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Conferences, Calls for Papers and Events Listings

To publicise your event or call for papers on this page please send details to Dr Claire Jones at web@womenshistorynetwork.org


Current listings ordered by date of event. Updated 4/2/2012

Topics in brief, click to learn more.

2012  
March Women, the Arts and Activism, Sarah Laurence College, New York
  Ursula Masson Memorial Lecture. 'The Witch as Heroine in Welsh Gothic', University of Glamorgan
  Women, Health and Welfare, WHN Southern, Kingston University
  'Thinking Through Time and History in Feminism', Birkbeck, University of London
  History of Women in the Americas, Brunel, University of London
  Gender and Irish Society in the 19th & 20th Century, National University of Ireland, Galway
  Women on the Homefront, WHN Midlands, National Arboretum, Staffordshire
  Displaced women: Multilingual narratives of migration in Europe, Glasgow
April Gender, Emotions and Health after WW2, Exeter
  Moving Dangerously: Women and Travel, 1850-1950, Newcastle
  Social History Society Annual Conference, Brighton
June The Local and the Everyday: Inter-War Women's Politics, Manchester
  Women and local activism after the vote was won, Bath
  History of Women Religious in Britain and Ireland Annual Conference, Dublin
July Home/Land: Women, Citizenship, Photographies, Loughborough
  Disability and the Victorians, Leeds
September 'Blessed Virago': The International Mysticism of Jane Lead, London EC2
  'Women, State and Nation', WHN 21st Annual Conference, Cardiff
November Women and Science, WHN Midlands, Worcester

      

 


Call for Papers: Women, the Arts and Activism, Friday-Saturday 2-3 March 2012, Sarah Laurence College, New York.

Historically, women have been seen and represented as protectors and transmitters of culture, yet, although some women gained recognition as artists, many more struggled to be seen, heard, and taken seriously.  As in other disciplines, women bring their own diverse voices and points of view to the canvass, writing table, music stand, stage, and street.  From Renaissance painters to contemporary hip hop and performance artists, women represent their particular journeys as singular personalities and as members of various groups.  Whoever they are and from wherever they hail, their expression expands our global understanding of women’s history.  Additionally, The women’s history conference at its core is about women’s activism. Throughout time, women have used their artistic expression as a method of activism. This year we will explore the ways in which women have used their art as means of liberation.

We invite the submission of proposals for papers, panels, workshops and performances that express the extremely diverse nature of the story of women in the arts and their activism, from ancient to modern/postmodern from all areas of the arts. Specific topics may include, but are not limited to: Women in the Black Arts Movement; Women’s Social Protest Expressed Through the Arts; Arts and Race; Women, Art and Sexuality; The Role of Women’s Artistic Expression in War and Revolution; Women’s Artistic Expression Across Cultures; Women in Literature.

Please include a short description of each presentation and a one-page c.v. for each presenter.  Proposals for whole panels or workshops are especially welcome, but we will also consider individual papers. Send proposals to: tjames@slc.edu<mailto:tjames@slc.edu> Deadline:  Monday, December 5, 2011. This conference is free and open to the public.


Event: 2012 Ursula Masson Memorial Lecture, 6-8pm, 8 March, University of Glamorgan (Zen Room, Atrium Campus).

Each year on March 8, International Women’s Day, the Centre for Gender Studies in Wales presents a public lecture, the Ursula Masson Memorial lecture, to celebrate the day and to commemorate its founder. Dr Ursula Masson (1945-2008) was a much loved and highly esteemed historian at Glamorgan. She was instrumental in founding Archif Menywod Cymru/Welsh Women’s Archive and its Roadshows.

This year’s lecture will be presented by Professor Jane Aaron, professor of literature and former director of the Centre for Gender Studies. Professor Aaron has written extensively on Welsh women’s writing and women’s history in Wales and her lecture is entitled:'The Witch as Heroine in Welsh Gothic’.

Places are limited for this popular lecture. Please RSVP to Dr Huw Jones by 28 February 2012 (email: hjones6@glam.ac.uk). Note that this year’s lecture is being held at the city campus, rather than at Trefforest. The Atrium is adjacent to Queen’s St Station. Parking is available at the Adam st NCP.


Call for papers: The Society for the History of Women in the Americas, 5th Annual Conference of the History of Women in the Americas, Wednesday 14 March 2012, Brunel, University of London.

