Call for Papers: GENDER IN THE EUROPEAN TOWN: MEDIEVAL TO MODERN
NYHET
University of Southern Denmark, Odense, 22-25 May 2013
As places which fostered and disseminated key social, economic, political and cultural developments, historically towns have been central to the creation of gendered identities and the transmission of ideas across local, national and transnational boundaries. The Gender in the European Town Network invites proposals for papers of 20 minutes, completed panels (3 papers, chair and commentator), and poster sessions.
The Conference will be organised in three main strands. We encourage papers that address one of the strands, or proposals that cross the theme boundaries. They should also explore what influence gender has on the shape of towns themselves, as a force for change. We welcome local studies as well as more comparative approaches and encourage historiographical, theoretical and empirical considerations.
Proposals of 200 words for papers or posters should be submitted to geneton@sdu.dk by 26 October 2012. For further information and submission details see: www.sdu.dk/geneton.
Keynote Speakers
Professor Elisabeth Cohen, York University, Toronto, CanadaProfessor Rachel Fuchs, Arizona State University, USAProfessor Hannu Salmi, University of Turku, FinlandProfessor Pamela Sharpe, Hobart University, Tasmania, Australia Professor Amanda Vickery, Queen Mary, University of London, UK
Political culture and Civic Identity
We want to discuss how civic identity and citizenship were negotiated and used in the urban space and how these were established and institutionalized. Proposals could include:•Gendered civic identity in different periods of time•Gender and different sites of political actions•Political culture and political actions•Religion as politics •Relations between local civic identity and national political development •Intersectional discussions of how changing social conditions interacted with gender and citizenship
Space Place Environment: Rethinking Space
The role of gender in shaping, and being shaped by, space and place, particularly in the urban environment, provides historians and cultural geographers with the opportunity to look afresh at the changing nature of the town and its inhabitants over time. Proposals could include:•Historiography of spatial studies•Gendered urban environment in historical process•Meanings of space•Urban places as gendered meaning makers •New directions in the study gendered urban space
Stretching the urban economy
The aim of this strand is to explore the influence of gender on the economic shape of towns and the ways in which men and women articulated their relationship to the urban economy. We encourage papers that stretch the traditional idea of economy by exploring different types of markets and nexus. Proposals could include:•Workplace organisation / relationships•Consumption and production interfaces•Networks (urban rural links, family businesses …)•Cosmopolitanism in economic systems•Influence of econo-political debates •Gendered illicit economy