Tuesday, December 7, 2021

Calls for Papers, Funding Opportunities, and Resources, December 7, 2021

 

CONFERENCES & WORKSHOPS

 

Altered States

The experience of an altered state requires some sort of excess, where things become too much and the line between pleasure and pain is blurred. In political terms, to alter or revolt against the state implies an excess of action and affect, towards a possible change in the order of things. Faced with the disintegration of our institutions, ongoing environmental degradation, and endemic colonial and racial violence, we risk falling into cynicism and a fatalistic acceptance of dissolution and collapse. Meanwhile, a surreal feeling pervades as the pandemic confines us to our ‘private’ spaces amidst ongoing digitization that frustrates any sense of a public/private divide. When do film and media catalyze altered states, in their many iterations? How can media that resists conventional form destabilize our perception? What does it mean to be altered by another or by an experience?

We hope to draw upon recent approaches from Black and Indigenous studies, queer and trans studies, and other decolonial perspectives to address altered states through an intersectional lens.

Interested parties must submit a brief abstract (300-500 words) and a bio of 50-100 words to csgraduatestudentunion@gmail.com by 17 December 2021.

 

Gender, Sex, and Politics: On Power, Identity and Biopolitics

https://kygws.as.uky.edu/cfp

February 24 (Thursday) & 25 (Friday), 2022 – Virtual

This year’s theme of the conference is “Gender, Sex, and Politics: On Power, Identity and Biopolitics.” In the past decade, the world has seen a rise in the anti-gender right -wing movements. The political gains made by right-wing parties in various countries have paved the way for conservative laws that have a negative impact on bodily autonomy of women, LGBTQ+ communities, people with disability, and minority populations in multiple countries.

Submission deadline: December 23, 2021,

email: kygwsconference@gmail.com

 

La Politiquera: Recovering Politics/Recovering Political Voices

https://artepublicopress.com/conference/

APRIL 7-9, 2022  ·  VIRTUAL CONFERENCE

We are pleased to announce the XVI Recovering the US Hispanic Literary Heritage Conference will convene virtually April 7-9, 2022. The meeting theme, La Politiquera: Recovering Politics/Recovering Political Voices, seeks to highlight voices in the archives that chronicle the agency of individuals and communities in navigating complex political environments and events, especially in the context of barred access to democratic institutions such as the courts and voting. What counts as politics when communities are deemed unrecognizable as a legitimate, enfranchised citizenry? Apart from the politics that appear in contesting the settler policies of a white, nationalist, Anglophone hegemony, what are other debates, controversies and ideologies that inform recovered archives? How do scholars approach and assess archives when politics in the past often underwrote issues, social practices and belief systems our communities no longer uphold?

Submit your 250-word abstract for presentations/posters by email to apprec@central.uh.edu by February 1, 2022.

 

Peace Conference

March 28- April 1, 2022; Loyola University

Presented both virtually and in-person, this year’s conference hones in on the divided nature of our globe. We aim to provide a platform to discuss, debate, and critique the differing opinions about some of the most pressing issues of our era: human rights, climate change, politics, economics, medicine, art, literature, and so much more. There is no fee involved for the conference, participation and all events are open to the public.

Please send a 250 word abstract of your paper or a description of your project to: peacecon@loyno.edu.

 

Animals in the American Popular Imagination

https://popular-animals.com/

Virtual conference 12-16 September 2022

Nonhuman animals have been unwilling objects of the human gaze: humans have been exploiting animals (real and imagined) on the basis, and the attendant continued perpetuation, of self-assigned human superiority and centrality. Innumerable popular culture artifacts and performances revolve around nonhuman animals, from reality TV shows on Animal Planet and iconic characters such as Lassie to animals as parts of wrestler gimmicks and animals in sports team names. These and other popular culture artifacts touch on animal-related matters of all kinds, from narratives in which heroic pets seem to take center stage to meat preparation and consumption. This international conference will focus on the representation of animals and human-animal relations in American popular culture, in all its forms, across media, past and present.

Deadline for submission: April 24, 2022

email: popmec.animals@gmail.com.

 

Humanities of Migration: Emotion, Culture, and Knowledge

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8947993/humanities-migration-emotion-culture-and-knowledge

20 May – 21 May 2022, Hansung University, Seoul, Korea

The international conference of the Humanities of Migration responds to this understanding about migrants and migration by providing a collaborative forum to bring together migration scholars with diverse interests and expertise in the humanities. We are more interested in the narratives about the movements and social imaginations of human beings than "scientific” facts and data on migration. Narratives and imaginations aboutmigration provide explanations of bodily, sensible, emotional, and affective experiences of migration that are both nuanced and vivid. The main premise of our conference lies in questioning the binary assumptions of existing migration studies and acknowledging that migration in human history has always been a political movement tied in with conflicts in particular spatial-temporal localities.

All accepted presenters from abroad will be provided with full economy roundtrip airfare to and from Seoul and 2 nights accommodation.

For further information, please contact us at Dr. Kim Jiyoun hshumanity@hansung.ac.kr.

 

The Colonial Anthropocene PhD Summer School at Linnaeus University

https://lnu.se/en/meet-linnaeus-university/conferences/concurrences-and-connections-the-colonial-anthropocene-15-20-aug-2022/

This is an invitation for PhD students to apply to the third interdisciplinary Linnaeus University Centre for Concurrences in Colonial and Postcolonial Studies PhD summer school. This will take place 15-20 August 2022, at Linnaeus University, Sweden on the theme Concurrences and Connections: The Colonial Anthropocene. Participation in the summer school is free of charge for those accepted, and a limited number of travel and accommodation scholarships are available for PhD students from low-income countries. The school is opens with a one-day conference where the faculty of the summer school represents new research in this particular field. This is followed by four full days where PhD students presents and receives feedback on their thesis projects.

Deadline for applications is March 1, 2022.

Contact Email: ase.magnusson@lnu.se

 

Posthumanism and the Anthropocene

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/9194737/icas-22-conference-posthumanism-and-anthropocene

Thursday 27th January 7-9pm ~ Friday 28th January 7-9pm ~ Saturday 29th January 12-2pm

‘Existence is entangled, symbiotic, hybrid. There are no clearly defined borders which allow fixed notions of being’ (Ferrando 2014, p.168). The growing turn away from Humanism, and thus ideas centring on human exceptionalism, arguably begins with Nietzsche and his concept of the Ubermensch but quickly develops towards the disavowal of a series of human constructions that whilst appearing to offer innate human truths, such as freewill, are, inevitably, deconstructed as being bolstered by non-human supplements such as writing, art and, technology – fundamental materials from which we derive our anthropocentric history. The posthuman begins with a pre-Humanist reflection: ‘what is human?’ and in our attempts to answer this question, we have come to revise our ontological individuality towards ideas that acknowledge our existence amongst a network of interactions, species and landscapes. We are intra-agency, fluid, future potentials, and evermore, non-human.

Please submit a 100 word proposal on your presentation by Friday 3rd January 2022 in Word or pdf files to: finniganl@src.ac.uk

 

Science of Consciousness Conference

https://consciousness.arizona.edu/science-consciousness-conference-tucson

April 18-23, 2022, Tucson, AZ

The Science of Consciousness (TSC) is an interdisciplinary conference emphasizing broad and rigorous approaches to all aspects of the study and understanding of conscious awareness. Topical areas include neuroscience, philosophy, psychology, biology, quantum physics, meditation and altered states, machine consciousness, culture and experiential phenomenology.

Abstracts are due by: December 30, 2021

Contact Email: center@email.arizona.edu

 

Women, Climate, Insecurity virtual conference

https://www.shu.ac.uk/helena-kennedy-centre-international-justice/events/women-climate-insecurity-conference

April 28-30, 2022

As the United Nations Environment Programme marks its 50th anniversary, this conference invites scientists, social scientists, humanities scholars, policymakers, legal experts, and activists to think across sectors and disciplines about climate crisis and the injustices, disparities, insecurity, and militarized responses crisis often incurs. We encourage feminist analyses of and responses to growing climate-driven insecurities and their effects on women and other marginalized populations. The conference aims to create a dialogue between policymakers, activists, and academics from diverse disciplines about the goals and methodologies we can use to create a more liveable and just future.

submission deadline Dec. 15 to hri@binghamton.edu.

 

Reproductive History Graduate Symposium

https://networks.h-net.org/node/24029/discussions/9011738/call-papers-reproductive-history-graduate-symposium

The organizers of this symposium invite scholars from across the Midwest to join us in deepening our collective understanding of local and global histories of reproduction. With the goal of spotlighting and workshopping the scholarship of graduate students, we seek to connect with others working in the field of reproductive history and engage in interdisciplinary and transnational conversations.

Submission Deadline: January 1, 2022 to uwreprohist@gmail.com.

 

Women in the Challenging World

https://www.socialsciencesandhumanities.com/gender-conference/

29 January 2022

Please note that the conference date is provisional and subject to change due to the epidemiological situation with the COVID-19 pandemic.

The question we can ask is how far have we got in achieving not just gender equality (for the vast amount of research testifies we have indeed not got far albeit lots of progress has been made), but how far have we got in achieving an understanding of gender? What kind of culture needs to be created to embrace diversity beyond positive laws (that exist only in some countries), but a true diversity where nobody will think they should have the right to question someone’s self-perception and self-expression, and a culture where all genders will be equal?