The Society for the History of Women in the Americas (SHAW, formerly known as British Historians of Women in the Americas). We welcome papers on any aspect of women’s and gender history in North America, South America and the Caribbean.  Papers that investigate women’s lives from single or multiple vantage points whether topically or geographically are equally welcome.  Scholars working on related topics are encouraged to put together a panel of two to four papers.  Speakers at the event will have the opportunity to submit their paper for consideration in SHAW’s journal, History of Women in the Americas

The conference fee is payable upon confirmation of your paper being accepted (or upon confirmation of your place in the case of delegates not giving papers).  This will be in mid- to late-February.  For non-SHAW members, the conference fee is £55 (waged) and £35 (postgraduate/undergraduate/unwaged); this includes a year’s membership of the organisation.  For SHAW members, the cost is £28 (waged) and £22 (postgraduate/undergraduate/unwaged). 

A 250 word abstract should be submitted to SHAW’s secretary, Dr Rachel Ritchie (rachel.ritchie@brunel.ac.uk), by Tuesday 14th February 2012.  Those interested in attending the conference as a delegate are more than welcome as well and should register their interest by this date too.  All other enquiries about the conference, SHAW and History of Women in the Americas, should also be directed to Dr Ritchie. 


Conference: Women, Health and Welfare, WHN Southern Spring Meeting, Saturday 17 March, Kingston University.

Sessions, spanning the early modern, Victorian and modern eras, in Ireland, England and Italy, include: women and mental health; women and reproductive health; women as health care practitioners and women and welfare.Our key speaker will be Lesley Hall from the Wellcome Library, who will lead a discussion on how archives can contribute to the debate, challenging the audience to be more imaginative and inquisitive in their use of these resources.

Women’s health and women’s participation in healthcare has always been a source of fascination and their involvement in welfare issues, whether as policy makers or consumers, is headline news today. This conference will discuss what we can learn about women’s connection to health and welfare from history and how that might influence our interpretation of current issues. The conference will be hosted at Kingston University’s Penrhyn Rd campus and run from 9.30am-5pm. Lunch, tea and coffee will be included in the conference fee of £15. (Registration is free for students and the unwaged).

To register please visit http://womenhealthandwelfare.eventbrite.com/ For information please contact Sue Hawkins (s.e.hawkins@kingston.ac.uk) or Nicola Phillips (n.phillips@kingston.ac.uk).


Call for Papers: 'Thinking through Time and History in Feminism', Birkbeck Institute for Social Research Colloquium, 23 March 2012, Birkbeck, University of London.

There has been an emergent call within the field of gender and feminist studies to consider themes that might be broadly situated under the umbrella term of “temporality”. Nostalgic and apocalyptic narratives of feminism abound in both popular culture and academic writing, with feminism’s death or out-datedness being the dominant narrative. Countering these narratives is crucially about unravelling the logic that makes them viable as well as interrupting their production. Explorations of alternative narratives have productively emerged from work in the field of collective and personal memory, new technologies as they impact feminist organizing, and creative activism and archival practices. There is a continued political need to explore alternative mechanisms of telling feminist time, alternative relationships to be forged with the recent and historical past and alternative means for considering how feminism might forge a future for itself both in and out of the academy.

This colloquium aims to provide the opportunity for an interdisciplinary, creative and exploratory approach to time and history in feminism. We welcome contributions from academics, artist and activists working in the area. Contributions could include but are not limited to, paper presentations, digital media, photography, film, poetry and performance. Contributions could consider, but are by no means limited to, some of the following questions:

How does the personal, social and collective memory of the feminist past create, sustain, or challenge feminism in the present?
How might we forge relationships between temporal periods that resist generational affects of duty or shame?
How might remembering and forgetting occur not only within the spaces of activism and the institution, but also between them?
How can we think critically about how, for example, citing, course building, and curating are practices of remembering and forgetting?
How might feminist activists, artists and theorists respond to the narratives of ‘the death of feminism’ or the ‘post-feminist’ era?
How does time, and the various ways we think of it, both enable and constrain politics?
Is the time of activism the same as the time of the institution?
What are the theoretical and methodological challenges of working within feminist archives?
How can we account for the multiple and diverse voices that comprise ‘feminism’ and the relationships between these voices? How can the use of creative methodologies enable the exploration of these issues?

Please submit a 200 word abstract by 25 November 2011 to Carly Guest and Sam McBean at bisrcolloquium2012@gmail.com. If you have any questions, please contact us.


