
Call for Papers: Conference on Gender, Sexuality & the Body
Interdisciplinary Conference, Oct. 18-19. Send submissions, by April 1. For untenured faculty, grad students and advanced undergraduates of all disciplines that deepen understandings of the relationships among gender, sexuality & the body
Call for Papers
Gender, Sexuality, and the Body
Interdisciplinary Conference
Oct. 18-19, 2013
Pacific University's Center for Gender Equity and Gender and Sexuality Studies program invite submissions for its second interdisciplinary conference for untenured faculty, graduate studentsand advanced undergraduates of all disciplines. This year we seek work that deepens understandings of the relationships among gender, sexuality and the body.
We are pleased to announce our keynote speaker is Natalie Boero, the author of the recently acclaimed book, Killer Fat. Dr. Boero will discuss her research on weight loss surgeries. She will focus on how gender and sexuality are central to people’s decisions to have surgery as well as to their experience of their post-surgery bodies.
Specific topics/themes may include the following:
- How individuals alter bodies to conform to or contest dominant social norms around gender and sexuality.
- How bodies act as an active canvas for the representation of meaning and identity.
- Language and discourses on gender, sexuality and the body.
- Implications of the DSM-V on diagnosis and assessment of gender and sexuality.
- Virtual representations of gender, sexuality and the body.
- Current controversies and impact of pro-ana and pro-mia sites.
- Fat studies and the rejection of bias based on weight, shape and size.
- The impact of media in the construction of "healthy" vs. "unhealthy" bodies.
- The historically and cross culturally variable ways that bodies are shaped by discursive power.
- How bodies and perceptions around gender and sexuality can be reshaped, reformed and molded to produce better sexual experiences.
- Gender, sexuality and the body within specific settings and contexts (e.g., military, medical encounters, work settings, restrooms, etc.).
- Expanding our understanding of gender and sexuality as it relates to health and medicine.
- Exploring movement and physical training as it relates to gender characteristics and sexual experience.
- Deconstructing the dominant sex-dimorphic model as it obscures sex and gender variation.
- Intersectional work that highlights the unique place of bodies in the relationship between gender, sexuality, race, and/or age.
Conference format includes roundtable, poster, and regular sessions.
Submit title, abstract of no more than 250 words, and requested session format (roundtable, poster or regular session) to whitehej@pacificu.edu by April 1, 2013. If appropriate to your discipline, please include 2-3 learning objectives.
Posted by Martha Rampton (ramptonm@pacificu.edu) on Mar 19, 2013 at 5:52 AM
Edited by Jenni Luckett (jluckett@pacificu.edu) on Mar 19, 2013 at 7:38 AM



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