Submissions of abstracts (up to 500 words) with an email contact should be sent to gender_conference@socialsciencesandhumanities.com by 10 January 2021

Contact Email: gender_conference@socialsciencesandhumanities.com

 

Planetary Precarity and Future Habitability

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/9095768/planetary-precarity-and-future-habitability

February 18 & 19, 2022, Online, international conference organised by School of Liberal Arts and School of Management, Bennett University, Greater Noida, India

This international, online conference aims to examine these planetary crises with a demand for planetary thought-actions-praxis that acknowledges the interconnectedness of all forms of life. Our concept note is constructed in the hope that pressing issues facing humanity can be addressed collectively, blurring the divide of global north and global south. We aim, for example, for recommendations on how looming disasters glimpsed in the rear mirror, such as the lurking sixth extinction of the planet, can be averted; or how carbon democracies arising in the wake of neoliberalism can be challenged and dismantled.

Submission of abstracts: December 15th, 2021

email: om.dwivedi@bennett.edu.in, schmidt-haberkamp@uni-bonn.de, janet.wilson@northampton.ac.uk

 

Decolonizing visuality

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/9170625/counter-image-international-conference-2022-and-photo-impulse

In a world still deeply marked by colonial images and worldviews, in which the production and mass distribution of visual technologies has contributed to the naturalization of oppressive systems, making the underlying visual codes almost unnoticed, this edition wishes to debate colonial visual heritage and how it impacts the world today. Being a historical process, it demands continuous criticism in line with the many scholars and artists working in Visual Culture, Gender Studies and Cultural Studies traditions in the various disciplines. Establishing counter narratives, counter archives and counter images is then a challenge to hegemonic social, cultural and political systems and a contribution to a much needed dialogue around themes that are difficult and complex, in view of a pluralist, diverse and balanced society.

Abstracts are due by March 31st 2022

Contact Email: teresaflores@fcsh.unl.pt

URL: https://counter-image.netlify.app/?fbclid=IwAR1ZOk4Jeb7eWdGsxToYm7GTZsthRljnF_bY9I3iZeNQuF2F-K2WNHh_gSk

 

Womanhood(s) in the United States: Cultural, Social, and Political Conflicts in Achieving Equality

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/9130156/womanhoods-united-states-cultural-social-and-political

May 19-20, 2022, Paris, France

It is in the context of the upcoming 100th anniversary (2023) of the Equal Rights Amendment’s introduction to Congress and the 50th anniversary (2022) of the decisive vote on the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) by both chambers of Congress that this conference aims to offer a reflection on womanhood(s) and feminine identities in the United States. The debate on the Equal Rights Amendment has been shaped by conflicting political, social, and cultural visions of womanhood that seem endemic to the history of women's rights.

Please submit proposals by February 1, 2022 to Christen Bryson (christen.bryson-charle@sorbonne-nouvelle.fr), Anne Légier (a.legier@univ-amu.fr), and Amélie Ribieras (amelie.ribieras@u-paris2.fr).

 

Challenging the Liberal World Order from Within, the Invisible History of the United Nations and the Global South

https://www.staff.universiteitleiden.nl/announcements/2021/11/conference-and-call-for-papers-making-and-breaking-global-order-in-the-twentieth-century?cf=service-units&cd=administration-and-central-services

Across the twentieth century, ideas about the global order have sparked a furious debate amongst scholars seeking to understand its power dynamics, structures, institutions, organisation and systems. The majority of the discussion has been centred around the role of states as critical to shaping the workings of the system of international relations and the horizon of peace and security. There has however been an inherent tendency to uphold conventional turning points such as the two World Wars, the Cold War and the North-South divide. We aim to go beyond these traditional understandings and rather focus on the institutions, nations, and often forgotten actors who were full participants alongside Great Powers in shaping the norms, systems and practices that make up global order.

To apply please send an abstract of no more than 350 words and a short bio to: invisihist@gmail.com by 31 January 2022.

 

 

PUBLICATIONS

Indigenous Social Work: Perspectives from the Global North

https://www.researchgate.net/project/Indigenous-Social-Work-Perspectives-from-the-Global-North

This book aims to explore indigenous social work issues across the global north. Notably, it will help the social work educators, researchers and policymakers to respond by developing a more appropriate social work curriculum for indigenous social work education and practice that will lead to a better outcome for the indigenous population across the global north. Proposals related to theoretical, empirical and policy analysis focusing on especially global north dealing with any of the below-mentioned themes are welcome across the world from academicians, scholars, early career researchers, policymakers, development professionals, and social workers. Indigenous scholars are especially encouraged to contribute. We are open to discussing any other potential themes (broadly matched with our book).

Please send your proposed abstract title (not more than 250 words), name, affiliation to koustab@rkmvuranchi.ac.in (cc to koustab3662@gmail.com) by 10th December 2021.

 

Sensing Place

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/9102018/cfc-%E2%80%9Csensing-place%E2%80%9D

This volume of Refract invites articles and other media that explore, expand on, and trouble the intersections of ritual, place, and the sensorium. We ask: What constitutes ritual and how does it relate to time, place, and the senses? How do rituals help organize our world(s) and define our senses of place? In what ways do rituals reify power, resist structures of oppression, or construct senses of identity? In this volume we seek to expand the boundaries of the historic interpretation of ritual to consider topics such as: the visual and sensory aspects of daily life that are exalted through routine; how we mark time through repeated celebrations; or the quotidian experiences of sitting together in classrooms or sharing meals.

Deadline: February 28, 2022

For submission guidelines, please visit our website. For additional questions, please contact refractjournal@ucsc.edu.

URL: https://refractjournal.com

 

Digital Flux, Linguistic Justice and Minoritized Languages

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/9106552/call-chapters-digital-flux-linguistic-justice-and-minoritized

The concept of linguistic justice, when applied to minoritized languages, sheds light upon the way in which minoritized communities conduct their lives in less-than-optimal environments. Because of that, the framework for the study of minoritized languages has been constructed from different areas of knowledge, creating a situation in which “language” is just one of these elements. This collection of essays (already under contract) proposes to recover the centrality of language, understood as bilingualism, biculturalism and bidialectalism both historical and contemporary.  We aim to expand the knowledge about the sociolinguistic, educational, political and social realities that occur in minoritized languages.

February 15, 2022: Proposal Chapter Submission deadline

Please, send your questions, proposals and full chapters to both editors, Covadonga Lamar Prieto (covadonga.lamar-prieto@ucr.edu) and Álvaro González Alba (agonz473@ucr.edu)

 

Perspectives on the Arts in Peace Pedagogy

In an effort to advance conversations about the arts in peace and justice education, we invite chapter proposals for the collected work, Perspectives on the Arts in Peace Pedagogy. We aim to elevate the voices of scholars and teaching artists who consistently use the arts to engage students in discourses relevant to peace and justice education. Despite the relevance of the arts in the social sciences, there remains a limited focus on how educators incorporate artistic media into their teaching. Even when the arts are theorized in these disciplinary spaces, they are seldom framed as being central in shaping how students grapple with issues of conflict, peace, or justice. This provides an opportunity to enrich our understanding of these intersections by focusing on the arts as praxis.

Proposals should be sent to both Dr. Laurence Stacey <lstacey1@kennesaw.edu> and Jonathan Taylor Downs <jdowns8@kennesaw.edu>.

 

Interface

https://www.soapboxjournal.net/page/call-for-papers-interface

For the upcoming issue of Soapbox, a graduate peer-reviewed journal for cultural analysis, we invite young researchers and established scholars alike to submit academic essays or creative work that critically engages with the theme of interface. An interface is a space of contact and interconnection. Thinking within but also beyond a media studies framework, we can understand our lives to be constantly mediated by interfaces of one form or another. They can be understood to serve as an intermediary between individuals and cultural objects, or alternatively, between experience and infrastructure. Interfaces mediate between a body and its environment, the private and public, subject and object. In each instance, the interface enables interaction and activity.

We are inviting extended proposals (500-1000 words) that follow the MLA formatting and referencing style to be submitted to submissions@soapboxjournal.net by December 14th, 2021.

Contact Email: info@soapboxjournal.net

 

 

FUNDING/FELLOWSHIPS

Wolfsonian Fellowship Program

https://wolfsonian.org/research/fellowships/

The Wolfsonian–Florida International University is a museum and research center that promotes the examination of modern visual and material culture. The focus of the Wolfsonian collection is on North American and European decorative arts, propaganda, architecture, and industrial and graphic design from the period 1850 to 1950. Fellowships are intended to support full-time, independent research, generally for a period of three to five weeks. The program is open to holders of master’s or doctoral degrees, Ph.D. candidates, and to others who have a significant record of professional achievement in relevant fields

The application deadline is December 31, for residency during the 2021–22 academic year.

For more information, email to research@thewolf.fiu.edu.

 

Schlesinger Library Grants: Dissertation Grants

https://apply-radcliffe-institute.smapply.io/

The Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America invites applicants for a variety of research grants. The library’s special collections document over two centuries of United States history, from abolition to transgender rights. Applications will be evaluated on the significance of the research and the project’s potential contribution to the advancement of knowledge, along with its creativity in drawing on the library’s collections.

Contact slgrants@radcliffe.harvard.edu.


