ICARUS-Meeting #11 will take place prior to the APEx conference from 25 – 26 June 2013. Detailed information can be found here.(http://icar-us.eu/ai1ec_event/icarus-meeting-11/?instance_id=671)
Certainly, this is a unique opportunity to engage into 3 different conferences at the same time, all focusing on related topics and issues within the archival world.

We are looking forward to an intensive time full of topics dedicated to the future of archives in the digital world!

Gerrit
Gerrit de Bruin
Project Coordinator Archives Portal Europe network of eXcellence  (APEx )
………………………………………………………………
Nationaal Archief
Prins Willem-Alexanderhof 20 | Den Haag
P.O. Box 90520 | 2509 LM | Den Haag
………………………………………………………………
+31 (0)70 331 5416
M +31 (0) 652 663 235
F + 31 (0)70 331 5499
gerrit.de.bruin@nationaalarchief.nl
http://www.nationaalarchief.nl

Call For Papers: Media Spaces of Gender and Sexuality

CFP: Media Spaces of Gender and Sexuality
Media Fields Journal
University of California, Santa Barbara

Courtesy Digital Trends, www.digitaltrends.com

This issue of Media Fields investigates the connections between media, space, gender, and sexuality, seeking conversations that center on these interrelations and negotiations. We invite papers that raise questions of how media spaces construct gender, and how gender, in turn, constructs media spaces; how spaces condition and are conditioned by gender performances and sexual practices; and how gender legibility limits (or allows) access to various media spaces.

Film and media scholarship historically came of age through its study of the relationship between gender, sexuality, and media. Much has been written about the status of women as objects of the cinematic gaze, as well as about the status of female and queer-identified subjects as media producers. Yet in more recent times, issues of gender and sexuality have once again become marginalized in academic discourse, revealing the need for new explorations that coincide with the impact of the ?spatial turn.? In this age of conflict, dissent, surveillance, and migration?when the study of media is often also the study of the precariousness and dynamism of the spatial?it is particularly important to trace the interconnections between space, media, and gender.

We are inspired by the work of those film and media scholars who have explored such interconnections. Lynn Spigel?s seminal book on the gendered discourse surrounding domestic television viewing provides us with one useful example, as does Lucas Hilderbrand?s forthcoming work on the culture of gay bars after Stonewall. While some scholars like Spigel and Hilderbrand have studied the connections between gender, space, and media in their own work, fewer media studies journals have made this topic a primary focus. As a result, we seek scholarship that deals with space in a range of ways: essays might discuss online spaces that allow for specific negotiations of gender or sexuality, or with gender embodiment in physical spaces of various scales, from the very local (the living room, for example) to the global.

Essays might also draw upon feminist interventions into Marxist/historical materialist theories of space, as well as engaging the intersections between gender, race, and class. These important intersections exceed the label, ?identity politics??a label that we feel is now often deployed in order to debunk the continued relevance of gender and sexuality to any scholarly conversation. While we do indeed call for political approaches to gender and space?essays informed by the agendas of feminist and queer activism?we stress that gender and sexuality are not merely areas of special interest, but are instead structuring principles of discrimination that permeate our lives on a number of registers.

Thus, our approach is multivalent. We invite submissions that consider this complexity, possibly addressing the following topics:

–Transnational Queer and Feminist Media: How are flows of bodies, labor, capital, and images gendered and sexualized?

–Queering Questions of Scale: How does heterosexism delimit notions of nation, state, and the transnational?

–Gendered Spaces of Conflict and Dissent: How do media contribute to the gendering of the different spaces of war and dissent as well as of the subjects who are involved?

–Gender, Sexuality, and Online Spaces: How are social media practices and spaces gendered and sexualized?

–Queer/Feminist Gaming: representations of gendered and sexualized spaces in mainstream video games, gendered geographies of video game production,  gendered spaces of gaming culture

–Spaces of Surveillance: How is surveillance fundamentally gendered, sexualized, and spatialized? How does voyeurism continue to bolster certain experiences of space and place?

–Gendered Infrastructures: How are media infrastructures gendered, and why does this matter?

–Gender, Sexuality and Access: How do gender and its legibility (e.g., normativity) result in certain types of access to particular spaces?

We are looking for essays of 1500-2500 words, digital art projects, and audio or video interviews exploring the relationship between gender, sexuality, and space. We encourage approaches to this topic from scholars in cinema and media studies, anthropology, architecture, art and art history, communication, ecology, geography, literature, musicology, sociology, and other relevant fields.

Feel free to contact issue co-editors, Hannah Goodwin and Lindsay Palmer, with proposals and inquiries.

Email submissions to submissions@mediafieldsjournal.org by May 30th, 2013.
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