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Call for Publications

Theme: Displacement
Publication: Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society
Date: Special Issue (Spring 2018)
Deadline: 15.9.2016

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Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society invites submissions
for a special issue titled “Displacement,” slated for publication in
spring 2018. 

The current refugee crisis gives new urgency to questions of gendered
displacement. The United Nations’ most recent statistics place the
number of registered Syrian refugees at 4.7 million, 50.7 percent of
whom are women and over half of whom are children under eighteen.
During the same period, tens of thousands of Central American women
and children have crossed the Rio Grande into the United States.
Feminists have already responded to concerns about sexual violence in
refugee camps and during refugees’ journeys and to the gendered
response to the crisis on the part of receiving states (i.e.,
demographic concerns surrounding gender ratios of migrants admitted).
What are the larger questions of “displacement” that require an
interdisciplinary and transnational feminist lens?

This special issue of Signs seeks submissions reflecting
multifaceted, innovative, and interdisciplinary approaches to the
question of displacement, as well as the potential for attention to
displacement to address and transform central questions in feminist
theory, including how feminists approach larger questions of space,
place, and subjectivity. Feminist scholars have a long history of
engagement with the question of displacement; across disciplines,
feminist scholars have described, theorized, and critiqued gendered
forms of displacement and how these displacements have shaped and
reshaped geopolitics, national borders, political discourses,
narrative form, and ethnic and racial formations both contemporarily
and historically. Questions of place and belonging have long been at
the heart of cultural work in literature, theater, visual culture,
and the arts. We invite submissions on the theme of displacement
widely conceived and at multiple scales—the subjective, the family,
the city; regional, national, transnational, and global.  Possible
subjects include:

- How humanitarian and state responses to displaced persons depend
  on, reinforce, or transform gendered, racial, and sexual norms.

- Visual and narrative representations of displacement in relation to
  gendered and racialized subjectivities.

- Cultural representations of displacement, migration, belonging, and
  exile. Critical and historical investigations and comparisons of
  feminist ideas of these subjects.

- Reverberations of historical displacements in the contemporary
  world.

- Claims to space and place as forms of resistance to displacement or
  as the basis for social movements (i.e., landless movements, right
  to the city).

- Dispossession and displacement as central to neoliberalism,
  capitalist development, colonization, and slavery.  How are
  dispossession and displacement related? 

- How experiences of displacement reshape constructions of “home” or
  the nation.

- Critical assessments of homophobic and gender-based violence as
  sources of displacement.

- Gendered figurations of internally and externally displaced persons
  as threats to national sovereignty or borders. The production of new
  forms of intimacy through displacement or the creation of new social
  movements through and in response to displacement.

- The way that ethical norms and perspectives ignore or undervalue
  the importance of gender and gendered perspectives with regard to
  displacement.

Pieces that critically examine or call into question distinctions
between migrants, refugees, and internally displaced persons are also
welcome.

Signs particularly encourages transdisciplinary and transnational
essays that address large questions, debates, and controversies
without employing disciplinary or academic jargon. We welcome essays
that make a forceful case for why displacement demands a specific and
thoughtfully formulated interdisciplinary feminist analysis and why
it demands our attention now. We seek essays that are forceful,
passionate, strongly argued, and willing to take risks.

The deadline for submissions is September 15, 2016.
Contact <a.mazzas...@neu.edu> with any questions.

Denise Horn, Assistant Professor of Political Science and
International Relations at Simmons College, and Serena Parekh,
Associate Professor of Philosophy at Northeastern University, will
serve as guest editors of the issue.

Manuscripts may be submitted electronically through Signs’ Editorial
Manager system at http://signs.edmgr.com and must conform to the
guidelines for submission available at
http://signsjournal.org/for-authors/author-guidelines/.




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