Elizabeth Alexander Writing Award

https://sophia.smith.edu/meridians/awards/elizabeth-alexander-creative-writing-award/

The Elizabeth Alexander Creative Writing Award celebrates an author whose work embodies the lyrically powerful and historically engaged nature of Dr. Alexander’s writing. We aim for this award to highlight different forms of knowledge production that emerge from the artistic, political, and cultural advocacy undertaken by women of color nationally, transnationally, and globally.

Prize of $500 and publication in Meridians Journal: feminism, race, transnationalism

Deadline: December 31, 2021

 

Progress Pride Scholarship

https://progresspride.org/

$10,000 for college-bound, college, or graduate students: who identify as both BIPOC & LGBTQ and who have a demonstrated record of positive service to the BIPOC & LGBTQ communities. Successful applicants will be college-bound, college, or graduate students at U.S. universities who identify as both BIPOC and LGBTQ—and who have a demonstrated record of positive service to the BIPOC and LGBTQ communities.

The application window closes January 15, 2022. To apply, please visit MensaFoundation.org/Scholarships.

Contact Nguyen at NguyenPham@MensaFoundation.org.

 

Michigan State University Libaries Visiting Scholars program

https://lib.msu.edu/MurrayHongSPC/research/travel-grants/

Michigan State University Libraries invites applications for visiting scholars for the summer of 2022. The grants are intended to support scholars who live more than 100 miles from East Lansing and whose research would benefit from on-site access to the rich primary source collections housed in MSU Libraries’ Stephen O. Murray & Keelung Hong Special Collections and University Archives & Historical Collections. Monetary awards of $3,000 will be granted based on the overall promise of the research project and the significance of MSU’s Special Collections and/or University Archives to the scope of work.

Please submit the following documents, preferably as a single PDF, to MSU Libraries Visiting Scholar Applications (lib.dl.spcgrants@lib.msu.edu) by January 31, 2022.

 

Haverford College Special Collections: 2022-2023 Fellowships

https://www.haverford.edu/library/quaker-special-collections/fellowships

Quaker & Special Collections at Haverford College is now accepting applications for its 2022-2023 Fellowship programs. Quaker & Special Collections includes materials documenting the history, faith, and practice of the Society of Friends from its founding to the present, as well as materials which illuminate histories of abolition, health and environment, relief work, book history, and material culture.

Application materials are due February 7, 2022.

contact hc-special@haverford.edu

 

Princeton University Library Special Collections Research Grants

https://library.princeton.edu/news/general/2021-10-31/research-grant-program-princeton-university-library-kicks-october-11th

Princeton University Library (PUL) is delighted to announce the return of the Special Collections research grants program funded by the Friends of PUL. With grants of up to $4,000, plus travel expenses, this competitive grant program offers researchers from around the world access to PUL’s unique and rare collections.

The deadline to submit completed applications is January 14, 2022.

 

 

JOBS/INTERNSHIPS

Dallas Resource Center – Gender Affirming Outreach Testing Coordinator and Event and Development Coordinators

https://www.paycomonline.net/v4/ats/web.php/jobs?clientkey=2251B4EED0EE04D8749AA00DC57CFF42

https://www.paycomonline.net/v4/ats/web.php/jobs/ViewJobDetails?job=70248&clientkey=2251B4EED0EE04D8749AA00DC57CFF42

Resource Center is a trusted leader that empowers the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer/questioning (LGBTQIA+) communities and all people affected by HIV through improving health and wellness, strengthening families and communities and providing transformative education and advocacy.

The Development Coordinator will be an integral part of the team at Resource Center. This position will support all aspects of fundraising including but not limited to, individual donors, event fundraising and fundraising operations.

The Event Coordinator will work closely with the Director of Events & Operations to ensure continuity of approach and messages within both internal and external fundraising events. The Event Coordinator will promote events to community, staff, and potential sponsors. Manage and market fundraising events working with the marketing team. The Coordinator will work directly with sponsors, volunteers and committees to ensure successful outcomes from events.

Gender Affirming Outreach Testing Coordinator: We are seeking an individual that is self-motivated, dynamic, and outgoing individual to join our team. Successful candidates should be able to interact with the gay/lesbian/bisexual/transgender community with ease.

URL: https://www.myresourcecenter.org/about-us/

 

Peace and Justice Studies - Assistant Professor

https://careers.pace.edu/postings/20350

Dyson College of Arts and Sciences of Pace University is seeking applicants for a tenure-track faculty position in Peace and Justice Studies Program, which is housed in the Women’s and Gender Studies Department, at the rank of Assistant Professor. The selected candidate will be expected to teach required major courses, have the ability to develop specialty courses in Racial Justice and Peacebuilding, Indigenous Studies and Peacebuilding, Transformative/Restorative Justice, Trauma Healing, Environmental Justice, or others, share student advisement and mentorship, and contribute to departmental, college and university programs and student-led social justice initiatives.

Applications received by January 3, 2022, are guaranteed consideration.

email: emilycbent@GMAIL.COM

 

Feminist Environmental and/or Climate Justice

https://apply.interfolio.com/98719

The Department of Women's Studies at San Diego State University invites applications for a tenure-track position at the Assistant Professor rank. We invite applications from scholars with a research concentration in feminist environmental and/or climate justice that foregrounds an intersectional and transnational/decolonial approach between women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, and environmental and/or climate justice. Areas of expertise may include, but are not limited to: ecological feminism, feminist environmentalism, feminist political ecology, environmental ethics, eco-psychology, environmental and/or climate justice activism, the Anthropocene/Capitalocene, water/land protection, resource extraction, and/or just sustainable solutions.  We are particularly interested in scholars who work from one or more of the following theoretical frameworks: global south feminisms, Indigenous feminisms, Black feminisms, transfronteriza feminisms, Asian American feminisms, queer and trans feminisms, and/or qualitative social science research methods.

Review of applications will begin on December 10, 2021 and continue until the position is filled.

URL: http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/dept/wsweb/

 

Feminist Economic Justice

https://apply.interfolio.com/98717

The Department of Women's Studies at San Diego State University invites applications for a tenure-track position at the Assistant or Associate Professor rank. We invite applications from scholars who use intersectional and/or transnational feminist frameworks to study feminist economic justice, with areas of expertise that may include: inequality and the concentration of wealth, social reproduction, precarity (housing insecurity, food insecurity, healthcare access, contingent labor, poverty), neoliberalism, neocolonization, development, globalization, migrant labor, biocapitalism, labor movements, or poor people’s organizing. We seek applicants who foreground one or more of the following theoretical frameworks: global south feminisms, Indigenous feminisms, Black feminisms, transfronteriza feminisms, Asian American feminisms, Marxist or socialist feminisms, and/or queer and trans feminisms. We are especially interested in scholars using the following methodologies, including but not limited to: field work in the global south, qualitative social science research methods, and/or community action research.

Review of applications will begin on December 10, 2021 and continue until the position is filled.

URL: http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/dept/wsweb/

 

Assistant Professor of Women's and Gender Studies

https://jobs.cofc.edu/postings/11337

The Women’s and Gender Studies program at the College of Charleston invites applications for a tenure-track position of Assistant Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences. We seek an innovative scholar of women's, gender, and/or sexuality studies with a focus on queer studies, trans/queer of color critique studies, and/or LGBTQ+ studies, with a rigorously interdisciplinary and intersectional approach.

We will begin reviewing applications on December 15.

 

Assistant Professor in BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color) Queer and Sexuality Studies

https://jobs.uri.edu/postings/9003

The Department of Gender and Women’s Studies (GWS) at the University of Rhode Island seeks a tenure-track Assistant Professor beginning Fall 2022 with expertise in BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color) Queer and Sexuality Studies.  The ideal candidate will have expertise in the intersection of race, gender, and sexuality with a focus on the experiences of BIPOC queer individuals and communities. We seek a scholar whose teaching and research are located in the interdisciplinary field of Queer Studies with expertise in at least one of these areas: local, national, transnational and/or global queer studies; race, sexuality, and queer theories, queer Black/Latinx/Indigenous and/or ethnic studies, transgender studies, queer politics and human rights, postcolonial and decolonial queer studies, and anti/decolonial pedagogies and research methodologies.

email:  jen_riley@uri.edu

Open until filled

 

Rising Scholar Postdoctoral Fellowship, Department of Women, Gender and Sexuality

https://graduate.as.virginia.edu/rising-scholars

As part of an ongoing commitment to diversifying our programs, the professoriate and the research workforce, the College and Graduate School of Arts & Sciences at the University of Virginia solicits applications to the Rising Scholars Postdoctoral Fellows Program.  This program recruits postdoctoral scholars who have the potential to assume a tenure-track faculty position and who would benefit from a mentored professional development opportunity.   

Applications should be complete by February 1, 2022.

 

Assistant Professor of Women's and Gender Studies

https://jobs.cofc.edu/postings/11337

The Women’s and Gender Studies program at the College of Charleston invites applications for a tenure-track position of Assistant Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences. We seek an innovative scholar of women's, gender, and/or sexuality studies with a focus on queer studies, trans/queer of color critique studies, and/or LGBTQ+ studies, with a rigorously interdisciplinary and intersectional approach. Although we seek applicants whose research focuses on all geographic regions, including transnational and comparative foci, we are especially interested in scholarship in and of the U.S. South.

We will begin reviewing applications on December 15.