Call for papers: Gender and Irish Society in the 19th and 20th Century: New Perspectives and New Ideas, 23 & 24 March 2012, National University of Ireland, Galway

This two-day interdisciplinary conference, funded by the Irish Research Council for the Humanities and Social Sciences ‘New Ideas’ Scheme, will examine the theme of gender in Irish society in the 19th and 20th centuries. The conference will take place at the Moore Institute for Research in the Humanities and Social Studies at the National University of Ireland Galway and bring together academics, early career researchers and postgraduates working in the fields of history, gender studies, children studies, English literature, sociology, film studies and related areas.

One of the aims of the conference is to produce an edited volume which will include chapters on gender incorporating a wide variety of issues. This collection of essays will represent the most up-to-date research in gender studies in Ireland with authors taking a fresh look at gendered topics. Potential paper topics may include but are not limited to:Gender and history; Gender and science, medicine and technology; Gender and education; Gender and human rights; Gender and sociology; Gender and literature; Gender and Irish studies; Gender and legal studies; Gender and religion; Gender and children’s studies; Gender and philanthropy; Representations of masculinity and femininity in 19th and 20th century Ireland and The future of gendered themes within the humanities: is gender a valuable mode of investigation?

Abstract proposals (approx. 300 words) are to be submitted to Dr. Laura Kelly at genderandirishsociety2012@gmail.com by 13 February 2012. Invitations to present at the conference will be sent by the end of February 2012. After the conference, selected conference speakers will be invited to submit their papers as chapters of the proposed edited volume. More details will soon be available on the conference website: http://genderandirishsociety2012.com


Call for papers: Women on the Home Front, WHN Midlands and University of Worcester, Saturday 24 March 2012, National Memorial Aboretum, Staffordshire.

In the twentieth century wars were fought not just on the battlefield but on the Home Front; in the factories, shops, kitchens, gardens, halls and cinemas of Britain. This conference is intended to critically explore the myths, memories and histories of women’s lives on the Home Front in the First and Second World War.
Potential topics may include but are not restricted to: Women’s work; Cooking and food production; Domesticity and evacuation; Women’s organisations; Fashion and clothing; Women’s lives and leisure; Film, radio and magazines.

We invite submissions of proposals for papers that explore any aspect of women lives on the Home Front in the First and Second World War. Abstracts of 250 words  should be sent via email to  Dr Maggie Andrews  by 15 January 2012  maggie.andrews@worc.ac.uk


Call for papers: Displaced Women: Multilingual narratives of migration in Europe, 29 March 2012, Glasgow Women's Library

This interdisciplinary conference will provide a forum for discussion of the issues facing women who have moved from one culture to another and have as a result adopted in their daily lives and for their creative work a language other than their ‘mother tongue’. We will look at the creative, linguistic, economic and psychological effects of this displacement. The critical examination of women’s narratives in Europe (fiction, poetry, diaries, memoirs, pamphlets), from a literary perspective will be complemented by sessions looking at these issues from a historical, political and sociological perspective. The broad nature of this conference provides an excellent opportunity for exchange between researchers in different disciplines who do not always have the chance to come together
(literature, cultural studies, social sciences, history etc).

Abstracts in English of no more than 300 words should be sent to Lucia Aiello (L.Aiello@sheffield.ac.uk), Joy Charnley (j.charnley@phonecoop.coop) and Mariangela Palladino (p.mariangela@googlemail.com). Papers should be 20 minutes in length and accessible to a multidisciplinary audience. Proposals for thematic workshops are also welcome. Deadline: 29 April 2011


Call for papers: ‘The stress of life’ : Gender, Emotions and Health  after the Second World War, 2 – 3 April 2012, Centre for Medical History, University of Exeter

In 1952, Hans Selye published a best-selling book on the relationship between stress and disease.  Based largely on the results of his own laboratory experiments on the role of pituitary and adreno-cortical hormones in the mediation of stress reactions, Selye’s account of biological stress was neither new nor universally accepted.  Nevertheless, The Stress of Life captured the imagination of post-war populations struggling to reconstruct families, communities and societies torn apart by the traumas of global conflict and threatened by the politics of the Cold War. 

Funded by the Wellcome Trust, this international conference seeks to bring together historians of medicine with scholars of social, cultural, gender and economic history to analyse not only the manner in which links between emotions and health were formulated and substantiated during the post-war decades, but also how the stress of life was variably articulated and experienced in the aftermath of the war.  Papers are invited to address any aspect of the following broad themes in any geographical location: Work, home and health; Gender and stress; Mind, body and health; The psychosocial determinants of ill-health and Stress.

