Índice de Títulos


Revisitar Michel Foucault: A Vontade de Saber 1976-2016

Conferência que assinala os 40 anos da publicação de A Vontade de Saber, de Michel Foucault

  • Revisitar Michel Foucault: A Vontade de Saber 1976-2016

    November 25, 2016 – November 26, 2016

Non-Monogamies and Contemporary Intimacies

(To see a longer version of this Call for Contributions, please go here)

 

Research in sociology, psychology, anthropology and contemporary history has shown that traditional concepts and practices regarding marriage, family, sexuality, and intimacy have been changing rapidly in recent decades. There have been radical revisions of thinking and practice not only related to sexuality but also involving gender roles, single-parenthood, family structures, contraception, abortion, and divorce. Many of these areas have been linked to transformations in broader social, economic and political constructs, such as same-sex marriage.

 

These changes are faced with mainstream negative representations of non-monogamy which describe it as “infidelity”, “serial monogamy”, or “failures” of the “normal” pattern of intimacy. Such perspectives assign a privileged role to the idealized couple, portrayed as intrinsically better. The dominant academic paradigm legitimates and strengthens monogamy’s normativity. At the same time, academia frequently fails to acknowledge the existence of open, consensual non-couple-based forms of relationships, and of a-romantic and/or asexual intimacies. Moreover, even the limited existing research on consensual non-monogamies focuses mostly on English-speaking and socio-economically privileged white groups and communities.

 

The rise in critical discourses regarding normative sexualities and intimacies (and the ways in which these two elements interact) calls into question the traditional paradigm of lifestyles that have been at the core of the sex-gender system, as well as hetero-mono-normative institutions and practices in general.

 

Topics: With this conference, we intend to bring together research, activism and other forms of social expression, focusing on, but not limited to, the following topics:

 

●     Research around the lived experiences of non-monogamies, especially those considered consensual;

●     Ideological and representational changes in how intimacies are thought of;

●     Intersections with race, sex-gender, sexual orientation, kinship, kink, sex work, class, culture, religion, dis/ability, asexuality, a-romanticism;

●     Activism and community-building around non-monogamies;

●     Reproduction of normativities and resistances: polynormativity and relationship anarchy, neo-liberalism and political contestation;

●     Evolution of scientific discourses on non-monogamies;

●     Challenges to counseling, psychotherapy, (public) health and legal frameworks around non-monogamies;

●     The roles of mass media and new technologies around transformations of intimacy.

 

Our goal is community-building within and beyond academia in all its fields and disciplines, challenging traditional models of the hegemonic Global North system of knowledge production. Therefore, we encourage the submission not only of academic papers and thematic panels, but also round-table discussions, film screenings and debates, installations, activist-driven reflections and other modalities.

 

Language & accessibility: For logistic reasons, the conference’s common language will be English, and abstracts must be submitted in English. If you wish so, you can also send us your abstract in another language, provided that you also submit it in English. It is highly recommended (but not mandatory) that presentations during the conference are in English. The venue is wheelchair-accessible. If you require a Sign Language interpreter, please contact us via email; unfortunately we cannot guarantee that this will be provided.

 

To submit: Abstracts of up to 250 words for individual submissions and up to 500 words for panel submissions, by May 18th, using this platformBefore submitting, please read the instructions HERE. Any doubts or technical difficulties should be addressed to the following email:nmciconference@gmail.com

  • 1st Non-Monogamies and Contemporary Intimacies

    September 25, 2015 – September 27, 2015

II European Geographies of Sexualities Conference

Sexualities have become a legitimate and significant area of geographical research, across diverse areasranging from cultural, social and feminist geographies, to political and economic domains. One of the main characteristics of studies on sexualities has been its critical and reflexive perspective, namely questioning hegemonies and modes of sexualised power relations. Although this work has brought some significant changes  and  developments,  still,  many  of  the  contemporary  modes  of  knowledge  production  reflect inequalities and hegemonies that need to be challenged.


The II European Geographies of Sexualities Conference wants to create a space of debate, discussion and questioning to explore how we might attempt to move beyond such normative domains and practices.


Conference sessions and papers will contribute to the questioning and debating the following topics:

  • The hegemony of heteronormativity in social relations and everyday environments, and across various other spaces;
  • The hegemony of the 'Western' views, the relative invisibility, and lesser  significance of  research on sexualities in other social and cultural contexts, as constraints in exploring cross-cultural variations on sexual diversity and complexity;
  • The hegemony of English in academic publishing and wider modes of knowledge production systems; work on sexualities in diverse languages has become obscured and thus devalued, as reflected in invisible citation records and general knowledge about its very existence;
  • The hegemony   of   large   publishing   companies which   although   profit-   rather   than   ethos-driven do influence and control the academic knowledge, decide on its relevance, influence academic career and funding prospects;
  • The hegemony  of globalisation discourses;  'sexual  citizenship'  and  its  relation  to  the  key  sites  of contemporary sexual politics and theoretical debates on sexuality in relation to consumption, space and globalization;
  • The hegemony of whiteness and how it  mediates other social  categories such  as gender, sexuality, religion, social class and so forth;
  • The male  hegemony in  the  'power  positions'  in  academia,  and  as  valued  knowledge  producers;intersections of gender and sexualities research;
  • Knowledge production through quantitative methods, measuring sexualities.

A comprehensive text of this call for papers is available at Beyond hegemonies.


We encourage contributions in a diverse range of formats. Alongside traditional academic conference papers, we welcome panel discussions, open space discussions, film screenings, installations and other contributions. We seek to foster networking, debate and discussions across national borders, across language communities, and across academic disciplines.


Language: we currently do not have funding for the translation at the conference. We plan a multilingual conference, and encourage participants to present in the language they feel most comfortable in using.

Interested contributors should send a max. 300-word abstract of a paper, or a max 500 word proposal of asession/panel discussion/other activity/format by 31st March 2013.

  • II European Geographies of Sexualities Conference

    September 5, 2013 – September 7, 2013


Organização: Grupo de Trabalho de Género e Sexualidades da Associação Portuguesa de Ciências da Comunicação/ CIC.DIGITAL – Pólo Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas da Universidade Nova de Lisboa