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Call for Papers

Appropriating the (In)appropriate: Rethinking Pageants, Contests and the Anthropology of Emblems
Powerful symbols are created when bodies and persons are appropriated as emblematic of a nation, community or institution's values and aspirations. Although many studies have unpicked and critiqued the ideologies condensed in such symbols, they typically take for granted the processes by which someone or something is appropriated as symbol or emblem. This panel seeks to revitalise the field through the cross-cultural analysis of processes of appropriation in such diverse contexts as beauty pageants and fashion shows, model citizen awards, advertising and diplomacy. Often associated with agency and creativity, appropriation can also involve more negative issues such as perceived inappropriateness, copying, or inauthenticity. The panel therefore invites papers exploring the relationships between those striving to be appropriated, those undertaking acts of appropriation, and the acts' audiences. It also asks what processes are instigated by appropriations. To what extent do appropriated entities become 'owned' by those they are representing? To what extent do they exhibit 'ownership' over what they symbolise? What happens when their exposure leads them to be (re)appropriated in quite unexpected and unforeseen ways? A final aim is to explore ethnographically the practices by which social actors render themselves 'appropriate' for appropriation, and how alternative, 'inappropriate', practices might be employed in acts of
cynicism, subversion or satire. These practices themselves often involve the appropriation of certain subjects, objects and relations (e.g. clothing, demeanour, tuition) and the panel invites papers that interrogate the often fraught connections between such micro-level practices and the actor's capacity - and desire - to be appropriated. We welcome all papers that engage with the themes of this panel, and are sympathetic towards broad and unorthodox interpretations of the CFP. Deadline for paper abstracts: 1st May 2008. Submit online at http://www.nomadit.co.uk/asa/asa08/panels.php5?PanelID=404. Any queries, contact Nick Long - NJL34@cam.ac.uk or Sharyn Graham Davies - sharyn.davies@aut.ac.nz.

Queer Excursions: New Directions in Language, Gender and Sexuality Research
Editors: Jenny Davis, Joshua Raclaw, and Lal Zimman (Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado at Boulder). Submissions are invited for a new edited volume in the field of language, gender, and sexuality that seeks to expand the present scope of these research areas. The volume will showcase work that considers how speakers (re)produce gender and sexuality outside of the traditional dichotomies that have been dominant in both scholarship and popular discourses. Topics of chapters currently under consideration focus on issues of linguistic practice among understudied communities such as female-to-male transsexuals, genderqueer individuals, tomboys and their girlfriends in Indonesia, polyamorists and other non-monogamists, and members of Native American two-spirit groups; additionally, much of this work underscores the theoretical limitations of a sociolinguistics driven by binary categorization. The editors welcome abstracts from scholars working within various disciplinary traditions, including sociolinguistics, linguistic anthropology, discourse and rhetorical analysis, gender and queer studies, and others. Background: The past two decades have seen a significant rise in what has been termed a poststructuralist sociolinguistics, a shift reflected in the adoption of a wide range of third-wave feminist and queer stances within language, gender and sexuality research. Adopting the trend toward critical examination of the dominant dichotomization of gender and sexuality, researchers within the last decade have considered additional intersections such as class and ethnicity, have deconstructed the traditional primacy assigned to male/female difference, and have established the importance of examining queer subjecthood. Yet research that looks at gender and sexuality as positioned outside of dichotomous categorizations – such as transgenderism and transsexuality, third and fourth gender categories, bisexuality and pansexuality – has been less forthcoming. Indeed, with few exceptions, the field has paid little attention to how social actors might challenge such binary categories through linguistic means, or to how speakers enact gendered and sexual identities outside of the dominant categories of male and female, heterosexual and homosexual. Rather than just constituting a simple gap in the literature, such trends potentially contribute to the reinforcement of traditional gender and sexual dichotomies by reinforcing the invisibility of those groups and individuals that remain outside of them (cf. Bing and Bergvall 1996). Submission Guidelines: Potential contributors should email a 500-1000 word abstract, including a title and a description of the topic of the proposed chapter, theoretical frameworks and methodologies employed, and how this work is situated outside of, or provides new insight into or potential challenges to, the binaries discussed above. Complete manuscripts are also welcome for submission at this time. Please restrict these submissions to a maximum length of 10,000 words and follow the Unified Style Sheet for Linguistics (located at http://www.linguistlist.org/pubs/tocs/JournalUnifiedStyleSheet2007.pdf). Abstracts due June 30, 2008. First round of full drafts due September 1, 2008. Please direct all correspondence to the editors at jennifer.davis@colorado.edu, raclaw@colorado.edu, zimman@colorado.edu.

