CFP: Queering Modernization in Eastern Europe: Deviant Sexualities, Gender Regimes, and the Limits of State Control

Deadline: February 28, 2023

29-30 June 2023, University of Vienna

This two-day workshop invites doctoral students and postdoctoral researchers to reflect on the impact that the modernization of states and societies in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) had on the construction of sexual and gender identities and experiences, as well as the notion of sexual deviance. While the 20th century was marked by increasingly modern (secular, science-based, medicalized, etc.) conception of sexuality across Europe, this new understanding interacted in complex ways with traditional and religious notions of morality and sin. Furthermore, the twentieth century in CEE was marked by multiple regime and ideological changes, which also impacted the ways people lived and understood their personal lives, gender identities, and sexual experiences. Considering the limitations of the Foucauldian narrative of the history of sexuality in the West, the workshop invites participants to reflect on the methodological and theoretical tools that are needed to interrogate the continuity and change of sexual discourses and practices in CEE.

In particular, the workshop invites participants to reflect: Can we see gender as one of the central categories of analysis in understanding the construction of hetero- and cis- normativity and morality, even in societies which prided themselves on achieving gender equality? How do we approach the categories of class and race in relation to sexuality, when talking about CEE region, which experienced modernity largely in its state-socialist form and had a peripheral role in the global history of colonialism and imperial expansion? How did the modernizing institutions of medicine, science, law, police, and other state and non-state actors participate in creating some subject positions as socially acceptable, while others as deviant in CEE countries? In what ways did queer people experience, pursue, and express their desires in modernizing societies, and how can we research, understand, and commemorate them from a contemporary perspective? What can we learn about modern CEE societies and politics when applying queer and feminist theoretical instruments?

Situated within the vibrant field of historical research into non-normative sexualities and genders in CEE, this workshop invites doctoral students and postdoctoral researchers to discuss the newest findings regarding the history of state regulation of deviant sexualities as well as the traces of queer creativity and resistance. It aims to create a platform for a theoretically and conceptually oriented discussion and will result in a publication of a special issue of a peer-reviewed journal.

Confirmed speakers and discussants:

· Dr. Anna Hájková, Associate Professor of Modern Continental European History, University of Warwick
· Prof. Dietlind Hüchtker, Professor of Historical Transregional Studies, University of Vienna
· Prof. Claudia Kraft, Professor of Contemporary History, University of Vienna
· Dr. Katharina Wiedlack, Assistant Professor for Anglophone Cultural Studies, University of Vienna
· Dr.  Łukasz Szulc, Senior Lecturer in Digital Media and Culture, University of Manchester

Applicants are asked to submit an abstract (250-300 words) and a biographical blurb (max. 100 words) by 28 February. Notifications of acceptance/rejection will be sent out in March. Accepted participants will be asked to send in a draft paper (max. 7000 words) by 1 June and prepare a 15-minute presentation. The costs of travel and accommodation will be covered according to need.

Abstract submission and inquiries: rasa.navickaite@univie.ac.at

This workshop is a part of MOSELIT (Modernization of Sexuality and the Construction of Deviance in Soviet Lithuania) research project and as such it has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 101025145.

LINK: https://transformations.univie.ac.at/en/news/

Call for Papers: Queering Modernization in Eastern Europe: Deviant Sexualities, Gender Regimes, and the Limits of State Control

29-30 June 2023, University of Vienna

Deadline: February 28, 2023

This two-day workshop invites doctoral students and postdoctoral researchers to reflect on the impact that the modernization of states and societies in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) had on the construction of sexual and gender identities and experiences, as well as the notion of sexual deviance. While the 20th century was marked by increasingly modern (secular, science-based, medicalized, etc.) conception of sexuality across Europe, this new understanding interacted in complex ways with traditional and religious notions of morality and sin. Furthermore, the twentieth century in CEE was marked by multiple regime and ideological changes, which also impacted the ways people lived and understood their personal lives, gender identities, and sexual experiences. Considering the limitations of the Foucauldian narrative of the history of sexuality in the West, the workshop invites participants to reflect on the methodological and theoretical tools that are needed to interrogate the continuity and change of sexual discourses and practices in CEE.

In particular, the workshop invites participants to reflect: Can we see gender as one of the central categories of analysis in understanding the construction of hetero- and cis- normativity and morality, even in societies which prided themselves on achieving gender equality? How do we approach the categories of class and race in relation to sexuality, when talking about CEE region, which experienced modernity largely in its state-socialist form and had a peripheral role in the global history of colonialism and imperial expansion? How did the modernizing institutions of medicine, science, law, police, and other state and non-state actors participate in creating some subject positions as socially acceptable, while others as deviant in CEE countries? In what ways did queer people experience, pursue, and express their desires in modernizing societies, and how can we research, understand, and commemorate them from a contemporary perspective? What can we learn about modern CEE societies and politics when applying queer and feminist theoretical instruments?

Situated within the vibrant field of historical research into non-normative sexualities and genders in CEE, this workshop invites doctoral students and postdoctoral researchers to discuss the newest findings regarding the history of state regulation of deviant sexualities as well as the traces of queer creativity and resistance. It aims to create a platform for a theoretically and conceptually oriented discussion and will result in a publication of a special issue of a peer-reviewed journal.

Confirmed speakers and discussants:

· Dr. Anna Hájková, Associate Professor of Modern Continental European History, University of Warwick
· Prof. Dietlind Hüchtker, Professor of Historical Transregional Studies, University of Vienna
· Prof. Claudia Kraft, Professor of Contemporary History, University of Vienna
· Dr. Katharina Wiedlack, Assistant Professor for Anglophone Cultural Studies, University of Vienna
· Dr.  Łukasz Szulc, Senior Lecturer in Digital Media and Culture, University of Manchester

Applicants are asked to submit an abstract (250-300 words) and a biographical blurb (max. 100 words) by 28 February. Notifications of acceptance/rejection will be sent out in March. Accepted participants will be asked to send in a draft paper (max. 7000 words) by 1 June and prepare a 15-minute presentation. The costs of travel and accommodation will be covered according to need.

Abstract submission and inquiries: rasa.navickaite@univie.ac.at

This workshop is a part of MOSELIT (Modernization of Sexuality and the Construction of Deviance in Soviet Lithuania) research project and as such it has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 101025145.

LINK: https://transformations.univie.ac.at/en/news/

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