Please provide a title and 250 word abstract by 1 October 2011. Contact Claire Keyte at the Centre for Medical History, University of Exeter, Amory Building, Rennes Drive, Exeter, EX4 4RJ or by email at c.e.keyte@exeter.ac.uk.


Call for Papers: Social History Society Annual Conference, Tuesday 3 - Thursday 5 April 2012, University of Brighton

The Society's conference has no single theme. It is organised in strands: Deviance, Inclusion and Exclusion; Life-cycles and Life-styles; Markets, Culture and Society; Political Cultures, Policy and Citizenship; Narratives, Emotions and the Self; Spaces and Places and Theory and Methods.

We encourage submissions of panels of up to 4 speakers. Proposals for individual papers of up to 20 minutes are, of course, also welcome.
Postgraduate students are encouraged to offer papers. Details of bursaries and the postgraduate paper prize are available on the conference website. Papers presented at the conference can be submitted to the Society´s journal, Cultural and Social History, to be considered for publication. For details, see http://www.socialhistory.gellius.net/Journal.php

General enquiries should be sent to: Mrs. Linda Persson, Administrative Secretary, Social History Society, Furness College, Bailrigg, Lancaster, LA1 4YG (01524 592547; l.persson@lancaster.ac.uk).  Deadline: 26 October 2011.


Call for papers: Moving Dangerously: Women and Travel, 1850-1950, 13-14 April 2012, University of Newcastle.

The period between 1850 and 1950 is widely acknowledged to have been one of dramatic societal and cultural change, not least in terms of women's experience of and relationship to travel. The rapid expansion of the travel networks both nationally and internationally towards the end of the nineteenth century coincided with the impact of first wave feminism, as the suffragette movement gathered momentum and the figure of the New Woman appeared. By 1950, new forms of technology and transport, and their widespread availability, had substantially altered women's perception of and ability to travel.

This two-day international and interdisciplinary conference invites papers that explore the changing relationship of women and travel across key moments in modernity, such the First World War and its effects on women's independence, the developments in British Imperial activity, and the boom in rail, air and sea travel. The conference aims to stimulate academic discussion on a range of topics relating to women and travel in the period ranging from 1850-1950. These topics include representations of women and travel in fiction and film, non-fictional portrayals and documentations, as well as archival work on first-hand accounts of women travellers. As such, we welcome papers from those working in the fields of Literature, History, Geography, Film and Media, Modern Languages, Gender/Women's Studies, and Politics.

Potential paper topics might include considerations of: both published and unpublished travel-writings by women of the period; fictional accounts of travel written by women throughout the period; representations of women travellers in contemporary biography; representations of women and travel during the period in fiction and film, and the benefits of archival research into women and travel on contemporary understandings of women's role in modernity.

Please send abstracts of 250 words for 20 minute papers by 30 November 2011to:
moving@ncl.ac.uk .


Lecture, 'The Local and the Everyday: Inter-war women's politics', Friday 15 June 2-12, Manchester.

The British Association for Local History annual lecture 2012 is being given by Prof Karen Hunt ‘The local and the everyday: inter-war women’s politics’. This is part of Local History Day, which this year will be held in Manchester. The morning session is led by Dr Paul Carter ‘Records of the Victorian Poor – Poor Law Correspondence: an underused source for local historians’, and the programme also includes BALH Awards 2012 and the AGM. For further details and bookings www.balh.co.uk/events


Call for papers: Histories and Archives of Women Religious: Vocation, Education and Care, 21-22 June 2012, University College Dublin.

Paper proposals are invited for the annual conference of the History of Women Religious in Britain and Ireland. Presentations should be 20 minutes in duration and address some element of the conference theme with reference to British and/or Irish contexts or relations.

Proposals (300 words) and biographical details by Friday 30 December 2011 to deidre.raftery@ucd.ie and/or louise.oreilly@nuim.ie


Call for papers: Women and Local Activism after the Vote was Won, West of England and South Wales Women's History Network, Saturday 30 June 2012, Bath

The annual conference will be held on Saturday 30 June 2012 at the Bath Royal Literary and Scientific Institute, Queen Square, Bath. Papers are invited that address issues of how women acted as citizens, at a local level, once they had gained enfranchisement. Both activism and the local can be defined broadly. For example spheres of activism could include local government, work for political parties, women only organisations or voluntary groups. The relationship between various activities or between the local and the national /international would be of interest. Proposals that look at countries other than Britain will also be welcome.