Council on Anthropology and Reproduction Graduate Student Paper Competition
The Council on Anthropology and Reproduction (CAR), an interest group of the Society for Medical Anthropology, is pleased to announce its eighth annual student paper award competition. The award will go to the best graduate student paper on anthropology and reproduction. Submissions from all fields of anthropology are encouraged. Criteria on which the papers will be judged: v Ethnographic richness based on fieldwork
* Anthropological methodology
* Linkage of work to other work in anthropology and reproduction
* Effective use of theory and data
* Originality/Creativity
* Organization, quality of writing, and coherence of argument
A committee of CAR members will read the papers. The author of the winning paper will receive a cash award of approximately $250. The winner will be announced in both the CAR Newsletter and the Anthropology Newsletter. An abstract of the winning article will be published in the CAR Newsletter. Submissions must be received by June 1, 2008. Send four hard copies of the paper. On a separate page, include your name, mailing address, e-mail address, telephone number, and school affiliation. Please do not include identifying information on the essay itself. Papers should be double-spaced, no longer than 9,000 words (including references), and references should be formatted in American Anthropologist style. Papers already published or accepted for publication at the time of submission are not eligible. Questions may be directed to Maggie MacDonald at maggie@yorku.ca. Address submissions to: Maggie MacDonald, Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology, York University, Toronto, Ontario CANADA M3J1P3

Gender Mainstreaming: the Appropriation of Feminist Discourses in Development?
A call for papers for a panel for the Association of Social Anthropoligists conference in December 2008 in Auckland (conference web page: http://www.theasa.org/asa08/index2.html). Convenors: Suzanne Clisby (University of Hull) and Maggie Bolton (University of Hull). Gender mainstreaming is a response to feminist and anthropological critiques of gender disparities in development. This panel calls for an analysis of gender mainstreaming from a feminist anthropological perspective and aims to critically explore issues of ownership and appropriation therein. Gender mainstreaming' is heralded as a major global strategy for ensuring the incorporation of gender perspectives and the promotion of equality in all areas of social development. Placing gender mainstreaming on the international development agenda can be perceived as a successful outcome of feminist/GAD and anthropological discourse and activism. The question is, how has this policy been translated in terms of practice and what are the real consequences of that discourse? The incorporation, for example, of 'gendered' terminology into policy without the corresponding implementation at all levels can serve to blunt women's calls for change on the grounds that their concerns have already been addressed. More critically, is gender mainstreaming being subverted as a tool for the appropriation of women's knowledge, interests and concerns in social development arenas? Does the terminology of gender obscure women and facilitate the continuation of male dominance over development processes? Does it impose an inappropriate model of womanhood on non-Western women? Has, then, the incorporation of feminist critiques into international development discourse subverted feminist theories of ownership and appropriation? Finally, to what extent has the requirement for 'gender mainstreaming' in international development discourse become an extension of a neo-liberal/neo-colonial project to control and 'civilise' developing economies? Is a putative concern for gender equality in development being used as another means to distinguish between the modern, civilised One and the colonial, traditional Other? We invite papers that explore one or more of these questions: we would especially welcome contributions from feminist anthropologists engaged in development.

Women and Agriculture
Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. Women and Agriculture. Submission deadline: May 1, 2008. For this special issue we invite international, transnational, and comparative studies that engage theoretical and historical analyses of women and agriculture; and analyses of racial, ethnic, and gendered dimensions of agriculture. We seek manuscripts on women and sustainable agriculture, on women in leadership and decision-making positions, and in feminist science studies pertaining to women's knowledge and changing agricultural practices. Carolyn Sachs, Professor of Rural Sociology and Women's Studies, Penn State University, United States, and Margaret Alston, Professor of Social Work and Human Services and Director of the Centre for Rural Social Research, Charles Sturt University, Australia, will serve as guest editors of the special issue on women and agriculture. For details, see http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/page/signs/call.html.

