Monthly Archives: November 2022

CfP: Bodies, Remedies, Policies: From Early Modern Chronicles of the Indies to Covid-19 Narrative (Event, 02/2023, Frankfurt a.M.); by: 04.12.2022

Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main; Romana Radlwimmer

Time: 15.-17.02.2023
Venue: Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main
Proposals by: 04.12.2022

The power over life and death defines healthy bodies and adequate remedies through policies determining that which is diseased – the origin, development, and outcome of illness (Esposito 2011). When in 1562 smallpox arrived with a European slave ship from Africa to Salvador de Bahia, causing contagion of pandemic proportions, Jesuit friars blamed local beliefs and shamanism to be the root cause and reinforced missionary work as only possible treatment. José de Acosta describes the pustules on skin, tongue, and mouth, inhibiting confession, and Leonardo do Vale reports that the ones most affected were the native slaves, living in squalid conditions, and among them, especially pregnant women, and elders – demonstrating the intimate link between pathology and race, gender, social belonging (“class”), or age. Colonial slavery, a form of biopolitical experimentation (Mbembe 2003), disproportionally raised the rates of indigenous infection, which reciprocally fostered massive slave trade with Africa (Alden/Miller 1987). Read more and source … (Web)

The investigations may be guided by, but are not limited to the following questions:

  • Which narratives position (post-)colonized bodies between well-being and pathology?
  • How do policies of race, class, or gender operate on ill bodies?
  • Which agencies respond to the imperial imposition of pestilence and medical substances, as well as to the erasure of local health practices?
  • How have groups been tasked with designing forms of immunity?
  • How are life and death being granted or refused during health crises?

Discussion: Queerness in (Post-)Yugoslavia: History and Activism 16.11.2022, Vienna

Department of Slavonic Studies (Web)

Time: 16.11.2022, 18:30 Uhr
Venue: Department of Slavonic Studies, Spitalg. 2-4, Hof 3, 1090 Wien

This event brings together different experiences and perspectives on the history of queerness and contemporary issues of queer activism in the post-Yugoslav space. The panelists will unfold, each in their own practice, the many ways of resisting and creating alternatives to heteronormative ideals of identity and society. Drawing from critical research and artistic practice, the panel aims at providing an opportunity to engage with a variety of different topics – ranging from intersectionality to queer liberation, from performance to the disruption of gender binaries. At the same time, the panel will create a specific possibility for engaging with topics across the timeline of queer activism starting in the Yugoslav 1980s and stretching well into present debates on EuroPride Belgrade.

Panel

  • Marina Gržinić, Academy of Fine Arts Vienna
  • Saša Kesić, Academy of Fine Arts Vienna
  • Markiza de Sada/Vladimir Bjeličić, Ephemeral Confessions, independent curator/performer
  • Moderation: Aleksandar Ranković + Miranda Jakiša, University of Vienna

Read more and source … (Web)