Abstracts of up to 300 words should be sent to June Hannam and Katherine Holden by 4th March 2012 to June.Hannam@uwe.ac.uk and                                         katherineuna.holden@googlemail.com


Call for Papers: Home/Land: Women, Citizenship & Photographies, 2-7 July 2012, The School of Arts, Loughborough University.

Home/Land is an interdisciplinary conference that asks what dialogues might be engendered, globally and locally, around concepts of citizenship and belonging by engaging with women’s photographic practices. In the terms of this conference, ‘photographic practices’ may include both historical and contemporary work, still and/or moving image, derived from fine art and social science contexts and embracing genres such as portraiture, landscape, documentary and installation.

We invite papers and presentations from theoreticians, historians and/or practising artists on the issues raised by this theme, which may include:
How questions of sexual and other forms of difference impact upon the geopolitics of citizenship; how the imaged communities formed through multiple modes of photographic practice inform, unform or reform notions of ‘home’; and how women’s photographies redefine personal and communal identities in relation to the politics of ‘land’.

Send abstracts of no more than 300 words accompanied by a brief biographical statement (150 words) to Marion Arnold (M.Arnold@lboro.ac.uk) & Marsha Meskimmon (M.G.Meskimmon@lboro.ac.uk) by 11th November 2011. Where presentations are focused upon artists’ work or practice-led research, please include no more than 10 low-res images or a small quick-time file – maximum file size of total: 2MB.


Call for papers: Disability and the Victorians, Confronting Legacies, 30 July - 1 August 2012, Leeds Centre for Victorian Studies, Leeds Trinity University College

The 19C was the period during which disability was conceptualised, categorised and defined. The industrial revolution, advances in medicine, the emergence of philanthropy and the growth of asylums all played their part in creating what today's society describes as the medical model of disability. Disability can be traced through many forms: in material culture and literary genres; scientific, medical and official enquiries; art, architecture; the history of disabled charities; disabled people's experiences; the legacies of phrenology and physiognomy; events such as the 1880 Milan conference, and the taxonomies of disability; the intersection of disability, theories of evolution and anthropology, gender and degeneration. How can we draw disabled voices and testimonies together to consturct 'the long view'? What are the advantages and challenges of teaching about disability and the disabled in the Victorian period?

For information please contact Karen Sayer, k.sayer@leedstrinity.ac.uk (a fuller call is also available).


Conference, 'Blessed Virago': The International Mysticism of Jane Lead, 10.00-16.00, 8 September 2012, London EC3

Unlike other women in the pantheon of English mystics like Julian of Norwich and Margery Kempe, the seventeenth-century visionary Jane Lead is far from a household name. And yet her writings, first published in English between 1681 and 1702, have enjoyed a remarkably wide and enduring circulation, influencing the international Pietist movement as well as prophecy movements in the nineteenth century and Pentecostal readers in the twentieth. This day colloquium aims to bring together leading experts on English radicalism but also mystical religion in Europe more widely, to examine Lead's context and networks, and the significance of her reception.

Keynote speakers: Prof. Nigel Smith, Princeton University and Prof. Phyllis Mack, Rutgers University Venue: The Hoxton Hotel, Shoreditch, Great Eastern St, London EC2A 3HU. Contact: Dr Sarah Apetrei, Theology Faculty, Oxford. Contact: sarah.apetrei@keble.ox.ac.uk: For registration visit the colloquium web.


Call for papers: Women and Science, Annual Conference of Midlands WHN, November (exact date tbc) University of Worcester, Henwick Grove, Worcester WR2 6AJ

The University of Worcester’s annual Women’s History Conference seeks papers for next year’s event under the heading of ‘Women and Science’.  Potential topics may include, but are not restricted to: Scientific Women – papers that evaluate the female experience within the scientific community and/or institutions. The Science of Women – papers that analyse the biological construction/s of femininity; the medical treatment of women and the idea of “women’s illnesses”.Science and Feminism – papers that explore how science has contributed to (or frustrated) the development of feminism.

We invite you to submit a paper based on your current research in the field of Women and Science.  We welcome submissions on any country and in any historical period.

Send an abstract of 300 words to Dr Wendy Toon w.toon@worc.ac.uk by October 1st 2012.

 


 

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