Inclusive Science: Articulating Theory, Practice, and Action
June 16-18, 2008, College of St. Catherine, St. Paul MN. Our web site is now live! Visit: http://www.stkate.edu/inclusive_science/ to learn more about the conference and submit a proposal. Conference Overview: During the summer of 2008, the College of St. Catherine, the nation’s largest college for women, will be hosting a national conference in St. Paul, Minnesota on feminism and science. “Inclusive Science: Articulating Theory, Practice, and Action” will focus on three intersections of science and feminism: 1) Multiple Frameworks: critiques of science from multiple perspectives including gender, race and ethnicity, and class; 2) Pedagogies that engage women, students of color, and students from a variety of social classes in the sciences, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM); 3) Transformation: putting theory into action; changing the way we do, learn, and teach about science. This conference is designed to help scholars in and of the sciences share knowledge and ideas; develop strategies for disseminating their theory, pedagogies, and activism; and discuss ways to go forward. We plan to include ample opportunity for dialog through innovative participatory sessions and intentionally scheduled time for informal conversations.We welcome proposals for formal papers, panels, and roundtable discussions. However, since one of our conference goals is to foster community among people engaged in making the sciences more inclusive, we encourage proposals for sessions that may not fit these more traditional formats. We particularly encourage creative formats that may include: “hands on” workshops, panels that bring together different disciplines or perspectives, and/or sessions that foster dialog among presenters and participants. We also encourage presentation of “works in progress” for feedback and discussion. We are especially grateful to the Associated Colleges of the Twin Cities (ACTC) and The College of St. Catherine for their generous sponsorship.

Getting Bi: Voices of Bisexuals Around the World, 2nd edition
--Do you have something to say about being bisexual?
--Do you have a story about coming out as bi?
--Do you feel you could identify as bisexual but choose not to?
--Do you find connections (or conflicts) between your bisexuality and other parts of your identity or life?
--Do you have something to say about desire? About relationships? About religion? About community? About politics? About the position of bisexuals in the place or community you call home?
If you answered yes to any of the above questions, we want to publish you! We seek short personal essays or poems (200-1000 words) by bisexuals from Central or South America, Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Asia, or Africa. We seek Muslim voices from anywhere in the world. If you don't want your name in print, you can write under a pseudonym. If you think you're not a "real" writer and would like to be included in this anthology, we want you. If you're not comfortable writing, we can interview you. If you are not comfortable writing in English, write in your native language and we will translate your essay. Essays will be published in the second edition of Getting Bi: Voices of Bisexuals Around the World. The new anthology will be published in 2009, in dual editions (English and Spanish). The first (2005) edition includes personal narratives by people from 32 different countries, on 6 continents, ranging in age from 15-79. Please help us make this amazing collection even broader in scope! Send submissions to Robyn Ochs (robyn@robynochs.com) by June 30, 2008.

Encyclopedia of Gay Folklife
The upcoming Encyclopedia of Gay Folklife, which should be finished by the beginning of 2009 and ready for publication mid-year, has many articles that still need authors. The Encyclopedia of Gay Folklife will be an 800 page, 2 volume work (approx. 300,000 words). Entries will be between 500-2000 words, depending upon topic and author's recommendations. Those authors that write 3 or more articles will get a free copy (approx. $200 retail). The publisher is M.E. Sharpe (contact person: Todd Hallman). Editor is Mickey Weems. We are looking for authors for entries that reflect the breadth and width of LGBTQA folklife. In order to distinguish this encyclopedia from other such works about the LGBTQA community, we emphasize the following points: Aesthetics, Identity, Ethics, Eros, Performance, Coding, Healthways, Lived experience, Spirituality. Those who have done ethnographic research address many of the same concerns as folklorists; such scholars would be qualified to write entries for this work. Sexual and/or gender orientation are not factors in considering authors for entries. Mickey Weems, editor 614-746-1778.

WID: Michigan State University
Michigan State University's Women and International Development (MSU-WID) Publication Series invites you to submit your manuscript for review. The series focuses on the relationships between gender and global transformation and publishes reports of empirical studies and projects, theoretical analyses, and policy discussions that illuminate the processes of change in the broadest sense. Individual papers in the series address a range of topics including women's historical and changing participation in economic and political spheres, intra- and inter-family role relationships, gender identity, women's health and health care, and the gender division of labor. We particularly encourage manuscripts that bridge the gap between research, policy, and practice. The Working Papers on Women and International Development series features article-length manuscripts by scholars from a broad range of disciplines. It disseminates materials that are at a late stage of formulation and that contribute new understandings of women's economic, social, and political position amidst change. The WID Forum series features short research and project reports and policy analyses of importance in the field. It disseminates papers that are brief or at an early stage of development and that contain insights that can inform scholarship and influence development policy and programs. If you are interested in submitting a manuscript to the MSU-WID Publication Series, please contact Dr. Anne Ferguson, WID Publication Series Editor, Women and International Development Program, 206 International Center, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824-1035, USA. You may want to refer to the WID Style Sheet to help you prepare your manuscript for submission. If you have any questions, please feel free to call us at 517/353-5040; fax 517/432-4845 or e-mail papers@msu.edu.

 

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