 

The James Weldon Johnson Institute for the study of Race and Difference at Emory University

http://jamesweldonjohnson.emory.edu/home/fellows-program/index.html

Pre- and postdoctoral fellowships

The Visiting Fellows Program is the core program of the Johnson Institute. The program supports new PhDs, faculty members, and independent scholars with a distinguished record of research on questions that examine the origins, evolution, impact, and legacy of race, difference, and the modern quest for civil and human rights. We are interested in research projects across the spectrum of the humanities that examine the origins, evolution, impact, and legacy of race, difference, and the modern quest for civil and human rights. We also support research projects that examine race and ethnicity and its points of intersection with other identities and movements addressing differences along gender, class, religious, or sexual lines.

DEADLINE: January 31, 2022

 

African & African American Studies, Postdoctoral Research Associate

https://afas.wustl.edu/two-postdoctoral-research-associate-openings

The Department of African and African American Studies (AFAS) at Washington University in St. Louis invites applications from recent Ph.D. graduates in the humanities and social sciences for two one-year postdoctoral fellowships, with the option to apply for a second-year renewal. One fellowship is open to any scholar working in the fields of African, African American, and Diasporic Studies whose research and teaching builds on the existing strengths of the department and our commitment to the St. Louis region. Geographic region and time period are open. We are particularly interested in scholars whose work compliments one or more of our strengths in urbanism, environmental justice, black geographies, digital cultures, health, gender and sexuality, and slavery and its wake.

Applications received by January 20, 2022 will be given priority consideration.

URL: file:///C:/Users/jestanton/Downloads/apply.interfolio.com/98427

Further inquiries regarding the fellowship should be made by e-mail to afas@wustl.edu.

 

Assistant or Associate Teaching Professor in the Center for Women's and Gender Studies

https://facultycareers.fiu.edu/?posting=525462

The Center for Women's and Gender Studies (unit in the College of Arts, Sciences & Education) at Florida International University (FIU) seeks applications for one non-tenure track full-time, twelve-month Assistant Teaching Professor or Associate Teaching Professor. The ideal candidate will possess a Ph.D. or equivalent terminal degree in Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies or related disciplines. Potential areas of interest include transnational women's and/or queer literature; intersectional approaches to health disparities; gender-inclusive health studies; and disability studies with an emphasis on Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. Successful candidates will show a strong record or evidence of promise for quality undergraduate teaching, advising, and mentoring.

email: Dr. R. Gabriel Mayora - rmayora@fiu.edu

 

Latina Latino Studies, Chancellor's Postdoctoral Research Associate

https://lls.illinois.edu/academics/postdoctoral-program

The Department of Latina/Latino Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign invites applications for two Chancellor’s Postdoctoral Research Associates. They are also expected to give a presentation on their research project and to teach one of the department’s regularly offered undergraduate courses. We seek postdoctoral students whoadvance the necessary work of feminist, anti-racist, transnational, postcolonial, and decolonial theoretical perspectives. Approaches to scholarship may include, but are not limited to, Afro-Latinidades, Afro-Indigenous studies, trans studies, and relational ethnic studies with additional interests in queer of color critique, disability studies, and social and environmental justice. Creative research from all disciplines and interdisciplines are eligible and will be considered.

E-mail: mlcastan@illinois.edu

 

 

EVENTS: WORKSHOPS, TALKS, CONFERENCES

What Now? Making Antiracism a Success in 2022

https://blogs.edgehill.ac.uk/icr/2021/10/14/cfp-what-now-making-anti-racism-a-success-in-2022/

In Spring 2022, MONITORacism magazine and the International Centre on Racism (ICR) will run a bi-weekly online seminar to discuss effective strategies for anti-racism around the world. We welcome contributions from scholars, practitioners, and policy communities globally. The series will be broadcast on the MONITORacism YouTube channel.

Please submit an abstract of c. 250 words by 26 November 2021: icr@edgehill.ac.uk

Contact Email: james.renton@edgehill.ac.uk

 

Forms, Voices, Networks: Feminism and the Media

https://www.ghil.ac.uk/events/exhibitions-and-special-events#c2784

23 November 2021 - 23 November 2022

The exhibition Forms, Voices, Networks explores the intersections between the growth of mass media and women’s rights movements in a transnational context during the 20th century. Centred on the histories of feminisms and the media in Britain, Germany and India, it draws attention to little-known or unheard voices and stories and draws connections between activists and the media across time and space. Built around the themes of recognition, redefinition, remapping, reclamation and regeneration, the exhibition offers a glimpse into different moments and different places of feminism.

The exhibition will be launched at three online events between November 2021 and January 2022.

The Politics of Photography: Feminist Activisms in India and Britain: 23 November at 1pm GMT

Recognition and the Intersections of Feminist Activisms in Germany and India: 15 December at 5:30pm GMT

Women on the Air Waves: Feminism and the Radio in Britain and Germany: 20 January at 5:30pm GMT

Contact Email: k.koenig@ghil.ac.uk

URL: http://www.ghil.ac.uk

 

Colloquium Biopoliticum

Thursday 9th of December, 14.30–17.00 EET (Helsinki time)

The Colloquium Biopoliticum is a periodic academic event during which researchers discuss work in progress and recent developments in the field of biopolitics. Particular attention is devoted to both historical and theoretical perspectives. Interdisciplinary approaches at the intersection of philosophy and other fields play a crucial role as well. The main aim of the Colloquium Biopoliticum is to foster international academic cooperation among scholars interested in research on biopolitics.

For more information about the Colloquium Biopoliticum please visit: https://colloquiumbiopoliticum.com/

Please email marco.piasentier@gmail.com for the Zoom link.

 

Participation and Public Interpretations: How to Navigate Multiple Historical Narratives in Museums?

https://www.c2dh.uni.lu/events/participation-and-public-interpretations-how-navigate-multiple-historical-narratives-museums

6-7 December 2021

This 2021 event focuses on the multiple and diverse narratives in participatory history. Reinforced by ideology, identity, memory, and personal stories, public participation can enrich history and foster a variety of perspectives that may compete or complement one another. Navigating diverse experiences and perceptions of the past raises the matter of diverse interpretations of historical narratives and their possible inclusion in historiography and museums.

Information required? Please send us an email to phacs@uni.lu.

 

Curating Detours: a Decolonial Guide to Hawaiʻi

https://grsj.arts.ubc.ca/events/event/curating-detours-a-decolonial-guide-to-hawai%ca%bbi/

01/12/2021 @ 12PM PST

Detours: A Decolonial Guide to Hawaiʻi takes seriously the power of form and the reading practices, imaginaries and publics produced by tourism and deliberately unsettles them. Our presentation will outline the ethical dimensions of the project and the rationale for turning away from the guidebook genre toward a book that guides readers to decolonisation—a template and archive of place-based work and representations aimed at achieving ea (life, breath, sovereignty). We will also reflect on the kinds of responsibilities that emerge from this framework and what it means for people who visit or live in Hawaiʻi and for decolonzation in other places.

 

 

RESOURCES

Intersectionality Matters!

https://www.aapf.org/intersectionality-matters

Intersectionality Matters! is a podcast hosted by Kimberlé Crenshaw, an American civil rights advocate and a leading scholar of critical race theory.

 

All My Relations Podcast

https://www.allmyrelationspodcast.com/

All My Relations is a podcast hosted by Matika Wilbur (Swinomish and Tulalip), and Desi Small Rodriguez (Northern Cheyenne) [previously by Dr. Keene] to explore our relationships— relationships to land, to our creatural relatives, and to one another.  Each episode invites guests to delve into a different topic facing Native American peoples today.

 

Women Resisting Violence Podcast

https://lab.org.uk/wrv/podcast/

King’s academics Cathy McIlwaine and Jelke Boesten, in collaboration with the Latin America Bureau, launch a new three-part podcast series which hears the extraordinary experiences of women addressing and resisting gender-based violence in Brazil, Guatemala and the UK, with episodes released every Thursday from November 25, 2021, in line with the international 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Based Violence. The podcast aims to champion grassroots campaigns to better understand the complex and innovative nature of their resistance, whilst learning from the lived experience of women survivors and civil society activists. These important learnings should positively influence broader policies around violence against women, both within and beyond Latin America. The podcast are also a great teaching resource.

 

 

 

Thursday, November 11, 2021

Calls for Papers, Funding Opportunities, and Resources, November 11, 2021

 

CONFERENCES & WORKSHOPS

Bodies on the Edge: Life and Death in Migration

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8671365/international-conference-bodies-edge-life-and-death-migration

On their perilous journey to foreign lands, migrants come close to death or encounter it. Once settled, some of them yearn to be buried with their ancestors in their homeland, a few prefer the soil where their children grew up. The Thanatic Ethics project explores the social implications and aesthetic representations of the circulation of bodies in migratory spaces. Circulating bodies become part and parcel of their biosphere, enmeshed in an organic and inorganic continuum with other living organisms, a wider relational cosmology of life forms (Kodjo-Granvaux 2021), from the smallest viruses (COVID 19) to complex plants and animals, but also material objects and raw matter. This is not only the case for migrants’ bodies but also for migrating bodies, their commodified body parts circulating on the market for organ trafficking.

