Call for Papers Lavender Languages Conference
Val Pagliai
v.pagliai at YAHOO.COM
Thu Sep 16 16:05:56 UTC 2010
Hi everybody,
I am organizing a double panel on discourse, immigration and Queer sexualities
for the Lavender Languages Conference (American University, Washington DC,
February 11-13, 2011), together with Rafael Lainez. We are soliciting papers
right now. I am pasting our complete call for papers below, which is still a
drafty draft, so it it open to changes later on. Anybody who may be interested
in joining, drop me a line.
Call for Papers
Language, Migration and Sexualities
This panel will focus on the discourses structuring the conditions met by Queer
migrants, including those discourses regimenting sexuality in both the countries
of origin and arrival of migrants. The panel will be divided in two parts.
Part 1: Seeking Inclusion: Discourses Surrounding Sexualities, Migration and
Belonging.
Organizer: Rafael Lainez
Migration is often described as a quest for economic betterment. Social
scientists have begun to inform how sexual minorities migrate for economic
betterment and for the opportunity to express their sexuality within a
supportive community. However, upon migrating, some immigrant sexual minorities
face social challenges which prohibit them from entering communities comprised
of sexual minorities in the mainstream. In this session, we welcome papers
exploring these discursive relations between sexuality, conditions of migration,
and the efforts to mainstream community engagement. Papers focusing on the
impact on migration on gender and sexual identities are also welcome.
Part 2: Discourses of Citizenship and Queerness.
Organizer: Valentina Pagliai
Papers are welcome on topics that touch on the production of discourses about
Queerness in the receiving countries, and their possible impact on the lives of
Queer migrants. This may include (but is not limited to) papers about the use of
discourses of tolerance for sexual differences in nation-state rhetoric, or
those produced by pro-immigrant or anti-immigrant groups; papers exploring the
production of discourses about danger and desire which may exoticize Queer
migrants as Others, to be either ostracized or included; those addressing the
intersections between discourses of race, class and sexuality in the receiving
countries; papers focusing on discourses about Queer migrants produced in the
legal system of receiving countries and the deriving policies; the impact of
Queer migration on the sense of Self of people in the receiving countries,
including in the imagination of sexuality and desire; etc.
Best,
Valentina Pagliai
Department of Anthropology
American University
Washington, DC 20016
Phone# (908) 668-4840 (h)
There Is No Place Like Everywhere
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