CFP: Queertopia! 2.0 Graduate Student Conference, Northwestern University

Call For Papers
Queer Pride Graduate Student Association
Northwestern University

We invite graduate students and advanced undergrads in all academic
disciplines to present their original research at Queertopia! 2.0 Graduate Student Conference to be held at Center on Halsted on Saturday, May 2. While we welcome submissions on all aspects of queer studies, we are particularly interested in submissions related to this year’s theme of (Re)Imagining Communit(ies).

Queer scholars have long recognized that there is no single gay community, but rather multiple overlapping communities comprised of people with multiple identities. We want to move beyond that, to interrogate how we can use our theoretical knowledge to understand our communities and lived
experiences.

Possible questions may include: In a shifting political landscape that
focuses less on a splintering of identity and more on community, how does the queer community and identity politics fit in? How do our multiple individual identities affect our constructions of different communities in which we claim membership? Once we’ve identified as queer, how do redefine ourselves in other communities? How do social constructions of sexuality affect our constructions of a queer community? How are stereotypes used by others and by us to define a queer community?

Proposed panels include, but are not limited to: bridging academe and
activism in queer studies; law, community, and queer studies; and gender variance and political-economy in the global south.

We invite paper abstracts of 500 words or less. In addition to submitting abstracts of individual research, we also invite students to submit proposals for panels. Interested parties should submit a title for the panel, description of the panel, abstracts of 4-5 papers to be presented, and contact information for a panel moderator/respondent and all paper presenters.

Please send an abstract, along with your contact information (name,
university, email address, and phone number), to ,queertopia.nu@gmail.com. We will begin reviewing abstracts as submitted on a rolling basis, with a final submission deadline of March 6, 2009. We will inform submitters of panel placements by March 23, 2009. We may be able to offer travel scholarships to presenters. Preference will be given to presenters travelling farther and those who do not have access to department, or other funds.

Please circulate this announcement to all those who may be interested.

CFP: 3rd Annual UC Davis Queer Studies Graduate Symposium “Queer Mobility, Queer Citizenship”

3rd Annual UC Davis Queer Studies Graduate Symposium
“Queer Mobility, Queer Citizenship”
University of California, Davis
May 29, 2009

Recent queer scholarship reflects an investment in studies of
transnationalism and a concern with questions of mobility and citizenship.
Scholarship within the growing field of transnational queer studies, as
exemplified in works such as Social Text’s 2005 special issue “What’s Queer
about Queer Studies Now” and GLQ’s 2008 special issue “Queer/Migrations,”
investigates the imbrications of gender and sexuality with racial, national,
and diasporic formations; circuits of travel, migration, and displacement;
and immigration, asylum, and citizenship policies. To interrogate discourses
of sexuality, desire, and political change within the current phase of
globalization, transnational queer studies requires attention to the ways in
which constructions of sexuality are linked to the movements of bodies,
ideas, and capital as well as to local, regional, and global systems of
inclusion and exclusion. This conference emerges at a moment in which
technologies of war and information simultaneously transcend and reinscribe
modern boundaries of time and space. Therefore, we invite conversations
around how queer modes of mobility and citizenship may be at once complicit
with and disruptive of the temporal, spatial, and affective logics of
nation-states, economic formations, and liberal personhood.

What does the study of mobility and citizenship offer queer scholarship? Who
is denied or granted access to various forms of mobility? How is that
access/denial contingent upon and constitutive of one’s citizenship status?
When and how are non-normative genders and non-reproductive desires in
synchrony with the state and when do they expose the fissures,
inconsistencies, and ambivalences of the state? Is queerness compatible with
the pursuit of liberal citizenship and is queer citizenship possible? How
does a focus on mobility and citizenship further demonstrate the necessity
of interrogating the racial, class, and gendered formations inherent in
discourses of sexuality? How can considerations of different scales of
mobility and forms of embodiment bring together studies of sexuality,
dis/ability, and citizenship? How are metaphors of mobility (coming out,
“fluid” identities, access) central to queerness? What are the links between
citizenship and in/voluntary modes of travel, im/migration, and
displacement?  How is the production of modern citizen-subjects embedded in
histories of colonialism, war, and empire-making, and what is particular
about the role of mobility in the construction of queer subjectivities? How
does queer fail or succeed as a transnational and translatable concept,
identity or politic?

We invite scholarship from a broad range of disciplines, especially
interdisciplinary work in queer theory and transgender theory. We especially
encourage work that critically engages mutually constitutive articulations
of race, class, sexuality, ability, gender, citizenship, religion, and
nationality. Papers engaging activism and community organizing are also
encouraged. For information on past symposium please visit
www.queersymposium.org.

Please send 250-500 word abstracts to queersymposium2009(AT)gmail.com by March
15, 2009.

Possible topics include (but are not limited to):
-Histories of queerness mobility and citizenship
-Gay/lesbian tourism and travel
-Immigration and asylum law
-Technology / digital and virtual spaces
-”Global Gay” / the gay international
-Embodiment/Disability Studies
-Queerness and mobile capital
-Border crossing and borderlands
-Violence, war, and the State
-Immobility/Stasis
-Local and regional belonging
-Temporal mobility, temporal belonging
-Affective and cultural citizenship
-Homonormativity, neoliberalism and mobile citizenship