We invite contributors to send their proposals (a 250-­word abstract, title, author’s name, a 150-word bio, and contact information) to the conference email address: thanaticethics@gmail.com.

https://www.thanaticethics.com/

 

No Limits

https://www.unl.edu/wgs/no-limits-submissions

“No Limits” is an annual student conference dedicated to crossing boundaries between disciplines and exploring a wide range of women’s and gender issues. We invite proposals from undergraduates, graduate students, and recent graduates on any topic from any discipline related to women’s issues, lives, histories or cultures; feminism; or women’s and gender studies. Creative writing, visual arts, film, music, performances, workshops, and academic papers are all welcome.

Deadline for submissions is Friday, January 21, 2022.

email: nolimitsunl@unl.edu

 

Love, Sex, and Justice in the South

https://www.sewsa.net/2022-call-for-papers

The Southeastern Women’s Studies Association (SEWSA) is a feminist organization that actively supports and promotes all aspects of women’s studies at every level of involvement. The organization is committed to scholarship on and activism eliminating oppression and discrimination on the basis of sex, gender identity and expression, race, age, religion, sexual orientation, ethnic background, physical ability, and class. Submit papers for a specific SEWSA caucus, and papers not accepted for a caucus panel will be considered for the general conference.

Submissions Due December 1, 2021

Please submit questions to SEWSA Student Caucus Chair Victoria Folayan at vfolayan1@student.gsu.edu.

 

Transportation, Movement, and Mobility

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8758279/robert-w-reeder-i-symposium-transportation-movement-and

October 27-28, 2022, Youngstown State University

This symposium seeks to bring together a variety of emerging and established scholars whose work investigates the themes of transportation, movement, and mobility in U.S. history. Proposals from all eras and fields relative to U.S. history are welcome. We will give due consideration to all proposals submitted, whether from faculty, graduate students, independent scholars, or undergraduate students.

Please email your proposals with the subject line “Reeder Symposium” to alfluker@ysu.edu by April 30, 2022.

 

Critical Infrastructure Studies & Digital Humanities

https://dhdebates.gc.cuny.edu/page/cfp-critical-infrastructure-studies-digital-humanities

Critical infrastructure studies has emerged as a framework for linking thought on the complex relations between society and its material structures across fields such as science and technology studies, design, ethnography, media infrastructure studies, feminist theory, critical race and ethnicity studies, postcolonial studies, environmental studies, animal studies, literary studies, the creative arts, and others (see the CIstudies.org Bibliography ). This growing body of work explores why infrastructure is essential for understanding people’s lives, practices, and identities. Critical Infrastructure Studies & Digital Humanities will now bring infrastructural approaches front and center as an area where DH is uniquely equipped to lead the humanities in thought and practice, using its own infrastructural legacy as inspiration and mirror. The aim is to understand how infrastructure underpins and influences DH, and how DH in turn can influence infrastructure design, development, and maintenance. 

Abstracts (500 words) and a short bio due: December 15, 2021: ayliu@english.ucsb.eduurszula.pawlicka-deger@kcl.ac.uk, and james.smithies@kcl.ac.uk.

 

Centering Resistance: Imaginings of a New Feminist Future

https://consortium.gws.wisc.edu/call-for-proposals/

April 7-9, 2022

This year’s theme rests on an urgent line of inquiry: What has the pandemic revealed about the type of world we need to rebuild and reconstruct to foster a new feminist future(s)? What have recent local, national, and global events taught us about empathy, inclusion, and justice as we grapple with the present but turn a hopeful gaze toward the future? As we pause to consider “Centering Resistance: Imaginings of a New Feminist Future,” we invite proposals that foreground an intersectional-feminist lens to map out inclusive societal structures, equitable institutional frameworks, cross-movement solidarities, and radical reimaginings of the future. We welcome proposals for pre-recorded presentations, virtual art exhibitions, virtual posters, and synchronous roundtables.

Deadline for submissions: 11:59 PM (U.S. Central Daylight Time): Sunday, November 7, 2021

email: karla.strand@wisc.edu

 

Intersections and the Anthropocene

March 31-April 1, 2022

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8801803/call-papers-intersections-and-anthropocene

This interdisciplinary conference embraces the challenge of creating an environmentally sustainable future with gender equity. Our goals are to disentangle the social and technological systems that have led to the contemporary climate crisis—the dubious achievement of the Anthropocene—and to unearth the deeply rooted intersections of identity categories, such as gender identity, sexual identity/orientation, race, class, age, ethnicity, and nationality, that shape the experiences of those who toil in service of this geological age. The complexity of imminent threats requires interdisciplinary cooperation to address scientific, ethical, and political problems of the Anthropocene and meet the goal of a sustainable society that treats humanity and Earth with respect. How does intersectionality allow us to better understand the challenges of Anthropocene?

Abstracts and proposals should be submitted by February 15, 2022, to rflynn1@ggc.edu

 

Shame - A Global Inclusive Interdisciplinary Conference

https://www.progressiveconnexions.net/series/interdisciplinary-perspectives/modern-living/shame/conferences/

The proliferation of information technology and social media has democratised and decentralised the way humans communicate and learn about the world around them. On one hand, this has afforded another platform for shame to be used against individuals and groups. On the other hand, this has facilitated the undermining – or destabilisation – of facts, truths, norms and customs that have traditionally informed the uses of shame. This raises questions about how shame can function in a world where the adherence of individuals to their own personal truths may immunise them against feelings of humiliation arising from the judgement of others. This inaugural conference offers a space for people from diverse disciplines, practices and professions to engage in inclusive interdisciplinary dialogues about the many facets of shame. From the conversations and dialogues which take place, our intention is to form a selective innovative interdisciplinary publication(s) and other outputs to engender further research and collaboration.

300 word proposals, presentations, abstracts and other forms of contribution and participation should be submitted by Friday 26th November 2021

email: pragueshame@progressiveconnexions.net

 

Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in the Historical Narrative

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8800661/diversity-equity-and-inclusion-historical-narrative-call-papers

University of North Carolina at Charlotte, January 21 & 22, 2022

The theme for this year's conference is "Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in the Historical Narrative." As historians, we have a duty and obligation to bring historical accounts to light no matter where they happened or to whom they occurred. This forum encourages researchers to look at those places and peoples who have been marginalized in our fields and broaden our shared understanding of history by bringing their stories to life. Take this as a call-to-research to reconstruct a fuller picture of the past from all perspectives of the historical narrative. We look forward to hearing the fruitful results of your research as you examine new avenues in the study of the past.

All initial submissions should be inputted through this form: https://forms.gle/Z1hkBqQMF3UB2NV76. All subsequent questions and correspondence should be emailed to: gha@uncc.edu.

submission deadline: November 12, 2021

 

Climate Change, Inequality, and Livable Cities

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8850282/workshop-climate-change-inequality-and-livable-cities

Carnegie Mellon University’s Department of History, Humanities Center, and Program in Environmental and Sustainability Studies, with generous support of the A.W. Mellon Foundation, will convene a three-day workshop, June 8 — 10, 2022, that seeks to bring together eight early-career scholars (including advanced doctoral candidates) to share in-progress research on the challenges of urban life in an era of accelerating climate change and inequality. We seek approaches from a wide range of disciplinary perspectives, methodologies, locations, and time periods (past, present, and future).  We are particularly excited to welcome scholars who engage directly with communities, organizations, or social movements working to make cities more livable for marginalized populations within and beyond the United States.

To apply: please submit a 300-word abstract of the work to be presented and a two-page c.v. to jsoluri@andrew.cmu.edu by January 15, 2022.

 

Future of Work

https://law.utexas.edu/humanrights/project-type/working-paper-series/

The Rapoport Center’s Working Paper Series -- part of University of Texas at Austin's Center for Human Rights and Justice -- is seeking to publish innovative papers by established and early-career researchers and practitioners. Authors from all disciplines are welcome to submit papers on a variety of human rights and social justice topics. At present, we are particularly interested in papers in line with the Rapoport Center’s current thematic focus on the future of work. Submissions are accepted on a rolling basis.

 

Graduate History Conference

https://networks.h-net.org/node/24029/discussions/8901098/call-papers-27th-annual-james-barnes-graduate-history-conference

Temple University March 18-19, 2022

The James A. Barnes Club, Temple University's graduate student history organization, is pleased to announce the 27th Annual Barnes Club Graduate Student History Conference. The event will feature a keynote address from the chair of the history department at Macalester College, Dr. Walter Greason, author of International Segregation and Cities Imagined: The African Diaspora in Media and History. Proposals from graduate students for individual papers or panels are welcome on any topic, time period, or approach to history. We welcome proposals that foreground public history and digital humanities, and are eager to work with applicants in these fields to facilitate their participation.

Please submit a 250-word abstract that outlines your original research or project and a current C.V. via this link no later than Friday, December 31, 2021.

If you have any questions, please email: jabconf@temple.edu.

 

Cultivating Dynamic Environments Graduate Conference

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8928533/cultivating-dynamic-environments-graduate-conference-duquesne

April 8-9th, 2022, Pittsburgh, PA

As our natural environments become increasingly vulnerable to the realities of climate change, so too do our personal and communal environments experience strain. In thinking about conversations of potential irreversible climate collapse, we don’t always ruminate on the ways in which our social, economic, political, cultural, creative, and academic environments are increasingly impacted by looming devastation. Thus, the varying environments of our lives do not remain isolated from each other as their pitfalls and triumphs reverberate across the dynamics of culture, manifesting in our policy, lifestyles, art, literature, and criticism to leave profound impressions on the historical record.

