25.312, Calls: Semantics, Pragmatics, Sociolinguistics/UK

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LINGUIST List: Vol-25-312. Sat Jan 18 2014. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 25.312, Calls: Semantics, Pragmatics, Sociolinguistics/UK

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Date: Sat, 18 Jan 2014 16:12:57
From: Tommaso Milani [tommaso.milani at wits.ac.za]
Subject: Queer, Semiotics and Space: Understanding Queer Identities through Language and Space

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Full Title: Queer, Semiotics and Space: Understanding Queer Identities through Language and Space 

Date: 26-Aug-2014 - 29-Aug-2014
Location: London, United Kingdom 
Contact Person: Tommaso Milani
Meeting Email: tommaso.milani at wits.ac.za
Web Site: http://www.zebracki.org/cfp2014queer 

Linguistic Field(s): Pragmatics; Semantics; Sociolinguistics 

Call Deadline: 30-Jan-2014 

Meeting Description:

Queer, Semiotics and Space: Understanding Queer Identities through Language and Space
Annual International Conference, London, 26-29 August, 2014 
Royal Geographical Society (RGS) with Institute of British Geographers (IBG)
Sponsored by the Space, Sexualities & Queer Research Group (SSQRG)

Convenors:

Martin Zebracki & Tommaso M. Milani
University of Leeds, United Kingdom & University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa

To date queer geography has induced critical debates about a variety of topics, which include but are not limited to: heteronormativities and homonormativities (e.g. Seidman 2001; Podmore 2013), sex/sexuality and space (e.g. Hubbard 2011), queer epistemology (e.g. Binnie 1997), feminism (e.g. Wright 2010), queer space (e.g. Oswin 2008), sexual citizenship (e.g. Mann 2013), queer liberalism (e.g. Eng 2010) and homonationalism (e.g. Puar 2007) in the light of the everyday represented and experienced identities of the sexual dissident, i.e. queer. These queer identities intersect with sex, gender, class, race, age, religion and ability/disability (cf. Brown 2012) across time, as implied in socio-historical understandings, current praxes and imagined futures, and across space, ranging from the home (e.g. Gorman-Murray 2008) to public life and governance (e.g. Bell & Binnie 2004) and online communities (e.g. O'Riordan & Phillips 2007).

Queer identities, and the everyday practices and performances associated with them, cannot be dissociated from the ways in which they are expressed by language-in all its subtleties and implicit associations as well as explicit self-reports-as situated in dynamic contexts of social norms and values, politics, power, ideology and various media (cf. Cameron & Kulick 2006).

We, a collaborating geographer and a semiotician, conceive of what we term as 'queer semiotics' as a frontier of knowledge that can further frame and challenge (predominant) discursive notions of the queer-space-identity nexus, as well as the language that scholars from diverse epistemological and lingual settings use to understand this relationship. Queer, in this sense, should not only be considered a subject of study but also a critical academic disposition in poststructuralist research on sexuality.

Call for Papers:

We invite scholars across disciplines and linguistic backgrounds—including non-Anglo-Saxon contexts—to further flesh out multidisciplinary spatial articulations of queer semiotics. We welcome any theoretical, methodological and/or empirical accounts drawn from either preliminary or fully-fledged research on this matter.

The deadlines are tight. If you are interested in participating in this session, please provide a brief statement of interest to both of the convenors by 30 January 2014. A 250-word abstract should be submitted by 10 February 2014.

We will potentially pursue opportunities for basing a special journal issue on this session. Therefore, in your statement of interest, please also indicate if you would like to contribute to such issue.

Submission Email:

M.M.Zebracki at leeds.ac.uk
Tommaso.Milani at wits.ac.za







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