CfP: Single Lives: 200 Years of Independent Women in Literature & Popular Culture (Event: 10/2017, Dublin); DL: 01.04.2017

16266107_1286344428124137_8751823515205458695_nThe Singleness Studies Research Group at UCD: Kate Fama and Jorie Lagerwey, School of English, Drama, and Film, University College Dublin (Web)

University College Dublin
Time: 13-14 October 2017
Proposal due: 1 April 2017

This conference will explore the last 200 years of literature and popular media by, about, and for single women in relation to aesthetics and form, race, sexuality, class, space, reproduction and the family, political movements, and labor.

Independent women —singly blessed, new, surplus, or adrift— have remained a center around which anxieties and excitement coalesce. A range of historians, demographers, and literary scholars have focused on the social and political significance of diverse single women in the nineteenth, twentieth, and early twenty-first centuries. Moving between the family home and domestic independence, between household and public labor, and between chastity and a range of sexual relations, the single woman remains a literary and cultural focus.

In recent years, especially in relation to UK and US elections, there has been an explosion of popular interest in contemporary singleness. Rebecca Traister’s Big Girls Don’t Cry and All the Single Ladies, comedian Aziz Ansari’s Modern Romance, Eric Klinenberg’s Going Solo, the Washington Post’s „Solo-ish“ column, as well as the work of psychologist and single-rights activist Bella DePaulo, author of Singled Out: How Singles are Stereotyped, Stigmatized, and Ignored but Still Live Happily Ever After, all explore what it means to be a socially, politically, and sexually active single person in the 21st century. News outlets, film, television, and a host of social and marketing media have demonstrated that people are fascinated by the changing status of singles.

Singleness Studies has emerged as an academic field over the last two decades but has rarely had its own forum for collaboration and exchange. This conference will bring together multiple disciplinary perspectives to uncover the social, political, economic, and cultural connections between the „singly blessed“ women and „bachelor girls“ of the 19th and early-20th century and „all the single ladies“ of the contemporary moment. We seek proposals that analyze single lives within or across this time frame, from disciplines including literature, media studies, history, geography, sociology, architecture, political science, and more. Papers and full panels that create new perspectives by crossing boundaries and integrating multiple disciplines are especially welcome.

  • Keynote Speaker: Rebecca Traister

Rebecca Traister is the author of the best-selling All the Single Ladies: Unmarried Women and the Rise of an Independent Nation, a New York Times Notable Book of 2016. Traister, a National Magazine Award finalist and winner of the Hillman Prize for Opinion and Analysis Journalism, is writer-at-large for New York Magazine, where she covers politics, media and culture from a feminist perspective. She has also written for The New Republic, Salon, Elle, The Nation, The New York Times and The Washington Post. Her book Big Girls Don’t Cry: The Election that Changed Everything for American Women was a New York Times Notable Book of 2010 and the winner of the Ernesta Drinker Ballard Book Prize. She lives in New York City.

Possible topics include:

  • Representation of singles in literature
  • Representation of singles in film, television, and other digital media
  • Narrative form
  • Space and architecture
  • Demographic change
  • Reproductive rights and family structures
  • Reproduction and temporality
  • Independent women’s labor and political work
  • „Women adrift“ and crisis narratives
  • Singleness and race, class, or identity politics
  • Queer singleness
  • Familiar Figures: bachelor girls, spinsters, new women, and single ladies
  • The single and the state
  • Singleness and literary or media genre
  • Conservative and radical independence
  • Singleness in Trump’s America
  • Single activism
  • Comparative singleness

Scholars from all disciplines are encouraged to apply.

Full Panel Proposals: Panel coordinators should submit a 200-word rationale for the panel as whole. For each contributor, please submit a 250-word abstract, a short bio, and contact information. Panels
that include diverse panelists with a range of affiliations, career experiences, and disciplinary homes are strongly encouraged. Panels should include 4 papers. Submissions can be emailed as a Word document to singlelives2017@gmail.com.

Proposal due: 1 April 2017 midnight Dublin time. Notifications by 1 May 2017

Individual Papers: Individuals submitting paper proposals should provide an abstract of 250 words, a short bio, and contact information. Submissions can be emailed as a Word document to: singlelives2017@gmail.com.

Conference Statement: We hope to host a diverse, welcoming, open first Single Lives conference. We understand diversity to include attendees as well as academic subject, approach, and field. We welcome comparative projects, though because of its smaller scale, this conference will be conducted in English.

Please direct all questions about the conference and the submission process to: singlelives2017@gmail.com
For up to date conference details, see our website: https://singlelives2017.wordpress.com/
Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Single-Lives-2017-Conference-1262119710546609/
Follow us on Twitter: @SingleLives2017

Conference Organizers:
Kate Fama
Jorie Lagerwey
School of English, Drama, and Film
University College Dublin

Conference Sponsors
College of Arts and Humanities, University College Dublin
Humanities Institute, University College Dublin

Source: H-Net Notifications