Sprouting from these recent queries, criticism, and meditations on the impacts of climate change, the English Graduate Organization at Duquesne University invites a wide range of proposals from all disciplines that consider, interpret, imagine, respond to the implications and necessity for cultivating dynamic environments in our contemporary era. We also encourage broader interpretations of the conference theme.

Deadline for submissions: January 1st, 2022                   

Contact email: environments@duq.edu

 

 

 

 

PUBLICATIONS

At the Dusk of Literature?––literary extremities.

https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/textmatters/Current_CFP

The French philosopher Catherine Malabou famously argued that writing must now face the dawn of the post-deconstructive era. Venturing beyond deconstruction, Malabou points to a necessary “reorientation of literature” along the lines of neurobiological research, whose objective is to reclaim the body from either philosophical or scientific reductionism. We welcome both individual scholarly abstracts that consider the topic alongside Malabou’s new materialist post-deconstructive reflection on writing’s extremity as a space from which to think its present and future; and we equally encourage a variety of other approaches that reflect on the significance and complexity of the notion of extremity as it continues to affect, transform and manifest itself in literature in the 21st century.

An abstract [max. 300 words] should be submitted by January 31, 2022:

malgorzata.myk@uni.lodz.pl and mark.tardi@uni.lodz.pl

 

"How We Want to Learn!" Radical Student Voices from the Academy in a Crises World

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8691176/how-we-want-learn%C2%A0radical-student-voices-academy-crises-world

Submit an abstract to our edited volume – “How We Want to Learn!”: Radical Student Voices from the Academy in a Crises World. This edited volume explores the rarely heard radical voices of graduate and undergraduate students expressing in critical and heartfelt ways how YOU want to learn, as opposed to how 'we' in the academy want to teach. This is your opportunity to dream about what school would look like in an ideal world. Write about your frustrations, your personal experience of pain or of success in an academic or other learning setting. Write about the learning that has set you on fire – or your longing for such an experience.

No deadline given

Contact Email: phoebe.godfrey@uconn.edu

 

Pandemic Pedagogy

In March 2020, college instructors across the US suddenly found their courses—and their classrooms—transitioned to fully-online contexts as COVID-19 took the lives of millions and people around the world began to shelter in place. Now, over a year later, the time for reflection seems apt. What have instructors learned from this historic era in higher education pedagogy? This volume seeks to explore these questions and offer concrete answers to instructors hoping to model their classrooms around a new hybrid pedagogy that blends various aspects of both online and face-to-face instruction. In particular, the volume will focus on these questions as they relate to teaching and learning in community college classrooms across the disciplines.

Deadline for proposal submissions: 11/15/2021

Please send proposals of 1-2 pages plus a 1-page bibliography and 1-paragraph author bio to: Melissa Dennihy: MDennihy@qcc.cuny.edu; Zivah Perel Katz: ZKatz@qcc.cuny.edu

 

Feminism: Global Tipping Points

https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/jfs/callforpapers.html

An argument could be made that 2020 itself was a tipping point for the world, and it also could be seen to have contained numerous tipping points. This issue considers the former, 2020-2021 as a major global tipping point that thrust populations and subpopulations into unfamiliar behaviors, procedures, and situations and forced immense, sometimes irreversible changes on their lives. In particular, the issue calls for feminist responses and considerations of these tipping points and discussions of how COVID-19 shaped and influenced feminisms and feminist movement. For this special edition, we invite articles that contemplate the idea of “tipping points” and how feminisms, feminist theorizing, and feminist activism has responded – or not -- to this period of time marked by the pandemic.

Submissions are due March 1, 2022

Any queries can be sent to jen_riley@uri.edu

 

Narratives of Gendered Abuse in Academia

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8758280/updated-cfp-edited-volume-narratives-gendered-abuse-academia

This edited collection will document narratives of gendered abuse and disadvantage in academia, in order to bear witness to the ways that women, and all whose gender expression falls outside heteronormative masculinity, are devitalized in higher education. We are interested in the power of memoir becoming “anonymous,” in the circulating of anecdote as feminist documentation, and in the idea that the personal is political, theoretical, and professional. The collection will also ask after the ways that academic institutions replicate the kinds of gendered abuses that individuals experience in other forms of relationship, such as partner abuse, abuse in marriage, and abuse in family structures, alongside the failures of various therapeutic models in these analogous scenarios.

Please submit your 500-750 word abstract, brief c.v., and contact information to both volume editors (hollandm@newpaltz.edu and rohmanc@lafayette.edu) by April 1, 2022.

 

Unserious Ecocriticism: Humor, Wit, Play, and Environmental Destruction in North American Contemporary Art & Visual Culture

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8771508/cfp-edited-volume-unserious-ecocriticism

Climate change, biodiversity loss, and habitat destruction are certainly serious issues. Mainstream environmentalism in North America, a continent just beginning to more viscerally feel the effects of the environmental destruction caused by its inhabitants, tends to approach environmental issues through bleak messages of gloom and doom, unquestioned sincerity, and appeals to feelings of fear and hopelessness. But what happens if we attempt to address these challenges with wit, playfulness, and earnest attempts to take the ridiculous seriously? This volume seeks to disrupt traditional forms of ecocriticism that only operate through tragedy and dire warnings, and instead bring together artists, art historians, and other scholars of visual culture who present creative, playful, and downright funny ways to rethink our relationship to the planet through contemporary art and visual culture.

To submit a proposal, please send a 250 word abstract and CV to the editors (marialux@gmail.com, and jlandau1@uchicago.edu) by November 3, 2021.

 

Representing Girlhood in Popular Culture

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8776825/representing-girlhood-popular-culture

Call for Chapter Abstracts for Edited Collection, to be part of the Routledge Advances in Popular Culture Studies series.

Contemporary popular culture texts increasingly showcase representations of girls and young women in a myriad of ways. There are common tropes that we as audiences have come to expect in stories of girlhood, which usually concern navigating friendships, self-discovery, familial drama, teenage discontent, etc., packaged in familiar frames about suburban school experiences, or in fantastical and bold tales in fantasy and science fiction. This collection aims to examine representations of girls and young women across the landscape of popular culture texts to understand how the figure of the girl is constructed and addressed.

Please send 300-word abstracts, including a title and short biography to Carmel Cedro carmel.cedro@aut.ac.nz by December 17th, 2021.

 

Teaching “CRT” in an Age of White Backlash

https://activisthistory.com/2021/11/01/call-for-contributors-teaching-crt-in-an-age-of-white-backlash/

Anyone paying attention to the protests and death threats at school board meetings over the last year would be forgiven for wondering if they had time-travelled to the segregationist insurgencies in the wake of the 1954 Brown ruling. From language rendering white supremacy as patriotic to conservative paranoia about socialist and communist agitators, many of the ideas voiced by “anti-CRT” protestors draw on the white reactionary movement of the Massive Resistance era. For our Winter 2021 issue, The Activist History Review invites essays that consider how we teach “CRT”—the umbrella term white conservatives apply to any teaching critical of white supremacy—amid a white backlash movement that seeks to outlaw our work.

Proposals should be no more than 250 words for articles from 1250-2000 words, and should be emailed to horne.activisthistory@gmail.com by November 22nd at 11:59 PM. 

Contact Email: horne.activisthistory@gmail.com

 

Critical Infrastructure Studies & Digital Humanities (edited collection)

https://dhdebates.gc.cuny.edu/page/cfp-critical-infrastructure-studies-digital-humanities

Critical Infrastructure Studies & Digital Humanities aims to direct the attention of digital humanists to the wider area of infrastructure studies, and deploy perspectives gained from that wider infrastructuralism to better understand the infrastructures of DH. It will bring infrastructural approaches front and center as an area where DH is uniquely equipped to lead the humanities in thought and practice, using its own infrastructural legacy as inspiration and mirror. The aim is to understand how infrastructure underpins and influences DH, and how DH in turn can influence infrastructure design, development, and maintenance. The volume will promote understanding of critical infrastructure studies as a field of writing and practice, and open dialogues between DH and cognate infrastructural fields.

Deadline for 500-word abstracts: December 15, 2021

email: ayliu@english.ucsb.eduurszula.pawlicka-deger@kcl.ac.uk, and james.smithies@kcl.ac.uk

 

Digital Storytelling

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8932227/velvet-light-trap-91-digital-storytelling

The Velvet Light Trap #91 seeks a variety of topics and approaches which include but are not limited to media industries, production culture, participatory culture, textual analysis, paratextual analysis, authorship studies, transmedia storytelling, media convergences, and contextual culture in analyzing storytelling within its respective digital environment. We welcome submissions that explore the shifting or newly emerging trends in storytelling in the broader media ecology, especially those that push the boundaries of formulaic legacy media storytelling and contextualize the changing modes of narratives within the new media environment.

Send electronic manuscripts and/or any questions to vltcfp@gmail.com by January 31, 2022.

 

 

 

FUNDING/FELLOWSHIPS

African and African Diaspora Studies

https://apply.interfolio.com/96035

Boston College’s African & African Diaspora Studies Program (AADS) announces its dissertation fellowship competition.  Scholars working in any discipline in the Social Sciences or Humanities, with projects focusing on any topic within African and/or African Diaspora Studies, are eligible to apply.  We seek applicants pursuing innovative, preferably interdisciplinary, projects in dialogue with critical issues and trends within the field. Eligible applicants must be currently enrolled in a PhD Program and be ABD by the start of the fellowship year. US Citizens, Permanent Residents and International Students are encouraged to apply.

Submit all application materials – including letters of recommendation – by Monday, 10 January 2022 at 11:59 pm Eastern Standard Time (EST) via Interfolio.

URL: https://www.bc.edu/content/bc-web/schools/mcas/sites/aads/resources-opportunities/dissertation-fellowship.html

 

2022-2023 William L. Clements Library Fellowships

https://clements.umich.edu/research/fellowships/

 The Clements’ holdings—books, manuscripts, pamphlets, maps, prints and views, newspapers, photographs, ephemera—are among the best in the world on almost any aspect of the American experience from 1492 through 1900, and support a diverse array of research projects.

Particular strengths include: military history, gender and ethnicity, religion, the American Revolution, Native American history, slavery and antislavery, Atlantic history, the Caribbean, cartography, the Civil War, reform movements, travel and exploration, among others. Primary sources relating to women's history can be found across our collecting divisions.

Applications are due by January 15, 2022

email clements-fellowships@umich.edu for more information

 

 

JOBS/INTERNSHIPS

Sociology, Race, and Gender

https://facultyjobs.ua.edu/postings/49342

The Department of Gender and Race Studies at The University of Alabama invites applications for a tenure-track assistant professor appointment specializing in Sociology, Race, and Gender. We seek candidates whose sociological research addresses outcomes in specific environments and communities, such as prisons, schools, housing, the workplace, urban and rural populations, and immigrant and refugee populations.

Review of applications will begin November 15, 2021, and will continue until the position is filled.

For more information, contact the search committee chair Dr. Utz McKnight, at utz.mcknight@ua.edu

 

Marilyn Yarbrough Dissertation/Teaching Fellowship

https://www.kenyon.edu/offices-and-services/office-of-the-provost/recognition/marilyn-yarbrough-dissertation-teaching-fellowship/

The program is for scholars in the final stages of their doctoral work who need only to finish the dissertation to complete requirements for the Ph.D. We hope the experience of teaching, researching, and living for a year at Kenyon will encourage these Fellows to consider a liberal arts college as a place to begin their careers as teachers and scholars. In the past, fellowships have been awarded in: African and African American Studies, American Studies, Anthropology, Art History, Asian Studies, Biology, English, History, Math, Modern Languages and Literatures (Spanish), Music, Religious Studies, Sociology, Women's and Gender Studies.

Questions? Contact Amy Quinlivan at quinlivana@kenyon.edu.

 

Assistant Director for Multicultural Student Affairs

https://yourfuture.sdbor.edu/postings/25638

Northern State University, Aberdeen, South Dakota

Reporting to the Director of Student Involvement and Leadership, the Assistant Director for Multicultural Student Affairs will build inclusive communities, facilitate programing, assist with recruiting, retaining, and mentoring historically marginalized students. Using best practices from across the country, the successful candidate will be responsible for providing institution-wide leadership around student belonging, connection, and engagement. Working within a supportive team environment, this critical leader will advance student inclusion so that students may thrive and focus on their academic and co-curricular interests in an environment that is safe, secure, and welcoming.

 

Lecturer - Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies

https://www.sfu.ca/gsws/about-us/careers.html

The Department of Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies (GSWS) at Simon Fraser University invites applications for a continuing teaching appointment at the rank of Lecturer, commencing July 1, 2022.

The preferred candidate will have: expertise in new media and equity-focused digital pedagogy; interest and training in one or more of the following fields, including but not limited to: educational technology, interactive arts and streaming media, games design, massive open online course design, Augmented Reality/Virtual Reality for online learning, experiential learning platform.

Applications should be addressed to Dr. Helen Leung, Department Chair, and submitted electronically to gswspost@sfu.ca.

Priority given to completed applications received prior to November 23, 2021.

 

Assistant Professor in Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies

https://careers.csusm.edu/en-us/job/506227/assistant-professor-in-womens-gender-and-sexuality-studies

Cal State University San Marcos

The WGSS department is committed to intersectional and critical approaches to the study of sex, gender, and sexuality. We seek a colleague who focuses on Women of Color Feminisms with a corollary emphasis in one or more areas (such as, but not limited to): Border Studies, Global/Transnational Studies, Decolonial/Postcolonial Studies, Immigration/Diaspora Studies, Indigenous Studies, Sexuality Studies, Disability Studies, and/or Ethnic Studies. We also seek a colleague committed to transformative feminist and decolonial pedagogies, undergraduate research, and feminist methodologies. The successful candidate will be committed to the academic success of all students and to an environment that respects and builds support for diversity, equity, and inclusion.

Review of applications will begin January 24, 2022, and will continue until the position is filled.

 

Director (Assistant or Associate Prof), Indigenous Studies Program)

https://careers.uwosh.edu/cw/en-us/job/498772/director-of-indigenous-studies

The College of Letters and Science at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh invites applications for an Assistant Professor (tenure track) or Associate Professor of Indigenous Studies and Director of the Indigenous Studies Program. We are searching for an individual who has a strong interest in and skills appropriate to developing a certificate program into a minor and supporting our Indigenous Studies Program through campus leadership, curricular development, scholarship, outreach/recruitment, and student mentorship. Our Indigenous Studies Program is globally focused, yet for this position preference will be given to those candidates whose lived experience, knowledge, and research is centered on and with Indigenous communities of North America.

Applications received by Wednesday, December 15th are ensured full consideration

email: bohrj@uwosh.edu

 

Emory University, Fox Center for Humanistic Inquiry

http://fchi.emory.edu/home/fellowships/index.html

The Fox Center for Humanistic Inquiry of Emory University is accepting applications for a Postdoctoral Fellowship for one and two academic years of study, teaching, and residence in the Center.  This fellowship offers research opportunities to those trained in the humanities as traditionally defined and to others seriously interested in humanistic issues; research projects must be humanistic, but fellows may hold the Ph.D. in any discipline.  We especially seek applicants and projects that will benefit from and contribute to the interdisciplinary nature of the group of Fellows and the work of the FCHI.

Application deadline: January 14, 2022

email: foxcenter@emory.edu

 

 

 

EVENTS: WORKSHOPS, TALKS, CONFERENCES

The Ecological Question in Global Health: A Panel Discussion

https://www.indiachinainstitute.org/event/the-ecological-question-in-global-health-a-panel-discussion/

Thursday, November 18 , 9:00 am – 11:00 am

The COVID-19 pandemic has brought into stark relief the interactions between climate change and global health and revealed the dangers of ‘siloization’ of these issues into different conceptual frameworks and governance regimes. The panel will explore how the understanding of the environment and public health can be bridged, and how these challenges are being addressed especially in India and China.

 

Biotic Resistance: Eco-Caribbean Visions in Art and Exhibition Practice

https://bioticresistance.squarespace.com/

November 2021

Importantly, the series is not bound by chronological focus, but supports research that draws transhistorical connections between the colonial era, the period of independence and the contemporary. The climatic phenomena that currently make the Caribbean one of the most ecologically vulnerable regions in the world are inextricable from the history of this region as a site of colonial extraction and exploitation. A central objective is to highlight the role that artists and thinkers with Caribbean heritage have played in shaping a planetary consciousness that is uniquely suited to thinking through the ecological emergencies of the present.

Contact Email: giulia.smith@rsa.ox.ac.uk

 

The Mobile Archive

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8703315/mobile-archive-online-symposium

November 10, University of Siegen (Germany)

The attention to mobilities across time and space thus necessitates a critical look at one of the anchoring institutions in early American studies, the archive. Often established with a geographic basis, and usually bracketed by dates, the archival collection inevitably renders a given moment or object or angle of inquiry more relevant than others. Practicalities, of course, shape these decisions. Scholars travel to Pennsylvania to investigate Revolutionary Philadelphia, Massachusetts to understand Puritan New England, and so on. But how did archival materials themselves travel? Letters were sent, objects changed hands, spaces were imagined, entire collections would migrate over time. This mobility belies the instability of any claim to archival “rootedness.”

Contact Email: mobilearchiveproject@gmail.com

 

The Realm of Possibility - A Gender and Queer Studies Symposium

https://www.eventbrite.de/e/the-realm-of-possibility-a-gender-and-queer-studies-symposium-tickets-178055467697?aff=ebdssbeac

Nov. 12-14, 2021

 Realm of Possibility (RoP) is an interdisciplinary, international symposium addressing issues and phenomena connected to Gender and Queer Studies. After a successful launch in 2020 with a wonderfully diverse panel of speakers, the 2021 symposium will concentrate on the topic of masculinity. While contributions from sociology, psychology, etc. are welcome, the symposium’s focus is on cultural and artistic expressions of selfhood and zeitgeist that can be read through the lens of Gender and Queer Studies.

Contact Email:  ef@ibugi.de

 

Digital Humanities and Materiality seminar

https://www.sas.ac.uk/events/event/24790

2 November 2021, 4.00pm - 5.15pm (UK time)

What are the future prospects for literary knowledge now that literary texts—and the material remains of authorship, publishing, and reading—are reduced to bitstreams, strings of digital ones and zeros? What are the opportunities and obligations for book history, textual criticism, and bibliography when literary texts are distributed across digital platforms, devices, formats, and networks? Indeed, what is textual scholarship when the "text" of our everyday speech is a verb as often as it is a noun? These are the topics which motivate Bitstreams, a distillation of twenty years of thinking about the intersection of digital media, textual studies, and literary archives.

 

Think Again! African Arts, Museum Politics, and Savior Complexes

https://emory.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_Znqee-uxRuuKhmteukb2PA

In recent years, calls for the return of objects from Africa currently housed in European and North American collections to the African continent have garnered increased attention among art professionals and broader publics worldwide. Through this one-day virtual event organized by Emory University’s Institute of African Studies (IAS), we will hear from a broad range of university- and museum-based professionals—some located in African institutions and others in North American ones—to consider different power dynamics and other concerns at play. The aim is to listen carefully to a variety of informed perspectives, including ones that may unsettle, inconvenience, or otherwise prompt us to rethink what we thought we knew.

URL: https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8772401/emory-universitys-institute-african-studies-fall-symposium

Contact Email: jacquelyn.charlton@emory.edu

 

Worlds Enough and Time: Towards a Comparative Global Humanities

https://comparativeglobalhumanities.mit.edu/About/

Saturday, Nov 13, 2021 08:00 AM - 11:00AM

This conference advocates for a new Comparative Global Humanities: the integrative transformation of the Humanities through a radical foregrounding of geographical scope and temporal depth. It embodies the belief that to create more equal societies in the present, we need to create more equality for other places and other pasts — and learn from all they have to offer. We aim to develop new comparative methodologies based on the world’s archives and conceptual vocabularies. This allows us to address the social, political, and creative functions of cultural heritage in today’s world and to advocate more effectively for social justice, and for cultural understanding and reconciliation.

Contact Email: tranvoj@mit.edu

Register: https://mit.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJclduyoqjssEtyKH2jw52RUgknfP6ws82Vi

 

U Belong Glasgow: A Creative Conversation with Kokumo Rocks

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/u-belong-glasgow-a-creative-conversation-with-kokumo-rocks-tickets-198847988687

Mon, 15 November 2021, 12:30 – 13:30 CST

Kokumo was raised in the Fife village of Cowdenbeath, and hers was the only black family in the area. In the mid 1990’s she was diagnosed as dyslexic and went on to become a performance poet. She describes herself as an African/Asian/Scottish writer and performance poet, and has performed in the UK, USA, India and Africa. Her collections are Bad Ass Raindrop (2002), and, Stolen From Africa (2007), both published by Luath Press.

 

Gender, Health, & Social Justice Speaker Series

https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/gender-health-and-social-justice-speaker-series-20212022-tickets-194631075787

The series is presented virtually (via Zoom) on select Fridays from 10:00-11:30am PST.

Contact Email: letitia.johnson@usask.ca

November 19, 2021: Urvi Desai (McGill University), "Birth Control in India: Women’s Stories, Health, and Technology, 1930s-60s"

January 21, 2022: Georgia Grainger (University of Strathclyde), "Vasectomy in Twentieth Century Britain: Uncovering Men's Reproductive Choices"

March 4, 2022: Ipshita Nath (University of Saskatchewan), "Diseased Delinquent Bodies: Sanitation, Healthcare, and Jail-Discipline in Colonial India"

March 25, 2022: Jennifer Fraser (University of Toronto), "Behind the Screen: The History and Politics of Canadian Breast Cancer Imaging"

April 1, 2022: Publishing in Scholarly Journals: Q&A with the North American Editors of Gender & History

 

Worlds Enough and Time: Towards a Comparative Global Humanities

https://comparativeglobalhumanities.mit.edu/About/

Friday, Nov 12, 2021 08:00 AM - 12:00PM Saturday, Nov 13, 2021 08:00 AM - 11:00AM - (Eastern Standard Time)

This conference advocates for a new Comparative Global Humanities: the integrative transformation of the Humanities through a radical foregrounding of geographical scope and temporal depth. It embodies the belief that to create more equal societies in the present, we need to create more equality for other places and other pasts — and learn from all they have to offer. We aim to develop new comparative methodologies based on the world’s archives and conceptual vocabularies. This allows us to address the social, political, and creative functions of cultural heritage in today’s world and to advocate more effectively for social justice, and for cultural understanding and reconciliation.

Contact Email: tranvoj@mit.edu

 

Racism(s) by Other Means

https://culturalresearch.center/Racism-s-by-Other-Means

November 18-19, 2021

This two-day workshop on "Racism(s) by Other Means" proposes to analyse how contemporary social, political and technological transformations have rendered ineffectual previous forms of thinking about racism and processes of racialisation associated with imperialism/colonialism. Given that the host institutions are in the USA, Hong Kong SAR, and India, we are interested in understanding how issues to do with racism(s) play out in these locations. Recently, a US-based scholar has proposed looking at race as a form of caste, while in the 1990s there was a great deal of interest in activist circles in India in defining casteism as a form of racism. Questions of race/racism have begun to surface more frequently in East Asia too.  

Contact Email: ccrd@LN.edu.hk

 

Buddhism and Posthumanism

https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0pcO2oqz0uGtfN6pGtOhooO1g7w_KsSfyq

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8850016/buddhism-and-posthumanism

Nov. 2021-March 2022

How are anthropocentric attitudes driving the climate crisis? What do Buddhist traditions say about these attitudes? What is our responsibility to non-human animals and the natural world? What do Buddhists say about the place of humans in multispecies environments? The Robert H.N. Ho Family Foundation Centre for Buddhist Studies at the University of Toronoto is thrilled to announce its 2021–22 speaker series Buddhism and Posthumanism: Questioning the Place of Humans in Multispecies Environments, which features climate researchers, activists, and Buddhist studies scholars focused on reconsidering the place of humans in an interconnected world.

Lectures on Zoom begin at 3:00 pm Eastern Time; registration is required. Optional readings are shared with registrants before each event.

Contact Email: buddhiststudies@utoronto.ca

 

Entangled Knowledges: Practices of Dreaming, Reflecting, and Being Present

https://grsj.arts.ubc.ca/events/event/living-resurgence-dreaming-in-dangerous-times-dr-dian-million/

November 17th, 2021 at 5:30PM - 7:00PM PST

Living Resurgence: Dreaming in Dangerous TImes with Dr. Dian Million

I seek an invitation to a conversation on what Indigeneity means to the abolitionist call for practices of “freedom” in places. It is to speak to the sometimes fraught and sometimes generous questions that are posed between Black and Indigenous Feminisms, about land and about the after lives of enslavement and what we might dream of just futures together if we think relationally, in “constellations” rather than from silos (Simpson, 2017). What is a promise of Indigenous economies as a practice of life making in places in this moment rather than as a shadow of capitalism; the lure of turning Indigenous places into corporate mini-economies, where the “implacable logic of debt takes over for the implacable logic of the white man’s burden…of the need for people cut off from circuits of capital accumulation to develop their capacities, to adjust to the standards of the more advanced world, to reform their backward ways (Byrd, et al.,2018).

 

‘Pracademia’: The Growing Trend of Academics Writing for Industry

https://www.aclang.com/event/routledge-november-30-2021/?src=hnet

November 30 at 4:30 PM Israel time/ 2:30 PM UK/ 9:30 AM EDT on Zoom

This month we are exploring the prospect of turning your research into an industry-specific book for practitioners. From research-based books geared towards CEOs on business management to books on wellness and maintaining healthy lifestyles, writing a book for a specific audience or readership outside of academia has become a higher priority for many researchers in recent years.

Contact Email: avi@aclang.com

 

Art, Critical Ecologies, and Multiscalar Engagements

https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/8870963/%E3%80%90updated%E3%80%91conference-art-critical-ecologies-and-multiscalar

Nov. 12-13, 2021

A conference organized by Wanwu Practice Group, City University of Hong Kong

This conference will be East Asia's first conference on contemporary art and ecology. Through the conference, we hope to bring together researchers and practitioners working in the intersections of art, ecology, indigeneity, geopolitics, and STS (science and technology studies) to build a cross-regional network of sustainable collaboration.

Contact Email: mankunli2-c@my.cityu.edu.hk

 

Indigenous Futurisms: A conversation between Grace Dillon and Suzanne Kite

https://event.newschool.edu/indigenousfuturisms

November 12, 2021 / 2 PM ET

The Liberal Studies Student Association at The New School for Social Research is excited to announce its latest event in the speaker series "Afro and Indigenous Futures." This online event asks, How can art engenderliberating ways of knowing, imagining, and ultimately producing the world? And what is the role of indigenous scientific literacies in this endeavor? In face of the decadence of Progress as the modern world’s civilizational compass, scholar Grace Dillon and artist Suzanne Kite will engage in a conversation to explore different aspects of indigenous artistic and scientific engagements with reality to delve for alternative worlds, futures, and temporalities, which will be able to account for a more-than-human endurance through time.

Contact Email: LibStudStuAssc@newschool.edu

 

 

 

RESOURCES

Digital Fridays by HASTAC Scholars

Digital Fridays sessions are conceptualized and hosted by HASTAC Scholars who present on research topics, teaching approaches. or professional development strategies. Recordings available here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLs4s4YzyzpmFxlhUc6W9-39kTfERZ3TMK